No. 1 Where to Begin? | No. 2 What's in a Name? |
No. 3 Using Technology: Software and GEDCOMs | No.
4 Vital Records: Death, Tombstones and Cemeteries |
No.
5 Vital Records: Marriage Records and Evidence |
No. 6 Vital
Records: Birth Records |
No. 7 What is the Question? | No. 8 Why You Can't Find Them |
No.
9 U.S. Census Records: Soundexes, Indexes and Finding Aids |
No. 10 SSDI (U.S. Social Security Death Index) & Railroad Retirement Board Records |
No. 11 Taxing Tales | No. 12 Creating Worthwhile Genealogies: Evidence, Sources and Citation |
No. 13 Military Records (worldwide) | No. 14 Military Records (United States) |
No. 15 Tracing Immigrant Ancestors | No. 16 Naturalization Records |
No. 17 Church Records | No. 18 Fraternal Organizations |
No. 19 Heraldry for Genealogists | No. 20 City Directories and Newspapers |
No. 21 Irish, Scots-Irish and Scottish | No. 22 Italian and Hispanic Ancestors |
No. 23 Scandinavian (Swedish, Danish, Norwegian, Finnish and Icelandic) Roots | No. 24 Canadian, French-Canadian, Acadian and French Connections |
No. 25 African American, Native American, Jewish, Unique Peoples (Melungeon, Black Dutch, etc.) | No. 26 Germanic Ancestors (Plus: Austrians, Dutch, Belgians, Swiss, Luxembourgers, and Liechtensteiners |
No. 27 Polish, Russians, Czechs, Hungarians, Croatians, Slovakians . . . | No. 28 English, Welsh, Australian, New Zealand, South Africa . . . |
No. 29 American Land Records | No. 30 Court Records |
No. 31 Adoption and Orphans Records |
RootsWeb Guides to Tracing Family Trees were written & compiled by professional genealogists, Julia M. Case, Myra Vanderpool Gormley, CG and Rhonda McClure |