The Ultimate Guide to Asking for Genealogy Records

Let’s talk about one of the most underrated genealogy skills: asking for records the right way.

Because here’s what nobody tells beginners:

It’s not enough to email a town clerk or cemetery and say,
“Hi, can you send me everything you have on my family?”

That is a guaranteed way to get one of three responses:

  1. No response
  2. “We don’t have time for that”
  3. A reply that makes you feel like you personally caused their backlog

So today I’m going to show you the simple way to write record requests that get results.

The secret: ask for ONE specific record

Record keepers are more likely to help when you ask clearly for something like:

  • “interment register entry”
  • “cemetery ledger entry”
  • “plot ownership records”
  • “grave opening permit”
  • “death certificate copy (with certificate number)”

You’re not asking them to do genealogy.
You’re asking them to look up a record.

That’s the sweet spot.

What information you should always include

Here’s your checklist.

Include:

  • full name (and spelling variants)
  • date of death (or approximate)
  • location (town/county/state)
  • cemetery name (if applicable)
  • certificate number (if you have one)
  • why you believe the person is there (briefly)

Example phrasing:

“I am requesting a copy of the cemetery ledger entry for James A. Bennett (died 1897), believed to be buried in Southside Cemetery in Red Creek, Cayuga County, New York.”

What you should specifically ask for (cemeteries)

Cemeteries may have more proof of relationships than you’d think.

Ask for:

  • interment register entry
  • plot card or lot record
  • name of plot owner
  • names of others in same plot
  • burial date
  • who purchased the plot
  • funeral home listed (if recorded)

These are the “family connection” gems.

What to say when email doesn’t work

If email bounces or goes unanswered, do not quit.

Switch to snail mail like a true genealogy warrior.

Mail still works because:

  • It looks official
  • It’s harder to ignore
  • It often reaches a different person

Template: record request email or letter

Here’s a clean template you can copy:

Subject: Record Request – [Full Name], [Year], [Cemetery/Town]

Dear [Name or Office],

My name is [Your Name], and I am requesting genealogical information for my family history research.

I am seeking any available records related to:

Name: [Full Name]
Death: [Exact date or approximate year]
Burial Location (if known): [Cemetery name, town, county, state]

If available, I would be grateful for a copy or transcription of the following:

  • cemetery ledger or interment register entry
  • plot/lot ownership records
  • names of others interred in the same plot
  • burial date and plot location

If there is a fee for copies or research time, please let me know the cost and preferred payment method.

Thank you very much for your time and for preserving these important records.

Sincerely,
[Your Name]
[Your address]
[Your email]

Final thoughts

Record keepers aren’t trying to be difficult. They’re busy, and they need clarity.

So make it easy:

  • Be polite
  • Be specific
  • Ask for ONE record type
  • Offer to pay

That’s how you win the genealogy record request game.


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.

Want consistent progress on your brick walls? Check out my Monthly Research Plan subscriptions on Loganalogy Store and let’s keep your family story growing, month by month.

How to Use Find a Grave Effectively for Genealogy

Find a Grave is one of the first places people run when they start genealogy.

And honestly? It’s a great tool.

But here’s the problem:

Some folks treat it like it’s the death certificate, cemetery ledger, family Bible, and the Book of Genesis all rolled into one.

It is not.

What Find a Grave is good for

Let’s be fair. Find a Grave is great for:

  • Photos of headstones
  • Cemetery names and locations
  • Clues for family members
  • Possible burial groupings
  • Volunteer-added obituaries

It can lead you to the right place.

What Find a Grave can’t prove

Find a Grave entries can be:

  • Wrong
  • Incomplete
  • Based on hearsay
  • Copied from online trees (which may also be wrong)
  • Updated without sources

Sometimes a memorial is made because someone “heard” that person is buried there.

That’s not proof. That’s gossip with a hyperlink.

The 3 records that beat Find a Grave every time

If you want real proof, look for these:

1) Cemetery interment register / ledger

This is the gold standard.
It may include:

  • Burial date
  • Exact plot location
  • Plot owner
  • Next of kin
  • Funeral home

2) Death certificate

This can confirm:

  • Burial location
  • Spouse
  • Parents (sometimes)
  • Cause of death
  • Informant name

3) Obituary or funeral notice

Obituaries can connect the dots:

  • Relatives
  • Residence
  • Burial location
  • Church affiliation

What to do if you suspect Find a Grave is wrong

Here’s your no-drama plan.

