The Importance of Documenting Your Family
Tree |
Why is it important that I document
my family tree?
When many people think about documenting their
research, they assume they are primarily helping
others. In fact, the experience of many long time
family history enthusiasts shows that the primary
beneficiary is...themselves!
Are you confident that you will remember 5
years from now that it was your aunt who told you
your great-grandmother had a half-brother named
Harold? Is there any chance you will forget either
that the birth date of your great grandfather was
estimated from information on muster roll, or
where you can find it again? The spirit of
documentation is encapsulated in the wise old
saying, "I have a great memory as long as I write
things down".
Furthermore, it is true that getting the names,
dates and locations of your ancestors is the
first, most important part of genealogy work. But
those things only provide a sketch, the merest
outline of who those people were, how they lived
their lives and what was important to them as
individuals.
Documentation captures the
details that color in the outline and breathe life
into a dry list of facts. For example, noting that
a birth location was discovered from a ship
manifest opens the door to studying more about the
specific ship and what life aboard was like.
OneGreatFamily allows you to preserve a
complete record of your ancestors, encompassing
facts like names, places and dates as well as add
to that record as more details become available to
you. You can also add enriching elements, like
photographs, videos, sound clips and scans of
documents. Most importantly, OneGreatFamily also
allows you to document all of your information.
Many of us haven't taken the time to document
the lives of our ancestors. OneGreatFamily not
only makes such efforts simple, but it will be
preserved for future generations as well as
instantly being available to other members of our
OneGreatFamily.
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OneGreatFamily Tip: Adding Documentation to
OneGreatFamily |
What types of documentation
information can I add to
OneGreatFamily?To add documentation to an
ancestor's record, simply open an Individual
Record in the Genealogy Browser. On the left side
you will see buttons for the different types of
documentation features:
Citations: Citations are references to
the specific evidence that you have found on an
individual during your research. Citations are
very important for establishing the credibility of
information, but they can also help others in
their research. The information you save in the
citations becomes part of OneGreatFamily and is
available to others to help with the collaborative
effort.
Citations are stored with each specific
individual's information. When you click the
citation button, you are presented with the
citation window containing listings for Individual
Sources, Birth Sources, Death Sources, Christening
Sources, and Burial Sources. These five categories
help to group citations for quick access. Be sure
you name your citations with a title that is
explanatory and easy to understand at a
glance.
Biography: Open the Biography window by
selecting the Biography icon. This section allows
you to insert files of three different formats:
text (txt), rich text format (rtf), or hyper-text
markup language (html). By allowing these
different file types, biographies on individuals
can be simple or stylized. You are also not
limited to just one file; you can make as many
files as you would like to include.
Notes: The Notes section is where you
store those extra bits of information that don't
seem to fit anywhere else, but are important
enough to keep. When editing an individual's
information, click on the notes button on the
right, represented here in the spot shadow. The
notes window will display, and you can add
information as needed.
Research Log: Research notes can be
extremely helpful to you and others working on the
same areas of genealogy. While doing your
research, leave yourself memos on recent
information you have found, where you have left
off, or anything that will help in the process.
These memos will be helpful for you, others in
your family group, and any others in
OneGreatFamily that are trying to further the
collaborative effort on research for that
person.
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Lisa Lights the Way |
Mortality Schedules by Lisa
South, Certified Genealogist
Mortality schedules can be very interesting. I
worked mostly in the South and saw disease listed
as the cause of many deaths. When I began checking
mortality in the western states I was a little
taken aback by the number of times a bullet wound
was listed as cause of death – no wonder they
called it the Wild West!
Mortality schedules were made in conjunction
with some of the federal census records.
Individuals who died in the twelve months before
the census date (usually June 1) were enumerated.
The information you will find in a mortality
schedule is usually the name of deceased, month
and cause of death, age, sex, color, marital
status and birthplace. The later schedules record
parents, birthplace and how long the deceased had
resided in the county of his/her death.
The first mortality schedule was taken in 1850
and continued until 1900; however the 1890
schedule was destroyed by fire and the 1900
schedule was destroyed by order of Congress after
they had compiled all the statistics. A
transcription of the 1900 mortality schedule of
Minnesota was discovered at the Minnesota
Historical Society and is the only known 1900
mortality schedule in existence for any state.
Mortality was also part of the Federal census in
1885 for Colorado, Florida, Nebraska and the
territories of South Dakota and New Mexico (see
OGF archives “Federal Census Records”
article).
Be aware that deaths were under-reported, some
believe by as much as 20-40% and that the recorded
information, just like any other census, is not
always complete or accurate.
Mortality schedules can not only provide you
with a death date, but can give you valuable
information about your family’s health history.
When an unusual cause of death is listed it may
lead you into other records, such as court records
etc.
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One Great Genealogy Site
Award |
Geneabios.com
Geneabios.com
is a free genealogy biography database with
biographies for your genealogy research. The site
also offers links to other online biography sites
to help you find your ancestors and surnames. The
links directory includes thousands of online
biography sites. You will find links to sites with
collections that contain numerous biographies in
each collection. You will also find links to
individual biographies as well. You can search for
your ancestors by entering a name or location, or
you can see a list of all genealogy biographies in
the database. The free genealogy database of
biographies is growing rapidly, so check it out
today!
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Managing Editor: Heather Matthews
Contributors: Heather Matthews, Lisa South
and Rob Armstrong Editor: Tracy
Armstrong | |
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