Every family history begins close to home. Before you search old courthouse books, census pages, ship lists, military files, or newspaper archives, you begin with the people you already know. You begin with your own name, your parents, your grandparents, and the stories that have been carried through your family.
That may not feel like much at first. You may only have a few dates, a few places, and a handful of memories. Maybe someone once told you that your great-grandfather came from Ireland. Maybe you heard that a family member served in a war. Maybe there is an old photo with no names written on the back. These small pieces are often where the search begins.
The goal at the beginning is not to build the largest possible family tree. The goal is to build a tree that can be trusted. A careful start will save you from confusion later. It will also help you recognize good records, avoid wrong turns, and understand your ancestors as real people instead of names on a chart.
Many people begin genealogy by opening an online tree and adding every possible match they see. It feels productive. Names appear quickly. Hints show up. Other people’s trees seem to offer answers. The problem is that those answers may not be correct. A record can belong to someone else. A shared surname can lead you down the wrong line. One wrong connection can send an entire branch in the wrong direction.
A strong family history is built slowly and carefully. Each person should be connected to the next person with evidence. Each date should have a source. Each place should fit the timeline. When you start that way, your research becomes easier to follow, easier to explain, and easier to share.
Begin With Yourself
The best place to begin is with yourself. Write down your full name, your birth date, and your place of birth. Then add your parents. Record their full names, including maiden names, when they apply. Add their birth dates, marriage dates, death dates if needed, and the places connected with those events.
From there, move to your grandparents. Do the same thing. Write down full names, dates, places, and any details you already know. Do not worry if some information is missing. Blank spaces are not failures. They are your first research goals.
This early work may feel basic, but it gives you structure. It also helps prevent one of the biggest mistakes in genealogy: skipping generations. You should be able to show how each generation connects to the next. Your father connects to his parents. Your grandmother connects to her parents. Your great-grandfather connects to his parents.
When those connections are supported by records, your tree becomes stronger.
Starting with yourself also helps you think clearly about what you know and what you only think you know. Family stories are valuable, but they need to be checked. A story may be mostly true, partly true, or built around a misunderstanding that changed over time. Write the story down, but label it as a story until records support it.
Talk to Living Relatives
One of the most valuable early steps is talking with relatives. Older family members may know names, places, marriages, military service, church connections, occupations, and stories that never made it into official records. They may also know who has family photos, Bible records, letters, funeral cards, or old documents stored away.
Ask clear questions. Instead of asking, “What do you know about the family?” ask, “Where was Grandpa born?” or “Do you remember the names of Grandma’s brothers and sisters?” Specific questions often bring better answers.
You can also ask about places. Where did the family live when you were young? What church did they attend? Where are they buried? Who lived nearby? What relatives visited during the holidays? These details may point you toward census records, cemetery records, church books, land records, or newspapers.
Write down who gave you the information and when. This is important. A note from your aunt about where her grandparents lived is useful, but you need to know who said it. Later, when you compare that memory with a census record or death certificate, you will have a clearer understanding of where the information came from.
Family interviews are also time sensitive. Records may stay in archives for generations, but living memory does not. If you have relatives who can answer questions, start there while you still can.
Gather What Your Family Already Has
Before paying for records or searching large databases, look around your own family. Many important clues are already in people’s homes. Family Bibles, birth certificates, marriage licenses, death certificates, funeral programs, military discharge papers, school records, letters, diaries, photo albums, and newspaper clippings can all provide useful information.
Old photographs are especially helpful when they are labeled. A photo with names, places, or dates written on the back may connect generations. Even an unlabeled photo can be useful if a relative recognizes the people in it. If you scan old photos, keep the front and the back together. The writing on the back may be as important as the picture itself.
Do not overlook small items. A funeral card may name a church or cemetery. A letter may include a return address. A military paper may list a unit. A marriage invitation may include the names of the parents. These details can be used to obtain official records.
As you gather these items, keep them organized. Create folders by family line or surname. If you scan documents, name the files clearly. A file named “Grandma birth certificate” may make sense today, but a better name would be “Mary Ellen Carter birth certificate, 1923, Ohio.” Clear names save time later.
Understand What Counts as Evidence
Genealogy is not just about collecting information. It is deciding whether the information is reliable. That means you need to understand evidence from the beginning.
A record created close to the event is usually stronger than one created many years later. A birth certificate issued shortly after a child’s birth is usually stronger for birth details than a death certificate issued decades later. A marriage record created at the time of the wedding is usually stronger for the marriage date than a family story told years later.
