Template:AR Goal Parents: Difference between revisions

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*'''Tip:''' Search records of your ancestor's siblings
*'''Tip:''' Search records of your ancestor's siblings
:'''Why?'''
:'''Why?'''
::*Brothers and sisters had the same parents. Their records may have your answer
::*Brothers and sisters had the same parents. Their records may have your answer.
::*They or their children may have compiled a genealogy and included it in a local history or a genealogy database


Click for more tips
Click for more tips

Revision as of 16:08, 27 February 2014

Here are a few tips for learning the names of a person's parents:

Why?
  • Many types of records were created around a person's death
  • Death related records usually give birth and marriage information, clues leading to parents
  • Later records typically provide more information and clues
  • Death certificates ask for names of parents
  • Obituaries usually identify the parents
  • Tip: Search marriage records for your ancestor
Why?
  • Marriage records often give names of parents
  • The records usually exist from the time the county was formed
  • Tip: Find your ancestor in every census taken while he/she was alive
Why?
  • They may live with or near relatives
  • Relatives, such as parents, brothers, sisters, an aunt, or uncle, may live with them
  • Censuses 1880 and later tell the state or nation where the father and the mother were born
Why?
  • Wills and other probate records often give married names of daughters
    • Online or published indexes provide every-name searches
  • These records were kept from the time a county was formed
  • Tip: Search records of your ancestor's siblings
Why?
  • Brothers and sisters had the same parents. Their records may have your answer.

Click for more tips

Articles About Finding Parents[edit source]