Beruflich Dokumente
Kultur Dokumente
Search Engines
Ask.com
Bing.com
Duckduckgo.com
Google.com
Ixquick.com
Search.com
Webcrawler.com
Yahoo.com
Yippy.com
Chroniclingamerica.loc.gov
Cyndislist.com/newspapers
Cyndislist.com/obituaries
Deathindexes.com
Digitalnewspapers.org
Elephind.com
En.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:List_of_online_newspaper_archives
Familysearch.org/learn/wiki/en/Digital_Historical_Newspapers
Findagrave.com
Genealogybank.com
Genealogysstar.blogspot.com/2014/07/online-digital-newspaper-collections-by.html
Legacy.com
News.google.com/newspapers
Newspaperarchive.com
Newspapers.com
Obituaries.com
Onlinenewspapers.com
Theancestorhunt.com/newspapers---links-to-online-collections
Tributes.com
USObituaries.com
Viewshare.org/views/refhelp/historical-newspapers-online-usa-2
Copyright April 2016 Amy Archibald
Social Networks
Bebo.com
Classmates.com
Facebook.com
Instagram.com
Linkedin.com
Pinterest.com
Plus.google.com
Twitter.com
Mortuaries
411.com
Address.com
Addresses.com
Advancedbackgroundchecks.com
Anywho.com
Birthdatabase.com
Checkpeople.com ($)
Dexknows.com
Dobsearch.com ($)
Findanyone.com ($)
Instantcheckmate.com ($)
Intelius.com ($)
Locatefamily.com
Peekyou.com
Peoplebyname.com/people
Peoplefinder.com
Peoplefinders.com ($)
Peoplelookup.com ($)
Peoplesearchnow.com ($)
Peoplesmart.com ($)
Pipl.com
Plusaddress.com
Publicrecords365.com ($)
Radaris.com
Searchbug.com
Spokeo.com ($)
US Public Records Index (MyHeritage.com)
Usa-people-search.com ($)
Ussearch.com ($)
WebMii.com
Whitepages.com
Zabasearch.com
Funeralnet.com/funeral-home-search.html
Legacy.com/funeral-homes
Nomispublications.com/SearchAdvanced.aspx
Redbookfuneraldirectory.com
The-funeral-home-directory.com
Tributes.com/search.funeral_homes
Us-funerals.com/funeral-homes
Usafuneralhomesonline.com
Cemeteries
Ancestorsatrest.com/cemetery_records/
Billiongraves.com
Cyndislist.com/cemeteries
Deathindexes.com
Familysearch.org/learn/wiki/en/United_States_Cemeteries
Findagrave.com
Gravelocator.cem.va.gov
Interment.net
Namesinstone.com
Nomispublications.com/SearchAdvanced.aspx
Beginner Tutorial
1.
2.
Examine Ancestors tree. Blue squares indicate males, red circles indicate females. Move your
mouse over the symbols to browse their names.
a. Notice Generations field. Suggestion for youth: change to 7 or 8 generations.
b. Click someone in the topmost row to select that person
c.
3.
Examine descendants tree. Selected person is at the center; children are in the first circle, grandchildren in the second circle, etc.
a. Click Targets button. This adds a red square to persons whose children have not yet been
found. These are good places to start because they are likely places where others research
stopped.
b. Suggestion: under Targets button click in Birth Range field and type 1830-1880 to narrow the
time to a period of good record coverage.
c.
4.
Click on View in FamilyTree and sign-in again. Examine person details in FamilyTree.
a. Birth and death: upper left
b. Spouse and children: lower left
c.
Click Search Records | FamilySearch.org This is like a Google search and lists records in order of
decreasing probability of matching your target person. Suggestion: Click Research Help | Record
Hints if any are available. Record hints show pre-selected historical records with a higher
probability of including your target person.
6.
Try again: If you dont find a match in the first Search Results page immediately, close that
browser tab, return to the Puzzilla descendants tree tab and select a different Target person.
