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  • Genealogy: Goggle Specialty Searches

    The following article is a sample from Barry J. Ewell's book "Family Treasures: 15 Lessons, Tips, and Tricks for Discovering your Family History." He is the founder of MyGenShare.com, an online educational website for genealogy and family history. 

    Learn to use Google to conduct special searches in Google Image, Google Book, Google Scholar and much more.

    Let Google find (and translate) foreign language websites. In the Google search page, change your preferences (under the gear menu in the upper right corner) to include non-English language sites among your results and click save preferences. Then go to the Google Translation Tool web site to download a button for your browser that translates thirty-four languages to English at the touch of a button.

    Search Google Books to find text from out-of-print books. Google is digitizing millions of books-many of which are no longer copyright protected and can be searched and read online for free at books.google.com. Use a surname and qualifier in the search box. For example, bennet "king county, Washington" or "anna larsen"

    Let Google know your most important search terms. Google often produces results that match some but not all of your search terms. Using a plus sign immediately before your most crucial terms or phrase requires its inclusion in results. For example, a search for +"benjamin rosenbaum" chicago OR "cook county"Illinois makes sure Benjamin is in each search result, even if he's in Toledo rather than Chicago.

    Don't let an imprecise location spoil a good search. When using a geographic search term, use all forms of the location, because the person who posted your information may have used abbrevia¬tions. Example: "mary norwood" hollywood, "los angeles co" OR "los angeles county" OR "los angeles"AND ca OR cal OR calif OR California. Remember: if you don't search them all, you don't get all the possible results.

    Use Google blog search to meet other researchers. Online blogs can be viewed for free at http://blogsearch.google.com. Use a surname, location limiter, and genealogy synonyms in the search box. Example: Ewell Charlottesville ~genealogy.

    Use Google Image search to find photos, postcards, and maps. A Google search of images indexed from websites can find research gold. Online images can be searched at images.google.com. Use a surname, location, or qualifier like postcard in the search box. Example: "albemarle county, virginia" lithograph.

    Try a Google Scholar search. Search historical society papers, journal articles, and college theses for ancestors. Scholarly searches are free at scholar.google.com. Use a name and location in the search box. Example: "ann mullins"golden Colorado.

    Try a Google News archives search. Search historical newspa¬pers for ancestors' announcements, ships, companies, crimes, and events. Limited searches of OCR (computer aided transcriptions) are free at news.google.com/archivesearch. Try a name, location, and date restriction in the search box. Example: larsen, atlanta, geor¬gia 1860.. 1890.

    Use Google to define antiquated occupations, diseases, or terminology. Google allows Define (define:) to identify the mean¬ings of words and phrases. Example: search define: ague to discover that Uncle Cyrus died of an illness with fever and shaking chills, or define: lapidary to learn that Cyrus worked as a cutter and polisher of stones into gems.

    Use Google's residential phonebook to find possible cousins. Use Google's Residential Phonebook (rphonebook) to locate phone numbers, addresses, maps, and even aerial and street-level photos of homes of the people who share your surname in a geographic area. Example: rphonebook: walter, ames, iowa, or rphonebook: morrison 89121.

    Use Google's business phonebook to find non-residential contact info. Use Google's Business Phonebook (bphonebook) to locate phone numbers, addresses, maps, and even aerial and street- level photos of businesses that relate to your ancestors in a geo-graphic area. Example: bphonebook: baptist, boise, idaho.

    Use Google Maps' address location and driving directions. Enter a complete address (like 3760 n central st miami fl) into www. Maps.Google.com to get a detailed map (including a high resolution satellite option). Then, in the search terms field, add the phrase "to 3413 nevada ave madison wi" to get detailed driving directions. This type of search is great for locating cemeteries.

    Use Google Street View to get snapshots of ancestral homes. As you may know, Google's camera-equipped cars are circling the United States and western Europe, taking continuous 360-degree photos of neighborhoods. Use www.Maps.Google.com to locate an address, then click Street View to call up the photo image of the home.

    Let Google Alerts search while you sleep. Alerts are a neat service. Google Alerts (www.Google.com/alerts) is an automated, online tool that lets you build complex Google searches and run them continuously to look for new additions to the Internet. You are periodically alerted by email of new web info about your favorite sports team or your great-aunt.

