FamilySearch Expanding Online Genealogy Database Efforts
Online genealogy research is getting a big shot in the arm from FamilySearch’s newly announced Records Access program. Project organizers say the goal is to promote a genealogical tidal wave of online databases.
FamilySearch is starting the program to increase public access to vast Read more »

If you have ancestors from Nova Scotia, a new genealogy database allows you to search for them in certain birth, marriage and death records, for free online.
Scottish ancestry research is getting a very big boost from the internet’s largest online genealogy website. Ancestry.com has completed its Scotland Census Collection, 1841 - 1901, containing more than 24 million names.
Online genealogy has one free resource available where just about everyone can expect to find an ancestor or two. That’s the Social Security Death Index, available at Rootsweb.
Genealogists around the world will likely keep an eye on the massive new census project announced this week by the National Archives of the United Kingdom. It’s teaming with internet genealogy site ScotlandOnline (home to ScotlandsPeople) to bring the 1911 England and Wales census to the web.
One of the best free genealogy resources on the internet is getting even better. The mammoth U. S. GenWeb Project (which marked its ten year online anniversary last year) is busy tweaking one of its most important search areas.
One of genealogy research’s ultimate brick walls has long been African American ancestry. The dark years of segregation, coupled with the darker days of slavery, have proven to be huge obstacles for individuals digging into their African American ancestral lines. Many have simply given up, happy to get as far back as they can, while others press on, digging into records that can stir many emotions.
In the course of their genealogy research, many Americans will eventually come across an ancestor who served in the Civil War. The 1861 - 1865 battle between North and South left nearly half a million soldiers dead, and just as many wounded. Millions more wore the blue or the gray.
A fast-growing online genealogy database website continues to bring in some important historical records. WorldVitalRecords.com has announced it has received more than 10 million records from the National Archives and Records Administration.