Who Do You Think You Are? Encyclopedia of Genealogy (4 page)

BOOK: Who Do You Think You Are? Encyclopedia of Genealogy
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In addition to the military paperwork generated by the wars, a wealth of civilian material also survives from that era, such as ration books, letters to and from loved ones separated by conflict, and telegrams from the army informing next of kin of the death of a soldier, all of which illustrate how difficult that time would have been for your ancestors. Civilian documents issued at other times are equally informative, like passports with a person's photo, vital details and stamps from the
places they visited, or identity papers and naturalization certificates if they settled in Britain from a foreign country.

Do not pass off as junk the general day-to-day items you might find when hunting in the attic or through drawers. Old receipts, tickets to the theatre, ballet, opera or to a football match, magazines that have been kept, all give an idea of what your ancestors enjoyed spending their money on and doing in their spare time. These are key indicators to what their lifestyle would have been like, and what they were like as people. If they believed that these bits and pieces were worth holding onto then that is an obvious clue as to what was important to them.

SUMMARY

Clues to look out for around the house:

•
Civil registration and religious certificates confirming births, marriages and deaths

•
Wills, deeds and legal documents

•
Newspaper articles and obituaries

•
School reports

•
Family bible and name patterns

•
Letters and postcards

•
Military, naval, air force and merchant navy documents, medals and uniform apparel

•
Civilian wartime letters, ration books, identity cards

•
Passports and citizenship documents

•
Old receipts, magazines, tickets to the theatre or to football matches

•
Photos

Photos are by far the most fascinating of our family artefacts. Even if we cannot name the majority of people in the frame it is always interesting to observe the different fashions, expressions and landscapes, and to try to work out when the picture was taken and what those people's lives would have been like. Photos in the Victorian and Edwardian periods were often very formal. Most people did not have a camera of their own and would have visited a photographer's studio or had their picture taken at a photographer's stand at a fair. The rarity of a photo opportunity during these eras meant that people wore their finery or would borrow clothes from the studio's wardrobe to dress up for the occasion. The clothes worn by the subjects can help you to identify a rough date for the photo, as specialists can establish when specific types of dress were fashionable. Your local archive or museum may be able to help you date the costume or background in an old photo. Photographic studios frequently printed their company name and address on photos, so you can trace this in trade directories to establish when that studio was in business, and to work out the rough geographical location where the person in the photo was living.

Do not be scared to take a photo out of its frame to ensure that there are no names or other written details hidden on the back. If the picture does not have any names or a date written on it, show it to as many elderly relatives as you can to see if anybody recognizes the faces or location. It might also be a good idea to make copies of photographs you find in relatives' houses, either by scanning them or taking digital photographs of the images – having obtained permission first. This way you can write on the back of your copies each time you identify a new face. Carry the pictures around with you so that you can keep adding to them as you show more relatives. You can also find out about how to preserve old photographs, or restore fading images, from local archives and specialist companies who now offer fairly cheap methods of storage and restoration techniques.

‘Do not be scared to take a photo out of its frame to ensure that there are no names or other written details hidden on the back.'

Preserve Your Past for the Future

Whilst talking to your extended family and delving into the family treasures they have hoarded, it will become apparent just how important it is to preserve your own family photos and mementos for future generations. Your children, nieces, nephews or grandchildren may not seem interested in their past while you are enthusiastically hunting away in the archives, but there will more than likely come a time when they will be curious to flick through old photo albums, read old family letters, and learn more about a past era that seems so different from today, but that their parents and grandparents were a part of.

The fantastic thing about genealogy is its educational element. Whilst finding out the names, dates and places of each person on your family tree, it is essential to put their lives into a social context, to find out what the major political and social events were that would have shaped their lives and affected their standard of living. Might they have visited the Great Exhibition when it opened in Hyde Park in 1851? Did they fight in the Boer War at the turn of the last century? Would they have been shocked to hear news of the
Titanic
's sinking in April 1912? Placing your family history into a wider national and international historical context brings textbook history to life. These people you are related to really did exist, and while the name ‘John Briggs' on a census return may not seem immediately exciting, when you look at the bigger picture and learn more about what life was like for him living in a Victorian slum, his existence gains meaning and our combined national past seems closer. As you find out more about each ancestor and can pin major historical events to their lives, you can help the children in your family to understand their history.