Repeat steps 4 and 5 until previously-unknown family members are discovered in historical
records.
d. Suggestion: Try many searches; dont get stuck on one person, one family, or one descendants
tree. Try a different descendants tree for a different ancestor from the Puzzilla ancestors chart.
2015-2016 Puzzilla.org. All rights reserved. Permission granted for training use.
Introduction
What is Family Tree and how Records work with Family Tree
Vital Events
Relationships
Marriage Events
Resolve Duplicates
Attach Sources
Historical Records
Historical records contain information about people who have died. Examples include birth,
marriage, death, census, and military records. The information in these records can help you
find individuals to add to your lines in Family Tree. It can also help you verify information
that is already there, such as birth dates or death dates.
Click the information you want to change (for example, the birth date).
Click Edit.
Make the desired changes.
In the Reason This Information Is Correct box, add a clear explanation of how you
know the information is correct.
5. Click Save.
3. Click Next. Family Tree displays the information you entered at the top, and any possible
matches below.
4. Do one of the following:
o If one of the possible matches is clearly the right person, click Add Person. If
you can't tell, do some more checking on the possible match before adding it.
-ORo If none of the possible matches is clearly the right person, click Create New. The
person is added as a family member using the information you provided.
Delete a Person
You can delete a person from Family Tree only if you added the person and you are the only user
who has added information to the record.
Instead of deleting a person, you can solve most problems by doing one or more of the
following:
Note: After you delete a record, it will not appear in regular searches. The only way to find the
deleted record is to search for it by the Person ID.
1. On the person page, scroll down to the Tools box, which is located on the right side.
2. Click Delete Person.
Note: If the link reads Delete Person Unavailable instead of Delete Person, this
person cannot be deleted.
3. Carefully review the notifications that tell you how many relationships, sources,
discussions, and possible matches will be deleted.
4. Enter a clear reason statement that explains why you are deleting the person.
5. Click the check boxes that indicate you have reviewed the information and entered a
reason statement.
6. Click Delete.
In the Family Members section, click the pencil icon next to the couple.
In the Marriage Events section of the popup, click Add Event.
The first field defaults to Marriage. Change the type of event if necessary.
Complete the Date and Place fields.
In the Reason This Information Is Correct box, add a clear explanation of how you
know the information is correct.
6. Click Save.
When you add information, it's a good idea to attach a source explaining where you found the
information. See Attach Sources.
Change the Marriage Event That Shows in the Family Members Section and
on the Tree
A couples marriage event appears on in the Family Members section of the person page. It also
appears when you view the couple in Tree View. When a couples record contains more than one
marriage event, the event with the earliest standardized date appears.
If the Person page and Tree View display the wrong marriage event, do one of the following:
If the couples record contains only one marriage event and if the information is wrong or
incomplete, correct it (see Add a Marriage Event or Change a Marriage Event
above).
If the couples record contains more than one version of the same marriage event, delete
the duplicate, estimated, and incorrect versions (see Delete a Marriage Even above).
Then make sure that all remaining events contain standardized dates and places (see
About Standardized Dates and Places below).
Resolve Duplicates
In Family Tree, a record is considered a duplicate if it represents the same person as another
record.
The information in Family Tree came from many different sourcesfor example, extracted
records, temple records, LDS Church membership records, and user submissions. As a result,
you may find duplicate records, particularly if you are working on lines with early members of
the Church (18301920).
Possible Duplicates
Duplicate records can cause confusion in research as well as duplicate temple work. Fortunately,
Family Tree's Possible Duplicates function can help you find and resolve duplicate records.
When you use the Possible Duplicates function, FamilySearch looks for records which are
similar to the one you are viewingfor example, with the same birth date, birthplace, and
parents.
Follow the steps below to check for and resolve duplicates.
