Bygone history article1

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Bygone Days

Article

Get back to your

roots

Getting started...

Part one

You no longer need to have a coat of arms and a huge ancestral hall to be interested in your roots.

Where to begin...

Whether your ancestors worked on the land or were shipped off to Australia, thanks to the internet, it has never been an easier or better time to start unearthing your family's past.

Don't worry about record offices just yet, the best place to begin researching your family tree is at home. By talking to as many relatives as possible, you'll soon build up an idea of who was related to who, and how many children Great Aunty Dot had.

If you're the sort of person who's got a mind for detective puzzles and solving problems, then it's a great hobby.

Before you set out on a unique journey into your family's past, follow our advice to getting the most from your research.

Ask your oldest relatives for family names, dates and places and look for birth certificates, letters, newspaper cuttings, diaries or anything that will fill in the background on your family. It's also a good idea to decide what you want to find out. Are you drawing up a simple family tree or do you want more of an idea of what life was like for your ancestors? Are you going to follow just one branch of the family (a one name search) or try and get an overview of everyone? "Have a hunt around and get a fact that you can start with - it doesn't matter how early or late that fact is," says Else.

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"Whether you're working with just your grandparents or whether you've got a lot of information and you're starting quite a way back, you need to have something to start with."


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