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Family Research - Bolster Your Research With This Special Technique

Author: Nick Thorne

In the years since starting out in this quest to build my family tree, I have been contacted on more than one or two occasions by people who share common ancestors. The excitement of opening an email from someone who has information to share, on the same or a collateral line to mine, is a wonderful experience. The help in propelling the researcher forward should not be underestimated. So how do you get your fellow researchers to make contact with you?

1.Enter your ancestors into a family tree on-line. I have used the facility at websites such as GenesReunited and Ancestry to upload some of my ancestors into the family tree facilities provided by these sites. A benefit here is that you don't have to give out your email if you don't want to, as you get messages via the website that allows you to decide to contact the person or not.

2. Set up a simple website. This has been my most effective way of receiving contacts. Initially I signed up for a free website hosting and simply purchased the domain name for a few pounds/dollars a year. I then got a free website builder that didn't need me to know any HTML code as it worked in a What-You-See-Is-What-You-Get manner. I posted a page with a few facts and some photographs on each branch and added a picture of my very minimal, at least that time, tree. As I grew more proficient I split the lines into several pages, one for each branch. When I went to see the places, from where my ancestors had come, I took photographs of their houses, places of work, schools that they had attended and so on. Next I published some pages in a short narrative about the trip. I then posted links to my site on a few websites that allowed me to do this, for example some forums will if it is not a commercial post.Eventually the Google search engine found my website and so now it has become easier for surfers to find it when looking for Thorne, or Stephens or Hay families. So what about the threat of spam to any email address that is published on the Internet? In order to prevent my main email becoming bogged down with spam I set up a separate email on my website domain, e.g name @ mydomain. com and then added a new identity in outlook express. I now have two email addresses so keeping my private one away from the spammers.

3. Get blogging. I chose to set up a Wordpress blog on my existing website as an add on, but Blogger is an alternative that I have seen used. You may decide that, instead of adding a blog to a website that you go down the route of a blog on its own. To many this is the simplest way to get a web presence. You are able to host it on the blog provider's platform. Better still, as you retain the copyright for anything you publish, register a domain name of your choice and get some web-hosting. Now all you need to do is set up the blog on your own hosted website. You don't need to have other pages on the site if you don't want to.

4. Join social networking sites like Arcalife, or We're Related, or Ancestral Maps.

Arcalife combines the ability to share family trees with connectivity. It is heralded as a facebook for family historians. While it is not fully developed yet the signs are good.

We're Related is an application that is not meant to be a full featured family tree software package, though it has got several features of that kind included. The idea is that you are able to exchange basic family research with anybody of your choice.This should allow you to find your relatives on Facebook, keep up with your family, build your family tree and share news and photos with your family. They hope that in the future the application will allow us to share memories about ancestors with our family, compare our family tree with our friends on Facebook and so to see if we are related.

Ancestral Maps is an exciting new website that allows family historians to plot events and locations relating to your ancestors' lives on maps. The idea is to then share these with others who are members of the website. It sounds like it could grow into a most useful site as it attracts new users.

So if you want to speed up your research and make contacts with distant cousins then I can't recommend enough these strategies. The bottom line is that the world wide web has made it much easier for us to make connections with fellow researchers but to do this you need to set up a means for them to find and contact you.

A word of warning: Never take what is shared and publish it without asking. If someone has put in 20 years research on their family and shares with you the benefit of their work, for you to go and add it to your website without their permission is a recipe for ill-feeling and perhaps legal proceedings.So a distant relation's work may well boost your ancestor research more rapidly than just by plodding along by yourself, but keep in mind that a good family historian will go back to the primary source of any information given and will not take it as read until they have found the births, marriages and death or census records for themselves and cited them properly in their family tree.

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