1. In the Tools box on the lower right side of the Person page, click Possible Duplicates.
2. Do one of the following as appropriate:
a. If you see a record that is probably a duplicate, click Review Merge to compare
the two records more closely.
b. If you don't see the record but you have an ID number, click Merge by ID, enter
the ID number, and then click Continue.
c. If the record is clearly not a duplicate, click Not a Match. In the Reason These
People Are Not a Match box, explain why you believe the records represent two
different people. Then click Not a Match. In this case, you don't need to complete
any more steps below.
d. If you completed step 2a or 2b above, the Merge Persons page appears, displaying
the information for the two duplicates side by side. Information on the left will be
kept when the merge is completed; information on the right will be deleted.
3. Carefully compare each item of information for the two individuals, and do one of the
following as appropriate:
o If the information on the right is the same as the information on the left, or if it is
less complete, you don't need to do anything.
o If the information on the right is more correct than the information on the left,
click Replace.
o If information on the right doesn't appear on the left and you want to keep it,
click Add.
4. After reviewing all information on the page, click Continue Merge.
5. Review the information a final time. If you are satisfied that everything is correct,
complete the Reason This Merge Is Correct box with a clear explanation of why you
believe the two records represent the same person.
For example, you could write something like this: Mary Entwistle M3DD-1QQ and
Mary Entwistle KVTF-1BJ were christened on the same date in the same location
and have the same parents. Clear, complete reason statements are important because
they help other researchers understand why changes were made.
6. Click Finish Merge.
Possible Duplicates link. When you find records that appear to be duplicates note the ID
numbers of those individual and use the Merge by ID function under the possible duplicates
link.
Attach Sources
On the person page, you can attach sources from FamilySearch Historical Records or from other
web sites. You can also attach sources that refer to physical sources, such as books or microfilm.
Messages
Messages are a way to communicate privately with another user. Any time you see a user's
name, you can click the name to send a message. User names are typically shown when a user
has contributed information or attached a source (see example below).
Send a Message
1.
2.
3.
4.
Reply to a Message
When you receive a message, you are notified by email. Click the link in the email to reply to the
message.
You can also reply to a message from the Person page:
1.
2.
3.
4.
Undo a Merge
If you find that a merge has been done by mistake, the merge can be undone as long as no
changes have been made to the person since the merge.
1.
2.
3.
4.
In the Latest Changes box on the right side of the screen, click Show All Changes.
In the green merge box, click Unmerge.
In the Reason this Unmerge is Correct box, explain why you are undoing the merge.
Click Unmerge.
In the Latest Changes box on the right side of the screen, click Show All Changes.
Click the name of the deleted person.
On the summary card that appears, click the name again.
Click Restore Person.
In the Reason to Restore This Person box, explain why you are restoring the person.
Click Restore. The person is restored in Family Tree.
ElderBednarremindsus
ItisnocoincidencethatFamilySearchandothertoolshavecome
forthatatimewhenyoungpeoplearesofamiliarwithawiderangeofinformationand
communicationtechnologies.Ourfingershavebeentrainedtotextandtweettoaccelerateand
advancetheworkoftheLordnotjusttocommunicatequicklywithyourfriends.Theskillsand
aptitudeevidentamongmanyyoungpeopletodayareapreparationtocontributetotheworkof
salvation
.
