First Steps
Organizing Data
- Surveying Available Sources
- Ranking Information sources
- Correspondence
- Research & Correspondence Logs
- Pedigree Charts
- Family Group Sheets
- Timelines & Narratives
- Research Activity Logs
- Documentation
- Numbering Systems
- Analyzing Data
- Fraudulent Pedigrees
Computers & Genealogy
Legal Considerations
Etiquette
Ethics


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Pedigree Charts

Most genealogical experts agree that the first step one should take in a genealogical research project is to sketch out whatever knowledge is available on a given family. Research and documentation should begin with oneself and proceed backward in time, one generation at a time. Pedigree charts provide an overview of the family and enable you to track research progress. All information recorded on the sheet (names, dates, and places) should be accompanied by a notation showing how that information was obtained. If names, dates, or places indicated on a pedigree chart are a product of speculation (unproven or undocumented), that fact should be indicated in some way on the chart.

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