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"Must-Do" Genealogy Projects

10 “Must-Do” Genealogy Projects for March

10 "Must-Do" Genealogy Projects for March

March is a month of change. Winter begins to loosen its grip, the days grow longer, and it starts to feel like it is time to get moving again. For genealogists, March is a great month to take on projects that may have been put on hold during the colder season. It is a good time to revisit outdoor research, organize your materials, and begin fresh work on family lines that need attention.

Genealogy often follows the seasons. Some months are better for staying inside and digging through records, books, and databases. Other months are better for cemetery visits, local history trips, and reconnecting with people who may have information to share. March gives you a little of both. You can still enjoy productive research time indoors while also preparing for the busier spring months ahead.

It is also a natural month for catching up. You may have a family history chapter you meant to write, a cemetery you wanted to visit, a historical society you have been meaning to explore, or a stack of records waiting to be organized. March is the right time to start.

Here are 10 genealogy projects worth doing this month.

Clean Off Some Headstones

As snow and ice disappear, cemeteries become easier to access again. Headstones that may have been hidden or hard to reach during the winter can now be visited more comfortably. March is a good time to check on family burial sites and see how they weathered the season.


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Sometimes a gentle cleaning can make faded inscriptions easier to read. Dirt, moss, bird droppings, and general buildup can hide names and dates that are already hard to see. Even a light cleaning may uncover lettering that has not been clearly readable in years.

This must be done carefully. Not every stone should be cleaned, especially if it is cracked, flaking, unstable, or very old. Fragile stones can be damaged easily. If a stone appears delicate, it is better to leave it alone and simply photograph it as it is. For stones that are in stable condition, the safest approach is plain water, a very soft brush, and a gentle touch. Harsh cleaners, bleach, power washers, and wire brushes should never be used.

Take clear photos before and after any cleaning. Photograph the full stone, the surrounding area, and any nearby family stones. Record the cemetery name, section, and plot number if possible. A March cemetery visit can become more than a cleanup trip. It can become a valuable research day.

Put Markers on Some Unmarked Graves

Many genealogists know where an ancestor is buried but also know there is no marker at the grave. Sometimes the burial is listed in a cemetery record, church register, family Bible, or funeral notice, yet nothing marks the spot today. In other cases, an original marker may have been lost or destroyed.

March can be a practical time to think about correcting that. As the ground becomes visible again and cemetery offices resume more regular activity, you can begin planning a marker project.

Start by confirming the burial location carefully. Contact the cemetery office, church, sexton, or local historical society if needed. Ask what rules apply to markers, including size, material, style, and installation. Some cemeteries have strict requirements, and others may require work to be done through an approved monument company.

A marker is not only a way to honor an ancestor. It is also a contribution to future family history research. A marked grave makes it easier for descendants to find the burial site later. It helps preserve the identity of the person buried there and prevents the location from being forgotten.

If a permanent marker is not possible right now, begin by saving the proof of burial and keeping a file with all of the necessary details. That way, when the time is right, you are ready to move forward.

Visit the Historical Societies Where Your Ancestors Lived

When the weather improves, short research trips become much easier. March is a great time to visit local historical societies, museums, archives, and genealogical organizations in places where your ancestors lived.

These places often hold materials you will never find online. That may include family surname files, donated letters, old maps, church booklets, city directories, local newspapers, cemetery transcriptions, school yearbooks, photographs, and unpublished local histories. In many communities, volunteers have spent years preserving records and information that exist nowhere else.



One of the best parts of visiting a local historical society is the local knowledge. Staff and volunteers often know details about name changes, old roads, closed cemeteries, forgotten churches, and boundary changes that are not obvious in online records.

Before you go, check the hours and ask whether an appointment is needed. Some smaller organizations are open only on certain days. Bring a written list of the names, dates, places, and questions you want to research. That helps you stay focused and make the most of your visit.

Even if you do not solve a major problem during the trip, you may come home with valuable background information that helps you better understand the community your ancestors lived in.

Read a New Book on Research or History

Genealogy is not just about collecting records. It is also about learning how to research better and understand the lives your ancestors lived. March is a good month to choose a new book that sharpens your skills or gives you deeper historical context.

Some books teach research methods. These might cover land records, probate files, military service, immigration, newspapers, DNA, or courthouse work. Other books focus on local or regional history, which can help explain migration routes, settlement patterns, work life, religion, and daily life in the areas where your ancestors lived.

Both kinds of books are valuable. A research book may introduce you to a source you have never used. A history book may explain why your family moved when they did or why certain records exist in one place but not another.

Pick one book for the month and take notes as you read. Write down record groups you want to explore, websites to search, or ideas that might apply to your own family. Reading with a purpose makes the time much more useful.

The more you understand about research and history, the better your family story becomes.

Start Research on a New Family Line

March is a natural time for new beginnings, and that can apply to genealogy too. If you have been stuck on one difficult branch of the family for a long time, starting a new line may be just what you need.

This does not mean giving up on the problem line. It simply means shifting your attention enough to keep making progress. A fresh family branch can bring new records, new locations, and a renewed sense of interest.

Choose a line you have not explored very deeply. Gather what you already know and create a timeline. Then start looking for the missing pieces. Search census records, birth and death records, marriage records, cemetery listings, newspaper notices, probate files, and local histories.

Starting a new line also gives you a chance to practice good habits from the beginning. Source your facts carefully. Keep track of where you searched. Save your document images with clear file names. Record negative searches too, so you do not waste time repeating the same steps later.

