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Ten Tips to Start Your Family History Journey

Ten Tips to Jump Start your Family History Journey

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• Ten Tips to Start Your Family History Journey

The quality of our lives is affected by knowledge of our ancestors. Such knowledge gives us a sense of identity and personal responsibility that cannot come in any other way. As we come to know them and the strength and courage of their lives, we begin to emulate them. As we emulate them, we are bound to them. If this is true, is it not also true that our posterity will be so influenced by our lives? If we do not create records that document our lives, or that of our family, knowledge of who we are is lost within a generation or two. Without that knowledge our posterity becomes disconnected from their roots and the nourishment those roots provide.Elder Dennis Neuenschwander, It’s More Than About Names, Conference on Family History and Genealogy Brigham Young University, July 27, 2010

• Prayerfully choose a family or an individual ancestor to learn more about. Give special attention to individuals who need to have temple ordinances performed for them.

• Remember, this same process can be repeated and followed for gathering information about any of

your ancestors.

https://www.lds.org/bc/content/shared/content/english/pdf/language-materials/36795_eng.pdf?lang=eng

Or Google search – look for pdf link

Ten Tips to Start Your Family History Journey

• 1. Start your family tree

• Your memory is the most readily available source of information about your family. Record the names you can remember and the dates and locations of births, marriages, deaths, and other important events in the lives of your ancestors. You can write this information on family group records and pedigree charts or in a research notebook, or you can record it in the FamilySearch internet site. Be sure to verify your information by comparing it with information you find in other sources. Memories fade and are not always accurate.

• Your immediate family often holds the key to starting your family history research. Record the memories of your parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles, siblings, and cousins as you start exploring your family tree online. Ask each relative about specific individuals and gather details surrounding their lives including nicknames, places they lived, vital information (including birth, marriage, and death dates), occupations, and other important clues.

Ten Tips to Start Your Family History Journey

• 2. Search your home for scrapbooks

• Family scrapbooks often yield important clues for family history research. Examine your home for vital records (birth certificates, etc.), school records, family bibles, diaries and letters, old photographs, and memorabilia boxes that tell stories about your family.

A storage box from Brother B’s Archives

Gather Information from Home Sources

Your home is an important source of family history information. Spend some time looking for records that exist in your home. You may find:

• Family group records, pedigree charts, books of remembrance, or ancestral tablets.

• Family Bibles.

• Journals, diaries, and letters.

• Personal histories and life sketches.

• Family histories.

• Old photographs.

• Obituaries and newspaper clippings.

• Birth, marriage, and death certificates.

• Household registers and tribal registration papers.

Ten Tips to Start Your Family History Journey

• 3. Start with the family history basics

• Use your initial research for your first searches and then analyze your results to achieve a personal success strategy. Following the family history golden rules will help you become a more efficient researcher and hopefully lead to greater rewards in your family search.

Ten Tips to Start Your Family History Journey

• 4. Start your online family tree

• Build your online family tree to organize your results. Keeping your research and records organized is important as you continue to find new details related to your family. Enter important information, including names, dates, and places to build a solid foundation as you continue exploring your family history.

• Build your family tree with an online family tree explorer program

Ten Tips to Start Your Family History Journey

• 5. Start with a family story

• When building your family tree, identify a potential story about family that you are interested to begin exploring. Aim to uncover both newspaper archives and records relating to your family’s stories in your research.

• Stories can include immigration stories, religious conversion stories, military service (such as exploring World War I military service records), occupational stories (memories of a first paycheck or time spent as a Merchant Marine), educational memories (attending high school or college) or a family legend (being a descendant from a prominent individual in American history or confirm stories of a renegade ancestor with detailed criminal records).

• The following eleven pages are examples from Brother B’s archives.

Hi Mike,Sorry, I didn't communicate earlier about what I know of my great grandfather's (William Riley Barrett) Civil War rifle.

My father said he was told that his father, John Taylor Barrett, gave the rifle to the Daughter's of the Utah Pioneers (DUP) Museum. I made a visit there a couple of years ago to see if they had any record of the donation but they told me they did not. However, Anne tells me that the DUP Museum has been understaffed for years and does not have a great reputation for keeping complete and accurate records so it is possible the rifle was donated to them but not documented. They have several weapons there from the Civil War.

