Guess what? Get Your Freebie and Loganalogy has a newsletter now! 🧾🌳

Hey there!

If you signed up for one of my freebies recently—like 12 Mistakes New Family Researchers Make—you’re already part of the Loganalogy crew. 🙌

Didn’t get your freebie?

But now, I’ve got something new just for you…

📰 A short, sweet, and beginner-friendly newsletter that drops helpful genealogy tips, free resources, and tools to make your family history research easier (and way less overwhelming).

What to expect:

  • Genealogy guidance in plain English
  • Mistake-saving tools & cheat sheets
  • Updates on new blog posts and Etsy goodies
  • Zero spam. Zero drama.

Think of it as research help from a Gen X friend who’s been in the archives and survived to tell the tale.

You’ll see your first official issue on August 1, and after that, just a couple times a month.

And hey, if you ever feel like it’s not your thing, you can unsubscribe anytime—but I hope you’ll stick around. There’s good stuff coming. 😉

Talk soon and remember, Share Their Stories!
Marlee @ Loganalogy 🌳

P.S. Got questions? Hit reply—I read every one.

Guess what? Loganalogy has a newsletter now! 🧾🌳

Hey there!

If you signed up for one of my freebies recently—like 12 Mistakes New Family Researchers Make—you’re already part of the Loganalogy crew. 🙌

Didn’t get your freebie?

But now, I’ve got something new just for you…

📰 A short, sweet, and beginner-friendly newsletter that drops helpful genealogy tips, free resources, and tools to make your family history research easier (and way less overwhelming).

What to expect:

  • Genealogy guidance in plain English
  • Mistake-saving tools & cheat sheets
  • Updates on new blog posts and Etsy goodies
  • Zero spam. Zero drama.

Think of it as research help from a Gen X friend who’s been in the archives and survived to tell the tale.

You’ll see your first official issue on August 1, and after that, just a couple times a month.

And hey, if you ever feel like it’s not your thing, you can unsubscribe anytime—but I hope you’ll stick around. There’s good stuff coming. 😉

Talk soon and remember, Share Their Stories!
Marlee @ Loganalogy 🌳

P.S. Got questions? Hit reply—I read every one.

How to Research Family History Without Family Stories

Not everyone grows up with Grandma or Grandpa telling wild tales of great-great-aunts or heroic ancestors. Sometimes, your family history is more like a locked treasure chest with no key. But don’t sweat it, you can still build your family tree, even if your parents or grandparents don’t have all the answers (or don’t want to talk about it).

Whether you’re an adoptee, part of a blended family, or just starting from scratch, there are beginner-friendly, free ways to piece together your roots. All you need is some curiosity, a dash of patience, and a willingness to get creative with records and timelines.

Here’s how to get started.


Step 1: Start with What You Know — Even If It’s Not Much

Before you dive into all the fancy records, jot down what you already have. This might be:

  • Your full name and birthdate
  • Names of parents or guardians (even if you don’t know much about their past)
  • Places you or your family have lived
  • Any old family documents, photos, or letters you can find

Think of this as the “base camp” before climbing the genealogy mountain. It’s okay if your info is skinny; this is your launchpad.


Step 2: Use Census Records to Fill in the Blanks

Census records are like family snapshots taken every ten years by the government. They list who lived in a household, ages, occupations, and sometimes even relationships. Best part? Many census records are free and online.

How to do it:

  • Head over to free sites like FamilySearch or the National Archives.
  • Enter what you know—maybe a name and place—and see what pops up.
  • Look for family members, neighbors, or patterns that might clue you in on your ancestors.

If you don’t know exact names, don’t panic. Try searching by location and estimated years instead. It’s like detective work, but without a trench coat (unless that’s your style).


Step 3: Check City Directories for More Clues

City directories are old-school phone books listing people’s names, addresses, and jobs. They’re a big W for filling in gaps between censuses or when records are scarce.