Downloadandmakesureyouhaveloginsforthefollowingapps:
FamilyTreeApps
FamilySearchTreeandMemories
FamilySearchInternationalAndroid/iOSFREE
AncestryandShoebox:Ancestry.com
Ancestry.comAndroid/iOSFREE
BillionGraves:BillionGraves.com
OtterCreekHoldingsLLCAndroid/iOSFREE
FindaGrave:Findagrave.com
Ancestry.comAndroid/iOSFREE
TurboScan:DocumentScanner
PiksoftIncAndroid$4.99iOS$3.99
DayJournal:PersonalDiary
TheAppsPodAndroidbasicFREEwithPROupgrade
PhotoEditingApps
GooglePhotos
GoogleIncAndroid/iOSFREE
PhotoshopExpress
AdobeAndroid/iOSFREE
RhonnaDesigns
RhonnaFarrerAndroid/iOS$1.99withtonsofin
apppurchases
Chatbooks
ChatbooksAndroid/iOSFREE
JournalingApps
KidChatteroo
KirstenWright/
$0.99/iOS
DayJournal:PersonalDiary
TheAppsPodAndroidbasicFREEwithPROupgrade
The truth is more important than the facts. ~Frank Lloyd Wright
Stories of Immigration
Unsung, or Reluctant Hero
A Love Story
War/Survivor Story
Pioneer/Farming Life
Rags to Riches
Sacrifices Made for Belief or Convictions
A Change In Plans
Hobbies, Holidays & Celebrations
Lessons About Life
Student Handout
Module 1: Family Tree
Basics and Navigation
1.0 INTRODUCTION
To modify your
personal settings, click
on your name in the
upper right corner of
the screen and click on Settings.
The Account tab shows your
username, birthdate,
Membership Record Number
and Helper Number. It also
allows you to change your
password.
The Contact tab shows your email address, phone number,
and address, and allows you to
select which contact
information is Public.
o We recommended that
you check the Public
box for both your e-
Note: Go to
familysearch.org/partneraccess to
sign-up for free access to any of
these three websites.
Note: Partner accounts you have
signed up for are listed. If you
want to discontinue the free
access to any of these accounts,
click on the
button.
Basic Navigation
3.2
Pedigree Views
3.3
Landscape View
Fan Chart View
Portrait View
Descendancy View
3.4
4.2
Other Information
Watch
to
begin watching. To turn off
the Watch feature, click on
Unwatch
Watch/Unwatch
o Receive an e-mail
notification when anyone
makes changes to a
specific individual in Family
Tree
o Turn on the Watch feature
for a specific individual,
either from their Summary
Card or from the Persons
page, by clicking on
Printing Charts
Persons Page:
o Pedigree Charts
o Family Group Record
Landscape View
Portrait View
Fan Chart View
Click on
to view quick
tips specifically applicable
to the page or topic you
are on.
Messages Icon
o
Click on
in the
upper-right portion of the
screen to send a message
or communicate with
another user who may
have added or changed
information on an ancestor
in FamilySearch.
Latest Changes
o A record of changes made
to an individuals
information. Changes can
be restored back to their
original state, if
appropriate. Click on
5.2
Tools
o
5.3
5.1
Contacting FamilySearch
Call Us Provides toll free numbers
to FamilySearch Support (U.S. is 1866-406-1830)
Live Chat Can choose Technical and
Product Support or Research
Assistance
Familysearch.org/apps
Load photos, documents, stories,
audio into FamilySearch
Description
Get pictures of headstones of ancestors, along with
other information
See what happened the year you were born
Find ancestors that came across the plains
Print 9-Gen fan charts and Name Clouds
Find cousins and missing ancestors
Find out where your ancestors came from
Find your famous ancestors
Sign up for free access to ancestry.com,
myheritage.com, and findmypast.com
Explore the many resources on the FamilySearch
Research WIKI. Get genealogical research advice, or
learn where to find record collections in our 81,360
articles
Explore various partner apps available.
Come to truly know your ancestors and feel the Spirit
of Elijah
BEYOND HINTS
ONLINE SEARCH STRATEGIES FOR BEGINNERS
Presented by: Crystal Beutler
Ancestry
Fold 3
Great place to look for military records. Draft registration cards and pension files are great sources of
information to help locate birth dates, death dates, and family relationships. If you can find a pension record
index you can locate the application number, and date of application and send a request for records to
NARA for a copy of the original file.
Look at the birth and death dates of your ancestors to determine which wars that may have pertained to
them. Narrow your search to those wars, and the area in which they lived. They would have registered for
the draft in a local county and filed other applications there as well.
If you can determine which military unit they fought with, you can do a google search and find out more.
Sometimes you can locate photos if you look in Google Images.
