I’ve been doing a little research into my family through FindAGrave.com and it got me interested in a pretty serious genealogy project. I’m planning on making a binder for each one of my great grandparents, since they are the oldest living family I ever got to meet, and branching out from there.

I was wondering if there were other free resources to track down some info. I know I can do a free trial on Ancestry.com and I plan on that once I get all my ducks in a row, so I can maximize my free trial.

I’d prefer online resources. I’m well aware I can go to my library or township halls to get info. I’m looking for stuff I can find when I’m just sitting around at home.

      • chicory [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        2 months ago

        familysearch.org is great. Once you have your grandparents entered it will pretty much fill in the rest of your tree. I was shocked.

        Also they tell you during the registration that it doesn’t come with any religious baggage, and they aren’t lying. I have been on there for awhile and haven’t gotten any sort of proselytizing emails or anything.

          • dannoffs [he/him]@hexbear.net
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            2 months ago

            Why the fuck do the Mormons have a picture of my great-great-great grandma who died in 1901 in a rural Kentucky town she never left?

            Edit: holy shit it goes back to 1527 on my father’s side.

              • dannoffs [he/him]@hexbear.net
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                2 months ago

                Like the 1910s?

                My mom’s side only goes back one generation before immigrating out of Poland, but I did some more poking around and on my Dad’s side I was able to go back to 1455. How much info they have probably varies a lot based on where your family is from. My dad’s side is all southern German and swiss so it makes sense that the Mormons would have a lot of that information.

                • NewLeaf@hexbear.netOP
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                  2 months ago

                  No, like the year 15.

                  To be fair, it’s really in the weeds as far as a direct line to me, but still neat. I found out just how much of a colonizer my family used to be. If you go back far enough, I’m related to a Mayflower passenger, pretty directly. Go back even further, but a bit afield of my direct line and I can find royalty from France and England before they were France and England, respectively

                  Obviously record keeping can be dodgy, but it’s still pretty neat that people can find connections that far back.

  • OgdenTO [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    2 months ago

    Yeah it’s wild how much the Mormons have, there’s something about their religion and knowing genealogy so it’s all tied together.

    It is free, though, and useful. They also have deals with a lot of local library systems to provide even better access to the actual (digitized) documents that they just hint at through the regular free version. Like if I go to my library I can get copies of the actual images of the records for free instead of relying on the text only (which can sometimes have errors)

    • BakedBeanEnjoyer@hexbear.net
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      2 months ago

      Yeah it’s wild how much the Mormons have, there’s something about their religion and knowing genealogy so it’s all tied together.

      They believe in Baptism of the dead. So if your great great great great great great ancestor was a Native American, you can make them an honorary Mormon.