BYU Library Family History

BYU Library Family History

Assorted training videos on many aspects of genealogy and family history for all interest levels.
The BYU Library offers family history webinars, virtual classes, and other instructional videos. Topics includes methodology, records, resources, tools, and other information to help you with your family history.
Visit our website for more info: fh.lib.byu.edu.

Пікірлер

  • @MagnaMater2
    @MagnaMater212 сағат бұрын

    Try to have Ancestors in Feldkirchen an der Donau. The parish-registers on Family- Search (asides being less reasonably sorted as the European registers on Matricula) are misslabelled as Feldkirchen bei Mattighofen. In Southern Germany and Austria Farmnames are often used interchangably as family-names. The Person-Cards are extremely unhelpful, not allowing the vulgo-name as part of the familyname. Because whenever a new or travelling monk during a vacancy baptizes children or does marriages and burials, and asks people for their name he would get told the farmname, not the family-name. The farmname being their vulgo-name, they are known by with the people in the region. Few replacement-priests check for elder entries by their predecessors to find out the 'real' family-name. And somebody who doesn't know the farmhouses in the village and the families living there will look up (and due to lack of naming-creativity also find) the wrong people.

  • @lindadenton7431
    @lindadenton74313 күн бұрын

    I would like templates in Word cause that is what I use. love all you podcast.

  • @jmj8596
    @jmj85966 күн бұрын

    hi James my dad was in the Korean War .... we're English. Dad made it back before we were all born. I'm the youngest of our family and the eldest was born in 1958. I was too young and left home before he died ... I wasn't there when dad died.

  • @alexandracruz5243
    @alexandracruz52436 күн бұрын

    Thank you very much for this great video. I think It's very important to do descendency research in combination with DNA to confirm that those people are really our ancestors.

  • @irishrosa6115
    @irishrosa61157 күн бұрын

    Sigh.

  • @rfrodrigo7979
    @rfrodrigo79797 күн бұрын

    En qué fecha se fabricaron estos aparatos alguien sabe?

  • @sararevesz8926
    @sararevesz89268 күн бұрын

    Thank you so much! I started doing genealogy in 2015. It was because my husband’s family was paternally Hungarian, without any clues other than his grandfather’s name and a town name, Kassa . The town name was given phonetically so I studied old maps looking for any towns that looked like they could sound like ‘ KAsha’. Let me add that everyone from that generation was deceased and an estrangement existed between my husband and his father. The language was a huge challenge. My approach was to delve into the country’s history and learning the geography as well. It took me 5 years to even discover my first tiny clue. Discoveries did follow in time. Certainty only goes so far back because of record destruction due to Jewish roots, world wars, country border changes, the iron curtain, etc. This added German, Hebrew and Slovakian to the language mix as well. It is a daunting task to find even the basics. 31:59

  • @user-df3wi1ti1p
    @user-df3wi1ti1p11 күн бұрын

    @jamestanner45 how do we deal with the fact that FamilySearch itself has incorrect jurisdictional hierarchies? For example, its locations for Germany are woefully simplified if we were to follow your guidance to refer to locations by their name at the time the event was recorded. Towns in Westfalen that I am dealing with are simplified research to as Prussia rather than referring to the German Empire. For some villages there is only the modern location in Federal Republic of Germany and not even an option for Prussia!

  • @mardeanchandler5177
    @mardeanchandler517713 күн бұрын

    Some of the people I come across were added to the family tree in 2012 when the new system started. Those records could have been submitted in the late 1800’s and the people submitting those records may have known the people but we can’t find any records to go with them and then we think they may be mistakes or duplicates. They have temple work done years ago. I have been leaving them alone hoping more records will be available to show them some time.

  • @chieffamilygenealogyoffice621
    @chieffamilygenealogyoffice62113 күн бұрын

    Is you have 1 mayflower passenger you probably have more- I have 9 or 10 of them as -“who else would their kids marry”?

  • @susandougherty9673
    @susandougherty967317 күн бұрын

    This has been extremely helpful.

  • @lionheart830
    @lionheart83020 күн бұрын

    Odd you mentioned names added without sources. In Ancestry, a huge genealogy website, Ancestry offers info with a small and very brief fake looking shot. There is no link to verify any info, no town, exact date, etc. This is quite annoying especially when you have an extremely expensive subscription. The Constitutional Convention was held in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.

  • @annthompson1375
    @annthompson137521 күн бұрын

    Interesting talk however I was disappointed that it was suggested to link a source to a person without obtaining a copy of the certificate. Recently I had to order multiple birth certificates as there was a family Bowen with mother’s maiden name of Bennett in the same place. It turned out to be 2 completely different families. One family had Victor Bowen married Maud Bennett and the other had Charles Bowen married to Gertrude Bennett.

