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the
following are some of the best FREE resources
on the web
ALL TYPES OF RECORDS
- FamilySearch
(LDS) Includes the Ancestral File, the IGI, Pedigree Resource File,
Social Security Death Index, Index to the U.S. 1880 Census, 1880 Census
of Great Britain, and 1881 Census of Canada, as well as the
catalog
to the Family History Library at Salt Lake (whose film can be
borrowed at the local Family History Center) . The newly added
Family Search Research Wiki's
are now available for countries and states and give detailed help for
any locale you are researching.
Family search has begun indexing and scanning original documents at
FamilySearch Labs!
- HeritageQuest
is available to patrons of the North Central Regional Library System
(Washington State). They have all U.S. census (though all is not indexed),
Rev. War Pensions, many family histories and county
histories etc. If you don't have the password call the public library
or the family history library in East Wenatchee for help. If you
are reading this outside of the NCRW service area call your local library
and see if they (or anyone in your area) provides access to HQ.
HeritageQuest has access to thousands of books but the search engines is
very clunky. If you pull up a book that looks interesting go to
the table of contents and see if it has an index or further help to get
around within that book.
- U.S. GenWeb Project
- Portal to the State & County Pages. The project is also in
the process of building a new
GenWeb Search portal
where you may search an entire state's GenWeb pages in one place.
- U.S.
GenWeb Archives - Choose state and county.
Material is donated by volunteers and some counties are very rich in
resources; others are lean.
CENSUS
- HeritageQuest
has ALL U.S. Census though some are not indexed [see above for how to
use HQ at home]. If you need census that is not indexed go to
the search screen and click BROWSE. It will put you through a
series of questions - what year? what state? what county? what township?
and you will eventually have the township you are after to look page
by page.
For census that is indexed make sure you click the advanced search
tab for the best search options.
-
FamilySearch Labs
will eventually have all census for free. Check their directory to
see what is currently finished and available.
- Census
Online is a directory to census that has been transcribed
or had images uploaded on various websites throughout the web
GEDCOM DATABASES - RESEARCH SUBMITTED BY OTHERS
- WorldConnect
(Rootsweb)
there are many more on the Gedcom
Research page and our Finding
Other Researchers page
GEOGRAPHIC HELP
- David
Rumsey Map Collection has beautiful historical
maps. You probably do not want to use them on a dial-up connection (too
long to load) and the site is a bit difficult to navigate but worth
the effort.
-
GNIS Geographic Names Database - put in those creeks and
it will tell you where they were!
- RootsWeb
Town Search - put in the town and state and it will tell you
what (current county) its in
- U.S.
County Formation Maps 1643-Present
Much more help on the
Finding Places page
IMMIGRATION RESOURCES
Ancestry has become
the best place to look for passenger lists as they have growing indexes
AND the images themselves to many of the records for the ports of Baltimore,
Boston, NY, New Orleans and Philadelphia.
outside of Ancestry:
- Bremen
Passenger Lists 1920-1939
-
Ellis Island Search
- Immigrant
Ships Transcriber's Guild
- Finding
Passenger Lists & Immigration Records 1820s-1840s
- has great information to help as does this guide to
the Hamburg
Passenger Lists. This guide
to interpreting Passenger Lists is also handy
-
U.S. Ports of Arrival & Their Available Immigration Records
is a directory that should not be missed
- Canadian
Immigration Records gives a good overview
for those with families who bought fare to Canadian ports
LAND RECORDS
-
Bureau of Land
Management Federal Land Patent Search
which now also has an original
survey search
LIBRARY FINDER
-
Switchboard Library Search
- put in your town, state and click the link in the right hand corner
that says BY DISTANCE. A box will appear where you
can choose a radius of 10 miles, 3 miles etc. When you search it will
pull up every library within that distance with name, address, phone
number.
Much more help on the Libraries
& Archives Page
MESSAGE BOARDS
-
GenForum
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RootsWeb.com The
largest volunteer driven genealogy network on the web. Among other options
you may
search mailing lists
search message
boards
MILITARY RECORDS
-
1840
census of pensioners
- Civil
War Soldiers & Sailors System
- HeritageQuest
has ALL scanned images of Revolutionary War Pension packets
-
Military
Record Databases from the National Archives
for a more complete listing of military resources see the
military records page
NEWPAPER RECORDS
- Nettizen's
Online Newspaper Directory is a directory to all currently
published newspapers everywhere
-
Newspaper Abstracts
- articles sent in by volunteers; small but growing fast
-
For Historical Newspapers try the state library for the state you
are researching or go to Google and do a search using terms like
Illinois Newspapers Microfilm.
Most collections will appear with directories to what newspaper was
published when and whether or not it can be interlibrary loaned.
You can help out your local librarian if you print this information out.
You might also email the local library in the town where grandpa lived
and simply ask "if I borrow this film for this time period am I likely
to find obits?" They will usually know if the early papers were
good about having the kind of information you are after and help save
everyone time and effort.
VITAL & CEMETERY RECORDS
-
Help finding marriages online
-
Death Records Online
is a directory to death records both
at state level and also smaller databases (i.e. county databases)
-
Find-A-Grave is fast becoming the first place to look for a
cemetery record. You may search by cemetery or person and if you register
you can contribute your own records as well as biographies, obituaries,
pictures etc.
- FuneralNet
will help you find funeral homes throughout the U.S.
-
ObitsArchives indexes newspaper
obits in recent years (1987 to present). It costs $2.95 to get the actual obit from them
however it tells you what newspaper it is in and when. Google that newspaper
and check to see if it is already available free of charge.
- Vital
Records.com for the United States tells
you where to send for birth, marriage & death records state by state.
Make sure you check the county links for the state you choose because
some counties can provide uncertified copies cheaper and be sure to
check the outstanding
state resources pages to make sure what
you are after is not already online
Much more help on the Vital
Records Page
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