The Internet is vast and easily intimidating. Start from the known, and
gradually explore the unknown.
Select
a few good genealogical Web sites and become familiar with them. Suggestions are AncestryPlus
available at your library and Family Search at http://www.familysearch.org/
Get
an e-mail account and take advantage of the Internet’s networking
capabilities. Join a mailing list with which you have a common ethnic,
geographic, surname or subject interest.
Become
familiar with at least one Web search engine (Google is the best known,
and Alta Vista is also good) and at least one Web metasearch site (Dogpile http://www.dogpile.com/
and Metacrawler http://www.metacrawler.com/ are good examples). To occasionally
cast a wide net over the World Wide Web, these sites are useful.
Regularly
use Web and e-mail contacts to search for data and research new leads.
Practice makes perfect.
Examples of Useful Websites
Personal pages centered around one family. Look for
these using a search engine or go to Cyndi's List, at http://www.cyndislist.com/ which is one of the largest and most
extensive of the free resources.
Clearinghouses for individuals' research such as Ancestry's World Tree, http://www.ancestry.com/trees/awt/main.htm,
from where information can be freely viewed and exchanged. The quality of
such information, of course, depends on each individual researcher's
reliability and documentation. Some people call these “boards.”
Official (civil) records. Generally, digitization of
recent official vital records is a low priority for their custodians.
Concerns about privacy and potential misuse have also limited online
availability of official vital records. Some are available through AncestryPlus, available through Galileo, at http://www.galileo.usg.edu/ at the library or from home with a password
(GA death index for example). Remember to search for vital records using a
search engine on the internet. Other official records, however, can be
very useful to genealogists, such as the Ellis Island Records at http://www.ellisislandrecords.org/ An example of an even more
ambitious plan is the Hamburg Passenger Lists
database at http://www.linktoyourroots.hamburg.de/
Indices
to and abstracts of vital records or
statewide indices to vital records such as records from federal and state
records accessible through AncestryPlus are very
helpful. Rootsweb, at http://www.ancestry.com/trees/awt/main.htm, is a free genealogy
site supported by Ancestry.
Information
extracted or abstracted from non-official
records, such as the Palmer List of Merchant Vessels
at http://www.geocities.com/mppraetorius/ is
worth pursuing. The Augusta Chronicle is
a resource available at the library. The Civil War Soldiers and Sailors System
at http://www.itd.nps.gov/cwss/
is another resource on the web. Augusta Chronicle at http://www.augustaarchives.com is an example of newspaper archives.
Data for sale in non-Web formats, like the G.R.D. (Genealogy Research Dirctory)
at http://members.ozemail.com.au/~grdxxx/ or Heritage Quest at http://www.heritagequest.com/
Don't
ignore websites created by or on behalf of the local genealogical community, like the USGenWeb
Project, at http://www.usgenweb.com/ or the Augusta Genealogy Society at http://www.augustagensociety.org/ . Richmond County has a gravesite search
available at http://www.augustaga.gov/departments/trees_landscaping/graveside_default.asp. Also of use is the Augusta-Richmond County
Historical Society at http://www.thearchs.org/.
The Internet is a democratic
medium--established institutions, profit-driven
companies, well-intentioned and often talented individuals and societies, and
downright charlatans are all equal. The Hoaxes and Scams Page of Cyndi's List at http://www.cyndislist.com/myths.htm is a register of the
latter. Be careful out there!
Don’t even think about it—get an
e-mail address. Eventually you'll want to contact somebody or something.
Next, you'll want someone to
exchange mail with. Mailing lists and USENET newsgroups are great for finding
genealogical pen pals...and researchers...and cousins...you get the idea.
Mailing lists are a type of "one to many"
communication. Subscribe to a list by sending an e-mail message to a
computer and follow the directions you get back. Once subscribed, you'll get
all the messages that subscribers like you send to the mailing list’s address. You can read, print, or reply to these
messages-- to the entire list or just specified individuals. The
best place to find addresses for genealogical mailing lists of all types is
the Mailing Lists Page at the
Genealogy Resources on the Internet site http://www.rootsweb.com/~jfuller/gen_mail.html
and there is Cyndi's List - Mailing Lists
at http://www.cyndislist.com/mailing.htm.
It is a good idea, when you
start out in a mailing list, to just sit back and read all the e-mails passing
by for a while before you enter the discussion yourself. This is called
"lurking,"--and isn't much different from going to a party and being
diplomatic about whom you speak with and what you speak about while you get
comfortable with the crowd. Mailing lists are the ultimate "virtual
neighborhood!" You can be in touch with researchers from around the
world! Find cousins, researchers in the next county or overseas, or neat
Web sites mentioned by others with interests in common with yours.