Step 1: Treat it as a clue
Not a fact.

Step 2: Confirm the cemetery
Call or write the cemetery and request the interment entry.

Step 3: Confirm location
Make sure there wasn’t a similarly-named cemetery nearby.

Step 4: Confirm family grouping
If it’s a “family plot,” cemetery records may actually prove relationships.

What you can do on Find a Grave (yes, you can fix things)

One of the best things about Find a Grave is also the most dangerous thing about Find a Grave:

It’s editable.

That means when you spot an error, you don’t have to just sigh dramatically and move on. You can usually do something about it.

Here are a few ways:

1) Suggest edits

On most memorial pages, you can click “Suggest Edits” and submit corrections for things like:

  • name spelling
  • birth/death dates
  • burial location details
  • family connections

If you have proof, even better.

2) Add a source (nicely)

If the memorial has wrong info, submit your edit with a brief, factual note such as:

  • “Death certificate lists burial at ___ Cemetery”
  • “Cemetery ledger confirms burial in Lot ___”
  • “Obituary states buried at ___”

Keep it calm and simple. No one responds well to “THIS IS WRONG.” (Even if it totally is.)

3) Contact the memorial manager

Each memorial has a manager (the person who created it or maintains it). If you can’t edit directly, you can message them and politely request:

  • updates
  • removal of incorrect relationships
  • addition of missing information

Most managers want the memorial to be accurate, but they may not know it’s wrong.

4) If you can’t get it corrected…

If edits aren’t being accepted, you can still:

  • use the memorial as a clue, not proof
  • document the correct information in your own tree
  • attach the real source records to your Ancestry profile / FamilySearch person page
  • note in your research log why the Find a Grave entry is questionable

Because the goal isn’t winning an online argument.
The goal is not attaching the wrong parents to your ancestor and spending 3 months living a lie. 🙃

Final thoughts

Find a Grave is an amazing starting point.

But it’s not the finish line.

So use it, enjoy it, appreciate the volunteers… and then go get the real records that make your family tree rock solid.


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.

Want consistent progress on your brick walls? Check out my Monthly Research Plan subscriptions on Loganalogy Store and let’s keep your family story growing, month by month.

When Records Don’t Behave (and Winter Won’t Quit)

If you think Florida doesn’t do winter, think again.
We’ve already had over 30 freezes, snow flurries made an appearance, and now we have a warmer week with winter peeking around the corner like it forgot something.

In this week’s Loganalogy newsletter, I share what I’ve been working on behind the scenes, a quick genealogy tip you can use immediately, and an honest update from my own research that’s reminding me how messy real family history can be.

In this issue, I cover:
• A quick tip on why timelines can change how you see your research
• Why town history matters more than people realize
• An update on my Lemuel research and why missing marriage records aren’t always accidental
• What I’ve been actively researching lately and why it matters

And that’s just part of it.

This issue is part education, part real-life research, and part “genealogy is never as neat as we want it to be.”

👉 Want the rest?

No spam. Just practical family history help, honest updates, and the occasional weather complaint.

Mastering Soundex for Easier Ancestor Searches

If you’ve ever searched for an ancestor and gotten nothing back, congratulations: you’ve officially experienced genealogy the way it was meant to be… mildly infuriating.

Here’s the truth: sometimes the record exists. The index just… doesn’t.

Maybe the clerk had messy handwriting. Maybe the person typing the index guessed wrong. Or maybe your ancestor’s name was spelled twelve different ways depending on the mood of the day. Either way, this is where Soundex comes in. And yes, it can absolutely save your sanity.

What is Soundex (in plain English)?

Soundex is a search system that groups names by how they sound, not how they’re spelled.

So instead of being stuck searching only for “Ashmore,” Soundex helps you find:

  • Ashmore
  • Ashmoor
  • Ashmor
  • Ashmer
  • Asmore
  • (and other creative spellings that make you question history)

Basically, Soundex is the “Close enough, let’s try it” method of genealogy research. And that’s exactly what we need.

Why does Soundex matter so much?

Because indexes are often:

  • typed from handwriting
  • created years later
  • done by people who were not local
  • full of typos, skipped lines, and “best guesses”
  • computer generated

So the record can be sitting there safely in a database… while the index is out here ruining lives.

When should you use Soundex?

Use Soundex when:

You KNOW the person should be there
Example: You have a marriage date and county, but no indexed marriage record shows up.

