Identify What You Know
Step 1: Identify What You Know.
Start by reviewing what information you already know. Record that information on appropriate forms and keep your records organized.
By the end of step one you should have:
- Facts and information recorded on family group records, pedigree charts, and if desired in personal and family history notes.
- Organized copies of documents and family memorabilia.
Use Appropriate Forms
Begin by carefully recording and organizing your information so important facts and clues will not be lost. To help record the information you already know about family members, you may want to use forms including family group records, and pedigree charts designed for this purpose. Using forms familiar to other researchers assures that they will understand the information you have found. The following forms, used by most researchers, can be purchased at genealogical stores, the Family History Library, Family History Centers, and most genealogical libraries:
Family Group Record
Family group records are forms with space to record information about the parents and children in one family. There is space for dates and places of births, marriages, deaths, and sources. You may need additional pages for large families. While modern family group records are usually letter size, other sizes such as legal size have been common in the past and can still be used. See the accompanying example. File:Family Group Record
Researchers make a blank family group record for each couple on the pedigree chart. A four-generation pedigree chart has seven couples, so you could make up to seven family group records.
For a person who married more than once, make another family group record for each additional marriage, especially if the marriage produced children.
Pedigree Chart
Most pedigree charts, sometimes called “Ancestor” or “Lineage” Charts, have space for four or five generations (parents, grandparents, and great-grandparents.) There is space for dates and places of birth, marriage, and death. See the nearby example. Ancestral lines can continue onto other charts.