Try this:

  • Search online archives or your local library’s digital collections for directories from towns your family lived in.
  • Look for your family’s last name to see where they lived and what they did.
  • This info helps build a timeline and confirms connections you find elsewhere.

Step 4: Build a Timeline to Connect the Dots

Once you gather bits of info, start organizing them chronologically. Write down birthdates, marriages, moves, jobs, and other key events. This timeline helps spot gaps or inconsistencies and makes your story clearer.

Pro tip: Use free tools like Google Sheets or just good old-fashioned pen and paper. Sometimes, doodling family timelines is more fun than a Netflix binge.


Step 5: Think Outside the Box — Creative Digging

If direct records are missing, look for indirect clues:

  • Newspaper archives for obituaries or announcements
  • Military records, if you suspect an ancestor served
  • Land deeds, wills, or probate records
  • Social media or online message boards for distant cousins who might have info

Every little piece helps—your family tree isn’t built in a day, but every leaf counts.


Final Thoughts

Building your family tree without stories from relatives can feel like assembling a giant jigsaw puzzle without the picture on the box. But with patience and these free tools, you’ll be amazed at what you can uncover. Remember, genealogy isn’t just about names and dates—it’s about reclaiming your story, one record at a time.

Ready to start your detective work? Grab your notebook, boot up your computer, and dig in. Your ancestors might be waiting to be found.


Need more help? Visit Loganalogy.com Research Specialist page! I offer guidance to streamline your research, provide expert tips, and help you build a family tree that future generations will cherish.

🧬 10 Free Genealogy Tools That Actually Help Beginners

Think genealogy is expensive or too complicated?

Not anymore. I put together a list of 10 free genealogy tools I actually use (and recommend to my clients) that make researching your family tree way easier. Whether you’re just starting out or finally tackling that brick wall ancestor, these resources will save you time and money.

Let’s get digging.

1. FamilySearch.org

This is the holy grail of free genealogy. Run by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, FamilySearch gives you access to digitized records, user-submitted family trees, and even online research help. It’s free to use, but you do have to create an account. Pro tip: always check the source citations. Not every tree on there is gospel truth.


2. FindAGrave.com

Owned by Ancestry, but totally free to use, FindAGrave lets you search millions of cemetery records. You’ll often find photos of headstones, obituaries, and family links—sometimes even plot maps. It’s especially helpful if you can’t travel but want to see where great-grandma is buried.


3. Google Books & Google News Archive

Yep, plain old Google is a powerhouse. Google Books includes digitized town histories, local biographies, and even weird little church anniversary pamphlets. Use quotation marks for names, like “Azubah Logan” and include locations for better hits. The News Archive can dig up old gossip columns and obits you won’t find anywhere else.


4. The U.S. National Archives (NARA)

NARA’s website gives you access to census records, military files, immigration records, land patents—you name it. While some things link out to paid sites, there’s still a goldmine available for free, especially for veterans and public land researchers.


5. Chronicling America

If your ancestor made headlines (or got married, arrested, or advertised chickens), you might find it here. Chronicling America is a digitized newspaper archive from the Library of Congress, and you can search by state, date, and keyword.


6. Cyndi’s List

This is the internet’s original genealogy bookmark list. It’s a categorized directory of over 300,000 links to genealogy resources, from colonial records to DNA education. If you feel stuck, Cyndi’s List can redirect your research in a new direction.


7. Linkpendium

Like Cyndi’s List, but a little more focused on U.S. genealogy. Type in your surname and state and it’ll bring up a buffet of links—cemeteries, census, military records, and even user-submitted family trees.


8. Library of Congress Digital Collections

There’s way more than just old books here. LOC’s digital collections include maps, photographs, audio interviews, slave narratives, and even high school yearbooks. This is a great spot to add historical color to your ancestor’s story.