The surname is easy to mess up
Some names are just more likely to be misspelled:

  • Wilmurt / Wilmot / Willmert
  • Douglass / Douglas
  • Booraem / Borem / Borum
  • Bennett / Benet

The clerk was probably having a day
If the record was created in the 1800s… it’s safe to assume spelling rules were optional.

You’ve tried all normal searches
If you’ve already done the “try every spelling” dance, move on to Soundex.

How Soundex works (simple version)

Every name gets:

  • 1 letter (the first letter of the name)
  • plus a few numbers based on sound

So even if a name is spelled differently, it often gets categorized the same.

That means you’re not searching for exact spelling, you’re searching for the same sound group.

Where Soundex helps the most

Soundex is especially helpful in:

1) Census records
Because enumerators weren’t always spelling champions.

2) Marriage indexes
One wrong letter and your record disappears into the void.

3) Death indexes
This is where typos thrive, especially if the information was provided by a stressed family member.

4) Birth records
The best part: even parents’ names can get messed up, so Soundex helps there, too.

How to use Soundex (without needing a PhD)

You can use it in a few easy ways, depending on the site:

Option 1: Search using “sounds like” settings

On platforms like Ancestry, turn on:

  • “Sounds like”
  • “Similar”
  • or broaden spelling options

Option 2: Search by first name + location only

One of my favorite tricks:

  • Use the first name
  • Use the county/town
  • Use an approximate year

Then scroll the results like you’re digging in a bargain bin.

Option 3: Use wildcards

Wildcards catch messy spelling too:

  • Ashm*
  • Wil*rt
  • Dougl*

It’s not fancy, but it’s effective.

Real-life genealogy win: the Soundex save

Sometimes the record isn’t “missing”… it was just indexed wrong.

That happened to me recently. The record I needed was not showing up under the correct surname at all. It wasn’t even close. But Soundex grouped it correctly, and there it was.

That one search saved hours, probably days, and at least one dramatic speech about “why do I even do this.”

What to do after you find the record

Soundex is only the beginning.

Once you find a likely match:

  1. Open the image
  2. Read the original record
  3. Compare it to what you already know
  4. Save it as a source
  5. Note spelling variations (future-you will thank you)

What to do next: help fix the index (yes, you can!)

Here’s the part most people don’t realize: on many genealogy websites, you can actually suggest a correction to the index.

That means if the record was indexed as “Ashmor” but clearly says “Ashmore,” you can help improve the database for everyone.

Depending on the site, you may see options like:

  • “Add or update information”
  • “Suggest edits”
  • “Report a problem”
  • “Correct transcription”

General steps (works on most sites):

  1. Open the record page (not just the search results)
  2. Look for an “edit” or “correction” option
  3. Type the corrected name spelling and details exactly as written on the image
  4. Submit and save

A few tips so your correction gets accepted faster:

  • Don’t modernize spelling beyond what the record shows
  • Keep it clean and factual (no notes like “this is obviously wrong”) 😄
  • If the site allows comments, politely reference what you see in the image

Why it matters:

  • It helps other researchers find the record
  • It reduces future confusion
  • It makes the genealogy world slightly less chaotic (slightly)

So yes… you’re not only finding your ancestor.
You’re basically doing community service.

Final thoughts

If you take nothing else from this post, take this:

Indexes lie. Soundex helps.

So the next time your ancestor magically disappears from the records, don’t panic and don’t assume the record doesn’t exist.

Try Soundex, broaden your search, and remember: genealogy rewards stubborn people.


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.

Want consistent progress on your brick walls? Check out my Monthly Research Plan subscriptions on Loganalogy Store and let’s keep your family story growing, month by month.

Unlock Your Family History: Loganalogy’s New Monthly Genealogy Research Subscriptions

Are you ready to transform your family history journey from a sporadic search into a consistent, rewarding discovery process? At Loganalogy, we understand that tracing your ancestral roots requires dedication, expertise, and often, access to specific historical records. That’s why we’re thrilled to announce the launch of our brand new Monthly Genealogy Research Subscription Plans!

We’ve designed two distinct tiers – the Basic Subscription and the Standard Subscription – to meet you exactly where you are in your genealogical research and keep your family story growing month after month.

Why Choose a Monthly Genealogy Subscription?

