With my new Clockwired handheld time machine, I went back in time to the and met my ancestors, the Hannisons. They had six kids (I guess that was common back then). Their names were Susan, Joseph, Margaret, May-Beth, Freddie, and William. I don't remember all their ages, but William was the oldest and May-Beth was the youngest, and Joseph was nine. It was actually very interesting. I followed them partway down the Oregon trail, but Susan came down with something like typhoid so I had to leave. It would be interfering with history if I brought medicine. I might get a ticket from the police
I'm not really lying. It's my poetic license.
Last edited by Wickimen (2010-12-26 14:42:46)
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I have a handy little book of my genealogy, which unfortunately was printed before my birth, so I'm not in it. My dad is, though, even though it's my mom's family tree - the women weren't recorded back then.
Alas, this book is in Dutch, so I don't really understand it. Regardless, my mom speaks Dutch so she was able to tell me that the oldest known relative of mine was born in 1557 and had eight kids. Pretty handy, eh?
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my mom really likes doing genealogy so i think its way back to like both some people in europe and some native american people
a while ago we let some distant relatives stay in our house even though we had never met them
the kid was a real jerk

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How did you find this? I want to know who my ancestors are xD!
BTW: I've tried ancestry.com. Doesn't work for some reason.

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MyHeritage is a good program. I've gotten back to my great-great-great-great grandfather, Patrick Lomey.

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JeanTheFox wrote:
MyHeritage is a good program. I've gotten back to my great-great-great-great grandfather, Patrick Lomey.
yay you are still Jean! Not ESN!
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ProgrammingFreak wrote:
JeanTheFox wrote:
MyHeritage is a good program. I've gotten back to my great-great-great-great grandfather, Patrick Lomey.
yay you are still Jean! Not ESN!
I try to keep up on both

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Anyone know a place where i can look up my ancestors and information on them?

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terminator68 wrote:
How did you find this? I want to know who my ancestors are xD!
BTW: I've tried ancestry.com. Doesn't work for some reason.
Any ancestry website is limited to whatever record they have. Maybe ancestry.com didn't have the records that would allow you to trace back you family lineage.
Did you try asking you family about it? That's how I traced my lineage.

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Nexstudent wrote:
Anyone know a place where i can look up my ancestors and information on them?
Genealogy reports are very expensive...
I started by asking my grandma, who had a cousin in Canada, who had done genealogy reports on our family before. Now the rest of the family up there and I are pen pals

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cheddargirl wrote:
terminator68 wrote:
How did you find this? I want to know who my ancestors are xD!
BTW: I've tried ancestry.com. Doesn't work for some reason.Any ancestry website is limited to whatever record they have. Maybe ancestry.com didn't have the records that would allow you to trace back your lineage.
Lots of people complain about ancestry.com, and how it's a scam or something.

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Nexstudent wrote:
cheddargirl wrote:
terminator68 wrote:
How did you find this? I want to know who my ancestors are xD!
BTW: I've tried ancestry.com. Doesn't work for some reason.Any ancestry website is limited to whatever record they have. Maybe ancestry.com didn't have the records that would allow you to trace back your lineage.
Lots of people complain about ancestry.com, and how it's a scam or something.
It's not a scam, it's more like people dont' read the fine print about things when they sign up. Someone asked this on Yahoo, and here was the answer:
No, it's not a scam. Like Jan said, if you sign up for the free trial, they will charge your account if you don't cancel it before the trial period is up. But like Ted said, once you're a member, they won't automatically renew your account unless you tell them to. I've subscribed to Ancestry for 7 years and I've never had a problem.
Using Ancestry is like visiting a library. The library won't write your research paper for you, but it provides you with books you can use to research the topic of your paper. That's how Ancestry works. It gives you access to historical documents such as census, vital records, military records, etc. that contain information about your ancestors; you search those documents and use the info to piece together your family tree.
If you're lucky, someone else has already researched some of your family and posted a tree on Ancestry. But that "someone" was not an Ancestry employee, a computer or a genealogy fairy (haha Ted). It was a regular person like you or me. They may be an expert genealogist with years of research experience; or they may be a beginner who's just starting out... and who may have made some mistakes. If you find some of your ancestors in a user-submitted tree, be sure to verify the information yourself by looking for documents to back it up.
Last edited by cheddargirl (2010-12-28 20:13:13)

