Genealogy has taken such a hold over the past decade that it is just conceivable
somebody, somewhere has already started the task of researching your family his
tory. Some of these people will be relatives. Unless you are pathologically ill-
disposed towards family reunions it can be exciting to make contact with distant
relatives who share the same ancestors, tribal memories and cleft chin as you.
Sharing some of the tasks and the outcome of genealogical research can be effici
ent and satisfying, too, and will certainly help you to build a wider picture of
the family you are researching. If you want to find out whether a relati
ve you have lost touch with, but who may be able to help you with your research
is online, you can try looking for them through an e-mail address database such
as www.bigfoot.com or through Yahoo!'s People Search at www.yahoo.com. Pe
rsonal web pages You may be able to find relatives simply by typing your
family name into a search engine. There has been a proliferation of personal web
sites over recent years. Some of them have dreadful music, "amusing" animations
and/or photographs, and are really no more than an electronic version of those l
etters some people send out to their friends and relations at Christmas ("Gervas
e continues to surprise us all with his success at school and Valerie is still h
aving problems with her feet"). But some are genuinely informative. Cyndi's List
has a page of links to personal web pages (www.cyndislist.com/personal.htm).
P> Databases of names You can also look for relatives using some of the
databases that are available online. These work just like those lists of names
at the back of magazines, such as Family History Monthly and Family Tree Magazin
Genealogy has taken such a hold over the past decade that it is just conceivable
somebody, somewhere has already started the task of researching your family his
tory. Some of these people will be relatives. Unless you are pathologically ill-
disposed towards family reunions it can be exciting to make contact with distant
relatives who share the same ancestors, tribal memories and cleft chin as you.
Sharing some of the tasks and the outcome of genealogical research can be effici
ent and satisfying, too, and will certainly help you to build a wider picture of
the family you are researching. If you want to find out whether a relati
ve you have lost touch with, but who may be able to help you with your research
is online, you can try looking for them through an e-mail address database such
as www.bigfoot.com or through Yahoo!'s People Search at www.yahoo.com. Pe
rsonal web pages You may be able to find relatives simply by typing your
family name into a search engine. There has been a proliferation of personal web
sites over recent years. Some of them have dreadful music, "amusing" animations
and/or photographs, and are really no more than an electronic version of those l
etters some people send out to their friends and relations at Christmas ("Gervas
e continues to surprise us all with his success at school and Valerie is still h
aving problems with her feet"). But some are genuinely informative. Cyndi's List
has a page of links to personal web pages (www.cyndislist.com/personal.htm).
P> Databases of names You can also look for relatives using some of the
databases that are available online. These work just like those lists of names
at the back of magazines, such as Family History Monthly and Family Tree Magazin
e. The most comprehensive, for UK researchers, are the regional surname lists ho
sted by Genuki which you can find listed by county at www.cs.ncl.ac.uk/genuki/su
rnameslist/. Here you will find links to all the listings of different surnames
that are being compiled nationwide, alongside the names and e-mail addresses of
the researchers. The GenForum site (www.genforum.familytreemaker. com) contains
the names of people (mostly from the US) who are looking for ancestors, and if y
ou think a branch of your family may have emigrated it is worth looking there. <
/P> Genuki will also help you to make contact with local family history societ
ies where you stand an excellent chance of finding distant cousins who are still
living and researching in the areas your ancestors originated from. I have made
contact with my fourth-cousin-once-removed in this way, who lives a short dista
nce from the farmland in Cardiganshire where our common ancestors lived and work
ed for many generations. As well as the Guild of One Name Studies at www.