USENET newsgroups are similar to mailing lists but don't use e-mail for
distribution. You actually go to a USENET site about a subject of
interest to you, read posted messages and post your own if you like. It
is more analogous to an electronic bulletin board.
Subscribing to e-zines like Rootsweb Review at http://newsletters.rootsweb.com/ and the Global Gazette at http://globalgenealogy.com/globalgazette/index.htm
is another way to use your e-mail account to improve your genealogical
knowledge.
Online tutorials for Internet
genealogy research
Diane
K. Kovacs' Genealogical Research on the Internet
is an excellent guide. http://www.kovacs.com/genbegin.html
Sharon
Centanne's Librarian's Guide to Helping Patrons
with Genealogical Research discusses not just an online perspective,
but research generally. http://home.tampabay.rr.com/centans/internet.html
V.
Chris and Tom Tinney Sr.'s Genealogy and Family History Internet Web Directory considers
the best university-related sites. http://www.academic-genealogy.com/
The World Wide Web
The World Wide
Web is what most
people think of as "the Internet." The Web's
(relative) ease of use and graphic capabilities account in large part for the
Internet's mass popularity. Here's a list of must-see websites
with Georgia ones first.
Georgia
1.
Georgia Secretary of State | Archives
and History Division at http://www.sos.state.ga.us/archives/
a.
Ask An Archivist is a
program that the government has at http://www.sos.state.ga.us/archives/how_may_we_help_you/ask_an_archivist/default.htm.
They will answer some research questions for you.
b.
Georgia Historical Organizations and
Resources Directory at http://www.sos.state.ga.us/archives/who_are_we/ghrab/directory/default.htm
c.
Online Indexes Georgian
Archives GIL at http://www.sos.state.ga.us/archives/what_do_we_have/online_indexes/default.htm
d.
Revolutionary War Veterans' Land
Lottery Records at http://www.sos.state.ga.us/archives/what_do_we_have/online_indexes/rev_war_veterans/default.htm
2.
The GAGenWeb Project at
TheGAProject.org This is done
by volunteers and very hit or miss because of that. Still it is worth checking
to see if someone hasn’t posted just what you need. Located at http://www.rootsweb.com/~gagenweb/
3.
Trees & Landscaping - Graveside
Search at http://www.augustaga.gov/departments/trees_landscaping/graveside_default.asp.
This is new resource available from Augusta. It is incomplete at this time but
provides a lot of information if the person is listed.
4.
Digital Library of Georgia
All of these are accessible through Galileo at http://www.galileo.usg.edu
a.
Annual reports of the Mayor of Savannah
b.
Civil War diaries and pictures
c.
Photographs
d.
Georgia Historic Newspapers
5.
Vanishing Georgia – early
photographs. Access through Galileo at http://www.galileo.usg.edu
6.
Hargrett Library Rare Map Collection -
Revolutionary Georgia A Galileo resource.
7.
WorldCat
Use this to search for those hard to find books. This is found in Galileo.
8.
Augusta Vital Records Available
on the Genealogy page of the East Central Georgia Regional Library at http://www.ecgrl.org/vitalrecords/disclaimer.asp
It begins in 1982.
General
1.
The Library of Congress at http://www.loc.gov/.
Use it to look for books about family names and for the maps in the American
Memory section.
2.
United States Patent and Trademark Office Home Page
Use this to look for patents, industries in the area and land descriptions.
Found at http://www.uspto.gov/ .
3.
NARA | US National Archives &
Records Administration at http://www.archives.gov/.
Here you can order military records, find
World War casualty lists and POW lists. The Dawes Rolls and the Guion Miller Roll Index and the
Irish Famine data files.
4.
Home - BLM GLO Records This
is the Bureau of Land Management – General Land Office Records. Sometimes the
site or different parts of it are down because they are being sued. Keep
checking. Whenever federal land changed hands, it is listed along with other
information about the land and people. Available at http://www.glorecords.blm.gov/ .
5.
Civil War Soldiers and Sailors System
at http://www.itd.nps.gov/cwss/. Largest free database of Civil
War soldiers on the internet.
6.
Slavery Era Insurance Registry
at http://www.insurance.ca.gov/0100-consumers/0300-public-programs/0200-slavery-era-insur/. Some slaves were
insured and the insurance company kept records about it.
Part
of this resource was originally developed and shared by Don Litzer
and added to by Dottie Demarest.