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Friday, October 11, 2013

Irish Genealogy? Free Issue of Irish Lives Remembered Offered

Anyone who has Irish genealogy knows that searching for your Irish ancestor can be challenging. Fortunately, Irish resources are vastly improving and Irish Lives Remembered makes some of those sources available to genealogists. Download a copy of their free October issue here or read it online.

Tuesday, October 8, 2013

Genealogical Checklist for Finding Birth Records from The Ancestor Hunt

Sometimes when we are searching for specific genealogical information on an ancestor, we search for the obvious and forget to dig deeper. Check out this great checklist from The Ancestor Hunt about locating birth records here. Use it as a guideline in your research to filll gaps in your genealogy.

Thursday, October 3, 2013

New Genealogical Data Added at Rootsireland.ie

Rootsireland.ie has announced the addition of new Monaghan birth, marriage and death records. Check out their complete list of genealogical source records at this pay-per-view site here.

Tuesday, October 1, 2013

The Genealogical Universe Takes a Look at Name Variants

Check out this article on name variants at the new genealogical blog, The Genealogical Universe here.

Sunday, September 22, 2013

New Genealogy Program Premieres on PBS September 23rd

If you are already missing "Who Do You Think You Are?", PBS's "Genealogy Roadshow" looks to fill that gap. Read more about "Genealogy Roadshow" here.

Wednesday, September 18, 2013

Discovering Genealogical Finds Through DNA

Genealogical dead-ends have long plagued all of us at once time or another. Somehow, you just can't break those ancestral blockades. Fortunately, as technology has evolved so have the choices for discovering family through affordable DNA packages provided by Ancestry.com, 23andme.com, and gedmatch.com.

Recently, I helped a friend discover her biological father after years of unsuccessful searches. She purchased a AncestryDNA from Ancestry.com and waited for her results. By the time, they came in, I had already mapped out her maternal genealogy right down to the German ancestry she didn't know she had, but she was no further to the truth about her father ... that is, until she received a AncestryDNA match of 96% from an unknown relation. The match was with an Italian family as possible 4th cousins. My friend had little information from her mother about her father, even his last name was as questionable as his character. But it was enough for me to eliminate five other possibilities and confirm what I already had suspected. Working with the proper time frames, census records, vital records, and the female generations of this immigrant Italian family, we traced the family by triangulating the data, and found an exact match to her grandmother and confirmed her marriage in the North End of Boston. There we also found her son, a promising ball player who gave up his career for the mob.

There is much more to the story but the point is that old-fashioned genealogical research techniques coupled with DNA can help solve your genealogical roadblocks.