Geneology?
|Question by moxie1352: Geneology?
I am trying to figure out more about my family history. Some family names are Margeson, McLean, Powers and Avery. What are some good sites or do you know anything about these names or where they came from?
Best answer:
Answer by grannytoad
You probably won’t have much luck with a scattershot of surnames. What works is to sit down with your oldest family members and ask what they recall – who their parents were and grandparents, and on back. You will need full names, and dates and places of births marriages and deaths. Enter all you’ve learned onto family tree software for organization, so you know what you don’t know. Then you’ll be ready to begin research.
With any luck some may be found on 1880 census if you’re US, you’d find them at familysearch.org. A couple other places to look for them might be the free trees at ancestry.com (just sign in), gencircles.com, genforum.com, rootsweb.com. Your library or LDS family history center may allow you access to census images — you’ll need that!
Know better? Leave your own answer in the comments!
Powers, McLean, and Avery are likely Irish, or possibly Scots . Margeson sounds Scandinavian.
BTW, it’s genealogy.
Well I’ve been researching my lines for over 7 years now and I must say that the best site is ancestry.com…you have to pay for a subscription, but they do offer a 14 day trial period with which you can try and gather as much as you can, then cancel…if money is an issue. Also, there’s a Mormon site that is free called familysearch.org It’s pretty good too. Another inexpensive way to go about getting a membership to ancestry is to go to Best Buy and buy one of their Family Tree Maker software packages for 50.00 to $ 80.00 It not only has the software that helps you organize everything, but it also has a free one year membership to ancestry in it. One more site I just thought of is Roostweb, it has a link called World Connect…it’s free and can give you almost an entire family line if you’re lucky.
OK, now for your names:
Avery: main origin is -England
Margeson: main origin is split between England, Great Britain, and Germany
McLean: main origin is split between Ireland and Scotland about 60/40
Powers : main origin is Ireland
I looked all of these up for you on my ancestry membership…you should use it…it’s the most awesome I’ve seen.
Good Luck on your quest.
Moxie,
The first thing to do is start with yourself and work backwards.
Any family knowledge already known by yourself or others is priceless.
http://www.rootsweb.com is an excellent place to start. It is free. They have mailing lists & message boards that are free to discuss names, locations, just about any speciality you can think of they have it. I find it best to start with the surnames, then the states and the counties that the said ancestors lived in. Good luck and I hope you like the research bug. Libraries specializing in genealogy will be a great help, they do charge for mostly copies, another thing, Family History Centers will help. Boots on the ground is hard work, but much more reliable than the internet.
Sincerely,
Erin, IBSSG
The web sites such as Ancestry.Com, FamilySearch.org can be helpful. But your research should not be limited to them.
There are family trees on them but don’t assume everything is accurate, even if you see it submitted over and over by different people. There is a lot of copying going on.
A lot of it is not documented.
I’ll paste my standard list o flinks and tips below, but first – take what Shirley said to heart. There is a lot of bad data on the web.
To take one notorious example, the first white settlement in Ohio was Marietta, founded in 1788. Yet if you go to Roots Web World Connect, leave surname and given name blank, enter “OH” for birth place, set birth year to 1767 and the range to +/- 20 (that is 1747 – 1787) you get 23,000+ hits. A handful of the hits are Indians; the rest are mistakes that a 10th-grade knowlege of history would have prevented.
Here is my standard answer.
—————————————–
These questions come up every day:
Where can I find my family tree for free?
Does anyone know the {Surname} family?
What are good sites for ancestors / genealogy?
They are all about tracing your family tree on the Internet. I am not chastising you for failing to search the resolved questions first. I am explaining why this is the same answer I gave to many other people. The fourth time I typed my favorite beginner’s links I realized I should save them in a text file and paste them in. This is a long, detailed and general answer. Because it is general, some of the links (or paragraphs) may not apply to your question.
These may help get you started. They are large and free. Many of them, however, have subtle ads for Ancestry.com in them – ads that ask for a name, then offer a trial subscription. Watch out for those advertisements.
http://www.cyndislist.com/
(240,000+ links, all cross-indexed. If you want Welsh or Pennsylvania Dutch or Oregon or any other region, ethnic group or surname, chances are she has links for it.)
http://www.familysearch.com
(Mormon’s mega-site. Click on “Search”)
http://worldconnect.genealogy.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi
(460,000,000+ entries, of varying quality)
http://www.ancestry.com/learn/facts/default.aspx?ln=
Surname meanings and origins
http://www.tedpack.org/begingen.html
My own site: “How to Begin”
United States only:
http://www.usgenweb.net/
(Subdivided into state sites, which all have county sites.)
(The Canadians have Canadian Gen Web, by province)
http://ssdi.genealogy.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/ssdi.cgi
(Social Security Death index – click on “Advanced”. You may find your grandparents.)
http://find.person.superpages.com/
(US Phone book, for looking up distant cousins)
United Kingdom Only:
http://www.genuki.org.uk/
(Biggest site for United Kingdom & Ireland)
http://www.freebmd.org.uk/
(Free Birth, Marriage & Death Records)
(If you posted your question in Genealogy, ignore this paragraph. If you posted it in the “Family” category, read on.)
Tracing your family tree is called genealogy. YA has a category for genealogy,
Home > Arts & Humanities > Genealogy
There are hundreds of more links in the resolved answers there.
In the USA, some public libraries have census image subscriptions. Many Family History Centers do too. FHC’s are small rooms in Mormon churches. They welcome anyone interested in genealogy, not just fellow Mormons. They have resources on CD’s and volunteers who are friendly. They don’t try to convert you; in fact, they don’t mention their religion unless you ask a question about it.
Notes:
You usually have to do some research. Sometimes you get lucky. Don’t give up if your Great grandfather with your surname isn’t there. Try all eight great-grandparents.
You won’t find living people on any of the sites except the phone book one. You won’t find many people born after 1920 on any of the sites except the SSDI one. Genealogists hide the birth dates, birth places and other facts of living people to protect their privacy. You will have to find your grandparents’ or great grandparents’ birth dates and maiden names somewhere besides the Internet.
The best way to get started is to ask your oldest living relatives about themselves and their parents. You may find great-grandpa’s death date and burial place on the web, but only his children, your grandfather and grandaunt, can tell you what sort of man he was.
The free sites are supported by advertising, just like TV. You can’t watch the Super Bowl without seeing a beer commercial, and you can’t surf for dead relatives without seeing an Ancestry advertisement. Many people complain about advertisements. Please don’t. They bring you the “free” sites. There’s no such thing as a free lunch.
If you get serious you’ll need a genealogy program. They are to family research what “Word” is to writing a novel. I like Roots Magic. Family Tree Maker is the market leader. Both cost around $ 29. The Mormons will let you download PAF for free. It is clunky, but it is free. You can sometimes find old versions of FTM or Family Origins (FO is the predecessor of RM) in bargin bins at CostCo.
This is a general hint: Even though you go in through YA Canada, YA Australia, YA UK or YA USA, all of the questions go into one big “pot” and get read by everyone in the world who speaks English. Most of the people here are in the UK and USA, but you sometimes get questions and answers from people who worry about kangaroos eating their roses. So – put a nation, or, better yet, if you are asking about a specific individual, a nation and a state / province in all of your questions. It will help people help you.