one-name.org, Rootsweb has a large mailing list for surnames at resources.rootsw
eb.com/surnames. You simply select the relevant letter of the alphabet, choose y
our surname from the list that appears and look for it among the assortment of d
atabases. Ancestral files and Gedcoms A number of people have publ
ished the results of their research and you may be lucky enough to discover a fa
mily tree already compiled and featuring some of your ancestors. When using the
IGI on the Familysearch site, for example, you may notice that an ancestor comes
up with a special button and link attached to his or her individual record, ind
icating there is an ancestral file in the LDS Church (Mormon) database. Ancestra
l files are collections of genealogical information collated from pedigree chart
s and family group sheets submitted to the LDS Church over the past 20-odd years
. The information has not been verified in any way, so, needless to say, you sho
uld use it only as a basis for your own research and be sure to check the conten
ts against the primary sources. You will come across the term Gedcom a gr
eat deal as you penetrate deeper into the world of e-genealogy. Genealogical Dat
a Communications is the standard file format for genealogists, enabling them to
export their research databases, the contents of family charts and family group
sheets, and share them with others. Gedcoms appear on your computer screen as a
chronological list of names and dates written in plain text, so they can be easi
ly read on a number of different machines and systems. You make Gedcoms w
ith special genealogical software. You can find out more by visiting the princip
al hosting project for Gedcoms, Worldconnect, at Rootsweb, www.worldconnect.root
sweb.com. On this site you can find out how to upload (that is post on the net)
Gedcoms and make use of the search feature to visit the Gedcoms uploaded by othe
r researchers. There are more than 10m names on this free site. Several c
ommercial sites offer a similar service, but they levy a subscription charge and
some of them retain copyright in your research and prevent you from posting it
elsewhere. The Genserv site (www.genserv.com) carries more than 12,000 Gedcoms,
which you can search for a small fee once you have submitted your own Gedcom.
P> You can try out Gedcom software for free at the Brother's Keeper site (ourw
orld.compuserve.com/ homepages/brothers_keeper/), at the Cumberland Family site
(www.cf-software.com) or via Kindred Konnections (www.kindredkonnections.com). T
he Familysearch site (www.familysearch.org) has its Personal Ancestral File (PAF
) software available for free download, which can be used on both Macs and PCs.
Dave Wilks has put together a very informative FAQ page on Gedcoms at www.my-ged
. com/faqs.html. If you want to see an example of a Gedcom, look at the one on t
he My Gedcom site www.my-ged.com/gedcom.txt which displays part of George Washin
gton's ancestral file. This example has been compiled using Ancestral Quest soft
ware, the basis for the Familysearch PAF system, and is one of the more competit
ively priced packages available. To find out more about the technical asp
ects of Gedcoms, visit www.tiac.net/users/pmcbride/gedcom. 55gctoc.htm. D
iscussion groups, listservs, newsgroups, messageboards and chatrooms: The
internet offers a number of ways to network and make contact with other genealo
gists, sharing tips, research and information. E-mail discussion groups,
or listservs, dedicated to just about every conceivable genealogical topic, are
legion. They all have their own rules, which you should find out about before su
bscribing and you should also spend some time reading the e-mail lists to see if
the discussions are likely to engage you. You can find a list of lists at www.l
iszt.com. To subscribe to an e-mail list you send an e-mail to the manage
r of the list indicating your wish to become a member, entering the word "subscr
ibe" in the Subject field. The message should just consist of the list name and
your name. If you want to unsubscribe you send a similar message with "unsubscri
be" in the subject field of your e-mail. Rootsweb carries a huge collecti
on of mailing lists. You can browse the list at www.rootsweb.com ~maillist and a
fter registering you can access old messages in the archive (archiver.rootsweb.c
om). Newsgroups, sometimes also referred to as messageboards, are electro
nic forums, wherein users post messages, called "articles", to one another. You
can find out more about them by using the newsgroup command on Outlook Express,
Netscape Messenger or NewsXpress. The last time I looked there were a vast numbe
r of topics covered of interest to genealogists - for example, adoptees, Irish g
enealogists, Jewish genealogists and so on - and there is also a newsgroup dedic
ated to British and Irish researchers who are just beginning their research. To search for newsgroups use the Newsgroup option on your search engine, or
visit www.deja.com which lets you search newsgroup articles on genealogy topics.
