Anyone who does genealogy knows that there is much truth
to Dollarhide's Rules listed below. It never hurts to keep these in mind!
Don't forget to check the resource LINKS below.
If you have any favorite links that you would like to share, email us and
let us know!
Dollarhide's Rules For Genealogy
1. Treat the brothers and sisters of your ancestors as equals....even
if some of them were in jail.
2. Death certificates are rarely filled in by the person who died.
3. When visiting a funeral home, wear old clothes, no make-up, and look
like you have about a week to live...the funeral director will give you
anything you ask if he thinks you may be a customer soon.
4. The cemetery where your ancestor was buried does not have perpetual
care, has no office, is accessible only by a muddy road, has snakes, tall
grass, and lots of bugs...and many of the old gravestones are in broken
pieces , stacked in a corner under a pile of dirt.
5. A Social Security form SS-5 is better than a birth certificate
because few people had anything to do with the information on their own
birth certificate.
6. The application for a death certificate you want insists that you
provide the maiden name of the deceased's mother...which is exactly what
you don't know and is the reason you are trying to get the death
certificate in the first place.
7. If you call Social Security and ask where to write for a birth
certificate, tell them it is for yourself...they won't help you if you say
you want one for your great-great-great-great-great-great-grandfather who
died in 1642.
8. When you contact the state vital statistics office in your home
state and ask if they are "on-line" and they respond, "on
what?," you may have a problem.
9. A census record showing all twelve children in a family proves only
that your ancestors did not believe in birth control.
10. Work from the known to the unknown. In other words, just because
your name is Washington doesn't mean you are related to George.
11. With any luck, some of the people in your family could read and
write....and may have left something written about themselves.
12. It ain't history until it's written down. (See #19)
13. A genealogist needs to be a detective. Just gimme da facts, ma'am.
14. Always interview brothers and sisters together in the same room.
Since they can't agree on anything about the family tree, it makes for
great fun to see who throws the first punch.
15. The genealogy book you just found out about went out of print last
week.
16. A good genealogical event is learning that your parents were really
married.
17. Finding the place a person lived may lead to finding that person's
arrest record.
18. It's really quite simple. First you start with yourself, then your
parents, then your grandparents... then you QUIT . . .and start teaching
classes in genealogy.
19. If it's not written down, it ain't history yet. (See #12)
20. In spite of MTV, computer games, and skate boards, there is always
a chance that your grandchildren will learn how to read someday.
21. "To understand the living, you have to commune with the dead,
but don't commune with the dead so long that you forget that you are
living!"
From Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil by John Berendt by William
Dollarhide
LINKS
Cyndi's List
U.S. GenWeb
site
Family
Search
Gendex
Kathleen Wilham
homepage - professional researcher
Lost Leaves
- photos donated to be identified and returned to family.
LDS
– Family Search
U.
S. Genealogy Helplist
Ancestry.com
GenForum
U.S.
Railroad Retirement Board
SurnameWeb
Order
forms for Military records (NARA)
Genealogy
Quest
– Epidemics by year