Family Research - Bolster Your Research With This Special Technique

September 3rd, 2009

In the years that begin in the quest to build my family tree, he contacted more than once or twice by people who share common ancestors. The thrill of opening an email from someone who has information to share in the same line or a guarantee of the mine is a wonderful experience. Assistance in pushing forward the researcher should not be underestimated. So how to find his fellow researchers to contact you? 1. Enter the ancestors in a family tree online. I facilities on sites like Ancestry GenesReunited and download some of my ancestors, at the premises of the family tree provided by these sites. One advantage is that you do not give your email if you do not like the messages through the web site that lets you decide to contact the person or not. 2. Develop a simple website. This has been my most effective way to get contacts. I originally signed a free hosting site and just bought the domain name a few pounds / dollars a year. He then received a builder, free website that I need to know any HTML code, while working on a What-You-See-Is-What-You-Get way. I published a page with some data and photos on each branch, and added a picture of my tree very minimum, at least this time. As I became more competent that the lines are divided into several pages, one for each branch. When I went to see where my ancestors came, I took photos of their homes, workplaces, schools attended and so on. Next I published a couple of pages in a short story about the trip. He sent me links to my site on some websites that allowed me to do, for example, some forums if not a trading post. Finally, the search engine Google found my site and what has now become easier for the user looking to find Thorne, or Stephens or families of hay. And what about the threat of spam to any email that is published on the Internet? To keep my primary email to get tangled in the emails I've created a separate e-mail on my website, E. g @ name mydomain. com, adding a new identity in Outlook Express. Now I have two email addresses to keep my private off spammers. 3. Blogs Home. I decided to create a Wordpress blog on my existing site as an afterthought, but Blogger is an alternative that I have seen used. You may decide instead to add a blog to a website that you go in the direction of a blog in itself. For many this is the easiest way to get a Web presence. You are able to host the service provider's platform. Better yet, as to retain the copyright to publish everything, registering a domain name of your choice and get web hosting. Now all you need do is create the blog on your own website hosted. You do not need the other pages on the site if they wish. 4. Join social networking sites like Arcalife, or are related or ancestral Maps. Arcalife combines the ability to share genealogical connection. It was announced as a Facebook for family historians. Although not yet fully developed the signs are good. We are related is an application that is not supposed to be a full family tree software package, but has had several characteristics of this type included. The idea is that you're able to exchange basic research on the family with the person of their choice. This should help you find your friends in Facebook, stay with your family, build your family tree and share news and photos with your family. They hope that in future the application will allow us to share our memories of family ancestors, our family tree to compare with our friends on Facebook and see if we like. Ancient maps is a new and exciting website that allows the historian to trace the family events and places in the lives of their ancestors on maps. The idea is to share with other people who are members of the site. It appears that a site could become as useful as attracting new users. So if you want to accelerate their research and make contact with distant cousins, so I can not recommend enough of these strategies. The key is that the World Wide Web, has been much easier for us to make connections with other researchers, but for this you must configure a means for search and contact you. A word of warning: Do not take what is shared and publish it without asking. If someone has put in 20 years of family research and share with you the benefits of your work, you go and add it to your site without permission is a recipe for feeling bad and perhaps judicial proceedings. Thus the work of a distant relative may very well increase your ancestor search more quickly than by simply persevering along by itself, but keep in mind that a good family historian goes back to the source of any information given and not take for granted until they have found the births, marriages and deaths and census records for themselves and cited correctly in your family tree.

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