Newspapers
Great source for information on key events in your ancestors lives. Birth, marriage, obituaries, anniversary
celebrations provide facts for vital information. Can also reveal stories you wont find anywhere else. You
might find information about businesses, sports honors, scandals, or criminal offenses.
Narrow your search by state, and then by cities of publication. Then enter the year in the date range boxes,
then enter the name you are searching for. Search just the last name, and then narrow by adding first name
or initial.
Newspapers.com http://newspapers.com
Genealogy Bank http://geneologybank.com
Google News Archive Search https: //news.google.com/newspapers
Newspaper Archive http://www.newspaperarchive.com
Chronicling America - http://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov use the directory to find information about
newspapers published in the United States, most of which havent been digitized. You can search by state,
county, city, years and other criteria. The directory tells you which repositories have microfilm copies you
may be able to borrow through interlibrary loan.
Yearbooks
Can provide a glimpse into the teenage years of an ancestor. Also might find photos you cant find
anywhere else. Look for them at:
Ancestry.com
Google Search if you know where and when your ancestor attended high school
Example: 1957 east high school yearbook, salt lake city, utah
Search Checklist
Ask Questions. Make them Think and Get Them Looking for Answers
I wonder what kind of food grandma ate when she was little?
I wonder what the town looked like back in 1950?
I wonder if the town were our ancestors lived saw any battles during the Civil
War?
I wonder where we could find pictures of toys grandpa and grandma would have
played with when they were little?
Google the answers, or visit historical societies, family history libraries, and teach
them how to search.
Have grandparents read or tell a story from their past.
Have a story telling competition. Adults share stories, and children are the
judges or children tell stories and adults are the judges. Share stories about
ancestors or your own personal history. Let the children give the awards to the
most interesting story, the funniest story, etc.
Pay two truths and a lie. Three people each tell a story. One is true the others
are not. Gear the stories towards family history.
Ask your children something they would want to know about their grandparents,
and then have your grandparent gear the story towards the question. Ask
grandparents what they would want to know about their grandchildren, and have
the children tell a story about their life. Family history goes both ways!
Interviews
Have smaller kids interview grandparents and record it. Grandparents, interview
your grandchildren and record it.
Use the microphone in the Family Search Memories app.
Honor Birthdays
Challenge extended family to make a recipe that reminds your of the birthday
boy/girl.
Share your favorite memory about that person and upload to your family tree.
Use the microphone tool on the phone apps Ancestry.com and Family Search.
Teach your children how to make the recipe and tell them the story about the
ancestor as you cook.
Serve this recipe as part of family traditions and celebrations.
Share the results on Instagram.
Make a family cookbook get your children to do the editing.
Treasure Hunt
Look for ancestor wills or chancery records,
Transcribe the inventory.
Google search to find images for those things on the list.
Create a poster or Chatbook with the images.
House Hunters
Use City Directories or Census Reports on Ancestry.com, to locate the addresses
of your ancestors. Google Earth the addresses and see if you can take a photo of
their home.
Check city archives to see if there are photos there, or plot maps.
My Favorite Things
List your favorites from elementary, middle school, high school like toys, movies and
music. Google search and attach images.
Childhood Tour
Walk the neighborhood and places you frequented as a child. Is your local ice
cream shop, park, elementary school, high school still there?
Write the occupants of the house you grew up in and ask if you can look inside.
Share Talents
Share your talents with each other.
If you do woodworking, paint, knit, etc. make your children an heirloom, or teach
them the skill.
Draw pictures from old photos and create a family history gallery of artwork.
What did dad look like at your age??
Make family history dolls.
Build a toy that was used by your ancestors. Tell the story while you work.
Have an auction at your family reunion of family-made items.
Fashion Show
Look for styles that were popular when your ancestors were alive. How did they
dress?
Do a skit based on an old family story. Make puppets out of Popsicle sticks.
