Flummoxed - Middle Period: Difference between revisions

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== Records Destroyed  ==
== Records Destroyed  ==


== Other Sources ==
= Use Alternate Sources =


The {{H:title|About 1600 to 1900| middle period}} also has much information from other sources:  
The {{H:title|About 1600 to 1900| middle period}} also has much information from other sources:  

Revision as of 20:04, 29 April 2011

Back to: Family History for the Flummoxed Flummoxed - Extending Family Lines

Note: This page is part of the Flummoxed series and made to help those who haven't found family history information in the usual places. More information about searching the usual places is on the Flummoxed - Extending Family Lines page.

Most Common Reasons[edit | edit source]

Records Not Yet In FamilySearch Collections[edit | edit source]

Religious Records[edit | edit source]

Religious organizations like parishes and synagogues worldwide are often on the Internet today. Contact them directly by email or by letter. Often they do not have set procedures for obtaining recent records, but most will try to help you find information about your immediate family members and direct ancestors in the middle period.

Governmental Vital Records[edit | edit source]

Governmental vital records were kept in some jurisdictions during the middle period. If they are not in the FamilySearch collections, then you must determine where the records are kept and how to access them:

  • Records still being kept by the original governmental jurisdiction. Instructions for getting vital records from the government agencies of most countries can usually be found easily on the Internet. Records from the middle period are often classified as "genealogical records" and available at a lower cost without providing verification of relationship. Example: Cook County Genealogy (Illinois).
  • Records moved to an archive. Laws and practices for archiving vary from jurisdiction to jurisdiction and country to country. It is common for older records to be move to an archive. Example: U.S. National Archives and Records Service.

Letter Writing Guides[edit | edit source]

If you need information from a foreign country, search this FamilySearch Wiki for "Letter Writing Guide" along with the name of the country in which you are searching.

Records Mis-Indexed[edit | edit source]

Perhaps the reason you haven't found your family is that someone along the line from the recorder to the records extractor made a typo. Wild cards and fuzzy searches are a searcher's best friend! Learn the proper use of wild cards like "*" and "?" in each search envirionment. Fuzzy means searching for inexact spelling. Soundex was the first fuzzy search mechanism, but now there are more sophisticated alternatives. Try going back to searching the usual places listed on the Flummoxed - Extending Family Lines page and using a variety of wild cards.

Records Never Existed[edit | edit source]

Even when record keeping was common or required during the middle period, it often did non happen. Here are some of the reasons:

  • Babies born at home were sometimes never reported. New York City reports, "Approximately 25% of all births prior to 1910 were not reported to the city. Births often took place at home and the doctor or midwife sometimes failed to report the event to the city."
  • Gaps exist when records were just not kept, particularly in religious records. Sometimes whole towns were devastated by war or disease. Sometimes there was simply no one there to make a record. Review reliable, published records inventories that cover the area you are searching.

Don't spend an inordinate amount of time searching for a single record because it may never have been created. Instead, move on to find other supporting evidence.

Records Destroyed[edit | edit source]

Use Alternate Sources[edit | edit source]

The middle period also has much information from other sources:

  • Local newspapers, including foreign language newspapers.
  • Other governmental records like census (not all areas), naturalization, license, land, and probate records.
  • Histories, genealogies, and collections available only through local libraries, societies, and archives.
  • The Internet is quickly acquiring older records, including digitized book collections from the middle period.