Genealogy TV Podcast

Great Ideas | Genealogy TV Podcast

29 min · 26. sept. 2025
episode Great Ideas | Genealogy TV Podcast cover

Beskrivelse

Genealogy Tips: Viewer Comments & Expert Insights on Cemeteries, DNA Clusters, and More!Join Connie Knox and Ashley Moore on Genealogy TV for an engaging episode filled with insights and tips derived from viewer comments. Explore various genealogical strategies, from the unique concept of a cemetery crawl to the practical use of Eagle Scout projects for documenting local cemeteries. Learn about the virtual cemetery tool in FindaGrave, the benefits of reflective surfaces in tombstone photography, and how to navigate DNA clusters on Ancestry. This episode is packed with useful information for both novice and seasoned genealogists. Don't miss Connie's expert advice on building heat maps and making the most of Google Earth for your family history research!00:00 Introduction00:13 Sharing Viewer Comments and Ideas00:38 Forgotten Lines Episode Comments - Cemetery Crawl02:57 Cemetery Documentation Tips04:03 Mirror for Seeing the Letters05:58 Virtual Cemetery on FindaGrave10:21 DNA Clustering and Centimorgans16:13 Brick Wall Strategies and Census Records21:02 Remembering Immigration vs. Emigration23:39 Accessing Google's Street View27:05 Mapping Ancestor Migration28:40 Conclusion

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Alle episoder

22 episoder

episode Finding WWII Military Records (Genealogy TV Podcast) cover

Finding WWII Military Records (Genealogy TV Podcast)

If you've ever tried to piece together a family member's military service from World War II, you've probably hit a wall at some point. In this episode, Ashley Moore joins me to talk through what records are actually out there, what to realistically expect, and how to keep going when things run dry. We start with draft registration cards -- a useful entry point, but registering didn't always mean someone served. Ashley spotted something on her great-grandfather's card that most people would scroll right past: "I actually looked very hard at his draft card, and they actually wrote in the upper corner, enlisted. Keep an eye out for that -- paying attention to those small details, because you might miss it." I also bring up the Old Man's Draft, a separate 1942 registration collection worth knowing about, and we cover what useful details you can find on both sides of the card. From there, we get into service records and the DD-214: "You're going to work backwards from their separation and then up through enlistment. The DD-214 is kind of like a cover sheet that summarizes essentially the person's time in service." A significant portion of these records no longer exist, and it's worth understanding why before you go looking: "They didn't actually burn up, they actually got wet. They were in the basement, all the water from the fire came down and molded all of these records, and very few of those records in that basement survived." We cover what to do when official records are gone -- Fold3, unit histories, pay vouchers, hospital records, local newspapers, and more. Ashley also talks through how to approach the abbreviations and codes that show up constantly on military documents, and medals and uniform ribbons as a way to identify where someone served and what they experienced. I share the story of a family member who was a POW in World War II and left behind two remarkable journals. At the very end of the written one: "He writes, 'We can hear the gunfire getting closer and closer. The guards have suddenly left.' And then he writes in big letters: Liberated. And there's one page after that where he writes: Home with Family." I also share a firsthand account from a great uncle who was aboard a ship at Pearl Harbor during the attack: "Normally it would take two guys to carry one shell, that's how heavy they were. The adrenaline was pumping so hard that one guy was carrying two. The guys in front of him were dropping, the guys behind him were dropping. He just didn't know how he survived it." We close with practical tips on correlating evidence across record types, and a thought worth sitting with: "I encourage people to write down what they know while they can, because these stories don't live forever." --- Chapters: 00:00 Introduction 00:39 Draft Cards Basics 02:09 Old Mans Draft Tip 03:04 Reading Draft Details 04:13 Enlistment and NARA Fire 05:39 Service Records and DD214 07:04 Decoding Acronyms Help 08:15 Alternatives When Records Lost 10:27 POW Diaries and Artifacts 14:04 Medals Photos and Context 16:33 Pearl Harbor Story 18:57 Closing Research Checklist 20:12 Where to Search Next 22:20 Wrap Up

19. juni 202623 min
episode Vital Records: Making Sense of Birth, Marriage, and Death Records (Genealogy TV Podcast) cover

Vital Records: Making Sense of Birth, Marriage, and Death Records (Genealogy TV Podcast)

Vital records are where most family trees get built, and in this episode we spend time unpacking what that actually means in practice. There is a real difference between knowing a record type exists and knowing how to use it well, and that gap is exactly where our conversation lives. We start with birth certificates. When they exist, they tend to hold up well, and for good reason: "Birth certificates are typically really good quality records because it's the parents that are giving the information. They witnessed the event. They participated in the event." The complication arrives when the certificate you need was never created. Civil registration of births did not get going until the early 1900s in most states, so for ancestors born before that, the search shifts toward church records, baptism registers, census entries, and family bibles. We also cover delayed birth certificates, which emerged largely because of Social Security in the mid-1930s. People suddenly needed to prove their age, and the resulting documents were often packed with corroborating detail from multiple sources, making them genuinely useful research tools. Marriage records get a substantial portion of the episode. One thing worth holding onto: "Pay attention to the dates. A lot of times people will put in their family tree the marriage license date thinking that is the date they got married, and it's not necessarily so. The marriage license is an intent to marry. The marriage return says, yes, it happened." We also get into marriage bonds, banns, and the value of witnesses. Ashley shares a story about her great-grandmother's records that gets to the heart of why cross-referencing documents matters: "I looked at that and I went, that's not right. She fibbed about her age to get married. Why would any woman want to make themselves two years older? It was so that she could get married. She was 17." Death records close out the conversation. The key is the informant, and why it matters more than most people realize: "Even a spouse didn't witness the birth of that person. So the birth information may not be first-hand knowledge, but the death information might be, because they may have witnessed the death." We also cover the FamilySearch Research Wiki as a practical first stop for any records search, mortality schedules, and county boundary changes that can quietly redirect where you need to look. --- 00:00 Introduction 00:23 Birth Records Basics 01:22 Birth Certificate Clues 03:53 Before Certificates Existed 05:01 FamilySearch Wiki Tips 09:36 Delayed Birth Certificates 12:02 Marriage Records Overview 12:48 Marriage Documents and Bonds 18:41 Marriage Evidence Beyond Certificates 22:17 Finding Images and FHL Numbers 24:49 Death Records and Evidence 27:30 Death Certificates and Informants 31:44 Copies vs Originals and Accuracy 34:18 Real World Marriage Stories 38:04 Wrap Up and Extra Tips

8. maj 202640 min