Timelines
What was happening in history during the time your ancestors lived. Look for clues on
Ancestry.com. The timeline adds that information.
Use the Census Report & Other Documents to Find Homes &
Historical Sites.
Use the census report to locate their address, and then use google maps and
look up the location and print a picture.
Or, visit the site in person a family history tour.
Verify
Reserve
Reserve through
FamilySearch
Why Verify?
To avoid doing work thats already complete
and to conrm the person is real.
Follow the levels outlined below before
reserving names.
Verication Levels
Required
Verify relationship
Resolve duplicates
110 years since birth
Deceased 1 year
Good
Better
Best
Compare locations
of life events
Check parents
Check children
Check spouses
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Save Our Snapshots
Save your photos from a digital shipwreck. Its easy to
convert them into photobooks that the whole family can enjoy
This is the most photographed generation in history. Yet, in 10 years, many of these
photographs will not have survived.
Storing your photographs on your computer, hard drive, or cloud-based storage is the
equivalent of keeping them in a digital shoebox.
Our children will lose their history unless we print these priceless photographic memories!
Photobooks are the lifeboat that can save your photos from
a digital shipwreck.
Chatbooks
Offered through Instagram
Easy and Inexpensive (starts at $8)
6x6 softcover books
Includes captions
Many subscription options offered
www.chatbooks.com
My Publisher
Landscape books in three sizes
Drag and drop capability
Preset layouts
Great for beginners
Quality paper and covers
Frequent discounts
www.mypublisher.com
Shutterfly
Five book sizes offered
Layout and customization options available
Regular free book (20 pages) and discount code offers
Ability to import .jpeg images from outside programs such as Photoshop
www.shutterfly.com
Picaboo
Landscape and square book styles available
Layflat page options available
Auto-fill feature creates your book for you
Huge background library within the program
Mixbook
Offers books in seven sizes
Has a large variety of predesigned book themes and layouts
Fully editable and customizable
Offers a huge library of backgrounds and stickers
Ability to import .jpeg images from outside programs such as Photoshop
Great program if you want a digi-scrap look
Better suited to intermediate to advanced users
www.mixbook.com
For more information on these and other Photobook companies, visit this site
www.photobookgirl.com
It contains comprehensive reviews, specs, and discount offers for most online photobook companies.
The family books of remembrance in Latter-day Saint homes today should rate in importance
second only to the standard works. These family records are supplements to the scriptures,
aiding in teaching the gospel of Jesus Christ to the posterity of faithful members of the Church.
A knowledge of the written testimonies and spiritual experiences of family members and of the
proved genealogies of the fathers serves to bind the hearts of the children to their fathers and
helps them to understand the doctrines that pertain to the exaltation of the family. 1
Large Plates (Family History):
1. Scanners
a. APPs for phone and tablets
b. High speed scanners
c. Zcan Scanner Mouse
2. Journal Apps and Software
a. DayOne journal and apps
b. LDS.org journal
c. Dragon NaturallySpeaking
3. Photo Apps
a. Photomyne
b. Project Life
4. Evernote.com
5. OneNote.com
6. Print-On-Demand
a. Shutterfly.com
b. Blurb.com
c. Lulu.com
7. Family History Blog
a. Blogger.com or Wordpress.com
b. Print blogs to books
8. Print Mission Letters into Book
a. MissonaryMemories.com
Additional Help
Quotes:
Confess your faults to the individuals you have wronged, and proclaim them not on the housetops. Be
careful that you wrong not ourselves. If you committed sin that no other person on earth knows of,
and done a wrong and have sinned against your God, but keep that within your won bosom, and seek
to God and confess thee, and get pardon for your sins to whomever you sinned against and let it stop
there. (Discourses of Brigham Young, pp245-245)
There, in a concise phrase, is the purpose of the book of remembrance: that our children may
know. With this book in our homes we are thus aided in erecting a concrete fortress against the
power of the adversary, that he may not destroy our family associations and faith.