    Try Google video search to find tutorials, travelogues, and family stories. Use video.google.com to search for short videos of interest.

    Read more great genealogy tips in Barry Ewell's book "Family Treasures: 15 Lessons, Tips, and Tricks for Discovering your Family History.

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  • Genealogy: Google Quick Reference for Genealogists

    The following article is a sample from Barry J. Ewell's book "Family Treasures: 15 Lessons, Tips, and Tricks for Discovering your Family History." He is the founder of MyGenShare.com, an online educational website for genealogy and family history. 

    If you want a quick reference for conducting a specific type of Internet search, the following list provides the most common searches to use as a genealogist:

    Search Google for ancestral village. Be as specific as possible about location. Be sure to try Google for the country as well-for example, google.ca for Canada and google.sk for Slovakia. See Google Language Tools or Google Translate, which is an applica¬tion that will let users translate between different languages. Simply type in your text in any language and then hit the "translate" button. Google Language Tools offers translation services between 149 dif¬ferent languages

    Search Google Books. Looking for a book? Try searching Google Books at books.google.com. This amazing resource contains thousands of entire digitized books that are in the public domain and selected pages of many books that are still under copyright.

    Search in lower case. Google doesn't care, but some search engines are case sensitive: The search terms "ed james" gives results such as the following:

    • Edjames
    • Ed James
    • . Ed JAMES . ED JAMES
    • eD jAmEs

    Don't sweat the punctuation. Google mostly ignores punctua¬tion (commas, semicolons, periods, and hyphens). Your search for tampa, florida (with the comma) and your search for tampa florida (without the coma) produce the same results. One exception- Google includes punctuation when searching for an exact phrase using quotation marks.

    View "cached" images of pages no longer available. Have you ever received an "Error 404-This Page Not Found" message? Click the "Back" button to return to Google's search results list. Then click on the unavailable item's "cached" link to view Google's archived snapshot of the page. Then copy and paste any useful content to a file on your computer.

    Quickly search whole web pages. Stop manually reading through long web pages trying to find where your surnames are hiding. Use your web browser's "Find" function-Crtl+F (Cmd+F for Mac users)-to efficiently search an entire page by jumping from occurrence to occurrence of the term you want to select. PDF documents also have a find feature (binocular icon).

    Search for genealogy surname websites. Google can provide a list of genealogy web sites whose titles include your surname by using the "All in Title" phrase allintitle.genealogy "Isaac Winston" finds sites with the word genealogy in the title (across the website's top band) and in which the name Isaac Winston appears on any page.

    Quickly search entire websites. If a promising website lacks a search box on its home page, you don't have to manually search each page for ancestors. Google can look at all the pages of a web site in a single search. For example, a search for "Maxcey Ewell"site:www. rootsweb.com will search RootsWeb.com for any page that references Maxcey Ewell. This kind of search only works for the visible web.

    Search phrases, not just words. Search for a phrase using quotation marks (" "). Quotation marks are used in searches to denote that you are looking for these words in a specific order. For example, if you are searching for "ebenezer jones", you will have results of pages containing the exact quoted phrase "ebenezer jones".

    Search synonyms. Search synonyms using the tilde character (~). For example, -tombstone gets the same results as searching tombstone, gravestone, headstone, monument, or marker.

    Other helpful search terms for genealogy research include the following:

    • -genealogy
    • ~ index
    • ~ biography
    • ~surname

    Search for missing text strings. Searching for Payson ~ut produces results with any number of missing words, including the following:

    • Payson, UT,
    • Payson, Utah, UT
    • Payson, UT Co., UT,
    • Payson, Utah County, UT

    Target timeframes. Set a date range for your searches to exclude recent events. Example: 1750.1899 produces a list of websites that include years (numbers, actually) between 1750 and 1899, inclusive, but omits sites mentioning only the 1900s.

    Search for names-both forward and backward. Search names as phrases; search them "forward" (given name first) and "backward" (surname first) to also find reverse name listings. Exam¬ple: search "mary sims" and also "sims, mary" to find additional relevant results.