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cheddargirl wrote:
Nexstudent wrote:
cheddargirl wrote:
Any ancestry website is limited to whatever record they have. Maybe ancestry.com didn't have the records that would allow you to trace back your lineage.Lots of people complain about ancestry.com, and how it's a scam or something.
It's not a scam, it's more like people dont' read the fine print about things when they sign up. Someone asked this on Yahoo, and here was the answer:
No, it's not a scam. Like Jan said, if you sign up for the free trial, they will charge your account if you don't cancel it before the trial period is up. But like Ted said, once you're a member, they won't automatically renew your account unless you tell them to. I've subscribed to Ancestry for 7 years and I've never had a problem.
Using Ancestry is like visiting a library. The library won't write your research paper for you, but it provides you with books you can use to research the topic of your paper. That's how Ancestry works. It gives you access to historical documents such as census, vital records, military records, etc. that contain information about your ancestors; you search those documents and use the info to piece together your family tree.
If you're lucky, someone else has already researched some of your family and posted a tree on Ancestry. But that "someone" was not an Ancestry employee, a computer or a genealogy fairy (haha Ted). It was a regular person like you or me. They may be an expert genealogist with years of research experience; or they may be a beginner who's just starting out... and who may have made some mistakes. If you find some of your ancestors in a user-submitted tree, be sure to verify the information yourself by looking for documents to back it up.
Ah. I didn't know that, although I never even went on the website, other people I know call it a scam.
I am still curious what website has found the most hits with people, so i can start tracing myself

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i'm from like the sky duh
that's why i keep talking about everyones wind
its their smartness
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AfraidOfClouds wrote:
i'm from like the sky duh
that's why i keep talking about everyones wind
its their smartness
You make less than no sense dude
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All the way back to the Bacon family.
Oh wait, that's only one generation back.
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Nexstudent wrote:
cheddargirl wrote:
Nexstudent wrote:
Lots of people complain about ancestry.com, and how it's a scam or something.It's not a scam, it's more like people dont' read the fine print about things when they sign up. Someone asked this on Yahoo, and here was the answer:
No, it's not a scam. Like Jan said, if you sign up for the free trial, they will charge your account if you don't cancel it before the trial period is up. But like Ted said, once you're a member, they won't automatically renew your account unless you tell them to. I've subscribed to Ancestry for 7 years and I've never had a problem.
Using Ancestry is like visiting a library. The library won't write your research paper for you, but it provides you with books you can use to research the topic of your paper. That's how Ancestry works. It gives you access to historical documents such as census, vital records, military records, etc. that contain information about your ancestors; you search those documents and use the info to piece together your family tree.
If you're lucky, someone else has already researched some of your family and posted a tree on Ancestry. But that "someone" was not an Ancestry employee, a computer or a genealogy fairy (haha Ted). It was a regular person like you or me. They may be an expert genealogist with years of research experience; or they may be a beginner who's just starting out... and who may have made some mistakes. If you find some of your ancestors in a user-submitted tree, be sure to verify the information yourself by looking for documents to back it up.Ah. I didn't know that, although I never even went on the website, other people I know call it a scam.
I am still curious what website has found the most hits with people, so i can start tracing myself![]()
I think that depends on the data each genealogy has on record (for example, most of ancestry.com's records are based on U.S. records, so you might have little luck searching there if you know your family might have come from areas outside U.S. territories). And even then, searching may be difficult because searching up a single name can result in hundreds of records.
I managed to stumble across this article when searching how to look up ancestry online, maybe it might help.

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I hardly know anything about my family, but heres some stuff. Well there are Newtons in my family, and also an Isaac!
Oh, and in 15 something someone in my family got deported to Australia for nicking an apple. :OOO I've got Tobins, Cawseys, Newtons, and some others.
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GlitchSprite wrote:
AfraidOfClouds wrote:
i'm from like the sky duh
that's why i keep talking about everyones wind
its their smartnessYou make less than no sense dude
thanks so much bro i love being random
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I can trace back to my great nan, and that's it. I'm not sure about my birth family though...
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cheddargirl wrote:
terminator68 wrote:
How did you find this? I want to know who my ancestors are xD!
BTW: I've tried ancestry.com. Doesn't work for some reason.Any ancestry website is limited to whatever record they have. Maybe ancestry.com didn't have the records that would allow you to trace back you family lineage.
![]()
Did you try asking you family about it? That's how I traced my lineage.![]()
I probably should ask again. I have my latin roots, and Ancestry doesn't find ancestors from Mexico, correct? Oh well xD. Thanks.

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