The path to uncovering your family tree is rarely a straight line. It involves meticulous record analysis, persistent searching for vital records, deciphering census data, and navigating various genealogical databases. A monthly subscription offers:

  • Consistent Progress: No more long gaps between research sessions. We ensure steady advancement.
  • Expert Guidance: Benefit from professional genealogist expertise applied directly to your unique lineage.
  • Budget Predictability: A flat monthly fee helps you manage your investment in family history research.
  • Overcome Brick Walls: Dedicated time each month is a strategic approach to breaking through challenging ancestral puzzles.
  • Verified Results: We prioritize accurate source citation and documentation for every discovery.

Let’s explore which plan is the perfect fit for your genealogical journey!


🌲 1. The Basic Subscription: Consistent Online Growth

Ideal for those who want to keep their family tree actively growing using the wealth of digital resources available today.

  • What You Get: 4 dedicated research hours per month focused on online genealogical databases like Ancestry.com, FamilySearch, newspaper archives, and more. We specialize in verifying online records, organizing existing data, and extending your family lines within the digital realm.
  • Perfect For: Beginners building their family tree, verifying existing online ancestry information, or researching lines that are primarily documented in digital historical records.
  • Monthly Investment: $100

With the Basic Subscription, think of us as constantly tending to your online genealogical garden, ensuring it remains organized and vibrant with new, verified growth.


🌳 2. The Standard Subscription: Deep Roots & Archive Coordination

For clients whose genealogical projects require a more intensive approach, including delving into offline records, archives, and specialized collections.

  • What You Get: 5 dedicated research hours per month, plus full professional coordination and management of requests for physical records from courthouses, state archives, historical societies, and other repositories. This includes identifying necessary vital records, ordering documents, and comprehensive expense tracking.
  • Perfect For: Breaking down stubborn genealogical brick walls, projects requiring original documents, researching challenging immigrant ancestors, or those who prefer a completely hands-off approach to record retrieval.
  • Monthly Investment: $125 (plus the actual cost of outside records, approved by you in advance).

The Standard Subscription allows us to dig deeper, coordinating all the essential genealogical evidence to establish the deep, verifiable roots of your ancestral tree.


Ready to Cultivate Your Family Story?

No matter where you are in your family history research, Loganalogy is here to provide the consistent, expert support you need. Our monthly plans are designed to give you peace of mind, knowing that your ancestral journey is always moving forward.

Visit our Stan Store today to choose your plan and plant the seeds for your next great family history discovery!

➡️ stan.store/Loganalogy

Let’s grow your family tree, month by month, with precision and passion.

No-Fluff Family History Tips Straight to Your Inbox

If you have a “someday” family history project sitting in your brain, you are exactly who the Loganalogy newsletter is for.

Over the past few months, I’ve been sending out short, beginner-friendly emails packed with simple tips, honest encouragement, and practical tools to help you make real progress on your family tree. Think of it as family history help in plain English, from a researcher who has made all the mistakes so you do not have to.

And if you have not hopped on the list yet, now is the perfect time.

What the newsletter has been doing for readers

From the very beginning, the goal has been “No Fluff, Just Family History Help.” That is not just a cute slogan on the signup page. It is how I plan every issue.

So far, newsletters have focused on things real people actually struggle with, like:

  • Getting started without feeling lost. We talk about how to take that big messy pile of names, screenshots, and half-finished trees and turn it into a simple, step-by-step plan.
  • Avoiding common beginner mistakes. If you grabbed the freebie “12 Mistakes New Family Researchers Make,” you know I am serious about helping you dodge the time-wasting, head-smacking stuff early on.
  • Keeping family stories from disappearing. One of the first topics I wrote about was how easily family stories vanish by the second generation, and what you can do right now to save them with simple tools like voice memos, journals, and family interviews.
  • Using tools and cheat sheets instead of guesswork. I love sharing quick reference guides, worksheets, and checklists, so you can spend less time wondering what to do next and more time actually doing the research.
  • Building confidence, not just trees. Every issue is written to remind you that you can do this, even if you are brand-new to genealogy.

You do not have to be an expert. You do not have to know what a “FAN club” or a “soundex code” is. You just need a little curiosity and a willingness to learn one small thing at a time.

What you get when you subscribe

When you sign up for the Loganalogy newsletter, you get two big things right away:

  1. A free Genealogy Quick Reference Guide
    This is a handy cheat sheet to keep nearby while you research. It is designed to help you quickly remember key details and stay on track without flipping back and forth between a dozen tabs.
  2. Ongoing help directly in your inbox
    The newsletter is:
    • Short and easy to read
    • Beginner-friendly
    • Focused on practical tips, free resources, and tools to make family history feel less overwhelming

You will also hear about new blog posts, fresh free resources, and helpful goodies in my shop, so you always know what is available to support your research.

