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  1. #1
    Join Date
    11th July 08
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    Genealogy research could become addictive

    I was blessed with having a grandfather who loved genealogy and history. He once said, despite our Scandinavian last name "I think we're more celtic than than the Swedes in our family would admit to". My brother and I have been bitten by his same bug. Once we found that the first in our line to come to America was born in Scotland, I kept looking for other connections.

    Here are some of the recent connectinons I've found that completely suprised me:

    A great-great grandmother with the name Carruthers (Sept of Bruce clan)
    Great Grandmother Hall.
    Great-great-great Grandmother Hunter.
    Great-great-great grandmother born in Edinburgh and her father's christening records are from St. Giles there.

    Perhaps my grandfater was right. Now I can't help thinking, hmmmm..maybe I should get 3 more kilts for the Bruce, Hunter and Hall connections. Darn...3 more ;-)

  2. #2
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    21st December 05
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    Hawick, Scotland
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    Yes, ancestry research is addictive, I started it as an only child who knew of very few living relatives, and now I have a family tree of more than 1,100 people including numerous second and third cousins all over the world whom I never knew existed and I have made contact with quite a few of them. I also discovered more family tartans I was entitled to wear, now in addition to Cunningham I also have kilts in Fraser, Hamilton, McLeod, MacKenzie and Wallace.
    Regional Director for Scotland for Clan Cunningham International, and a Scottish Armiger.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    15th September 08
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    Piqua, OH
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    Quote Originally Posted by cessna152towser View Post
    Yes, ancestry research is addictive, I started it as an only child who knew of very few living relatives, and now I have a family tree of more than 1,100 people including numerous second and third cousins all over the world whom I never knew existed and I have made contact with quite a few of them. I also discovered more family tartans I was entitled to wear, now in addition to Cunningham I also have kilts in Fraser, Hamilton, McLeod, MacKenzie and Wallace.
    I have to guess you're using Ancestry.com or similar, right? I don't think I have seen any of those names in the Scottish part of my tree, but with the numbers you gave...

  4. #4
    Join Date
    11th July 08
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    I've started doing the "tree" which appears to look more like a shrub. How could I have forgotten in my previous post to also list JONES? Wales...yep, yet ANOTHER kilt to pine for.

    The mind boggles.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    24th October 08
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    I need to start on this very same project. It's rather daunting.
    "A true adventurer goes forth, aimless and uncalculating, to meet and greet unknown fate." ~ Domino Harvey ~
    ~ We Honor Our Fallen ~

  6. #6
    Join Date
    15th September 08
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    Quote Originally Posted by Derek Conley View Post
    I need to start on this very same project. It's rather daunting.
    Ancestry.com is where I have been doing mine, I think they have a 2 week free trial for the premium version, and it's been good to me. I know more than some of my grandparents now.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    11th July 08
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    Ancestry.com has definately been a help for me, and now I'm looking for a Mac compatable gen software package. I have 3 generations that have more then 10 children per generation, so having a place to map everything would really be helpful.

    Genweb and Ancestry have been very valuable in checking my records against others.

    Derek--it IS kind of daunting when first begining, but its like what they say about eating an elephant--one bite at a time. I'm no where near where I know I could be in my family research, but I'm just finding one fact/individual and going to the next.

    My family had a family genealogy published in 1926 that has in some ways been very helpful, yet the 'seeds' of our family prior to coming to America had always been no more than a guess.

    After just 2 months interacting on gen-web sites I found the pre-cursor to the first in our family here AND found out he was from Scotland when our book surmised his family came from Sweden.

    Problem is...add this to my kilt addiction and then add my highland games insanity and well, too darn bad I have to spend at least a few hours each day at work ;-)

  8. #8
    Join Date
    14th March 06
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    Warning

    The pedigrees and group sheets on ancestry.com and the other online sites are very convenient, but when you rely on them, you are relying often on other people's work that we really don't know the integrity of (especially the LDS site.)

    It has always been the case in genealogical research that bad information is passed around, but with the coming of the internet this process happens a lot faster. It really is heart breaking when you see an entire wing of your genealogical edifice come tumbling down because it was based on a foundation of incorrect assertions regarding more recent (or even more ancient) events. After it happens a few times, it become merely irritating, and one kicks oneself for taking shortcuts and not assessing information more stringently.

    I have a cousin who says he never accepts anything as a fact until he can hold the original document that supports it in his hands. I think that's a very good rule of thumb.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    24th October 08
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    Quote Originally Posted by Detroitpete View Post
    Derek--it IS kind of daunting when first begining, but its like what they say about eating an elephant--one bite at a time. I'm no where near where I know I could be in my family research, but I'm just finding one fact/individual and going to the next.
    I'm sure I'll just take a deep breath and take the plunge here soon...
    "A true adventurer goes forth, aimless and uncalculating, to meet and greet unknown fate." ~ Domino Harvey ~
    ~ We Honor Our Fallen ~

  10. #10
    Join Date
    3rd December 07
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    The genealogy addiction started many years ago for me. The kilt addiction is relatively new. My Family tree occupies four four drawer file cabinets with copies of documents for each of the 18,421 records in my database. Without verification, the data could be a mere bit of the wishful thinking of the author of the source you have entered. Around the beginning of the twentieth century everybody was publishing a family genealogy purporting to go all the way back to famous, or royal lines. Most of these "brag books" were very wishful thinking that could not be really feasible biologically. They serve as nice guide, but should be verified with primary records as much as as is possible. Mine started before the personal computer became available. The internet does speed up the process, as well as speed the spread of some questionable data.
    Slainte

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