    Force Google to include "ignored" words within results. For speed, Google automatically ignores many common words like a, the, he, she, how, when, where, and if. Ordinarily this is okay, but I and will can be meaningful to genealogists. The solution: enclose I in quotes: "arthur darrah I" or precede will with a plus sign (+): dunning +will.

    Search for all likely aliases. Don't stop with a search for "ora w. jones" He may have been indexed as

    • Ora Jones
    • O. Jones
    • O. W. Goode
    • Ora William Jones
    • Ora W. Jones

    For common surnames, add geographic or time restrictions.

    For example, search using this single long search string of all the variations at once: "ira smith " OR "ira a. smith " OR "i. a. smith " OR "i.aaron smith" OR "aaron smith" chicago 1874..1938

    Use minus sign "-" to exclude unwanted results (same as "NOT"). Exclude irrelevant results that crowd out desired results by using the minus sign (-). For example, adding -ulysses to a search for grant removes most of the original results. Be careful, though: -texas will exclude all sites with the word Texas, including sites that elsewhere contain your ancestors.

    Try the marriage "combo plate." Search husband and wife surnames together to increase relevant results. For example, search "ora jones"AND Dearing. Understand that "ora jones" alone retreives thousands of hits, but by adding Dearing, you eliminate 99.7 percent of the initial results; the remaining 0.3 percent of results emphasize the Jones marriage and family that you are specifically searching for.

    Use genealogical key words in your searches. Add genealogical terms to your surname search string and search repeatedly with different emphases. The following is a list of suggested key terms to include in your searches:

    • Born
    • . Birth
    • Died
    • Death
    • Married
    • Marriage
    • Buried
    • Burial
    • Cemetery
    • List index
    • Roster
    • Genealogy
    • Family
    • History
    • Surname . Will
    • Probate
    The order of search terms is important. Search engines apply priority to early words in your search string. Example: smith tombstone rock New Jersey produces somewhat different results than rock tombstone New Jersey smith.

    Don't forget the invisible Internet. Search Engines can see only the "visible Internet." Most web sites that require you to use their own search box (Ancestry.com, FamilySearch.org, and Root- sWeb.com, for example) are considered the "invisible Internet" and must be searched individually.

    Repeat your searches using variations of your search terms. This is important: Searching the web is hard work; missing ances¬tors are often inaccessible, buried on page two hundred of your search results. So continuously revise and refine your search terms and re-search (repeat) with the aim of fewer than 200 hits with highly relevant sites in the top ten to twenty results.

    Repeat your searches using different search engines. No search engine has a complete index of the Internet. It pays to use more than one Search Engine. In addition to Google, consider trying AltaVista.com, AllTheWeb.com, Ask.com, and Vivismo.com.

    Try searching with a meta-search engine. These are like search engines on steroids-they automate the simultaneous search of multiple search engines. The advantage of using a meta-search engine is breadth of results, but the downside is their inability to manage complex searches, because different search engines use dif¬ferent syntax and punctuation rules. Try Yippy.com or DogPile. com.

    Find links to a relevant site. Often, a productive site will have other valuable sites linked to it. Use Google to find a list of sites that link to a good site. Example: link:www.danishgenealogy.com.

    Target ancestors hiding in (.GED) files. Most genealogy pro¬grams for computers export files as GEDCOMs (.ged file format), so ask Google to look for ancestors inside highly relevant .ged files. For example: "Maxcey ewell" filetype:ged.

    Read more great genealogy tips in Barry Ewell's book "Family Treasures: 15 Lessons, Tips, and Tricks for Discovering your Family History.

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  • Genealogy: Remember the Power of One

    The following article is a sample from Barry J. Ewell's book "Family Treasures: 15 Lessons, Tips, and Tricks for Discovering your Family History." He is the founder of MyGenShare.com, an online educational website for genealogy and family history. 

    It's very easy to start researching one line of thought, become interested in another, and change direction, all in a matter of a few minutes. Soon you're surrounded with papers, documents, names, dates, and locations and are left with a head full of swirling questions.

    You will find your research more productive if you clearly identify your research goals, develop a research plan and focus on their completion. The following are a few ideas for keeping your research on track and manageable.

