
Things
To Do When You Hit A Brick
Wall
Submitted
by: HostGFSKate@aol.com
Instead
of getting frustrated......take
the time to go back and analyze
the information and documents
that you already have.
What exactly is analysis? It is
the separation of information
into parts to examine and fully
document your research. To quote
Sir Conan Doyle writing as
Sherlock Holmes in "The Beryl
Coronet", "When you eliminate the
impossible, whatever you have
left, no matter how improbable,
must be the truth."
Genealogy can be done just like
that, too. Use the
Who-What-Where-When-Why method of
analyzing. Define the "Who"
before you start your search. Was
the surname spelled differently
during different times? Was the
spelling changed at the time of
immigration? "What" do you want
to know? "Where" is probably the
most important fact, after "who".
If you don't know "where", you're
not going to find anything!
"When" ... .give a time frame or
time period so you know where to
search for records. "Why" is a
fun subject. Why did your
ancestor immigrate from Germany
to the US? Why did they move from
Illinois to Wyoming? Why are
there so many German (or Irish,
or Italian, etc.) people in the
area? Why did grandma have her
first child at 15 and grandpa was
32? Was he married before? "How"
do I answer all these questions.
How do I find the records I
need?
The "Who", "What", "When",
"Where", and "Why" concept can be
applied to every document/source
that you acquire.
Recognize the jurisdictions that
apply. Are the records in
national records, state, county,
parish, town, precinct records?
Know where you need to look.
Establish search boundaries.
Realize those boundaries could
have changed over the years.
Here are some common genealogical
mistakes (I hate to use that
word, but I can't think of a
better one):
Not using forms
(pedigree/lineage or family
group/record). These can be
manual forms or forms produced by
a genealogy software program.
Avoiding contacting
relatives and others working the
same lines.
Assuming there are no
others researching your
lines.
Not using maps for the
time/area where your ancestors
lived.
Avoiding historical
studies of your area/time frame
of research.
Failing to utilize family
traditions when researching
Trying to connect to
"published/printed" lineages
Avoiding using
primary/original records
Losing control over your
records (comes under the heading
of organization)
Not following through on
clues
Ignoring spelling
variants
Announcing you are at a
dead end, brick wall or giving
up. Brick walls should be
considered as "rest stops" in
research, not stopping places.
This is a time to go back and
review your data for new
clues.
Assuming the census names
in one household are all one
family
Assuming John Jr. is
always the son of a John Sr.
Not keeping an open mind
to more than one marriage
Assuming all printed
materials are correct
Avoiding reanalyzing your
own work periodically for
clues
Evidence/Sources:
There
are five types of evidence
(sources).
1. Primary Evidence: Any evidence
or event which is recorded at (or
near) the time of the event, such
as a birth certificate or a
will.
2. Secondary Evidence: Any
statement made by persons (or
facts) that are from personal
memory or any evidence recorded
at any time other than when the
event occurred, such as a death
certificate.
3. Collateral Evidence: Evidence
which gives cause or clues to
other records. The purpose of
this type of evidence is an
important part of the record
without actually proving
anything. For example, if a
father speaks of his daughter in
a will, land record, or deed by
another surname, you would look
for a marriage for the
daughter.
4. Circumstantial Evidence: Two
or more facts might be so related
that one may prove a different
type of evidence than the other.
For example, in a record a man
mentions a daughter. Later he
marries again and refers to the
daughter as "daughter of a
previous wife". This implies that
he had at least one daughter by a
previous marriage.
5. Reported Evidence: Rumor,
hearsay, family
tradition.....this type of
evidence can be found in family
interviews, family histories,
county histories, biographies,
etc. This should be considered
suspect until proven with primary
or original evidence. For
example, family tradition says
grandma was widowed young and
raised her family alone. Records
do not indicate a death (no
probate, no change of land
ownership, guardianship, etc.)
When no proof appears that
grandpa died, you might suspect
that he ran away from home for
some reason.
Weigh your evidence/sources for
their value.....study the merits
of any information you receive,
compare all the evidence, and
draw your conclusions. These
three steps are
analyzation.
To study the merits of your
information, try this:
Virtual Truth (proof is
certain)
Probable Truth (proof is
probable, but not absolutely
certain)
Supposed Evidence (you
suspect this is true, but you
can't be sure.) Give reasons why
you suspect this is true. Grandpa
was "in his cups" and made a
statement, but you can't prove
it.
Absolutely Ridiculous
(utter nonsense, but it can't be
ignored)
It's relatively easy to compare
data. Get your data together,
arrange it in usable form
(chronological or group),
compare, and contrast the
information. If there are
differences, note them until you
can prove the differences one way
or another. I prefer to keep all
of it....and make the appropriate
notes such as: "This is family
tradition, but it was disproved
by (and state the source)."
Draw your conclusions......once
you have done the above, you are
ready to make a decision. Let's
use our Forum term "bingo". This
means you have found solid,
indisputable proof that will
extend your pedigree. Then there
are the "maybes"....you need to
work on these more, but perhaps
they will prove to be true. And
finally, "might be". You keep
these and review them from time
to time because they may fit in
when you get additional
information.
Don't forget items of common use,
either. Antiques that are handed
down from generation to
generation can substantiate your
research. A chair may have been a
wedding present, a piece of
jewelry could have been presented
to a new mother by her husband to
celebrate the birth of a
child.
Keep an open mind when you
evaluate your "evidence". The
research process can be defined
in one paragraph. Gather data in
order to define the problem(s)
accurately. Look for answers in
more than one source in order to
draw conclusions from all
evidence. Then look for other
alternatives. Follow clues to
their conclusions in order to
make decisions based on facts.
Gather more data.
Your research should be
critically analyzed for accuracy
and completeness at each phase of
your search. Document each
statement. Research which you
have previously completed may
contain more clues than you might
think. When we are new and
starting our research, we grab
anything and everything we can
find, and never look at them
again. Many of the answers we are
looking for now may be in those
records and notes. You could find
materials previously
missed.
Here are some warning signs when
you look at your pedigree charts
and family group sheets. Do you
have blank lines? Is there
incomplete information on the
children? "CA" or "about" used
too often? Are dates too close,
or too far apart to be correct?
Check for historical
impossibilities. If a child was
born in 1860, there is no way he
would have served in the Civil
War. On the other hand, look for
historical possibilities. What
war could he have served in? Was
there a massive migration? Check
the time lines to see what was
happening in the world, state or
county at the time this ancestor
was alive. Do you have wrong
locations or missing locations?
No county or town listed, just
the state? Any other missing
information? Marriages of
children? Second marriages? Each
line on that form serves a
purpose.
Just remember when looking at the
documents you so painstakingly
acquired to use them, reuse them,
and then use them again. What are
they trying to tell you? What
were they used for? Remember the
time frame and the context within
that time frame. Be a detective!
Search for clues. Eliminate the
impossible. Check out the
possible to come up with the
probable. Then look for
substantiating documentation.
Remember the Sherlockian phrase I
cited at the beginning of this
article...."When you eliminate
the impossible, whatever you have
left, no matter how improbable,
must be the truth."
I hope you have fun analyzing
your research....happy
sleuthing!

©
2002 GFNEWS, a monthly
publication of the Golden Gate
Genealogy Forum, Inc. of
Franklin, MA.
(America Online Keyword: roots.)
The Editors
welcome your ideas and
articles,
success stories, favorite
genealogy research tips, comments
and suggestions.
©
2002 Graphics
By
Carol,
All Rights Reserved
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