SUMMARY

•
What is the aim of my research?

•
What do I know about my ancestors?

•
What do my relatives know about our ancestry?

•
Are there any family mysteries to clear up?

•
Are there any family heirlooms to give me some clues?

•
What information do I need to verify?

Genealogy is not just about the past; it is also about preserving the present for the future. So why not keep hold of a few items that may seem inconsequential today but will help to illustrate some of the defining events of your life in the future. Just as you write down the names of the faces you learn about on old photos you find, make the same effort with your own photos so that people will be able to identify you and your loved ones. The following chapter will explore ways of storing your research and organizing your findings so that the whole family can enjoy your hard work, but remember – it's all too easy to concentrate on the past at the expense of the present. Make sure that you are at the heart of your research, so don't forget to leave behind an impression of what
you
were like. After all, you have just become the chronicler for your family, and future generations will want to know all about you!

CHAPTER 2
Building Your Family Tree

By now you will have spent many hours writing down what you know about your family, talking to relatives and looking for physical clues and objects that have accumulated over the years. The next stage is to organize this information into a family tree, and use this to choose which path then to follow – verifying information you are uncertain of; searching for new ancestors; or pursuing an interesting relative or family story in more detail.

Creating a Family Tree

A family tree is a diagram that shows at a glance how your relatives and ancestors are related to one another. This will become the foundation of your future work, a growing document that incorporates all the biographical information you uncover as you hunt for documentation in archives, libraries and museums. The importance of building a family tree from the instant you start your research at home has already been touched upon in
Chapter 1
, but you will learn here just how vital it is to keep updating your tree after every discovery so that you can see at a glance what your next research step should be.

People can get quite confused about drawing up a family tree, assuming it is a more complicated process than it really is. There are many software packages on the market that promise you an all-singing, all-dancing family tree with generational reports, photo uploads and print-outs. But if this is your first attempt to put a family tree together, it's probably best to go back to basics until you're more familiar with the procedure, and simply use a large piece of paper and a pencil.

‘A family tree shows how your ancestors are related to one another – and to you.'

This section will show you the various methods of writing family trees and the abbreviations and genealogical terminology used. Some of this may be familiar. If you've watched
Who Do You Think You Are?
regular graphics appear on screen to show you how, for example, John Hurt is related to Walter Lord Browne. Or you may have seen pedigrees published in books or newspapers that relate to the royal family or members of the aristocracy. Even though you may not have such distinguished roots, the principle behind a family tree's construction remains the same.

However, before attempting to build your first family tree, it's important to have a basic grasp of some of the terminology used, since you'll need to describe how members of your family are related to one another.

Understanding Family Relationships

In essence, this will be
your
family tree, so anything you produce should start with you, with your name placed right at the centre of the blank piece of paper. Everyone else is therefore described in terms of their relationship to you. On this embryonic family tree, your parents' names will be written above you; your brothers and sisters – known as your siblings – will be either side of you, also underneath your parents; and the names of any children you have will be written below you, with their children – your grandchildren – below them. Above each of your parents will be their parents – your four grandparents – and alongside each of your parents will be their siblings, your uncles and aunts.

Every group of people on the same horizontal line represents a separate generation. Most people are familiar with these terms, but these are all close family members, and you will be working many generations back into the past when it becomes harder to keep track of distant relationships; so listed below are some of the key words used to describe relatives from the extended family, and ancestors further back in time, which are perhaps less familiar.