    1. Focus on specific sections of your genealogy at a time. This can

    • A specific family line or surname,
    • A specific time and place,
    • A specific family unit, or
    • A specific question to solve.

    2. Once you have focused a specific area to research, create a log to help you develop a big picture of what you have and where you want to go. Keep the log up-to-date-it will save you time and energy. Note when and where you viewed the information. The log can include, but is not limited to, the following:

    • Who you have talked to and information provided,
    • Information you have found and citations,
    • The questions you still seek answers to,
    • Thoughts of where to research,
    • The answers you have found, and
    • Ideas and assumptions you are making and why.

    3. Keep a to-do list-a plan as to what research you seek to per¬form. Organize the plan so the most important research gets done first. Often you find that when you focus on top priority research, many other items on your list are completed also.

    4. Group your to-do items by the source you will use to conduct research.

    5. Create a "future research" file. As you are conducting your focused research, you will always come up with ideas for research you want to conduct that is outside the focus of your current line of inquiry. Record it-whether it's an idea, a paragraph, a printed document, a photocopy, or whatever else-put it in the file, and forget about it until you are done with the task at hand. You can then go through the file at a later date, organize your notes, and start the next task. Don't be surprised if you begin doubling your accomplishments.

    6. Keep track of your progress.

    7. Reach out for help as you need it.

    8. If you have a hard time finding time or are spending too much time doing research, schedule time with yourself to conduct your research. Make your appointments start and end on time. There is something about a deadline that helps keep you on track.

    See the big picture. While focused research will help keep your genealogy work organized and streamlined, it's important not to get so focused on finding a single individual or piece of information that we don't look at extended family, neighbors, and the migration patterns of the entire community. Often the missing person (or piece of information) will pop up in someone else's family in a completely different geographic location.

    Sometimes the shortest distance between two points is not a straight line. There are many instances where researchers come to a dead end on an individual and, through researching related people (siblings, aunts, uncles, and so on), are led back to the individual of interest. Think outside the box. If you're stuck, find unusual ideas and places to look for information.

    Read more great genealogy tips in Barry Ewell's book "Family Treasures: 15 Lessons, Tips, and Tricks for Discovering your Family History.

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  • Genealogy: Cite and Verify Every Source

    The following article is a sample from Barry J. Ewell's book "Family Treasures: 15 Lessons, Tips, and Tricks for Discovering your Family History." He is the founder of MyGenShare.com, an online educational website for genealogy and family history. 

    I was given copies of genealogy for Christmas in 1990. I didn't pay to much attention to the information until 2004. As I reviewed the information, I found one line that ended in the late 1700s in North Carolina. I began the process of becoming familiar with the line and finally decided that I would like to see if I could extend the line. Within a few weeks of research, I cracked the puzzle and was able to start extending the line. Over a period of two years, I had extended it several generations. I had carefully documented my research and was quite proud of the work I had done.

    On one of my genealogy field trips, I had made arrangements to visit a distant cousin and collaborate my finding with hers concerning this line. Within two minutes of looking at my research, she told me that person from whom I began my research was not the right person. With further discussion, she explained that the person I had listed was in fact in England at the time I had her marrying her husband in North Carolina. She would not arrive in American for another ten years.

    Where had I gone wrong? I should have taken time to confirm the information that I had been given in 1990. I just assumed it was correct. There was no documentation. That assumption was a costly but valuable error on my part. I learned the value of analysis and hoped I would not make that mistake again.

    What exactly is analysis? It's the dividing of information into its six parts: who, what, where, when, why, and how. Each of the six parts can be applied to every document or source that you acquire.

    To quote Sir Conan Doyle writing as Sherlock Holmes in The Beryl Coronet, "When you eliminate the impossible, whatever you have left, no matter how improbable, must be the truth." Let's look at what each of the six parts means to genealogists.

    • Who. You can define the who before you start your search by asking who created the source.
    • What. What do you want to know? What information does the source provide?
    • Where. "Where" is probably the most important fact after "who." Are the records in national, state, county, parish, town, or precinct records? Where did you find the records?
    • When. Determine a timeframe or time period so you know where to search for records.
    • Why. Why was the source created? Why did your ancestor emigrate from Germany to the United States? Why did they move from Illinois to Wyoming? Why are there so many German (or Irish, or Italian) people in the area?
    • How. How does the information agree or conflict with information from other sources? How do I answer all these questions? How do I find the records I need?

