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.