I have seen one account that claims the rifle was give to the "Civil War Veteran's":

He joined the confederate army at the beginning of the Civil War and fought in the Battle of Chauncervillewhere Stonewall Jackson was killed. The old musket he used was kept for years by his son John T. Barrett who finally turned it over to the Civil War Veterans.

I have no idea if this account is accurate - there is no Civil War Veterans organization in our vicinity that I know of and I find it unlikely my grandfather would have shipped the rifle back east. The historical excerpt above also reports that William Riley Barrett fought at the Battle of "Chauncerville" (Chancellorsville) which is incorrect. William Riley Barrett enlisted in the Army of the Tennessee, 45th Infantry Division, Company G in December of 1861 along with his uncle, Jeremiah Barrett. He saw action at Shilo, Murfreesborough, Lookout Mountain, Atlanta, etc. but not Chancellorsville. Based on my research, the 45th Tennessee Infantry division was not involved in that battle.

Several years ago, I was told by an aunt, who has since passed away, that she remembers the rifle being around their home when she was a child and she remembers picking it up at one point and being overwhelmed with how heavy it was. She didn't seem to know when the rifle was given away or to whom.

Unfortunately, I'm not aware of any photos that were taken of the rifle.

Bob

A river barge from the time of Brother B’s ancestors and a current photo of the countryside.

• North Carolina was the third most populous state in the Union in 1790, but by 1860 it had

dropped to twelfth in population. Hundreds of thousands of White North Carolinians fled the

state during those years, seeking cheap, fertile land in Tennessee, western Georgia,

Indiana, Alabama, Missouri, Mississippi, and other trans-Allegheny states and territories.

Thirty percent of North Carolina’s native-born population, amounting to more than four

hundred thousand persons, was living outside of the state in 1860.

• The migration west actually began before the Revolutionary War (1775–1783), as

adventurous North Carolinians followed Daniel Boone in search of new frontiers beyond the

mountains. After the war, veterans of the Revolution were rewarded with free land in

what became Tennessee.

One of his ancestor’s wills

Ten Tips to Start Your Family History Journey

• 6. Join the family history conversation

• Join a network of family historians both experienced and new on social networking resources (like findmypast's Facebook and Twitter) to make new connections and gain insight on how to expanding your family history resources.

• Staying tuned to the findmypast.com blog for latest record updates and podcasts (FamilySearch) to help expand your family history search. Read genealogy articles and watch youtube videos related to family history to start building your knowledge base of records and methods for tracing your family tree.

Use the FamilySearch Internet Site

The FamilySearch internet site, found at

new.familysearch.org, may already contain some

information about your ancestors. Review this information

at the beginning of your search to avoid duplicating work

that may already have been done.

Hi Adele,It was nice to talk to you again for a few minutes yesterday.

I had an opportunity to look again at the records for the two Robert Lee Barretts listed as sons for both Joab Lawrence Barrett and William Riley Barrett with two different PID numbers. Both Roberts show a son George Robert Barrett who, on closer inspection, appears to be the same individual. The spouses, however, for the respective Roberts are different - son of William Riley Barrett is shown as being married to Mary Ruth Smith while the son of Joab Lawrence Barrett is married to Margaret Daley. The birth dates are different for the two Roberts but the death dates and locations are the same - (Salt Lake City, UT). It appears the records have definitely been mixed up with some correct information being attached to the wrong individuals.

I noticed in the 1870 Federal Census that Joab and Amanda had a son Lee listed as 8 years old and, as I believe you indicated, a son Wm listed as 10 years old. I assume, as you do, that the 10-yr old is George Washington Barrett -"Buddy."

I'm not sure what happened to the 8-year old son Lee - I am not able to identify him as Robert Lee in any records I've come across. A marriage record for "Margret Daley" indicates she married a Lee Barrett in Franklin, TN on 17 August 1882. I wonder if this is Lee, the son of Joab (1870 census) or another Lee. At any rate the 1882 marriage date is the same date attached to Robert Lee Barrett and Margaret Daley in Family Tree though the location is listed as Wilson, Tennessee instead of Franklin, Tennessee.