Blood Relations

The direct line in your family tree is made up of all the people who have been biologically crucial to your creation. Therefore they would
include your parents and your grandparents, but not any of their siblings and other descendants – these people are your extended family. Each time you move one generation further back, you need to add ‘great' as a prefix. Therefore the parents of your grandparents are known as your great-grandparents, and the parents of your great-grandparents are your great-great-grandparents, and so on. Every time you search for another generation in your direct line you will be looking for twice the number of people as the generation that came after that. This is because you have two parents, who each have two parents, so that you have four grandparents. These four grandparents have two parents each, which means you have eight great-grandparents, and then sixteen great-great-grandparents. As you work further back than this, you might find it easier to shorten this description to ‘2 x great-grandparents'.

Extended Family by Blood

These are the people that are related to you by blood, but are not biologically crucial in your existence today. Where possible, you should include them in your family tree – particularly after your first phase of research – but you might want to focus on your direct ancestors and come back to them at a later date.

Nieces and Nephews

Your nieces and nephews are the children of your siblings. Niece is used to describe a female offspring and nephew to describe a male offspring. Any subsequent children of your nieces and nephews are known as your great-nieces and great-nephews, and another ‘great' is added to the prefix each time another generation is born.

Uncles and Aunts

Your uncles and aunts are the siblings of your parents. The siblings of any previous generations in your direct line are described by adding ‘great' as a prefix, and each generation you go back another ‘great' is added. Therefore the siblings of your grandparents would be your great-uncles and great-aunts, and the siblings of your great-grandparents would be your great-great-uncles and great-great-aunts. Some people use the word ‘grand' instead of ‘great', and might describe these relations as ‘great-grand-uncles and aunts'.

‘
This is your family tree, so everyone else is described in terms of their relationship to you.'

Cousins

Your cousins are the children of your aunts and uncles. These are known as your first cousins. Any subsequent descendants of your first cousins are indicated by how many generations they are ‘removed' from you. If your first cousin has a child, this child is your ‘first cousin once removed'. If your first cousin then has a grandchild they would be your ‘first cousin twice removed'. First, second and third cousins can only be used to describe cousins of the same generation. Therefore, if you had a child, they would be second cousins with your first cousin's child. This means that while you refer to that relation as your first cousin once removed, your child would call them their second cousin.

To describe the cousins of any previous generations to yourself, you should refer to them as the cousin of whichever person in your direct line they are of the same generation as. This means that the parent of your second cousin should be called your ‘parent's first cousin', and the grandparent of your third cousin would be your ‘grandparent's first cousin'. The relationships between cousins is very confusing and you may find that in documents such as wills and census returns people use the word cousin to describe a distant relative without qualifying exactly how they are related. It will be your job to untangle this confusion!

Extended Family by Marriage

Families are complicated entities, and as well as direct blood relatives and their extended family you will quickly discover that there are other relationships that are more complicated to define – usually the result of divorce, subsequent remarriage and an associated second family. Here are some of the more useful terms that you may need to incorporate into your family tree.

In-laws

When one member of your family marries, they are related to their partner's family as a result of the wedding. This relationship is said to be ‘in law' due to the legally binding nature of the union. Thus the mother of the bride is the ‘mother-in-law' of the groom, just as the father of the groom is the ‘father-in-law' of the bride. If either the bride or the groom has siblings, then they become the sister- or brother-in-law of the other party.

Step-relations

The word ‘step' is used to describe the relationship to a member of your family that occurs through a subsequent marriage by one (or indeed both) of your biological parents. Your stepfather would be your biological mother's husband from a subsequent marriage, whilst your stepmother would be your biological father's wife if he married again. If either of your step-parents had children from a relationship prior to marrying your biological parent, these children would be your step-brothers and stepsisters; whilst they would be described as your biological parent's stepsons and stepdaughters.

Half-relations

The word ‘half' is used to describe a relationship between children who share only one biological parent. For example, if your biological father or mother had a child with your step-parent, this child would be your half-brother or half-sister.

