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FamilySearch

Discussion in 'Search tips - discussion' started by Tim, Mar 14, 2013.

  1. RosemaryC

    RosemaryC LostCousins Member

    Many records in the US and Canada do list full names for both the mother and father, which can be extremely handy in finding people who have emigrated. Because my ancestors moved between Scotland, Ireland and England and Canada and the US, I have found such parent searches very useful in a number of cases, as more recent records in Canada and the US often do give both names. It is important, of course, to include the mother's maiden surname in the search engine.
     
  2. Jacqueline

    Jacqueline Moderator Staff Member

    I would bother with the old search only for those things which have specific dob or date of baptism entered by "members" who perhaps had access to a family bible or suchlike where it seems to be the only such reference in captivity. Amongst the rubbish, there were the odd gems.
    The new site is so useful! Especially where the PRs have been added like Norfolk. I have a good lead nowat last on my Mary Riches born Norwich c 1775.
     
  3. Jacqueline

    Jacqueline Moderator Staff Member

    I think the mothers' maiden names are important to those non-conformists in Calvinist (not sure about Lutheran, but I think not) influenced churches eg French Huguenots and "the Kirk" where marriage was a civil business rather than a religious one. I first came upon them while researching my Orange ancestors, refugees from the Rouen area of Normandy in the 1670s and '80s, before realising that Scottish records were the same. Unfortunately, I'm rather short of Scots who went to Northumberland - Heppples and Proudlocks via Laidlaws from Selkirk.
     
  4. peter

    peter Administrator Staff Member

    You may not feel the same after reading my next newsletter.....
     
  5. Alexander Bisset

    Alexander Bisset Administrator Staff Member

    Hopefully your newsletter will dispel some of the negative myths about the new search. ie: Just because you don't yet know where to find something doesn't mean it doesn't work.
     

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