I stopped by the FamilySearch Pilot site for a ‘week’ yesterday. The visit was planned for only a few minutes to look for a birth record for one of my ancestors who was born in New Hampshire.
Browsing directly to that collection, success was almost immediate. That was easy! While there, why not refine my search and search for the rest of my ancestors who were born in New Hampshire too? That’s when the ‘week’ started. Success, success, success, mixed with some failures.
The successes continued all the way back to the mid-1600’s. Thinking the ‘touch’ was with me; I started looking for the children of my direct ancestors. A lot of their records were there too.
The saved images were added to each source entry in my database as I went along. A quick preview of family group sheets for the families looked great with the primary sources and their related thumbnail sized images included.
“One more family”. “Just one more family” I murmured as the sun of the new day came over the mountain. Of course I didn’t need to work all night. The records will still be there for a little while until they are removed when the indexing of them is complete. Eventually, they’ll be included in the rewritten FamilySearch.org site, but when will that happen – exactly?
It will happen. The WHEN is the “I Can’t Wait For It” question.
The same is true for most if not all of the records that are being Indexed by volunteers like you and I who are working on that massive project at FamilySearch.
If you haven’t searched the primary source records on the Pilot site yet, http://pilot.familysearch.org, give it a try this week.
The FamilySearch user community is contributing excellent knowledge articles to help all of us in our ancestral quest. See it at: https://wiki.familysearch.org
If you are having problems in your research, be sure to stop by the site and see if there is a posting to help. If you have knowledge about any specific location research tools, hints and tips, sign in and add an article.
The wiki grows daily. Don’t forget to add it to your browser bookmarks.
Well documented family and regional family trees have been added as yet another FamilySearch site. The site uses my favorite web based genealogy software - Darrin Lythgoe’s “The Next Generation.” Take some time to look through it and see if information about your family has been included in the database. http://histfam.familysearch.org
2 comments:
I have awarded you the Happy 101 Award. Please go to my blog, Twig Talk (http://familytwigs.blogspot.com/2010/01/happy-101-award.html) to pick it up :o)
Thanks so for this post. I went back to Family Search and found the church records from my grandparents' ancestral villages have been posted. Eureka!
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