When searching for your ancestors sometimes even knowing
their names does not seem to help! It depends on who recorded the records. I
found a website (and I’m sure there are others) that has a list of alternates
for names. http://www.censustrail.com/ctrail/abbreviations.php
http://amberskyline.com/treasuremaps/x-prop.html
also shows how some of these names appear in script in the records.
Finding your female ancestors can be even more difficult.
Many women of Catholic European heritage were named Mary something and spent their whole lives being known by their middle
names. The only records that would have their Christian names are the birth,
marriage, or death records – just the ones you are looking for!
Another problem I’ve found with searching for women in newspapers
is the more formal naming patterns. Many of my ancestors’ newspaper records
show the women as nothing other than Mrs. Jones or Mrs. Parker or, if I’m
really lucky, Mrs. James Parker.
Don’t forget that some of your immigrant ancestors may still
use the “foreign” given name they were born with. Lewis could be in the very
record you are looking at but he’s listed as Ludwig. Rootsweb has a great chart
for researching foreign names across multiple countries and shows the name in
different languages: http://www.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~scoconee/names.html
The results are shown as .pdf files and you will need Adobe
Acrobat Reader (or similar software) in order to read the results.
Don’t give up!
Happy Hunting!
I haven't done any work on my tree for ages, but something brought me over to your site and I just might give it another shot. I really need to learn how to organize so that I know how to keep track of everyone. Where there is a will there is a way. :)
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