Do you need help climbing over, going around or breaking through your genealogy brick wall? Join Crista Cowan as she shares some of her best tips and tricks for those tough family history challenges. Video Rating: 4 / 5
My brick wall is a document I know exists, and I cannot find where it is
located, the original manuscript of the 1782 enumerations of Hampshire
County, Virginia. It does list how many sons and daughters the head of
household has!?
Clifford Hughes
Great Ideas on how to break thur the brick wall. Cliff. Hughes?
Kat Red
I really like the idea of researching the entire family – get great
information by doing that.?
Mike Field
Why are marriage records from the mid 1800’s and onward, so utterly
difficult if not impossible to find? It’s as if these people got married in
the middle of an empty field, jumped over a broom stick and said “We be
hitched.” Lol! Then the husband tell the wife “You were never anybody’s
daughter, so forget all about it.”
I swear I would have better luck trying find out the name of the wine
waiter for King John at the signing of the Magna Carta in 1216. Lol!
Ancestry.com offers very scant information leads..?
Daniel Luce
I noticed you forgot an important detail about the 1900 census. You can
always find the birth month and year for someone if they were in the 1900
census which can be a vital piece of information in breaking down a brick
wall.?
Robert Burns
This woman sure likes to hear herself talk. GET TO THE POINT!!!!!!?
Sharron Hintz
I have been with Ancestry.com off and on for over 20 years. I struggled
through the hit and miss years, the LDS library helped, and my cousins
working from their end, but your classes are by far the best help for me.
Thank You, Sharron Hintz?
Mike Field
Could you recommend the best and safest way to obtain a social security
death record? I have my grandfather’s No#, the question is what type of
information can I expect to retrieve from the record??
Congakeystone
Too bad the Ancestry website is not working. All I get is a white page.
Apparently this is a continuing problem, as indicated by comments in the
Ancestry query section on the website, “Is It Down?”?
BOB Adis
I am trying to find my great grandfather Elias Adis and grandma Sarah in
Damascus Syria, around 1800s, i hear it was called the ottoman empire can
you help me as what to do. thank you Joan Adis?
Melissa Esquerra
Great!?
pdmshalom
Thank you, Crista for all of your skills, time, and hard work. I greatly
appreciate these videos and can’t thank you enough. ?
tyedyeblue1
Great video!! lots of tips and things to look out for to help you in
finding the answers
to some of the tough questions in are searches.?
Breaking Through Your #Genealogy Brick Walls:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zQLhtzYx7Bk?
My brick wall is a document I know exists, and I cannot find where it is
located, the original manuscript of the 1782 enumerations of Hampshire
County, Virginia. It does list how many sons and daughters the head of
household has!?
Great Ideas on how to break thur the brick wall. Cliff. Hughes?
I really like the idea of researching the entire family – get great
information by doing that.?
Why are marriage records from the mid 1800’s and onward, so utterly
difficult if not impossible to find? It’s as if these people got married in
the middle of an empty field, jumped over a broom stick and said “We be
hitched.” Lol! Then the husband tell the wife “You were never anybody’s
daughter, so forget all about it.”
I swear I would have better luck trying find out the name of the wine
waiter for King John at the signing of the Magna Carta in 1216. Lol!
Ancestry.com offers very scant information leads..?
I noticed you forgot an important detail about the 1900 census. You can
always find the birth month and year for someone if they were in the 1900
census which can be a vital piece of information in breaking down a brick
wall.?
This woman sure likes to hear herself talk. GET TO THE POINT!!!!!!?
I have been with Ancestry.com off and on for over 20 years. I struggled
through the hit and miss years, the LDS library helped, and my cousins
working from their end, but your classes are by far the best help for me.
Thank You, Sharron Hintz?
Could you recommend the best and safest way to obtain a social security
death record? I have my grandfather’s No#, the question is what type of
information can I expect to retrieve from the record??
Too bad the Ancestry website is not working. All I get is a white page.
Apparently this is a continuing problem, as indicated by comments in the
Ancestry query section on the website, “Is It Down?”?
I am trying to find my great grandfather Elias Adis and grandma Sarah in
Damascus Syria, around 1800s, i hear it was called the ottoman empire can
you help me as what to do. thank you Joan Adis?
Great!?
Thank you, Crista for all of your skills, time, and hard work. I greatly
appreciate these videos and can’t thank you enough. ?
Great video!! lots of tips and things to look out for to help you in
finding the answers
to some of the tough questions in are searches.?