I need one that is online no downloading,and simple to use. I have looked everywhere and none of them work like I want them too! Please Help me!
EDIT::::::::I also have tried many of the sites already recommended and none of them actually hooked more than one relative to another family. I have been searching for 2 hours but none of them behave correctly, if you find an answer please tell me or recommend one
Hi everyone! The other night I just couldn’t sleep. I decided to go online and I read a million articles on genealogy. I really noticed how everyone was raving about how great Legacy 7 was. So, after checking it out some more I downloaded the free version. Honestly - there are so many great features just in the free version. I was pleasantly suprised. For a free software - it is such a great resource. Between the to-do list to keep my scatterbrain organized, the wonderful notes sections, the color and ease of use, and the amazing help it gives when you record sources - Needless to say, I think I’ve found my new program. NOTE: The views expressed in this video are purely my own. I was not paid to talk about how great Legacy was. I am not trying to bash any other program. I am merely saying that it really seems to be a great program. Also - I wanted to let you guys know that I have a brand new blog out: It kind of goes along with these videos but it also includes information on my own genealogy. So please check it out at: elysesgenes.blogspot.com I decided to create this blog because of a suggestion that the wonderful Robert Ragan told me about. If you haven’t heard of Mr. Reagan or his amazing genealogy site Treasure Maps yet, the I highly suggest you check out his website at http As always - I love your comments and ratings. Thanks everyone!
Hope Masters, President of the Leon H. Sullivan Foundation and her daughter, Sage, talk about their African Ancestry Experience and why the Foundation needed to partner with African Ancestry. To trace your DNA and find your roots, visit www.africanancestry.com.
My paternal grandfather’s parents seem to have dropped in Texas out of nowhere, because I can’t find any record of their families, and my grandfather doesn’t have much information to share about them. I’d really like to get past my great-grandparents on my family tree, I just don’t know where to turn now.
An overview to the process of documenting ancestors who had Native American Genealogy. This provides information about the basic documents to use to document this history.
It seems weird to me that someone would post on a genealogy message board they are looking for information for their mother’s sister’s husband’s family
These are all plausible answers. I know some geneologists don’t post info on living relatives…so I wondered if one needed to be careful about sharing info with those who aren’t direct descendants.
Serious genealogists look far beyond the Internet for original records and go to great lengths to find them. A key destination is the National Archives in Washington, DC where you can handle documents your ancestors personally created. In this video archivist Reginald Washington takes you into the secure stacks where pension records are preserved, and board-certified genealogist John Humphrey shares his excitement over the roles his ancestors played in the history of our country. Film by Kate Geis and Allen Moore.