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Monday, 16 September 2019

how can one find genealogy?

answers1: well you already start to search them in here......
answers2: start with genealogy.com
answers3: Many Mormon Churches have genealogy libraries and they are
open to the public. They have the most extensive files available.
answers4: the internet
answers5: Hi Prince47, <br>
<br>
Your genealogy starts with you. Then your parents, then your grand
parents, and iteratively their preceeding parents. As you go back
each generation, you will double the previous number of ancestors from
the prior generation (you have twice the number of great grandparents
as grandparents). So, you need to draw a binary tree. <br>
<br>
There are software packages to help you with that. Like Family Tree
Maker. Then you document each link from parent to child with
documentation, proof, evidence. This can be birth, death, marriage
certificates and a host of other types of documentation. Pictures are
great. DNA Evidence is great. <br>
<br>
You can go to GENEALOGY.COM, ANCESTRY.COM or any of the sites below
for additional information. AS you get going through this mass of
information, you will find that there are other people interested in
the same families as you are - if you collaborate with them, you can
fill in your family tree faster and more accurately. When I started,
I only had a few generations, those that I knew. People helped me on
various family sites on the internet. These have only gotten better
in the past 5 years. <br>
<br>
So, try a search on Yahoo for your sir name, or any other family name
(like your mothers maiden name), with the word FAMILY. You will see
genealogy sites where people post questions, answer questions, store
family trees, and will probably have some useful information for you.
<br>
<br>
Notice below there are ELLIS ISLAND links. The Later Day Saints (I am
not of their religion) keep excellent records. There are Civil war
sites, and Cindi's list is excellent list of lists. <br>
<br>
Best of luck, if you get stuck, post again.
answers6: You might try <a href="http://www.lds.org"
rel="nofollow"class=Clr-b>http://www.lds.org</a> and follow their
Family History link... <br>
<br>
There may be another link inside that one to take you overseas to India.
answers7: Hate to burst the bubble, but finding any family history on
an Indian family is going to be VERY tough. Reddy is also an Irish
name, so everything you're going to find on genealogy.com is going to
be Irish for that name. You might try searching the last name itself
on google or ask.com, but you probably won't find much, sorry to say.
In genealogical terms, in the United States, Indian heritage is very
recent, most of the information remaining in India. And I'll tell you,
India does NOT keep very good records where population is concerned.
If they immigrated to England during its' colonial period, there may
be some record, but again, I doubt it. Whites did not consider Indians
much better than monkeys; they were despised and treated as the lowest
of the low, the outcaste of that society, regardless of their personal
family status. Records just weren't kept. You write of your childrens'
births, not your servants'. <br>
<br>
Now, I don't want to dash your hopes completely, because you might
luck out, and there might be some record. I'd look in the British
colonial period, for the names of those who served either in the Army
or in a medical position. Servants may not have been recorded, but
officers certainly were. And while there may not have been many of
them, who knows? Your ancestor might have been one. Check British
military records from the 19th century, the records from Ellis Island,
and the census soonest after your famil immigrated...wherever they are
now. <br>
<br>
Of course, this has all been assuming your family immigrated. If
you're still located in India, all records, such as they are, have
remained in India, and you're not likely to find much at all, since
most family records were oral, not written. <br>
<br>
Oh, and, by the way. For the community of European descent, surname
and last name are the same thing. We don't have a caste distinction.
If you look this up, look for the name most likely to have been used,
but only one of them at a time. Western records, especially American,
will only have one name, having put the first as a middle name, not a
surname.
answers8: THIS IS FUC**** HILARIOUS LMFAO ...........LOLLOLOLOLOL

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