That does not mean later records are useless. Death certificates, obituaries, county histories, and online trees can all contain useful clues. The key is knowing how to use them. A death certificate may list the parents’ names, but the informant may have been mistaken. An obituary may list survivors, but it may leave someone out. A county history may tell a good story, but it may have been written from memory.
Every source should be read with care.
When two records disagree, do not panic. Conflicting details are common. Ages change from census to census. Names are spelled different ways. Birthplaces may shift between records. Your job is to compare the records and decide which information is best supported.
Ask yourself who created the record, when it was created, and how that person may have known the information. That kind of thinking will help you make better research decisions.
Work Backward One Generation at a Time
One of the best habits in genealogy is working backward. Start with the known generation and move to the previous one. Do not jump from a grandparent to a possible ancestor from 1700 just because the surname matches.
Surnames repeat. First names repeat. Families often used the same names again and again. In some communities, several men with the same name lived near each other at the same time. If you are not careful, you can easily attach your family to the wrong person.
A safer method is to prove each link. Your parents’ birth record may name their parents. A marriage record may confirm a spouse. A census record may show children in a household. A probate record may name heirs. Each record helps connect one generation to the next.
Think of your tree as a chain. If one link is weak, everything beyond it becomes uncertain. It is better to have four well-supported generations than ten generations built on guesses.
Use Census Records Early
Census records are often one of the first major record types you will use. They help place families in a specific location at a specific time. They show household members, ages, occupations, birthplaces, and sometimes relationships.
The census is useful because it gives you a timeline. If your ancestor appears in Ohio in 1900, Indiana in 1910, and Illinois in 1920, you now have movement to investigate. If a child appears in one census but not the next, that may point to marriage, death, or relocation. If an older parent appears in the household, that may help confirm a maiden name or family connection.
When you find a census record, read the whole household. Then look at nearby households. Neighbors may be relatives. Families often lived close to parents, siblings, in-laws, or people from the same community. These nearby names can become important later.
Do not rely only on the typed index. Indexes are helpful, but they can be wrong. Look at the actual image when you can. Handwriting may be difficult, but the image often gives more context than the transcription.
Keep Good Notes From the Start
Good notes will save you from repeating the same searches. They will also help you understand your own work months or years later.
Write down what you searched, where you searched, and what you found. Also write down what you did not find. Negative searches are useful. If you searched a county marriage index and did not find your ancestor, that tells you something. It may mean the marriage took place elsewhere, the record is missing, or the name was recorded differently.
Keep source details with every record. At a minimum, note the record title, location, date, page or image number (if available), and where you accessed it. If you are using a website, record enough information so you or someone else can find the same record again.
This does not need to be complicated. A notebook, spreadsheet, or genealogy program can work. What matters is consistency. Make it a habit from the beginning, and your future research will be much easier to manage.
Be Careful With Online Trees
Online family trees can be useful, but they should be treated as clues, not proof. Some trees are carefully researched. Others are copied from tree to tree with little checking. Once an error spreads, it can appear in dozens of places and look convincing only because so many people repeated it.
When you see an online tree that includes your family, look for sources. Does the tree cite records? Do those records actually support the relationships shown? Does the timeline make sense? Are children born before parents were old enough? Are people shown living in two distant places at the same time?
Use online trees to find research ideas. Then confirm the information yourself.
This is especially important with older generations. The farther back you go, the easier it is for mistakes to multiply. A copied name from the 1700s may look exciting, but it needs solid support before it belongs in your tree.
Pay Attention to Names
Names can cause many problems in genealogy. A person may appear under a full name in one record, initials in another, a nickname in another, and a misspelled version somewhere else. Women may appear under maiden names, married names, or both. Immigrant names may change over time.
Do not assume spelling was fixed. Many older records were created by clerks, census takers, ministers, or officials who wrote what they heard. If your ancestor’s name was unusual, it may appear in several forms.
Search creatively. Try alternate spellings. Search with initials. Search by first name and location. Search for a spouse or child. Sometimes you find the right household by looking for someone else in the family.
Also, watch for repeated given names. Families often named children after parents, grandparents, ministers, neighbors, or national figures. Naming patterns can provide clues, but they should not be treated as proof on their own.
Study the Places Your Ancestors Lived
Place is one of the most important parts of family history. Records were usually created by location. Counties, towns, churches, courts, and local offices all kept records. To find your ancestors, you need to understand where they lived and which offices or institutions created records for that place.
County boundaries changed. A family may have lived in the same home while the county name changed around them. A town may have been renamed. A courthouse may have burned. A church may have closed, with its records sent somewhere else.