  • @Jan-xp8yi
    @Jan-xp8yi21 күн бұрын

    Why doesn’t FS require someone to explain why they are updating information or tying a source. Seems like lots of people ignore that information, even some KZreadrs don’t do that when they are giving examples of using FS, very frustrating. Also why doesn’t FS give the option to use the standardized information not the abbreviated information in the index, which it defaults to.

  • @MagnaMater2
    @MagnaMater212 сағат бұрын

    Oh they do. But somehow with the xth child in a clan this gets tedious, and I get snappy by the third child, and whenever that line 'why do you want to change the record' comes up, I can only enter the european Icarus&Matricula-link (that differently to the FS-file is correctly labelled and correctly placed as well as on the official regional map as well as on the emperial kataster-map) and add 'as plainly readable in the official source'. But they don't accept the european government-sources as valid links.

  • @AnnieBarentine
    @AnnieBarentine23 күн бұрын

    I “vented” right along side many of your comments as I find all the 10 things annoying… thank you for wonderful instruction.

  • @suzanassantiago
    @suzanassantiago23 күн бұрын

    Thank you for this, I´m from Brazil, in September I will begin my first certificate in Family History by Byu Worldwide, and this video gave a lot of insights.

  • @michaelmurff9649
    @michaelmurff964923 күн бұрын

    Really interesting approach. It would be great to get an update on the coverage question. Over the last 5 years, how has the census audit progressed, and what is the current coverage of Family Tree?

  • @michaelmurff9649
    @michaelmurff964923 күн бұрын

    @joeprice5531

  • @BonnieDragonKat
    @BonnieDragonKat23 күн бұрын

    As one genealogist told me, entries into your family tree that don't have sources are nothing more than mythology. It takes the sources to prove that these people are real and that the connections are real. One of my pet peeves Well maybe there's two, is one, people that just copy other people's tree without actually doing the research and two, people that see say they say share a surname with someone that is famous, they will purposely build their tree so that they can say that they are related to that person. They don't realize that when somebody goes to do DNA or whatnot That person has been copied so many times and what they've done has been taken for granted, that it throws off the algorithm and it can mess up DNA. I had that problem in my maternal family. My mother's maiden name biologically is Hight and there are at least seven different spellings for the last name that I'm aware of, and there is one very very well-known person with that last name. And that is Jost Hite he built Belle Grove Plantation in Virginia. You have no idea how many trees that I've seen from my DNA matches alone that try to say that we are descendant from him. But the family organization says we're not. So doing ones research and doing one still due diligence is important in a family tree. And you don't just take somebody's word for it or copy someone's tree because you may be copying the wrong information. And don't automatically think because you share a surname with someone that you're actually related because you may not be. And please don't force your tree to go that way because it may be wrong. On the standardizing of dates, that's a big one!

  • @raheacock9964
    @raheacock996424 күн бұрын

    Playback audio is not good. The information in the webinar was great. I just couldn't listen to the whole webinar due to the audio issues.

  • @kelly3942
    @kelly394224 күн бұрын

    I found that alot of people do not research, I research & research agian to make sure the information I put online is right. What I come across the most is May 24, 1878 & findagrave will have May 24 1876. So it takes more time found the information,.

  • @dhscts
    @dhscts25 күн бұрын

    All of these points are part of my FamilySearch tree. Especial on my maternal Grandmother's side. It gets to the point, of why even try to support Family Tree. In the near future my death date will be recorded and my work will be replaced by fairy tales.

  • @dhscts
    @dhscts24 күн бұрын

    Some members of my family insist on a fictitious relation to peerage, Northern Ireland. Claiming ancestor Edward Rocks is Edward Agustus Duke of Kent. They have even created a parallel family tree. Some type of fictisous relationship to peerage has been added to every single family in the line.

  • @annes133
    @annes13326 күн бұрын

    Mr Tanner, can you tell us the time period (roughly) when Junior and Senior became a father-son designation? And in-law. I believe I heard that a son-in-law could mean something different in 1780 than how we use it today. So my question is - when did it change? Thanks.