Genuki also lists some county-based forums on its county pages. Chatroom
s allow you to interact with other people in real time, like having a telephone
conversation on the internet. You need to have reasonable typing skills. However
, you should never simply key in "chatroom" on a search engine unless you want t
o take part in lurid, not to say alarming, conversations of a highly dubious nat
ure. The Liszt site is very easy to use and has a large selection of chat channe
ls for you to search (www.liszt.com/chat/). Netiquette As with all
successful examples of human society down the millennia, a system of codes and
conventions governing people's behaviour has evolved on the internet. No doubt i
n the future "netiquette" will be a subject ripe for anthropological study - the
ses are, no doubt, being prepared even now. The rules are quite basic and do not
defy the codes of practice most of us adhere to in our offline lives. Al
ways acknowledge any help you receive from someone you contact over the net, and
don't ask for help with anything you could easily find out for yourself. Try to
reciprocate whenever you can, or at least make the offer. Most genealogists are
helpful souls by nature and simple gestures, such as offering to look up a birt
h in the GRO index next time you are going, are much appreciated. When ta
king part in a discussion group, forum or chatroom, try to stick to the point. I
f you don't, you might find your fellow members becoming more than a tad irritat
ed. Make sure the subject line of your contribution gives others a good indicati
on of what you are writing about. Don't be vague, but don't bind on too much, ei
ther. When replying using the Reply to Author feature on your e-mail prog
ramme, make sure you delete all the previous messages irrelevant to this particu
lar communication. Use a standard font - such as Arial - as your default
setting for e-mail messages. Fancy fonts may not be readable to other computers
and can even cause systems to crash. Similarly, the stationery options that come
with some internet software do not always carry to other computers. Take
sensible precautions when replying to messages or in chatrooms. Do not give out
personal details until you are confident you can trust the other person. Never,
ever send credit card information over the net unless you are on a secure site.
You can tell a site is secure when the URL starts https:// and a padlock icon a
ppears in the bottom left-hand corner of your screen. Finding people who
are not online While finding relatives and other genealogists has been ma
de much easier through the internet, not everybody is online. Never forget, howe
ver, that finding offline resources is one of the very best uses for the interne
t. There are many telephone directories online, including British Telecom's Phon
eNet UK (www.bt.com/phonenetuk/), which allows you to search the entire country
by surname for listed telphone numbers. For international phone directories try
www.teldir.com. Publishing on the internet Building a web page of
your own is a good way to enable long-lost relatives to find you, and it is surp
risingly easy. There is a vast amount of information on the subject available th
rough your computer, including probably everything you need to know in one of th
e software bundles that came with your word processing package. If not, there is
good selection of suitable software packages available at www.hotwired.com. Cyndi's List has an exhaustive collection of links and topics pages under th
e title of Cyndi's Genealogy Homepage Construction Kit (www.cyndislist.com/ cons
truc.htm) and you should be able to find everything you could ever wish to know
there. Yahoo! carries a page in its Guides and Tutorials section which is very i
nformative. Go to www. yahoo.com/computers_ and_internet/internet/world_wide_web
/. Peter Christian has written two extremely good and easy to understand
articles on web page creation for the Society of Genealogists online publication
, Computers in Genealogy, which you can download at www.sog.cig.org.uk/cig/vol5/
509christian.html and www.sog.cig.org.uk/cig/vol5/510christian.html. You
don't have to know Hypertext Markup Language (HTML) in order to write a web page
as many programmes can translate your files for you. But if you want to find ou
t more The Bare Bones Guide to HTML (werbach.com/barebones/index.html) is a very
good basic explanation with lots of links to other web page construction sites.
Once you have built your page you will want to upload it to the internet
. You may have some free web space as part of your package with your Internet Se
rvice Provider. You can take advantage of the free web space offered by Rootsweb
at freepages. rootsweb.com/ but I would recommend registering with Submit.com (
www.submit.com) if you want other search engines to be able to find you, as some
do not run on the Rootsweb pages. You will also need a web address and there ar
e several places where you can register your name for free (if available). Try w
ww.freenetname.co.uk or www.ukreg.com.
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