9. USGenWeb Project

This is old-school, but don’t overlook it. Each U.S. state has its own GenWeb site, and some counties are full of volunteer-transcribed records—cemeteries, marriage indexes, church notes, and more. It’s free, no account needed, and totally run by volunteers who love genealogy.


10. Your Local Library & Digital Archives

Seriously—check out your hometown library’s website. Many have free access to newspaper databases, obituary lookups, city directories, and even genealogy librarians who will answer your email questions. Some also offer free access to Ancestry Library Edition if you log in onsite.


🧓🏼 Ready to Build Your Family Tree for Free?

You don’t have to spend a fortune or wait for the next DNA sale. These free tools are beginner-friendly and powerful. Try them out, make some discoveries, and get ready to fall down the best research rabbit hole ever.

🔗 Need help getting started? Visit the Loganalogy Research Specialist page for tips, strategy, and one-on-one help.

Beginners: How to Avoid the #1 Rookie Genealogy Mistake

Let’s talk about a mistake nearly every family historian makes—yes, even me. 🙋‍♀️

When I started building my family tree, I was so excited to find names, dates, and full-blown ancestors just sitting there online. I thought I struck gold! So, like many enthusiastic beginners, I copied an entire branch from someone else’s tree on a genealogy site. Guess what? That “gold” turned out to be more like glitter…shiny, but totally fake.

Why Copying Online Trees Can Be a Genealogy Disaster

Online family trees are like group projects from middle school—there’s always that one kid who just makes stuff up. Many online trees are:

  • Unsourced (no documents or records to back them up)
  • Based on guesses or family myths
  • Mixed up with other families with similar names
  • Outdated or abandoned for years

Relying on them without checking the details can lead you to chase the wrong ancestors, waste time, and even delete entire branches later. Not fun.

But I Already Copied a Tree…Now What?

First, take a deep breath. You’re not alone. I did it, and I lived to tell the tale (and so will your tree). Here’s how to clean up the mess:

  1. Start verifying each person with records—birth, marriage, death, census, probate, land, military, etc.
  2. Add sources as you go so you can track what’s real and what’s still a guess.
  3. Detach incorrect people—yes, you can break up with that “great-grandfather” who turns out to be from the wrong side of the country.
  4. Keep a notes section for anything suspicious or “still investigating.”
  5. Don’t delete—just detach and reassign. Save people in a “Holding Pen” tree if you’re unsure.

How to Copy Smart (If You Really Want To)

If you spot a tree with promising leads:

  • Check the sources. No sources? No dice.
  • Use it as a hint, not a fact.
  • Verify every name and date yourself.
  • Be cautious with “shared ancestor hints” on genealogy websites. These are great for ideas, but they’re not always right.

A Lesson Learned (The Hard Way)

I once spent hours researching a man I thought was my 6th-great-grandfather… only to realize he lived 1,000 miles away from where my actual ancestor had records. Turns out, I’d copied a stranger’s tree because the name was close. Yep. Oops. Lesson learned: Shiny trees aren’t always your family tree.

Final Word: Trust, but Verify

Think of online trees like internet recipes. Some are amazing, others forget the sugar and leave out the oven temp. Use them as a starting point, but always double-check the ingredients.

🧬 Happy tree-taming, and remember: real research beats wishful thinking every time.


Need more help? Visit Loganalogy.com Research Specialist page! I offer guidance to streamline your research, provide expert tips, and help you build a family tree that future generations will cherish.

How City Directories Can Enhance Your Family History Research

Think of City Directories as the 19th and early 20th centuries’ version of Google Maps meets Facebook.

Here’s why they’re awesome:

  • They list names, addresses, and occupations.
  • They’re published annually or every few years.
  • They can reveal when someone moved, married, died, or changed jobs.

How to Use Them:

  • Track your ancestor’s movement across a city year-by-year.
  • Look up neighbors (FAN Principle anyone?).
  • Find missing years between censuses.

Fun Fact: City Directories often note when a person died: “John Doe, dec’d 1902.” Instant clue without chasing death certificates!