How often does it show up?

I respect your inbox. This is not a daily sales pitch or a never-ending stream of noise.

You can expect issues a couple of times a month, with occasional special notes if something especially helpful or time-sensitive comes along.

The goal is simple: every email should either teach you something, save you time, or give you a tool you can use right away.

Who this newsletter is for

You will feel right at home on this list if:

  • You are just starting your family tree and do not know where to begin
  • You have been poking around Ancestry or FamilySearch, but it all feels scattered
  • You keep thinking, “I really should write down Grandma’s stories before it is too late.”
  • You like the idea of getting guidance from someone who explains things like a friendly teacher, not a textbook

If you are further along in your research, you are still welcome. Many subscribers with experience tell me they enjoy the reminders, tools, and encouragement to stay organized and keep sharing their stories.

Ready to join us?

If you have been meaning to “get serious” about your family history, this is your nudge.

👉 Sign up here: https://loganalogy.com/loganalogy-newsletter/

You will instantly get access to the free Genealogy Quick Reference Guide, plus you will start receiving those no-fluff, high-help emails that keep you moving forward on your family tree.

Your ancestors lived full and fascinating lives. Let us make sure their stories do not disappear into a box in the closet or a hard drive no one opens.

Need more one-on-one support with a tricky branch or a brick wall?
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.

Monthly Family History Goals for Genealogy Success Part 2

A new year is around the corner, which means new puzzle pieces. Instead of letting your calendar boss you around, save a spot for family history. Fifteen minutes a day, an hour a week, or a once-a-month binge. Pick what fits and stick with it. I laid out clear monthly goals you can mix and match.

May – Do a House History

Ever wondered who lived in your home before you? Or maybe your ancestor’s old address still exists. Start by gathering clues from deeds, tax records, and city directories. Check with your local property appraiser or courthouse for ownership history. Historical societies often have maps or photos showing the evolution of your neighborhood. If you’re researching your ancestor’s home, look for census records tied to that address and old newspapers for local gossip or “who moved in” tidbits. You might even uncover your family’s house being sold, built, or remodeled in the classifieds!


June – Go Outside!

Spring is the perfect time to take your genealogy out for a walk. Visit old family neighborhoods, ancestral farms, or cemeteries. Take photos of headstones and markers (and upload them to Find a Grave or BillionGraves to help others). Walk through historical districts or open-air museums for the architectural context of your ancestor’s era. If possible, bring family members along—someone might recall details you’ve never heard before. Don’t forget sunscreen, bug spray, and a notebook!


July – Reconnect with Relatives

Summer is reunion season. Plan a family gathering, even if it’s just a Zoom call. Reaching out to relatives—especially those DNA matches you’ve been curious about—can uncover photos, stories, or documents that fill big holes in your research. Be polite, respectful, and share something of your own (like a cool discovery or photo). This helps build trust and keeps the communication going. Remember: today’s cousin connection could be tomorrow’s biggest genealogy breakthrough!


August – Dive into History

Take a deep dive into the local or regional history tied to your ancestors. Visit your hometown’s museum or historical society. Read old newspapers to understand what life was like during your ancestor’s lifetime—wars, weather, prices, and social issues all shaped their stories. For a modern twist, use AI tools or online archives to create timelines that show what was happening during key years of your ancestor’s life. Understanding the bigger picture helps bring those names and dates to life.


September – Improve Your Skills

Genealogy is a lifelong learning adventure. Dedicate this month to building your expertise. Attend online webinars or local workshops. Explore podcasts, YouTube channels, and online courses that cover DNA interpretation, record analysis, or writing family stories. Consider joining genealogical societies—they often offer exclusive training sessions and resources. Keep a notebook (or digital log) of what you learn so you can revisit tips and apply them to your own research.


October – Be a Contributor

Give back to the genealogy community this month. Volunteer as a transcriber or indexer for archives and record projects. Respond to photo requests on Find a Grave or share obituaries and family photos online (with permission). Contributing helps preserve history and strengthens your research network. You might even meet distant cousins or researchers working on the same lines. Every name indexed or photo uploaded makes a difference!


November – Write It Down

It’s NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month), so grab that keyboard or pen and start writing your ancestor’s story. It doesn’t have to be long—pick one ancestor or one event and describe it in your own words. Use documents, maps, and photos to make it feel real. If you want to share, submit your story as a guest post on Loganalogy or create a small family keepsake to give as a holiday gift. Writing brings your research to life and ensures your ancestors are remembered.


