Skip to main content

Home/ Genealogy Research Resources/ Group items tagged genealogy

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Moultrie Creek

PhpGedView News - Online genealogy at its best - 0 views

  • PhpGedView is a revolutionary genealogy program which allows you to view and edit your genealogy on your website. PhpGedView has full editing capabilities, full privacy functions, can import from GEDCOM files, and supports multimedia like photos and document images. PhpGedView also simplifies the process of collaborating with others working on your family tree. Your latest genealogy information is always on your website and available for others to see.
  •  
    Online application to post, edit and manage a genealogy database on a web site.
Sarah Smith

Ancestor Search | Free Genealogy Search Engines | Find your family ancestry & build a f... - 0 views

  •  
    Begin your genealogy search here! Search genealogy databases to help find ancestors & trace your family tree.
Michael Hait

African-American Genealogy Examiner receives Kreativ Blogger award - 0 views

  •  
    Robyn Smith, of the "Reclaiming Kin" blog, has awarded the African-American Genealogy Examiner with the "Kreativ Blogger" award. This award was created by Hulda Husfrue, a Norwegian arts & crafts blogger on 5 May 2008. [Please note that her site is in Norwegian but you can translate the page using Google Translate.] From these humble beginnings the award has spread like wildfire, and the Geneablogger community regularly recognizes their favorite peers with this award.
Michael Hait

The African American Genealogy Examiner: 2009 Year in Review - 0 views

  •  
    As we near the end of the year 2009, the African American Genealogy Examiner would like to look back and remember the accomplishments of the past year.
Michael Hait

Are census records reliable for genealogy research? - 1 views

  •  
    Over the last six months, this column has discussed the "Anatomy" of the federal census for the years from 1870-1930, not including the mostly-destroyed 1890 census. In this series of articles, each column of the census questionnaire was examined, and clues that will aid your research were discussed. If you have missed any of these articles, you can read them again using the links below: Anatomy of the 1930 federal census Anatomy of the 1920 federal census Anatomy of the 1910 federal census Anatomy of the 1900 federal census Anatomy of the 1880 federal census Anatomy of the 1870 federal census In a discussion concerning the federal census as evidence for genealogical research, however, one must also consider the question: are census records reliable sources?
Michael Hait

The basics of Y-DNA testing for genealogy - 1 views

  •  
    From CSI to The Maury Povich Show, DNA and DNA testing has become a part of American popular culture. But what is DNA?\nIn simple terms, DNA is a string of proteins that contain coded blueprints for our bodies. It tells our bodies how to grow. We inherit our DNA from our parents, which is where its genealogical value comes in.
anonymous

Regional Genealogical Societies in Australia | Quazen - 0 views

  •  
    Genealogical Societies in Australia.
TK Sand

CuriousFox UK genealogy message boards - villages, towns, local history, UK maps - 4 views

  •  
    "The village by village contact site for anybody researching family history, genealogy and local history in the UK and Ireland. Every UK county, town and village has a page for family history, local history, surname and genealogy enquiries. Use the search box to find your village or town." CuriousFox was created in August 2002. The aim was to provide a resource for finding and identifying the myriad of UK villages, and allow genealogists, family history and local history researchers to make contact and share knowledge at a village level.
Sandy Johnson

USGenNet. The First and Only Nonprofit Historical-Genealogical Web Hosting Service on t... - 15 views

Price Gen

His Parents - Price & Associates Genealogists3 - 2 views

  •  
    Professional Genealogy Blog: LIFE WITH HERMAN - His Parents Herman was born 17 June 1906 in Christopher, Franklin County, Illinois to Joseph Steinbuchel (Steinbeigle) and Elizabeth Ann Wallwork. Both parents were immigrants with Joseph arriving from Germany around 1883 as a young boy of about five, and Elizabeth "Lizzie" arriving 6 June 1887, about 9 years old, on the ship Alaska. Elizabeth came with her mother, Jane, brothers Joseph and George and sister, Victoria. Their father, Joseph Wallwork, came a month later in July. - Continue Reading Here: http://www.pricegen.com/life-with-herman-his-parents/
Price Gen

His Parents - Price & Associates Genealogists - 1 views

  •  
    Professional Genealogy Blog: LIFE WITH HERMAN - His Parents Herman was born 17 June 1906 in Christopher, Franklin County, Illinois to Joseph Steinbuchel (Steinbeigle) and Elizabeth Ann Wallwork. Both parents were immigrants with Joseph arriving from Germany around 1883 as a young boy of about five, and Elizabeth "Lizzie" arriving 6 June 1887, about 9 years old, on the ship Alaska. Elizabeth came with her mother, Jane, brothers Joseph and George and sister, Victoria. Their father, Joseph Wallwork, came a month later in July. - Continue Reading Here: http://www.pricegen.com/life-with-herman-his-parents/
Craig Manson

Jamaican Family Search Genealogy Research Library - 0 views

  •  
    This Jamaica, West Indies, genealogical research site contains transcriptions from various documents for 1655 to 1947 (and a few to 1993), including nineteenth century Jamaica Almanacs (which list property owners and civil and military officials), the complete text of "Monumental Inscriptions of the British West Indies" written in 1875 by J. H. Lawrence-Archer, Jamaica Directories for 1878, 1891 and 1910, extractions from Jamaican Church records, Civil Registration and Wills, and excerpts from newspapers, books, and other documents. It includes images, a Glossary, Historical Background, and other Utilities to aid in putting this information into focus. New information is added constantly, thus creating a virtual genealogy library for those researching Jamaican families. Here you will come across people from all walks of life: large landowners and paupers, slave and free, knights, gentlemen, laborers, seamen, soldiers, lawmakers and lawbreakers. They all left their imprint in the Jamaican records. Facts come to light, and skeletons jangle in the closet. The colors of people mentioned in the Registers, and the variety of people found here, reflect the island motto, "Out of Many, One People."
Moultrie Creek

Genealogy Resources | Diigo Group - 0 views

  •  
    A Group committed to finding and discussing the strengths and weaknessess of the available genealogical resources.
Julie Cahill Tarr

GenClass - 0 views

  •  
    Genealogy classes online.
Cheryl Rothwell

OneSource Comprehensive Directory Index: Family Genealogy and History Internet Educatio... - 0 views

  •  
    Complete alphabetical listing of all Family Genealogy and History Internet Education Directory pages.
Moultrie Creek

Emigrants from Drenthe - 0 views

  •  
    This site uses a database containing genealogical information on emigrants from the Dutch province of Drenthe, which was compiled by researcher Arend Everts from Hoogeveen. He searched the 1840-1930 census records of all towns in this province and several towns in the provinces of Groningen and Overijssel for 'departed persons'. The data was then checked against information from the archives of Pella, Iowa, Holland, Michigan and Grand Rapids, Michigan. In addition to the emigrant indexes (passenger lists 1820-1880 and American census records 1850-1870) published by Robert Swieringa, 'Emigrants from Drenthe' aims to be a handy resource for genealogical research.
‹ Previous 21 - 40 of 1629 Next › Last »
Showing 20 items per page