  • @jamestanner45
    @jamestanner4519 күн бұрын

    Here is an accurate and interesting answer to the question as provided by Microsoft Copilot with source citations. The terms “Junior” and “Senior” have been used to distinguish two people with the same name, regardless of their familial relationship. This practice was common in the colonial period1. The terms simply indicated ‘the younger’ or ‘the elder’ if there were two men with the same name in the same town1. However, it’s important to note that these terms are not always indicative of a father-son relationship. They could also be used to distinguish between any two individuals of different ages with the same name in the same community2. As for when this practice began and when it was discontinued, it’s difficult to pinpoint exact dates as the usage of “Junior” and “Senior” has varied over time and across different cultures3. Today, in the United States, “Junior” and “Senior” are most commonly used to denote a father and son with the same name3. In England, the abbreviations are “Jnr” and “Snr”, respectively3. Please note that while these terms are most frequently used to denote a father and son with the same name, they can still be used in their original sense to distinguish between two unrelated individuals with the same name2. However, this usage is less common today2. Learn more 1 genealogy.stackexchange.com2 genealogy.stackexchange.com3 collectingancestors.com What I can add is that because these designations often refer to people with the same name rather than the same family relationship, they can lead to problems when either is assumed to be related.

  • @annes133
    @annes13319 күн бұрын

    @@jamestanner45 Thanks! I may have to reassess some of my documents. I appreciate your taking time to respond.

  • @cvoskuil
    @cvoskuil26 күн бұрын

    Thank you for this post. You have hit on many of my complaints. My favorite is the one where people are added who are parents of "discovered" people. I have multiple occurrences in my tree. Thanks again.

  • @beepbopboop3221
    @beepbopboop322126 күн бұрын

    Is "gedcom" a valid source? I don't think it is. It says nothing to me. That could mean the person's mistakes came over with their data from where ever they imported it from.

  • @alanwilson175
    @alanwilson17526 күн бұрын

    I can understand James Tanner's comments and objections to historical records - or lack of records. But I find that his objections lack any remedies or solutions. His main point seems to be that Family Search (FS) wants and needs sources. The difficulty is that FS does not have any useful way to include historical sources into some profiles. To take an obvious example, records for royal families have all kinds of pseudo sources, but do they really qualify as true sources for genealogy? History tells us that William the Conqueror married Matilda of Flanders about 1051, but are there any records of this event? So far as I know, there is no such record from contemporaneous sources, that exists today. But, I think we are justified in claiming the date anyway, despite our genealogy proof standards that criticize this practice. I think this is justified for no other reason than that everyone alive in 1066 acted as though Matilda and William were married, because if they contradicted the assertion, William would kill them. Seems like proof to me. This problem also occurs in more modern situations, such as families in Eastern Europe circa 1930 to 1950. In that time period, every single family east of Berlin and west of Moscow was dislocated, and moved, sometimes to new continents, but always to some place else. Are there any source records in eastern Europe that can be connected to their descendants now? I think any such connection is tenuous at best, and they certainly do not adhere to any genealogy proof standard. I think Tanner's objection has to be tempered by some kind of acknowledgment that the scope of a source, has to be widened to include something else besides paper with some names and dates written on it.

  • @jamestanner45
    @jamestanner4526 күн бұрын

    Please understand that this is not the first and will probably not be the last of the times I have written about these issues. I have been suggesting solutions to FamilySearch since almost the day the Family Tree went online.

  • @user-ju2ry2mk5h
    @user-ju2ry2mk5h27 күн бұрын

    Wonderful !

  • @lumbaracres3587
    @lumbaracres358727 күн бұрын

    #11. The lady who created from her imagination, generations of people with no last name, no dates, no places, who, when asked for sources or references, replied they are "in a private notebook" that can't be divulged. She did it twice on my line, which suggests she is related. Horrible thought. One group was about 47 people, counting all of the sibs and cousins. She was thorough. FS had no solutions for it - either for cleaning up the mess, or counseling the offender. Ultimately I created a fictional male and a fictional female with obviously bogus names, merged in all of the fictitious characters, and left them floating as two small blobs in the FS universe. (The person changed their userid, attempting to hide...)

  • @mardeanchandler5177
    @mardeanchandler517726 күн бұрын

    I have a situation similar to that only they think they have documentation but their documentation obviously shows their person is not the same as my person but they can not believe their documentation shows that.!!

  • @toniasalways
    @toniasalways27 күн бұрын

    And the disadvantage is wrong information gets posted and reposted and changed back after it's been corrected. I don't use it and I wish people who think they know more about my family than I do will go away.

  • @Eli-tj1om
    @Eli-tj1omАй бұрын

    Love your webinars! They are so informative and down-to-earth.

  • @alissong.
    @alissong.Ай бұрын

    nice, thanks

  • @olabaskerville
    @olabaskervilleАй бұрын

    Very inspiring and motivating lecture 🤓 Thank you!

