Talk about entertaining stories! Our RecordClick professional genealogist has found the movie mogul...
Category - Ancestry Research
Ancestry research usually begins with you starting your family tree. Once you’ve added your name to the tree, then begin by adding your immediate family. Remember, your immediate family often holds the key to starting a successful family history project.
Record the memories of your parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles, sibling, and cousins as you start building your family tree. As you continue adding new family members you will quickly discover how easy it to complete ancestry research.
At some point you are going to hit a road block or also referred to as a genealogy brick wall. Not to worry, continue searching in a different family branch. The goal is to complete as much of your ancestry research by yourself as possible.
Find free tools and resources on the web to help you with your search. When you’ve exhausted all resources and you can no longer find any more records for your ancestry tree you will need to find help. We, at Record Click, want to be your resource, your aid, your means to passing your brick wall and solving the next piece of your puzzle.
A Genealogist Corrects On line Info in Larry David’s...
Larry David is on Broadway and his online info is abundant. But if you dig a little deeper, his...
A Genealogist Looks at Larry David’s Family
The genealogist can always look a bit further into a family's history and find generational...
For this Genealogist: Family and Football – Vince...
RecordClick's professional genealogist Jean Shurtliff looks at Football great Vince Lombardi and...
For the Genealogy Researcher, the Life of Sandy Koufax is at a...
Sandy Koufax, the legendary pitcher, has led a very private life since he retired from baseball...
Are Super-sized Family Trees the Work of a Genealogy Researcher...
Family trees and lineage charts are what the genealogy researcher does. Now, with the aide of...
Happy New Year From the Genealogist to the Poet
Christmas is over and everyone has gone home. New Year's Eve is just about here and what comes to...
Hundred Year – Olds Give the Genealogist a Long Life:...
Most of the ancestors we search for in the 20th century didn't live to be 100. There were maybe 60...
When the Genealogist Comes Across an Unusual Nickname
Some people's names are down right wacky. Fuzzy? Pip? Moo-Moo? Nicknames like Tom, Jim, Bob or Chaz...
A Close Look at Laila Amaria Ali’s Genealogy, Family...
African American genealogy has moved to a new level with DNA testing and genetic genealogy. Boxer...
A Special Christmas in 1776 From the Vantage Point of a...
Everyone has heard of Washington's crossing of the Delaware and his amazing victory in December...
An Unbroken Subject for the Genealogist: WWII Hero Louis...
Angelina Jolie's new film Unbroken features the heroic story of World War II hero Louis Zamperini...
Our Genealogist Loves Christmas and Crooner Andy Williams
Holiday season is about family and place. America's favorite Christmas-time special was always with...
Cranberries Didn’t Get Bogged Down in Limited Lineage...
You'd think the ancestor who was quiet and a little bitter would have faded away. But not in...
Part 3: Disasters May Help the Genealogy Researcher; Not So...
When the family of entertainer Bill Cosby lost their only son in 1977, the Cosby family tree was...
A Genealogy Researcher Looks At Thanksgiving, the Pilgrims...
Thanksgiving makes us think of the Pilgrims, the Mayflower and the Native Americans all having a...
Looking For Resources, Genealogist? Check Out a Library
Every genealogist knows that the search is the biggest part of the process. That search for...
For a Genealogist, the Obituaries are Already Heaven
Some have said that the obituary section of the paper is one of the most well-read parts. Why? Are...
Our Genealogy Researcher Finds Swimmer Michael Phelps’ Ancestors...
He swam into the record books and we wondered if other people in Michael Phelps's family were...
For Veteran’s Day, A Genealogist Looks at the...
Veterans who win the Medal of Honor are famous, right? Our genealogist Joan Shurtliff finds that...