When you study a place, you learn where to look next. If your ancestor lived in a rural county, land and tax records may be useful. If they lived in a city, directories and newspapers may help. If they belonged to a church, baptism, marriage, and burial records may exist outside civil records.
A good family history is tied to geography. Names and dates are only part of the story. Places help you understand how people lived.
Build a Timeline
A timeline is one of the best tools for keeping your research clear. For each ancestor, list known events in order. Births, census entries, marriages, land purchases, military service, children’s births, moves, deaths, and burials can all go on the timeline.
Once you see the events in order, problems become easier to spot. A child born in one state, while the parents are present in another state at the same time, may require further research. A man listed in a census after his supposed date of death clearly requires correction. A large gap between records may show you where to focus next.
Timelines also help you see opportunity. If a family moved between 1880 and 1900, you can look for land sales, tax records, city directories, or newspaper notices during that period. If a child was born in a new state, that birth location may help narrow the move.
A timeline turns scattered facts into a clearer life story.
Review Your Work Often
Genealogy is not a straight path. You will learn more as you go, and records you found early may take on new meaning later. That is why reviewing your work is so helpful.
A census record you found months ago may include a neighbor whose surname now appears in a marriage record. A death certificate you skimmed before may include an informant you now recognize. A confusing place name may make sense after you study county boundaries.
Do not be afraid to revisit old research. It is often where new discoveries begin.
Reviewing also helps you catch mistakes. Maybe you added a date without a source. Maybe you accepted a record too quickly. Maybe two people with the same name became mixed together. Careful review keeps your tree clean and reliable.
Expect Slow Places
Every family history has slow places. You may search for a birth record and fail to find it. You may not know a woman’s maiden name. You may lose a family between two census years. These moments are normal.
When you hit a difficult spot, do not force an answer. Step back and ask what records might help. Could a marriage record name parents? Could a death certificate give a birthplace? Could a probate file name children? Could a newspaper obituary provide relatives? Could land records show family connections?
Sometimes the answer is not in the record you expected. It may be in a neighbor’s record, a sibling’s obituary, a church register, or a court file.
Slow places are part of the work. They often lead to better research habits.
Share Carefully
As your family history grows, you may want to share it with relatives. That is one of the best parts of genealogy. A well-researched family tree can help others understand where they came from and preserve information for future generations.
Share what you know, but also be honest about what is not yet proven. There is nothing wrong with saying, “This is likely, but I am still looking for more evidence.” That kind of honesty makes your work stronger.
When sharing with family, include stories when you can. Dates and names are important, but people connect with lives. Where did your ancestors live? What work did they do? What losses did they face? What records show their movement, service, faith, or family ties?
Family history becomes more meaningful when it helps people see the lives behind the records.
Build It Right From the Start
Starting your family history the right way does not require expensive tools or advanced training. It requires patience, careful notes, and a willingness to verify before moving forward.
Begin with yourself. Talk to relatives. Gather family papers. Work backward one generation at a time. Use records carefully. Keep notes. Pay attention to names, places, and timelines. Treat online trees as clues. Review your work often.
These habits will give your research a strong foundation.
The names you find are more than entries in a database. They belonged to people who lived real lives, made decisions, faced hardship, raised families, moved from place to place, and left traces behind. Your work is to gather those traces carefully and preserve them well.
That is where family history begins.
Research Tip of the Week
Write down what you already know before searching online. Include names, dates, places, family stories, and who gave you the information. This gives you a starting point and helps you avoid mixing up people with similar names.
Record Spotlight
Family Bibles
Family Bibles can be valuable because they often contain handwritten records of births, marriages, and deaths. Some entries were written close to the time of the event, while others may have been copied in later. Look at handwriting, ink, spacing, and the order of entries. These details may help you understand when the information was added.
If your family has a Bible record, scan or photograph every page that contains family information. Also, photograph the title page and publication date if possible. Those details can help place the entries in context.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Relying on online trees without checking the records
Online trees can point you toward useful clues, but they are not proof by themselves. Before adding names, dates, or relationships to your own tree, look for records that support the information. A copied mistake can spread quickly and lead your research in the wrong direction.
Quick Research Checklist
- Did I start with myself and work backward?
- Did I record full names, dates, and places?
- Did I write down where each detail came from?
- Did I talk to living relatives?
- Did I gather family papers, photos, and Bible records?
- Did I compare more than one source?
- Did I check whether the timeline makes sense?
- Did I treat online trees as clues instead of proof?
Try This Next
Choose one grandparent and create a short timeline for that person. Add birth, marriage, census entries, places lived, death, and burial if you know them. Then look for one record that confirms one missing or uncertain detail.
