Jobs & Education0 min ago
How To Start
6 Answers
The family tree.
Ive asked this before waaaay back i am sure.
I think i used a scottish website but my family goes back to ireland on both sides.
I remember a few folks on here were very good at this but i cant remember who!!! X
Ive asked this before waaaay back i am sure.
I think i used a scottish website but my family goes back to ireland on both sides.
I remember a few folks on here were very good at this but i cant remember who!!! X
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by tinkerbell23. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.You start by talking to all your surviving family and gathering every bit of information they can provide before they pop their clogs.
After that you subscribe to a site or use freebmd to check the records of those you know and find out who they may be related to. Use census too when they allow you to see them.
You purchase birth marriage and death certificates to get more info.
And if you need more you go around the country looking at graveyards and reading parish records. Also joining a local genealogy club or taking a look in your nearest town library may help too.
Get yourself some decent software to record al the information you get.
After that you subscribe to a site or use freebmd to check the records of those you know and find out who they may be related to. Use census too when they allow you to see them.
You purchase birth marriage and death certificates to get more info.
And if you need more you go around the country looking at graveyards and reading parish records. Also joining a local genealogy club or taking a look in your nearest town library may help too.
Get yourself some decent software to record al the information you get.
For Scotland try http:// www.sco tlandsp eople.g ov.uk/
For Ireland: I found it easier to actually go to the records office in Dublin, but that was 10 years ago.
For Ireland: I found it easier to actually go to the records office in Dublin, but that was 10 years ago.