Don’t worry about mastering any
particular information in the text.
At this point, all I would ask is that you form some idea of the kind
of sources available for doing this type of history.
(2) Start compiling information about your family history.
(You should start this assignment, if at all possible, while you are still
at home.)
It is a cardinal rule of genealogy that research
begins at home.
Consequently, begin by talking to relatives, in
particular
your parents and grandparents. Using these initial contacts,
gather and record any information you can: names of relatives,
dates and places of birth and/or death, dates of marriages, information
concerning physical appearance, places they lived, their employment,
military or public service.
Click on the following for
Questions you might want to ask.
In short, anything you can find and which might supply clues as to
where to look for more information. Genealogy is a historical
puzzle for which you must gather and put together the pieces.
And don't worry if you can't discover everything you
hoped to find this semester. Genealogy is also an on-going
process and this class is a beginning, not an end.