December – Share the Traditions

The holidays are made for reminiscing. Cook traditional family recipes, decorate with heirlooms, and share stories of relatives from holidays past. You could even create a “Family Traditions” scrapbook or record video interviews with older relatives. Don’t forget faith-based or cultural customs—these often hold deep ancestral meaning. Sharing these moments keeps your heritage alive and teaches younger generations where they came from.


Visit Loganalogy.com and my Research Specialist page to get guidance that fits your time and budget.

Monthly Family History Goals for Genealogy Success

A new year is around the corner, which means new puzzle pieces. Instead of letting your calendar boss you around, save a spot for family history. Fifteen minutes a day, an hour a week, or a once-a-month binge. Pick what fits and stick with it. I laid out clear monthly goals you can mix and match.

January: Get Organized
Create a main “Genealogy” folder on your computer, add surname folders, then family-group subfolders. Drop in digitized photos, documents, and research notes. Download record copies from your online trees so you keep control. Back up to the cloud and an external drive. Start or update your tree in software and sync with your online tree. Add raw DNA files to a “DNA” subfolder.

February: Rebuild One Family
Choose a branch that’s thin on facts. Turn on record hints by building a working tree on your favorite sites. Review hints carefully, attach only good matches, and keep “maybe” notes. After hints, hunt for gaps, like missing census years or vital records, and fill them with targeted searches. Use multiple sources for key events, and fix loose ends like second marriages and stepchildren links.

March: Find the Women
For Women’s History Month, focus on one or two female ancestors. Search husbands, siblings, and children for her maiden name. Check marriage records, obits, church books, and pensions. Consider an mtDNA test to study your direct maternal line. Review matches with care, since mtDNA changes slowly.

April: Do More with DNA
National DNA Day lands on April 25. Autosomal tests (AncestryDNA, MyHeritage, 23andMe) help with matches on both sides. Y-DNA traces a direct paternal line. Ask relatives to test, respect privacy, and message close matches to compare trees and places. Upload raw data to GEDmatch and sites that accept uploads. If you use health insights, share results with your doctor, not as a diagnosis.


Visit Loganalogy.com and my Research Specialist page to get guidance that fits your time and budget.

Tracing Prussian Ancestry: The Story of Augusta

When we trace our family history, sometimes we stumble on a name that looks plain on paper but represents an entire life full of struggle, love, and resilience. For me, one of those names is Augusta Reikowska, the mother of Clara Elizabeth Schwitkowski/Hennig.

A Name, A Journey

Augusta was born in Prussia in the mid-1800s, a time when political upheaval and economic challenges pushed many families to seek a new start. Immigration records hint at her journey across the ocean, though the details of her passage are still foggy. What we do know is that she settled into a new country, carrying with her the traditions, strength, and determination of her homeland.

S.S. Switzerland

Life as a Mother and Immigrant

Like so many women of her time, Augusta’s story is often hidden in the shadows of census records and marriage certificates. Yet, her legacy shines through her children — especially her daughter Clara, who went on to raise her own family in America. Behind every census tick mark is the reality of daily survival: learning a new language, making a home in a foreign land, and holding a family together through uncertain times.

Digging into Prussian Roots

If you have Prussian ancestors like Augusta, you know how tricky records can be. Borders shifted constantly, and “Prussia” covered areas that today belong to Germany, Poland, Lithuania, and beyond. That means Augusta’s hometown might not appear under the same name today.

 Marriage of John Schwittkowski and Augusta Reikowski

A few tips if you’re researching Prussian records:

  • Check the church books: Lutheran and Catholic parish registers are often the best source for births, marriages, and deaths. Many have been digitized by FamilySearch or regional archives.

  • Look at gazetteers and maps: Historical maps can help you pinpoint a village’s modern location. The Meyers Gazetteer is a great free tool.

  • Explore immigration records: Passenger lists, naturalization papers, and local newspapers sometimes provide the only clues to an ancestor’s origins.

Even if you don’t find a detailed record for someone like Augusta right away, piecing together these breadcrumbs can reveal the bigger picture of your ancestor’s journey.

Hennig Family circa 1918

Why Augusta Matters

It can be tempting to skip past names like Augusta’s when we’re building a family tree, but pausing to dig deeper reminds us that every ancestor has a story worth telling. Augusta’s life reflects the broader immigrant experience of the 19th century — the courage to leave home, the resilience to start over, and the determination to create a better future for her children.