    As you analyze your data, you will be able to make good decisions about its value and accuracy. It's not necessary to write the answers to the above questions, but writing your conclusions will help to clarify your thinking and reveal any inconsistencies.

    Take time to carefully review your research. Look at the sources. What is the artifact? What documents did you use? What books did you use? With whom did you speak?

    Look at information gathered from oral or recorded histories. Review previous research.

    Correlate unrelated information by categorizing your information. Is it primary information (participant, eyewitness) or is it secondary (non-participant)?

    Look closely at the evidence. What does the evidence say to you? How relevant is the information to your research? Does it provide direct answers to the questions you are researching? Does it provide indirect answers that help answer the question but do not stand alone? Does it provide negative answers or no answer at all? Is there information missing? What are you seeing that you didn't see before? New insights? Different conclusion? Same answer? Different clues?

    Ask for documentation. Never be shy about asking for documentation from another researcher when they have shared information with you. Again, without the paper records in hand, nothing is proven.

    Always verify. There is never a time when you should not verify information you have received. You can go to almost any Internet search engine today and within a few minutes find hundreds of questionable "facts." I've seen the same birth recorded as happening in Florida in the 1600s and in Utah in the early 1800s. I've seen records of mothers who supposedly gave birth to children at the age of five, as well as twenty-two-year-old grandfathers. It's frustrating, to say the least.

    Through the years, I have found critical errors in what I downloaded. It often appears that genealogists wanted so desperately to extend the line or make a connection that they jumped to conclusions in their research, which caused other genealogists to research someone else's family lines. Often the answers they were looking for were right before their eyes. The following are a few examples of experiences that other genealogists shared with me about the value of verifying information:

    • "I verify everything for myself. I once used someone else's info and there was a huge mistake that cost me about a year of work."
    • "Great-Granddad's marriage certificate had wrong occupation details on it, which caused me no end of problems with my searching."
    • "Family myths are just that, myths, unless you check and double-check. I was lead to believe that my father's family was from Suffolk County in England. Everyone swore that this was right. It took me five years and a trip to Utah to find out that they were not right. In fact, the family was from the county of Essex."
    • "I do not automatically accept a version of ancestry from another person-I check everything out, because people sometimes will create their ancestries to fit their own conceptions. When creating a family history, make it a masterpiece of accuracy. Inaccurate information will lead you away from where you want to go."
    • "Make no assumptions. The family has always stated that my mother's family was from Germany because of the heavy accent. However, in North Carolina, an Irish or Scottish accent could also have been considered 'heavy,' as could Welsh. Don't dis-count anything until you've proven it can't be."
    • "I learned some time ago after receiving a family CD from a genealogy company that the information was incorrect on the family line. I called the company and found that they never asked the person if all their information was documented. Today, the new genealogist seems to rely on information over the Internet."
    • "Do not assume something is correct. This is a real time waster. I spent a lot of time seeking my great-grandfather who supposedly died in South Africa, when in reality he died at his home in Scotland. I have many examples of wasting time-now I'm almost too skeptical. Nothing should be taken at face value. Humans make errors."
    • "Don't believe everything you read; adopt a "show me" attitude. I'd heard for years that there was a fire in the Martin County Courthouse (North Carolina) and all records were destroyed. I visited the courthouse and was informed that wasn't the case. Yes, there had been a small fire that damaged a few land records, but that was it."

