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- How Your Local Library Can Provide Clues to Your Ancestry

 
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  • Basic Genealogy Information For Children
  • Bring to Life Those Dead Ends in your Genealogy Research
  • Create a Timeline for your Family history
  • Creating A Family History Has Practical Uses Too
  • Creating A Family Tree
  • Eight Important How to Tips in Searching Census Records
  • Eight Ways to Avoid Barking Up the Wrong Family Tree
  • Ellis Island Records Are Valuable Keys To The Past
  • Fact or Fiction How to Know When You Have a True Lead
  • Five Important Things You Can Learn from Researching Death Records
  • Four Tips for Writing Genealogical Inquiries
  • Genealogy Search
  • Give the Gift of Genealogy Five Gifts that Reflect the Family Tree
  • How Computer Software Can Streamline Your Genealogy Research
  • How Your Local Library Can Provide Clues to Your Ancestry
  • How to Follow up Leads for Possible Native American Ancestors
  • Jumping Into Genealogy
  • Researching Native American History
  • Scrapbooks Are Great Genealogy Tools
  • Searching Foreign Countries For Genealogical Information
  • The Great Genealogical Need
  • Tracing Genealogy through Church Records
  • Using Public Records For Genealogical Research
  • Using The Internet For Genealogical Research
  • What To Include In A Family History
  • What is a Coat of Arms?
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    How Your Local Library Can Provide Clues to Your Ancestry

    Joining the world of genealogy research can be quite exciting at times. At other times, though, it can be confusing and difficult. It can be hard to locate sources of information about your family; it can also be hard to figure out who is related to whom. Starting your genealogy research can be a difficult and daunting task. With so many resources at your fingertips, it can be difficult to decide where to start your research. One of the best places to begin your genealogy research, though, is your local library.


    There are a number of different reasons to rely on your local library for the beginnings of your genealogy research. The first reason, though, is that they have trained personnel who can help you find what you are looking for. Working on your family history involves more research than you have probably ever completed in your life. In most cases, the research you will be working with is not simple research, either. It is both complex and tedious. This is one reason to rely on your local librarians for help. Most have degrees in library science, so they know where to find the information you are looking for. Moreover, many librarians deal with hundreds of people each day, so it is possible that they have helped others with the same difficulties you are experiencing. It is not beyond the realm of possibility that they have already looked through the copies of the 1890 census information ten times in the past month. As a result, they might be able to give you a leg up on where to find some of the information you require.


    Another reason to work with your local library in the beginning stages of your research is because over the past hundred years or so, they have been accumulating material to help you with your research. Everything from local newspapers to programs from important town events might be contained in your library's archives. In fact, many libraries have a special genealogy section to help you with your research. Most compile thousands of family histories, so you can cross reference your own work. Many have census data dating back to 1790 on a federal, state, and county level. Many also have city directories dating back to the time the city you live in was founded. Moreover, if you live near a port of entry into the United States, it is likely that your local library has passenger lists of vehicles carrying immigrants. Some local libraries even index military records of local veterans.


    Even if your local library has very little accumulated material or if your family history does not begin in the town you currently reside in, your local library will have online databases to help you with your research. Most of these databases are only accessible from your library, not from your home computer. Many of them also have some pretty extensive instructions which your local library can help you sort through as you begin to use them.


    As you begin your library sources, there are a few things you should consider. First, you will want to rely mostly on primary sources. A primary source is any document that contains first-hand information. For example, your great-grandfather's military record would be a primary source. Similarly, the 1890 census that lists your great-great aunt would also be considered a primary source. However, this will not always be possible with genealogy research. As a result, you should evaluate your secondary sources carefully. You must decide how accurate the information contained within might be. For example, if you are looking at an autobiography written by the mine owner in a small Kentucky town, you might be given a very different view of the working conditions your grandfather was dealing with than if you took your information from some letters he wrote to your grandmother at the time he was working. The accuracy of either source, though, can be doubtable at times. Both sources can have wrong dates, and both can list wrong countries of origin. If you end up being seriously stuck, sometimes it is best to consult a professional genealogist for help, as they have run up against the same problems you have many times over.




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    Interest in genealogy taking off thanks to new TV shows (Deseret News)
    Genealogy. It's not the dreaded, boring word anymore that applies only to your grandmother or mother.

    Genealogy group may dissolve, president warns (The Neosho Daily News)
    The Genealogy Friends of the Library is on the verge of dissolving, its? president told members Monday.

    Little River County Genealogy Society meets today (Texarkana Gazette)
    The Little River County Genealogy Society will meet at 5:30 p.m. today at Cossatot Community College in Ashdown, Ark. Terri Buster will present a program about the ?Orphan Train.?

    Kramer goes from gynecology to genealogy (The Daily Iberian)
    FRANKLIN ? After delivering nearly 5,000 babies during his 35-year career, Thomas Frere Kramer, MD., retired from the gynecology trade, which he replaced by taking on the task of genealogy in an effort to resurrect the secrets, skeletons and memories of his forebears.

     
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