A Story Waiting in Your Tree

Augusta’s story made me think about the other “quiet” women in family history — the ones who don’t always have headlines or detailed obituaries, but whose lives were no less extraordinary. If you’ve ever looked at a name in your tree and thought, There’s not much to find here, I challenge you to pause. Ask yourself: what might their life have been like in their time and place? What history were they living through?

Sometimes the most meaningful stories are the ones waiting in the margins.

1529 S. 26th St

Augusta lived in the house above from 1910 until her death in 1964 at the age of 94. Her service was held at St. Lawrence Church.

St. Lawrence Church, Milwaukee, Wisconsin

She is buried with her husband at Mount Olivet Cemetery; Location: Block: 9 Section: 2 Row: Lot: 8-s Grave:

Obit

You’ll notice in this obituary that it says “née Reik,” meaning her maiden name. Yes, the Reikowskis changed their surname as well.

 

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Why Newspapers Are Key to Your Genealogy Research

The Missing Piece in Your Family History Puzzle

When you think about researching your family tree, your mind probably goes straight to the usual suspects: birth certificates, death records, marriage licenses, and census data. These documents form the skeleton of genealogy research, providing the essential dates and locations that map out your family’s timeline.

But here’s what most beginning genealogists don’t realize: while vital records and census data tell you WHERE and WHEN your ancestors lived, newspapers reveal HOW they actually lived their lives.

Why Newspapers Are Genealogy Underrated

Historical newspapers capture something that official records simply cannot – the human stories that happened between the major life events. Think of newspapers as the social media of bygone eras, documenting everything from grand celebrations to everyday community happenings.

What You’ll Discover in Newspaper Archives

Through newspaper research, you might uncover:

Professional Life: Career changes, business partnerships, job achievements, workplace incidents, and employment advertisements that reveal your ancestor’s work history in ways census occupations never could.

Social Connections: Wedding party lists, social club memberships, community event participation, and mentions in society columns that show who your ancestors knew and how they spent their social time.

Personal Achievements: School honors, athletic accomplishments, artistic performances, civic awards, and community recognition that paint a picture of their talents and interests.

Real-Life Drama: Legal proceedings, business disputes, accidents, arrests, and other challenging moments that humanize your ancestors and show they faced struggles just like everyone else.

Daily Life Context: Local events, weather disasters, economic conditions, and community changes that shaped the environment where your family lived.

Getting Started: Essential Newspaper Research Strategies

Begin with What You Know

Before diving into newspaper databases, gather your existing knowledge about the ancestor you want to research. Create a simple timeline including:

  • Full name and any known nicknames or variations
  • Birth and death dates (even approximate years help)
  • Places where they lived throughout their life
  • Occupation information from census records
  • Names of spouses, children, and other family members
  • Any family stories or traditions about this person

Set Specific Research Goals

Rather than randomly searching through newspaper archives, establish clear objectives for your research sessions. Instead of hoping to “find something interesting,” set measurable goals like:

  • Locate the obituary for a specific family member
  • Find business advertisements or mentions related to an ancestor’s occupation
  • Discover community events or social activities involving your family
  • Understand the local context during significant periods in your ancestor’s life

Master the Technical Search Strategies

Use Quotation Marks for Precision: Searching for “John Smith” in quotes will find that exact phrase, while searching John Smith without quotes returns results containing both words anywhere in the article.

Try Name Variations: Historical records often contain spelling variations, especially for immigrant surnames. Consider alternative spellings, shortened versions, and even phonetic possibilities.

Leverage Boolean Operators: Most newspaper databases support Boolean search logic:

  • AND: Both terms must appear (“Samuel AND Paulison”)
  • OR: Either term can appear (“Samuel OR Sam”)
  • NOT: Excludes unwanted terms (“Smith NOT John” if you want to avoid a common name)

Employ Wildcard Characters: Use asterisks (*) to replace multiple characters and question marks (?) for single character substitutions. For example, Paul* would find “Paulison,” “Paulson,” or “Paulsen.” And, Sm?th would find “Smith” or “Smyth.”

Filter Strategically

Most newspaper databases offer filtering options that can dramatically improve your search results:

Location Filtering: Start broad (state level), then narrow down to a county or city level as needed. This prevents missing results from nearby communities where your ancestor might have had connections.

