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February 6, 2012,
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Author:
kgallagh
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Categories:
Dead Ends in Family Tree Research, How to do a family tree
Tags: ancestor, ancestors, ancestry, archives.com, death records, family tree, family tree research, find maiden name, genealogy, great grandfather, great grandmother, maiden name, marriage records, multiple marriages, vital records, worldvitalrecords
Finding marriage records when your ancestor has been married multiple times can be a difficult task, specifically on the bride’s side. A woman who is married many times may very well go by many different last names over her lifespan. Every time she gets remarried, she is then married under her previous marriage’s last name. This can make it seem impossible to trace your ancestor back to find her maiden name! Here are a few hints to help you to [...]
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February 6, 2012,
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1 Comment,
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Author:
kgallagh
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Categories:
Eichelberger
Tags: ancestry, baden wuerttemberg, eichelberger, eichelberger family tree, evangelical lutheran church, family tree research, genealogy, grand duchy, Ittlingen, john frederick, lancaster pennsylvania, maria barbara, oath of allegiance, passenger list, philadelphia pennsylvania, rotterdam holland, wuerttemberg germany, york pennsylvania
Phillip Frederich Eichelberger was born on April 17, 1693 in Ittlingen, Heidelberg, Baden-Wuerttemberg, Germany. He was one of nine children born to parents John E. and Maria Barbara Eichelberger. He went by his full name while living in Germany and then by his middle name Frederick throughout his time in America. Share and Enjoy Facebook Twitter Delicious Digg Google Buzz StumbleUpon Add to favorites Email RSS
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February 6, 2012,
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Author:
kgallagh
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Categories:
General
Tags: ancestors, ancestral lines, family history, family tree research, family tree researchers, family trees, libraries and archives, research genealogy, research libraries, researching family, vital records, vital records indexes
Genealogy and researching family trees has become quite popular. Why the interest in tracing ancestral lines? This was not necessarily a popular hobby in the past. This can be seen by how difficult it can often be to track down your ancestors. Vital records were not kept formally by the government until recently and it is not altogether normal to find family trees all put together and complete from 100 or 200 years ago. Why then, has genealogy become so [...]
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February 3, 2012,
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Author:
kgallagh
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Categories:
General, How to do a family tree
Tags: ancestors, ancestry, birth and death, birth death, census records, death records, family tree, family tree research, family tree researchers, genealogy, military records, veteran status
A great resource for family tree researchers are census records. In the United States, we can access census records in some areas as far back as 1790 and currently as late as 1930. Census records remain sealed to the public for 72 years after they are taken. While early census records will often fail to provide too much information and often not even the names of anyone except the head of the household, later census records can provide a wealth of [...]
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February 2, 2012,
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Author:
kgallagh
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Categories:
Dead Ends in Family Tree Research, General
Tags: ancestry, birth records, family tree, family tree research, genealogy, marriage records, vital records
I recently did family tree research for someone who have very little information to start with. Her recently deceased mother had gone by many different names over time, had moved many times to multiple states, and had little to no communication with her family. She knew nothing about her mother’s side of the family and wasn’t even sure what her mother’s legal name was. With this sort of information to start off with, researching a family tree can seem like [...]
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