The first purpose of the book of remembrance, then, is to show the eternal promises that have been
bestowed upon members of the immediate family as well as upon those who are classified as
ancestors. (Royall, Paul F. That Our Children May Know; Ensign, October 1971, www.lds.org.)
The family books of remembrance in Latter-day Saint homes today should rate in importance second only
to the standard works. These family records are supplements to the scriptures, aiding in teaching the gospel
of Jesus Christ to the posterity of faithful members of the Church. A knowledge of the written testimonies
and spiritual experiences of family members and of the proved genealogies of the fathers serves to bind the
hearts of the children to their fathers and helps them to understand the doctrines that pertain to the exaltation
of the family. Every faithful family should be diligently compiling a book of remembrance. In it should
be found the story of the family, especially the story of its spiritual life, written by inspiration. Also it should
contain a genealogy of the family so that the children may have an opportunity to acquire knowledge of their
fathers. (Improvement Era, April 1966, pp. 29495.)
I urge all of the people of this church to give serious attention to their family histories, to
encourage their parents and grandparents to write their journals, and let no family go into
eternity without having left their memoirs for their children, their grandchildren, and their
posterity. This is a duty and a responsibility, and I urge every person to start the children out
writing a personal history and journal. (Kimball, Spencer W. Ensign May 1978; p:4.)
Men should write down things which God has made known to them. Whether things are
important or not, often depends on Gods purposes: but the testimony of the goodness of God and
the things He has wrought in the lives of men will always be important as a testimony.
(Wilford Woodruff)
Church members are being urged by priesthood leaders to realize the importance of a book of
remembrance in every home. Many families that have no book of remembrance justify this lack by
claiming access to their parents book or to the completed record compiled by an aunt or some
other relative. The genealogy of the family may well be gathered by others, but if a copy of the
direct genealogy of the family is not in the home, there will be little interest evidenced by that
family in its progenitors. Relatives are not responsible for recording the testimonies and spiritual
experiences of families other than their own, and it is not common practice for them to do so.
Generally, if a family fails to record its spiritual history, it is never written.(Saviors on Mount Zion)
Bennett, Archibald F. (Archibald Fowler), Saviors on Mount Zion. Salt Lake City, Utah : Deseret Sunday School
Union Board, 1950. Available online at FamilySearch.org catalog.
Story Finder: [noun] a person who has mastered the techniques of the pros to examine the evidence,
understands the story seeds within the historical and social context, and then brings the story to life.
Story Finders dont need to make stuff up, the truth is far more interesting.
1 Zwick,
W, Craig and Jn J. Zwick. More to Your Story; Discover the Powerful Experiences Youre Already Having. Salt Lake City, Utah : Deseret Book, 2012, p 3-5.
2 Ibid.
Share the story, a chapter at a time, not the whole book. Focusing on a chapter keeps the story manageable. If
you wish to write a whole book, create it one story at a time, chapter by chapter.
Ways to Share Your Story
If you cant be a good example. Then you will just have to be a horrible warning.
~Catherine Aird
But silence is not a natural environment for stories. They need words. Without them they grown pale, sicken and die. And then they
haunt you. ~ Diane Setterfield
There is no better heritage than a good name that a father can bequeath to his children. Nor is there in a
family any richer heirloom than that of a noble ancestor. We are the guardians of the treasures of the past,
with the high duty to preserve them and pass them on the generations yet future. ~Jessie H. Lindsey
Helpful Links:
FamilySearch http://www.familysearch.org
Steven Morse search site: http://www.stevenmorse.org
Timetoast http://www.timetoast.com/
X Timeline http://www.xtimeline.com/index.aspx
Brainy History http://www.brainyhistory.com/
Timelines of History http://timelines.ws/
Cyndis List Timeline help
http://www.cyndislist.com/timelines/how-to/
it is impossible to
overestimate the influence
our own stories can have
on us, our children, and
future generations.write
them down, and
frequently recount them
thus making them part of
our family lore and
heritage.2