Date Range Filtering: Use known life events to create logical date ranges. If researching a marriage, search newspapers from several months before and after the ceremony date to find engagement announcements, wedding coverage, and related social events.

Publication Type Filtering: Some databases distinguish between daily newspapers, weekly papers, and specialized publications. Weekly papers often contain more local social news, while daily papers focus on breaking news and business information.

Advanced Research Techniques

Browse Entire Newspaper Issues

Don’t limit yourself to name-based searches. Sometimes the most valuable genealogical information comes from understanding the broader context of your ancestor’s life. Browse through complete newspaper issues from significant time periods to understand:

  • Local economic conditions that affected employment opportunities
  • Community events and social structures
  • Regional challenges like natural disasters or economic downturns
  • Cultural and social norms of the time period

Organize Your Discoveries

Create a systematic approach to saving and organizing newspaper findings:

Digital Clipping System: Most newspaper databases allow you to save article clippings. Create folders for different family lines or research topics.

Consistent Tagging: Use standardized tags like “obituary,” “business,” “social event,” or “legal notice” to make findings searchable later.

Citation Tracking: Always record complete citation information, including the newspaper name, date, page number, and database source for future reference.

Timeline Integration: Add newspaper discoveries to your existing family timeline to see how new information connects with known facts.

Common Challenges and Solutions

Dealing with Name Misspellings

Historical newspapers were typeset by hand, leading to frequent spelling errors. Additionally, optical character recognition (OCR) technology used to digitize old papers sometimes misreads text, creating search challenges.

Solution: Use wildcard searches and phonetic variations. If searching for “Johnson,” also try “Johnsen,” “Jonson,” and “John*son” to catch variations.

Managing Information Overload

Popular newspaper databases contain millions of digitized pages, which can feel overwhelming for new researchers.

Solution: Always start with specific parameters (exact names in quotes, location filters, and date ranges), then gradually expand your search if initial results are limited.

Verifying Information Accuracy

Remember that newspapers, especially older ones, sometimes contained errors, gossip, or biased reporting.

Solution: Cross-reference newspaper findings with other sources when possible. Look for multiple newspaper reports of the same event, and compare newspaper information with official records.

Making the Most of Your Research Time

Focus on Quality Over Quantity

It’s better to thoroughly research one ancestor using multiple newspaper sources than to briefly search for many different family members. Deep research often reveals connections and stories that surface-level searching misses.

Document Your Search Process

Keep notes about which databases you’ve searched, what terms you’ve used, and what date ranges you’ve covered. This prevents duplicate work and helps you expand searches systematically.

Connect Newspaper Findings to Other Research

Use newspaper discoveries as springboards for additional research. A mention of your ancestor’s business partner might lead to researching that partner’s family, potentially revealing new connections to your own family tree.

Building Your Newspaper Research Toolkit

Essential Online Resources

While many newspaper databases require subscriptions, some excellent free resources exist:

  • Local library digital collections often include area newspaper archives
  • State historical societies frequently maintain digitized newspaper collections
  • University libraries sometimes provide free access to regional newspaper databases
  • Google News Archive contains some historical newspaper content

Physical Archive Locations

Don’t overlook non-digital resources:

  • Local historical societies often maintain newspaper collections specific to their area
  • Public libraries frequently have microfilm collections of local papers
  • Genealogical societies sometimes have compiled newspaper indexes or abstracts

Taking Action: Your Next Steps

Ready to start discovering your family’s newspaper stories? Begin with these concrete actions:

  1. Choose one ancestor to focus your initial newspaper research efforts on
  2. Gather existing information about this person’s life, locations, and time periods
  3. Identify relevant newspaper databases or archives that cover the areas where this ancestor lived
  4. Set specific research goals for what you hope to discover
  5. Start with focused searches using exact names, date ranges, and location filters
  6. Expand gradually using wildcards, Boolean operators, and broader search terms
  7. Document and organize your findings using a systematic approach

Newspaper genealogy research opens up dimensions of your family history that traditional records simply cannot provide. While census data tells you your great-grandfather was a railroad worker, newspaper archives might reveal the specific company he worked for, when he changed jobs, workplace accidents he survived, or community recognition he received.

These stories transform names and dates into real people who lived full, complex lives in communities that shaped them just as much as they shaped those communities. Your ancestors weren’t just statistics in government records – they were human beings with achievements, struggles, relationships, and stories worth preserving.

Start your newspaper research journey today, and prepare to discover the fascinating human stories that have been waiting in historical archives for you to find them.