A fresh start can be one of the best ways to stay motivated. Sometimes the discoveries you make on a new line can even give you ideas that help break through problems on older ones.

Write a Chapter on Your Family History Book

A lot of family historians say they want to write a family history book someday. Fewer actually sit down and begin. March is a good month to change that.

Instead of thinking about an entire book, focus on writing one chapter. Choose one family, one person, one generation, one migration story, or one place. Narrowing your goal makes the project feel more manageable and far less overwhelming.

A written chapter turns your research into something your family can read and understand. Documents and timelines are valuable, but a clear narrative helps relatives see the people behind the records.

Pick a topic you can finish this month. It might be your grandparents and the home where they raised their family. It might be an immigrant ancestor and the first years after arrival. It might be the story of a family farm, a military service record, or a church connection.

As you write, you will often notice where your research is strong and where it is weak. That is one of the hidden benefits of writing. It shows you what is missing and helps you decide what to look for next.

One finished chapter is real progress. Once you complete one, the next becomes easier.

Put Flowers or Decorations on the Graves of Your Ancestors

Not every cemetery visit needs to focus only on research. Sometimes it is enough to show up, clean the area a little, and place flowers or a small decoration in memory of those buried there.

March can be a nice time to do this, especially after the grayness of winter. Some graves may still show the effects of snow, wind, and seasonal neglect. Fresh flowers or a respectful decoration can brighten the site while also showing care and remembrance.

Check cemetery rules before bringing anything. Some cemeteries allow seasonal flowers but limit other decorations. Others remove items on a regular schedule. Knowing the rules ahead of time can save frustration.

While you are there, take a few moments to read the stones again and notice who is buried nearby. You may spot relatives, military markers, symbols, or family groupings you had not paid much attention to before. Take updated photos, especially if the season gives you better lighting or visibility than previous visits.

These quiet visits help keep your ancestors from becoming just names in a file. They make the connection feel more personal and more real.

Plan a Traditional Family Easter Gathering

If your family celebrates Easter, March is the right time to begin planning. For a genealogist, this can become more than just a holiday meal. It can become a family history project.

Start by looking into how earlier generations in your family observed Easter. Did they attend a particular church? Did they prepare the same foods every year? Were there special desserts, decorations, clothing, or customs that were passed down through the family? Did those traditions come from a certain country, region, or denomination?

Clues may be found in old photographs, recipe cards, church records, family letters, diaries, newspaper notices, or stories from older relatives. Even one old Easter photograph can lead to new questions and good conversation.

You do not need to recreate every detail. Even adding one or two older traditions to your modern celebration can make the day more meaningful. Prepare a family recipe, display old holiday photos, or ask relatives to share memories of Easter from childhood.

Holiday traditions are one of the easiest ways to connect the past with the present. They help family history feel lived in, not just studied.

Do Some Genealogy Spring Cleaning

Genealogy can create clutter faster than almost any other hobby. Papers pile up. Duplicate files multiply. Downloads land in random folders. Notes end up on scraps of paper that are easy to lose. Before long, valuable information is buried under disorganization.

March is a good time to clean all of that up.

Start with your physical materials. Sort through papers, folders, notebooks, binders, and boxes. Throw away what you do not need. Refile what belongs elsewhere. Group records by surname, family, place, or record type, whichever system works best for you.

Then move to your computer. Rename files clearly. Organize document images. Delete obvious duplicates. Back up your family tree, scanned records, photographs, and notes. Make sure important files exist in more than one place.

This is also a good time to clean up your research itself. Look for people in your tree who have unsourced dates, weak notes, or hints you attached years ago without checking closely. Bring order not only to your files but to your methods.

A clean research space saves time, reduces stress, and makes it easier to think clearly. It also helps you avoid doing the same work twice.

Catch Up on Your Genealogy Correspondence

Genealogy often grows through contact with other people. Distant cousins, local researchers, librarians, cemetery caretakers, DNA matches, and family friends may all have pieces of information you do not.

That is why March is a good month to catch up on correspondence. Look back through your email, messages, contact list, or notes and see who you have been meaning to answer.

Maybe someone sent you photos and you never replied. Maybe a cousin asked a question. Maybe a researcher shared a lead that you meant to follow up on. Maybe you promised to send information and never got around to it.

Take the time to write back. Share a short update on your research. Thank people for their help. Ask if they have discovered anything new. If you have made progress on a family line you share, let them know.

Keep your messages clear and specific. Include names, dates, and places so the other person can quickly understand which family you mean. If you are asking for help, explain exactly what you are trying to find.

These connections often lead to some of the best discoveries in genealogy. A single reply can reopen a conversation that turns into shared documents, photographs, or stories that would have been lost otherwise.

Conclusion

March is one of the best months to renew your energy for genealogy. It gives you the chance to get outside again, revisit cemeteries and local history sites, organize your materials, reconnect with other researchers, and begin new work with fresh interest.

You do not have to do all 10 of these projects at once. Even choosing two or three can give your research a strong push forward and set the tone for the rest of the season.

Visit a cemetery. Read a new book. Write a chapter. Start a new line. Organize your files. Answer those overdue messages. The important thing is to keep moving.

And while you are planning your March genealogy projects, take a little time to stay connected and inspired. Subscribe to the Ancestral Findings Podcast for more genealogy stories, ideas, and research help throughout the year.