Drawing Your Family Tree

Using these terms, you should be able to build your initial family tree quite quickly; and it should display all the information you've found when you were interviewing relatives and looking through collections of family heirlooms. There are bound to be some things that you don't know yet – full names and biographical dates of more distant ancestors, for example – and you should add question marks against anything you're not sure about. This is one of the main purposes of this first family tree – to show at a glance what you need to verify, check or research more fully. Don't worry if it looks messy at this stage or a bit sparse – you'll be tidying it up and adding new branches when you start your research away from the family.

One thing to decide upon is the presentation style of your family tree, bearing in mind there are several recognized ways of doing this and the final choice will be down to you, based on what you find easiest to work with and how much data you wish to include. Some trees will only show the direct line, whereas others are very large and sprawling, and include all the siblings in each generation and distant cousins.

In the past, genealogy was the preserve of the aristocracy – or those that aspired to higher social rank – who wished to prove their connections to illustrious forebears. They commissioned diagrams, or ‘pedigrees', that were as much works of art as family trees, with coats
of arms, heraldic beasts and key names circled. A pedigree that shows immediate ancestors as far back as the sixteen 2 x great-grandparents is known as a
seize quartiers
, whilst one that covers all thirty-two 3 x great-grandparents is known as a
trent-deux quartiers
. These linear trees start with the most recent generation at the bottom of the tree, and continue horizontally upwards, with each entry representing people further away in time from the person at the foot of the tree. However, only key relatives, rather than all 16 or 32 direct ancestors, are often shown as they often focused on connectivity to the great and the good, or key marriages, rather than completeness.

Today, family trees that only show a direct line are often drawn not from bottom to top, but from left to right, with the most recent person on the left and their ancestors spreading out from them to the right of the page. There are pedigree templates for trees in this format available from the Society of Genealogists and local Family History Societies that simply require you to write the names and relevant dates in the spaces provided on the form.

While family trees that show just your direct line are a quick and easy way to map your immediate heritage once you have worked back far enough, it makes sense to include your entire extended family to start with as they can provide clues to help you move back further. UK genealogists favour drop-line family trees for this purpose, and these are the most common format you are likely to come across in books. Essentially, they are a diagram that shows how everyone is related to one another; and most people start by placing their own data at the heart of their family tree – sensible really because, after all, they are the ones undertaking the journey and will therefore be describing the people they find in relation to themselves.

You should write your full name, which should be the name you were registered with at birth, rather than a nickname or surname you took later in life. Therefore married women should always be written onto the tree under their maiden name, not their married name. Underneath your name, write a ‘b.' to signify ‘birth date' and then write your date of birth after that. Draw a horizontal line above your name and a small vertical branch coming down from the line to connect your name to it – a bit like a large ‘T' shape with extended horizontal arms. Any siblings you may have should have their names attached to the horizontal line in the same way, which effectively creates an entire branch for your generation. You should start with the eldest sibling first, whose name should be written to the left of the branch, and work along to the right so that if you were the third child, for example, you would appear third
on the branch, and the youngest sibling's name is positioned at the far right-hand end of the branch. Write every sibling's date of birth in the same way you did for yourself. If any of them have died you should write a ‘d.' underneath their birth date, followed by their date of death.

Above your generation's branch you need to write your parents' full names. Traditionally, the man's name should be written on the left and the woman's on the right. Leave enough space between them to put either ‘m.' or ‘=' to indicate their marriage, and write their date of marriage beneath this. Below the date of marriage you should draw a vertical line that connects their marriage to your generation's horizontal branch, thus showing that you are all related by blood. You can use the same method to add your own marriage date and spouse's name, and the marriages of your siblings if you wish. You may want to include subsequent generations after yours, such as your children, nieces and nephews, grandchildren and so on, in which case you will need to leave enough space below your generation to fit them in. Where space permits, each generation of children should be at roughly the same level on the tree – your nephews and nieces roughly alongside your children. However, if you are only creating a tree of your ancestors and not your descendants, then your name should be positioned towards the bottom of the page to allow more space for you to work back in time, up the page.

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