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eLearning Series: Geneology
My Family Tree is Important to Me
( 50 articles in this series )
Trace
Your Genealogy Using Church Records
Using church records to trace genealogical
information is a great resource that is rapidly being discovered
by those who are tracing their family tree information. Your
church or the church that your family belonged to in the past
may have extensive records. Many do.
The most well known church records for genealogy research
are those of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day
Saints,
the Mormons. The LDS church maintains extensive records and
several web sites, and you don’t have to be a member of their
church to access the records as they consider genealogy records
to be part of the mission of their church. They have a free
genealogy search engine, as well as links to many other sites
that can assist in research. Links include US, British and
Canadian census records online. The LDS church also offers
a free workbook for researchers and other tools either free
or at a very low cost that can prove helpful.
Many other churches also keep records
of membership, marriages, births, confirmation, baptism,
death, anniversaries and other
important events in the lives of their members. If your church
is part of a large denomination there may be a central record
center where this information is kept. If you or your family
belonged to a smaller church, you may have to visit the church
or write to the pastor to gain this information. Many times
the logs or journals of pastors will be passed down from one
to another. If logs or journals are not available, church records
will generally show attendance and that can help tremendously
in determining if your family members were at this particular
church during the specified time period.
In the country many churches have adjoining cemeteries and
extensive burial records. One family researcher has been known
to hang out at cemeteries reading the inscriptions on grave
stones looking for long lost relatives, and has had very good
results. Other researchers have had good luck with the records
of church affiliated organizations. As an example, the Knights
of Columbus is a Catholic organization for men that has been
around for a very long time and keeps records of membership.
This is a group formed to provide men of the parish with a
meeting place for fellowship and an organizational structure
for doing good works for the community.
The various rites of the Masonic Lodge has a similar goal
and has had affiliation with many Protestant churches and one
genealogic researcher discovered that most of her male ancestors
were members of a particular lodge, which led her to visit
that lodge and ask for help in finding records of her ancestors.
The lodge members were quite helpful. It turned out that in
the small community where the lodge was located most of the
members were also members of the same area churches, and many
of the records coincided. As fortune would have it, one of
the churches also had a nearby cemetery and she was able to
find the graves of many ancestors by visiting there, as well
as photographs of two grandfathers and two great grandfathers
who had been Lodge Masters during the years. This was a rare
find, and proved the value of checking with churches, cemeteries
and fraternal orders.
Family
bibles often have indispensable information, and while
most families keep possession of the family bible, some donate
them to churches. If this is the case, checking out the family
bibles of other families in the area can give clues to what
may have been going on with your own family around that time.
Of course, if your family is from a rural area there may be
less organization than would be found in a larger or older
city. Boston for instance is filled with churches and graveyards,
and most of them keep very good records. On the other hand,
a small town in Arizona may not have been settled that long
ago in the grand scheme of things and may not have records
that are as extensive. But, you never know until you check
it out, and part of family tree research is following leads
to see where they go. While one lead may dry out, it also may
split off and lead you in a different and more productive direction.
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by SolveYourProblem.com
: 2006
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