There is definitely some work to do to clean up the records for these two Roberts (if they were both, in fact, Roberts).

Let me know if you would like to communicate via email and I will address some of the other questions we discussed in subsequent messages. I am also happy to communicate via regular mail if that works better for you.

Best,

Robert

Ten Tips to Start Your Family History Journey

• 7. Search the U.S. census

• The U.S. Federal census is the largest resource for family history and is a solid starting place for examining your family tree. Starting with the newly released 1940 US census, trace parents and grandparents through the census, recording their names, ages, birthplaces, immigration details, occupations, and residences as your build out your family tree.

• US Census - Search the US Census starting in 1790.

• Brother B shared censuses from his family tree and how they shed light on the family and aided further research.

Ten Tips to Start Your Family History Journey

• 8. Search one family story at a time

• Focus on one or two families at a time to help organize your research and increase your productivity. Select one or two families that interest you, rather than trying to tackle your entire family tree at once. Spend time gathering information and documenting your family in small pieces as you work towards the larger goal of filling out your family tree.

• Learn how to then "connect the dots" by following family members on their journey to America through the U.S. census, passenger lists and naturalization papers.

“My earliest recollection was of my father’s plantation of cleared fields, of waving corn, and, best of all, the wild woodlands of beautiful hardwood trees and magnificent cedars of immense size.” John J Barrett

“When I was about eight years old I fell into an open well and drowned. I remember being met by a messenger and told I needed to return to earth as it was not my time and there was still much to be done. I awoke to find myself all wet and lying on a board. My mother was weeping over me.” John T Barrett Life Sketch on 67th Birthday, Feb. 17, 1946

Ten Tips to Start Your Family History Journey

• 9. Gather materials from relatives

• Your relatives will likely have important resources in their homes that can assist your search. Family bibles, letters, certifications, and other important materials might be only a phone call away. Some family members might have old genealogical information from other relatives who have also worked on the family history that can help jumpstart your search or add information to what you may already have.

Louise Matilda Caroline Dahl, John Taylor Barrett (near drowning victim), Charlotte and Ellen (twins)

I thought you might find the following of some interest. During our visit, with Richard he showed me a book he had, History's Apprentice; The Diaries of B H Roberts - 1880-1898.

On p 48 the following is recorded:

(September 4, 1881) We had benches fixed up under Bro. Gwyn's mill-shed and a good congregation came to hear. Bro. Ford spoke first and I followed -had a good liberty.

In the afternoon I baptized W(illia)m Barrett, Benj(amin) Bright, Mrs. S. C. Vaughan, Henietter Bottoms, and S. Daniels. Elder Jos. Ford and myself confirmed them members of the Church.

In the footnotes is the following:

William R. Barrett was a thirty-eight-year-old sawyer living in Wilson County with his twenty-nine-year-old wife, C. V. and their seven children.

* C. V. = Charlotte Varshti

I have also visited with a cousin, Adele, who provided this additional background:

Hi Bob,

What an interesting journal entry! Bro Gwyn would be Rhoda's brother-in-law George Washington Gwyn, who operated a saw mill. He joined the Church also, in fact he and his wife actually came to Utah to receive their endowments. He returned to Tennessee, however, and only part of his family was in the Church. It was he that I mentioned, along with Joseph Lewis Gwynn, who also provided safe haven for the missionaries.

If you look at the 1880 Census for Andrew Jackson Barrett, you will find him working at the saw mill and in the household of GW Gwyn, George Washington. Next up the page is Jane Gwyn, his mother, who was also baptized by BH Roberts and came to Utah where she died in Salt Lake City. It is my understanding that the Elder Jos. Ford in the journal entry was from Centerville (as was BH). Fun connections. Thanks for sharing. (I wonder if BH mentioned baptizing Jane.)

It was good to visit with you and your daughter. You have amassed such a large quantity of interesting documents and photos. I really think the information about John A. incarcerated is our John. How did the proceedings wind up clear up in Virginia though--am I remembering right?

