Discovering Your Roots: An Introduction to Genealogy By John Phillip Colletta – Digital Download!
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Discovering Your Roots: An Introduction to Genealogy by John Phillip Colletta
Our family tree is full of nuts. Find out what yours looks like, with help from a genealogist.
LECTURE (15)
01:Interviewing Kin and Mining Home Sources
Interviewing relatives is a fundamental (and highly entertaining) element of genealogical research.
In this section, Dr. Colletta presents a number of techniques and ten essential pointers to assist you make the most of your time spent sitting down with family members and turning casual discussions into strong frameworks for your future investigative endeavors.
02:Genealogy Online-Gems and Junk
Genealogy these days would be impossible without the Internet. However, not all websites can be trusted.
Examine the advantages (and disadvantages) of commercial, nonprofit, and governmental websites first. After that, discover how to interpret US demographic surveys, which are the most crucial source of information for tracing American ancestry.
03:The Library-Shelves Full of Family History
Discover how to use the abundance of library resources to obtain reliable explanations for the “why” underlying historical events.
You will visit the Periodical Source Index (PERSI), family history and genealogies, state, county, city, and town histories, and several map types (which assist situate events in the real world).
04:Military Service and Homestead Records
It is an exciting experience to have a document that your ancestor once owned, and you can now more easily than ever establish a close connection with your ancestors.
Learn to navigate through homestead files, which cover 33 states that are public domain from 1863 to the 1970s, and military data, including service and pension information.
05:How to Build Historical Context
Put down your study and investigate how to turn your data into captivating life stories using historical content.
Dr. Colletta outlines seven methods for creating a compelling historical background, such as evaluating your materials in the context of the region and employing historical accounts to verify theories about how events happened.
06:Your Ancestors in Ship Passenger Lists
Discover how to interpret passenger arrival records, which are the most valuable record for retracing the journey of your ancestors to North America.
You can learn details about immigration from colonial times until the 1950s by using a number of important guiding principles and sources (such as colonial land records and immigrant directories).
07:Your Ancestors in Naturalization Records
Did your forebears who immigrated acquire US citizenship? Did they put it off or did they never naturalize at all?
Naturalization records can provide answers to these and other biographical queries, as Dr. Colletta explains. Your research will be tailored to three main periods of naturalization: before 1790, from 1790 to 1906, and from 1906 to the present.
08:The Genealogical Proof Standard
This in-depth examination of the Genealogical Proof Standard, a five-step procedure that trained genealogists employ to substantiate ancestral identities, relationships, life events, and other biographical information, will help you become a more adept family history investigator. Finally, conclude the talk with an intriguing examination of the nature of evidence.
09:Your Ancestors in the County Courthouse
Learn how to search the county courthouse records for the people who lived before you.
You’ll study how to interpret courthouse resources, such as probate packets, vital records, tax rolls, and even records from the colonial era like indentures and apprenticeships, using the two most prevalent types of courts—circuit and chancery.
10:Your Ancestors in State Records
Competent genealogists never fail to utilize local resources beyond the courthouse, such as state archives, which preserve documents arising from the enforcement of state legislation.
You will discover here how to access data from both original (like census and military records) and derived (like newspapers and maps) sources.
11:How to Write Biography
Examine how to write about your ancestors in a way that is both memorable and true to the facts.
Find out how to create timelines, put historical context to events in life, look for and identify a life’s major subject, choose the appropriate literary structure, and more.
12:Dos and Don’ts of Writing History
Writing historical fiction is rife with traps. Discover how to avoid them by using Dr. Colletta’s historical narrative writing dos and don’ts.
These include avoiding the risk of looking at the past through the prism of the present, employing vocabulary specific to the era, and stimulating the senses with noises, textures, and scents.
13:Searching in Your Ancestors’ Backyards
You will eventually need to travel to the locations where your ancestors formerly lived as part of your investigative job.
Learn how to use important local resources that will be essential to your research success in this informative lecture: local libraries, historical societies, city directories, church and synagogue records, and cemeteries.
14:Assembling an Account of Your Discoveries
You now know how to create a compelling story and add context. Now consider how to effectively arrange your materials so that you may create a durable record of your own history.
What are the essential inquiries that must be addressed prior to writing? Which five components are necessary for every intergenerational story?
15:Extending Your Family Tree Overseas
Finally, give students a sneak glimpse at how to look up data from countries other than the US.
Dr. Colletta discusses his experiences in Europe while highlighting the key information you need know about your ancestors who immigrated, as well as the six main obstacles you may face when trying to obtain and use historical resources abroad.
DETAILS
Overview
Discover the mysteries of your ancestors’ long-lost history with this course that teaches you the methods and research techniques used by experts in genealogy.
About
John Phillip Colletta
“A journey of self-discovery, genealogy is much more than the captivating detective work of uncovering a long-forgotten past. You become more aware of who you are as you gain more knowledge about your forebears.”
ALMA MATER The United States Catholic University
INSTITUTION Institute of Genealogy and Historical Research at Samford University
Dr. John Philip Colletta is one of the most well-liked genealogical lecturers in America.
He teaches at the Salt Lake Institute of Genealogy, the Institute of Genealogy and Historical Research at Samford University in Birmingham, Alabama, and the Genealogical Research Program at Boston University.
Additionally, Dr. Colletta has taught and coordinated courses for the Genealogical Institute of Texas, the Genealogical Institute of Mid-America, and the National Institute on Genealogical Research.
The Catholic University of America awarded him a Ph.D.
Dr. Colletta taught workshops at the National Archives and worked at the Library of Congress for twenty years.
In the present day, he gives talks across the country, instructs at nearby schools, and runs programs for the Smithsonian Institution’s Living Assistant Program.
The Historical Society of North Dakota, Brigham Young University, Johns Hopkins University, the St. Louis Public Library, Daughters of the American Revolution, the Huntington Library (San Mateo, CA), and the Genealogical Society of Ontario, Canada are just a few of the organizations he has worked with.
Many popular and scholarly articles, two handbooks, They Came in Ships: A Guide to Finding Your Immigrant Ancestor’s Arrival Record and Finding Italian Roots: The Complete Guide for Americans, and a family history book, Only a Few Bones: A True Account of the Rolling Fork Tragedy and Its Aftermath, are among Dr. Colletta’s publications.
Dr. Colletta is a regular guest on radio, television, and podcasts. Among his accolades are awards for meritorious service from the National Society of Daughters of Founders and Patriots of America and the Dallas Genealogical Society.
Discovering Your Roots: An Introduction to Genealogy By John Phillip Colletta
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