Buzz Rules
To Infinity and Beyond
- Joined
- Feb 7, 2005
Any new questions?
Ancestry will break down Paternal lines from Maternal Lines Can you contact some of the Maternal "cousins" and maybe one is willing to work with you. Worth a try.Buzz Rules,
Thank you for starting this thread and for all your information. You've generated many interesting conversations.
My question: I did the Ancestry DNA test to learn more about my Mother's origins as she was adopted. There have been many hits through Ancestry for cousins, 2nd cousins, 3rd cousins, etc. on the maternal line. I can differentiate the maternal and paternal lines because my father's family are rabid crazy genealogist LDS members and have research going back many generations.
I don't know how to use the maternal information I get on Ancestry. I thought I'd start with my mom's adoption records: I know my Mother's birthdate, year and location. How ought I proceed?
https://www.familysearch.org/en/wiki/England_Online_Genealogy_RecordsI traced mother's side back to 1654 arrival in Virginia from London - pretty sure he was an indentured servant because ship's captain was given 50 acres of land per person transported (the headright system). Family hung around Virginia wilderness for a couple of generations then moved south to NC, SC, GA and finally AR. Not sure if they were following frontier or what. Very sketchy records -a little military, some land records, one church minutes book. Like putting together a puzzle with missing pieces.
My dad's arrival is a bit more documented - French Huguenots who fled France in late 1600s. Went to Holland, eventually fought with William of Orange to defeat King James then were rewarded by King William in 1700-1701 with land outside of Richmond, VA. Again, sketchy records for a few years but they made their way down Virginia to western Tennessee where most settled.
I've tried half-heartedly to go further back on both but haven't found records in London, Holland or France. I need to get serious about it. Would also love to discover some of the missing pieces once they arrived but a lot of records were burned during wars.
Genealogy thread. Post questions on genealogy here. Genealogy is a hobby of mine, so if you need some tips just ask. If you have any tips, feel free to share.
Yes.I have a weird one (question), can I DM/PM you?
For whatever reason, it doesn't work. That said - it nudged me to google my question and I think I got the info I was looking for. No worries.Yes.
If records exist for the Medieval and Renaissance era, try to see the history of the places where your ancestors were last known to live if possible. If you have specific surnames from 1600's and before, try to see any relatable resources in Ancestry's catalog system specific to each country. If you have trouble finding information there, see if public trees of other family members on Ancestry hold any clues (keep in mind they may have mistakes in their tree unless you have verified information), you can also consider contacting an Ancestry expert. My two other recommendations are to contact the government offices in those countries that are closest to the regions where your ancestors came from and to get some updated genealogy tip books from the library or book store. I hope these tips help.Ancestry takes me back to 1600s and 1700s on some sides of the family. Some in Poland and others in Italy. Where do I go from there to find information that goes farther back from those regions?
Thank you for posting this. I think I might try to attend online. I‘m still a genealogy newbie but there are already some lines of my family tree where I could use some help figuring out where to go from here.Today is the first day to register for Rootstech Genealogy Conference! I attended virtually last year (it’s free!) and had so much fun that now I’m going in person this year.
https://www.familysearch.org/rootstech/home
I got some very good tips for working with DNA matches that helped with a few brick walls I had even though after three days my brain felt like mush lol
Thank you for thi info. Do you mean the online sessions are free?Today is the first day to register for Rootstech Genealogy Conference! I attended virtually last year (it’s free!) and had so much fun that now I’m going in person this year.
https://www.familysearch.org/rootstech/home
I got some very good tips for working with DNA matches that helped with a few brick walls I had even though after three days my brain felt like mush lol
Do you know what commonwealth nation the person would be a British subject of?Anyone know the names of the British armies of 1875 to 1895? Looking for the army(ies) a Commonwealth person would have served in.