moderated Another accessible / genealogy web site.
Peter Tesar
The search algorithmworks with what it has to search.
You have to guess at what information was recorded.
The further back in time the recorded information may not be what
you would expect today.The official document may not work well
with OCR.
I never use a city. Use the country England. There may be a photo of the grave stone and the cemetery may be
located outside the city.The Find a Grave Index and the Billion
Graves Index might come up on FamilySearch.
Which FamilySearch engine are you using. The simple one does not
require you to register and it asks for only 6 items of
information. . https://www.familysearch.org/en/
The birth or death locations may not be available. Leave one
blank and choose a date birth/death range to get an idea of what
is in the data base. The maiden name will be more effective than
the married date.
With geneology searching you have to be flexible and pacient. Try
different search criteria.
Peter T.
On 6/24/2020 3:36 AM, Steve Nutt wrote:
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Steve Nutt
Trouble with FamilySearch is that their search algorithm is rubbish. If I search for someone and put their birth place as London, it gives me results from the USA.
All the best
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From: main@jfw.groups.io <main@jfw.groups.io> On Behalf Of Tony
Sent: 05 June 2020 17:54 To: main@jfw.groups.io Subject: Re: Another accessible / genealogy web site.
I’ve been using FamilySearch.org for a couple of years and can do fairly well with it. Parts of the site disappear from time to time especially on Sunday afternoons when it is heavily used. Also uses colors, images, and some unlabeled buttons and links. It is pretty easy to use once you learn to watch for the problems and can work around most of them.
One thing I learned is to keep the window maximized at all times. Rather than srinking character sizes they drop some items from the menus in order to keep the same text size. At least that is the way it appears to me.
I will try the other site some more to see why I had a different experience.
Thanks
Tony
From: main@jfw.groups.io [mailto:main@jfw.groups.io] On Behalf Of Peter Tesar
I've given you the WikiTree.com site.
Another accessible source is the Mormon's FamilySearch Engine.
There is no need to register. You get basic information when you enter first & last names, birth & death locations and year (a range).
You should get a page with the title: Historical documents we found for xx — FamilySearch.org
Navigate to the heading: Top people we found for xx in the shared Family Tree
For each record found will be listed the information asked for and perhaps the spouse and parents.
If you toggle for more information on that individual, you will need to create a Familysearch account or sign in (no charge).
Researching distant family relations is a way to fill in my stay at home time.
Peter T.
On 6/5/2020 9:30 AM, Georgie Mac wrote:
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Tony
I’ve been using FamilySearch.org for a couple of years and can do fairly well with it. Parts of the site disappear from time to time especially on Sunday afternoons when it is heavily used. Also uses colors, images, and some unlabeled buttons and links. It is pretty easy to use once you learn to watch for the problems and can work around most of them.
One thing I learned is to keep the window maximized at all times. Rather than srinking character sizes they drop some items from the menus in order to keep the same text size. At least that is the way it appears to me.
I will try the other site some more to see why I had a different experience.
Thanks
Tony
From: main@jfw.groups.io [mailto:main@jfw.groups.io] On Behalf Of Peter Tesar
Sent: Friday, June 05, 2020 10:59 AM To: main@jfw.groups.io Subject: Another accessible / genealogy web site.
I've given you the WikiTree.com site.
Another accessible source is the Mormon's FamilySearch Engine.
There is no need to register. You get basic information when you enter first & last names, birth & death locations and year (a range).
You should get a page with the title: Historical documents we found for xx — FamilySearch.org
Navigate to the heading: Top people we found for xx in the shared Family Tree
For each record found will be listed the information asked for and perhaps the spouse and parents.
If you toggle for more information on that individual, you will need to create a Familysearch account or sign in (no charge).
Researching distant family relations is a way to fill in my stay at home time.
Peter T.
On 6/5/2020 9:30 AM, Georgie Mac wrote:
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Peter Tesar
I've given you the WikiTree.com site.
Another accessible source is the Mormon's
FamilySearch Engine.
There is no need to register. You get basic information when you enter first & last names, birth & death locations and year (a range).
You should get a page with the title: Historical documents we found for xx — FamilySearch.org
Navigate to the heading: Top people we found for xx in the shared Family Tree
For each record found will be listed the information asked for
and perhaps the spouse and parents. If you toggle for more information on that individual, you will
need to create a Familysearch account or sign in (no charge).
Researching distant family relations is a way to fill in my stay
at home time. Peter T.
On 6/5/2020 9:30 AM, Georgie Mac wrote:
Tony, I too have been trying to get to this site, but after a few times, I've had success. First and last name and there it is! This will give me some added help since I have been trying to track down my family roots since forever. Thanks to all.
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