    Searching online presents many of the most challenging issues when it comes to verifying sources. The following are a few of the lessons I have learned from searching online:

    • Search for the source. It would be nice if all web resources included a source. Whenever you find a record on the web that relates you to your family, look for a source of the data. This can be in the form of source citations and references (often denoted as footnotes at the bottom the page or at the end of the publication), notes or comments, or an "about this database" section for websites like Ancestry.com. You could also send an email to the author or contributor and politely ask for source citations.
    • Seek to find the referenced source. If the website or database you are using does not have digital images of the actual source, you can search to find the source references. For example, if the source of the information is a genealogy or history book, look for a library in the area you are searching that has a copy and is willing to provide photocopies. Expect a small fee. If the source is a microfilm record, you will most likely be able to secure the original from your local family history center, where the film can be borrowed and viewed.
    • View the original online. There is a growing trend of many online databases to provide access to scanned images of original documents. The vast majority of Internet resources have been copied, abstracted, transcribed, or summarized from previously existing, original sources. Understanding the difference between these different types of sources will help you best assess how to verify the information that you find.
    • Primary sources were created at or close to the time of the event by someone with personal knowledge of the event (for example, a birth date provided by the family doctor for the birth certificate). Primary evidence usually carries more weight than secondary evidence.
    • If the record you are seeing is a photocopy, digital copy, or microfilm copy of the original source, then it is likely to be a valid representation.
    • Compiled records (which include abstracts, transcriptions, indexes, and published family histories) are more likely to have missing information or transcription errors. If you find these records, it's in your best interest to track down the original sources.
    • Think about the possible source. When you find information that doesn't provide you a source for the database or website, ask yourself what kind of record could have supplied the information. For example, if it's an exact date of birth, then the source is most likely a birth certificate or tombstone inscription. If it is an approximate year of birth, then it may have come from a census record or marriage record.
    Use the "sanity checks" built into the better genealogy programs! The exact name of this feature may vary from one program to another, but all the better genealogy programs have the capability to find suspicious data within a database. These built-in quality checks help you quickly identify questionable data, such as very young girls or elderly women giving birth. When your software identifies such data, examine the evidence closely.

    Whether the source provides good, limited, or no information- write it down. Citing sources gives credibility to your research, helps others understand where you have been, and aids during your analysis.

    Read more great genealogy tips in Barry Ewell's book "Family Treasures: 15 Lessons, Tips, and Tricks for Discovering your Family History.

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  • Genealogy: Document Your Sources

    The following article is a sample from Barry J. Ewell's book "Family Treasures: 15 Lessons, Tips, and Tricks for Discovering your Family History." He is the founder of MyGenShare.com, an online educational website for genealogy and family history. 


    Do it right the first time! Whether the source is a newspaper, journal, court record, personal interview, letter, or church record, write everything down while you still have the source in your hands. The following are a few of the lessons I've learned about the value of documenting your sources:

    Sources you can rely on. No one has a perfect memory, and some sources will have worse memories than others. The only source you can rely on is an "official" one: birth, marriage, death documents, and other confirmable databases and indi¬ces. Even if information came from a relative, list their name. You want to stay as accurate as possible and leave a clear trail for others to follow. Not only will you know you have proof of your information, but others you share the information with will know it is factual, not just speculation.

    Sources establish credibility. Many genealogists pointed out that unless we are able to tell others where we obtain the information, all we are sharing is our opinion. Citing sources is essential to establishing credibility. If we have done a good job with our research, we can give others the ability to broaden and build upon the research already done and not have the same work rechecked over and over again.

    Write legibly. If you handwrite any information, write leg¬ibly. It doesn't pay to hurry and then not be able to read your own handwriting later. Where possible, I try to always get a photocopy or a photo of the key information I am capturing and then enter it into my genealogical program or record database.

    Checking sources allows for verification. Checking sources allows you to verify of spelling and dating and to report variations, and it also leads to more information. Relying on the expertise of others helps save time and energy. Create and maintain a record of what resource was checked, so that you don't waste time later. Likewise, some sources (books, newspapers, and so on) might be found at only a few locations. Include where these were in case you need to glean them again.

    How valuable is your time? Genealogists told experiences where they tried to pick up the trail of research from undoc¬umented records and spent weeks, months, or even years searching for the next clue, only to find out that the data they had was incorrect.

    Six elements of a good source citation. The six elements of a good source citation include author, title, publisher's name and location, publication date, location of the source and identifying information (library or archive where you found the info and its call number), and specific information for the piece of data you found (page number, line number, and so on).

    Read more great genealogy tips in Barry Ewell's book "Family Treasures: 15 Lessons, Tips, and Tricks for Discovering your Family History.


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