🧩How to Find Birth Years Through Historical Records

You won’t always find a neat and tidy birth certificate tucked into history. But don’t worry, you can still estimate a birth year using clues from other records!
Here’s how to play detective:

  • Census Records often list age. (Just remember, people fibbed or guessed—sometimes wildly.)
  • Marriage Records might list age at marriage. Add or subtract accordingly.
  • Death Certificates sometimes list birthdates—or at least an age at death.
  • Military Draft Cards (especially WWI and WWII) usually have exact birthdates!
  • Gravestones sometimes offer exact birth dates… or the mysterious “aged 72 years, 5 months, 3 days” inscriptions. Bring a calculator!

💡 Quick Tip: Always double-check ages across multiple documents. If Uncle Joe aged 10 years between censuses taken 5 years apart, you’re not the only one confused.

Genealogy Vocabulary Simplified for Beginners

Have you ever read an old family record and felt it was written in another language? You’re not alone! Genealogy has a lot of strange words, but we’re going to break them down together. We’ll make these terms so easy to understand, you could explain them to a friend!

Let’s learn what these tricky words really mean.


🌎 Land and Property Words

Land Patent – This is the first time someone got land from the government. Think of it like getting a land “birth certificate.”

Survey System – This is how land was measured.

  • Metes and Bounds – They used trees, rocks, rivers, and directions. It’s like saying, “Go 100 steps from the big oak tree, then turn left at the creek.”
  • Township and Range – This system uses a grid, like graph paper. It’s all neat and numbered.

Bounty Land Warrant – A “thank you” gift of land the government gave to soldiers after a war.


⚖️ Legal Words

Probate Records – These are the papers that show what happened to someone’s stuff after they died.

Dower – A special share of land or property saved for a widow (the wife of someone who died).

Estate – Everything a person owns when they die—like land, animals, tools, and money.

Grantee – A person who gets land or property.

Intestate – A person who died without writing a will.

Chattel – This is a fancy word for personal belongings like cows, tools, or furniture.


👩‍👧 Family Words

Maiden Name (née) – A woman’s last name before she got married. “Née” means “born as.”

Issue – This just means children.

FAN Club – Friends, Associates, and Neighbors. These people can help you find your ancestors when records are hard to follow!

Ahnentafel Chart – A fun chart that gives numbers to your ancestors. You are #1, your dad is #2, your mom is #3, and so on.

Family Group Record – A page that shows a family—parents and their kids—all in one place.


🕵️‍♀️ Records and Search Tools

Census Enumeration District – A part of a city or town the census worker visited to count people. It’s like a neighborhood on a map.

Marriage Bond – A promise (with money) that there were no legal reasons the couple couldn’t get married.

BANNS – A church announcement about a couple who planned to marry. It gave people time to speak up if there was a problem.

Soundex – A special way of writing last names by how they sound, not how they’re spelled. Great for looking up Smiths and Smyths!

PERSI (PERiodical Source Index) – A big list of articles from genealogy magazines and newsletters. It helps you find stories or records about your family.


🌍 Movement Words

Emigrant – A person who leaves their country.

Immigrant – A person who enters a new country.

Et Al. – This is Latin for “and others.” You’ll see it when there are too many names to list, like “John Smith et al.”


💡 Bonus Terms Beginners Might See

Here are a few more words you might run into:

  • Vital Records – Birth, marriage, and death records.
  • Abstract – A short version of a longer document.
  • Index – A list of names to help you find the right record fast.
  • Lineage – A line of ancestors, like your great-grandparents, their parents, and so on.

🎯 Final Tip: Don’t get stuck on the big words! Keep a cheat sheet nearby (like this blog!) and take it slow. Genealogy isn’t a race—it’s a fascinating puzzle to solve. 🧩

Need more help? Visit my Research Specialist page! I offer guidance to streamline your research, provide expert tips, and help you build a family tree that future generations will cherish.