Adele

Sawmill operated by the Oliver family – in-laws of the Barretts

B H Roberts disguised as a vagabond, going to claim the bodies of Elders Gibbs and Berry. (1884)

Journal of John Taylor Barrett

Death of Charlotte Varshti Herron, April 25, 1901

Thursday: 4/25 At Home. Mamma very bad – I quite restless and uneasy. Papa went with Dr. and got some medicine. When he returned I was with Mamma. At 15 of 11 AM Mama, dear darling one, passed from this existence to a glorious beyond. I was at her side and saw her go, the only one there. Papa was having something to eat. Oh! how our hearts do ache – no power can tell the anguish and pain but we alone can feel it, not express it. I and Jake and another man brought Mamma down to the front room downstairs and the undertaker came. Jos. W. Taylor attended to her with the other man. Also Mrs. Lloyd and Clements were very handy and kind. Sudie and Tuzz came at 11 AM. Papa went to Lee’s and to the Tithing Yard and told Sam. I and Tom went and saw about a grave and lot in the City Cemetery. I and Tom also went to E. M. Creek and notified Bro. Fisher’s folk and Bro. King’s folk also. All astonished and overwhelmed with sorrow. A sorrowful day. I was at Nora’s overnight.

Friday: 4/ 26 At home. Preparing all day for the funeral which was held in the house 815 Spruce at 4 PM. Bishop Atwood was present. Bro. James McGhie and Bros. N. V. Jones, J. T. Pry, and Wm. R. Knight spoke. The house was filled to overflowing and yard was full also. The grave was dedicated by Bro. Jno. Hafen. At Nora’s. Papa at Lee's.

William Riley Barrett

Original photo of Bothilda Yorgason

Cleaned up and enhanced copy of BothildaYorgason photo

Botilda (Matilda) Yorgason (Sorensdotter) 1840-1858

Lars Nilsson 1826-1892

Hi All,Here is a picture of Grandma's older sister Matilda/Botilda Yorgason.

Richard and Elise LaJeunesse had the photo framed and on their living room wall. They thought it was our grandmother Louise - not sure why - but the hairstyle and dress seem to be the wrong generation. Maybe Aunt Ellen wrote on the back that it was Louise - (she often guessed at who photos were). Elise and Richard said they rescued the photo from a trash heap after Aunt Ellen died.

Botilda was one of the twin sisters to Ellen Yorgason (there are several various spellings of the surname) and married Lars Nilson (Larson) in Keokuk, Iowa in 1856 shortly after her family arrived there. Lars was the missionary that brought the gospel to the Yorgason family in Sweden. Unfortunately, Botilda died shortly after arriving in Salt Lake while giving birth to their first child, Niels Larson. The infant son also died shortly after being relocated to Spanish Fork and Nilson married a cousin of the Yorgason's, PernillaYorgason.

There is a longer history listed for him on FamilySearch Family Tree as well as a variation of the attached photo I posted there of his wife Botilda.

FYI - I have quite a lengthy history of the Dorius missionaries (brothers from Denmark) who brought the gospel to the Dahls in Norway if you are interested at some point. Their father was on the same ship coming to America as Grandpa Dahl and his brother Christian who died of cholera and was buried at Mormon Grove.

The light fixture from their grandparents’ home.

Ten Tips to Start Your Family History Journey

• 10. Find a Family History Society

• Connect with other genealogists and family historians through a local genealogical society or family history event in your area. You can also post questions to findmypast's facebook online for others to answer when you need help with your research. Attending local classes about family tree research, family history records, and how to avoid brick walls is an important step to finding answers for beginners and advanced genealogists alike.

• Visit the Federation of Genealogical Societies (FGS) Society Hall to find a family history society in your area.

• Become active on FamilySearch.org

Using the FamilySearch Internet Site

Family history information may be handwritten or recorded by computer, but before temple ordinances can be done for your ancestors, their information must be entered into the FamilySearch internet site at new.familysearch.org. When your family history information is entered into this site, the system will: • Show what information has already been gathered about your family. • Show which temple ordinances have been completed and which ordinances need to be done. • Provide a way for you to print Family Ordinance Request forms that can be taken to the temple. • Allow other researchers to use your family history information to help them in their research. • Help you find and communicate with extended family members who are also searching for your ancestors.