  • @user-df3wi1ti1p
    @user-df3wi1ti1pАй бұрын

    As somebody who was born in Worksop, it was quite the shock to have this as a case study in this video!

  • @wp9860
    @wp9860Ай бұрын

    This is the only analysis that I have found that purports to offer a system of organizing genealogy archives and correctly identifies the problem: multiple avenues of access. It's solution, to use genealogical software for this purpose is problematical. These programs have no archival use in that they offer no unlimited life of their being operational. Consider the Personal Ancestry File (PAF) family tree program once offered by the Church of the Latter Day Saints. It is no longer supported. Family tree programs in general have three features that eliminate them from consideration as archival systems. One is that all information is stored in a database. Database systems are volatile. The technology changes over time creating the risk of obsolescence and loss of access to your data. The second problem is that the information is very difficult to extract from the database that it presents a problem nearly in the range of encryption. The third problem is that the database in these family tree programs is closed and proprietary. The opposite of this would be an open (published interface) and controlled through public standards making. The no longer maintained GED standard illustrates the concept of open system design. A digital genealogy archive should stick to tools that offer the most stability. Elements that may fit this bill is using only the operating system file management system as the "database" repository. Using file formats that offer long term stability, such as TXT, .RTF, PDF, and perhaps DOCX text format and TIFF, JPG, and GIF image formats. Also, seek stability in audio and moving image formats. I like this presenter very much. He identifies the real of organizing genealogy archives, the only person who I find gets that right. The notion of digital archive organized with off-the-shelf family tree software is problematic.

  • @ValorieZimmerman
    @ValorieZimmermanАй бұрын

    Thank you, James Tanner

  • @Eli-tj1om
    @Eli-tj1omАй бұрын

    Thank you for an informative and well-done lecture. Just wanted to let you know that the marine corps is pronounced “core” as in apple core not “corpse” as in a dead body)))

  • @davidetienne9404
    @davidetienne9404Ай бұрын

    Thank you very much for sharing this information. There are a few key people I would love to have a photograph of. If it's even only a slight possibility, I'm going to try. And I have plenty of information of my own to share.

  • @RuthI118
    @RuthI118Ай бұрын

    You provided lots of good information! Thank you!

  • @martnal
    @martnalАй бұрын

    It's all good progress, but AI still has a long way to go. Recently, searching a newspaper archive for my grandmother, Kate Loughborough, I was given a link to a production of the play "Kiss Me Kate", Loughborough Theatre.

  • @warrensmith2902
    @warrensmith2902Ай бұрын

    I don't worry about duplicate in my family tree, they find me with great regularity.

  • @ValorieZimmerman
    @ValorieZimmermanАй бұрын

    Please don't diss FamilyTreeDNA which was the first testing company and the only one offering both Y & mito testing. While autosomal testing is cheap, and the most useful, this company is useful and most users are genealogists. And you can upload your autosomal raw data from Ancestry. Not your first step, but don't discount it either.

  • @alexandracruz5243
    @alexandracruz5243Ай бұрын

    Excelent analysis of the ethnicity estimates. That's why it's so important to combine history with geneaology.

  • @patriciajrs46
    @patriciajrs46Ай бұрын

    It's George A Miller. That 1801 is not obvious!! How would we know that they made the 8's sideways!!!?? I know now, because you just told me.

  • @patriciajrs46
    @patriciajrs46Ай бұрын

    Could you please tell us what that Carlingian writing says?!! It would be nice if you added the translations that you worked out. Please.

  • @patriciajrs46
    @patriciajrs46Ай бұрын

    I fully advocate the teaching of writing in cursive and teaching how to read old documents. History is important.

  • @patriciajrs46
    @patriciajrs46Ай бұрын

    Your video scrolled across my you tube today. I am trying to work on my family genealogy. I have a niece who is with your church. She has helped me with some records. Please slow down and give yourself time and breathing room. It could help minimize the ums and the uhs.

  • @gabrielzazueta2218
    @gabrielzazueta2218Ай бұрын

    Someone from BYU is the last person I’d want to learn from

  • @barbarabrann6217
    @barbarabrann62172 ай бұрын

    Why is marriage not a tag?

  • @kimba341
    @kimba3412 ай бұрын

    Thanks for doing this class

  • @AnnieBarentine
    @AnnieBarentine2 ай бұрын

    Helpful!! Thank you:)

  • @kaybobbitt7787
    @kaybobbitt77872 ай бұрын

    very interesting, James. Always appreciate your information