90 million U.S. war records now online, free until the anniversary of D-Day on June 6

May 31st, 2007

Some good news — millions of military records are now on Ancestry.com in a new collection, with access offered free until June 6. There’s a link to this new collection off the main page at Ancestry.com.

I found some of the searches a bit awkward as far as tunneling down to details, but the real treat here is that, like the images of original census records, the microfilm images these records come can also be viewed online.

Unfortunately the links from search results to images don’t necessarily take you directly to the page citing the name you searched for, leaving you with hundreds of pages of records to browse to find the ones you are looking for. But with a little work you can find things like copies of the original muster rolls, with signatures of officers, and much more.

It helps if you have some idea what you’re looking for. For example, in the subsets of Revolutionary War records, I know that the 5th Battalion of the Continental Line was formed in Chester PA.

(via wikipedia)

“The 5th Pennsylvania Regiment was raised December 9, 1775 at Chester, Pennsylvania for service with the Continental Army. The regiment would see action during the Battle of Valcour Island, Battle of Brandywine, Battle of Germantown, Battle of Monmouth and the Battle of Springfield. The regiment was furloughed January 17, 1781 at Trenton, New Jersey and disbanded on January 1, 1783.”

So the film shown here with records from the 5th should include Chester County residents: http://content.ancestry.com/Browse/list.aspx?dbid=4282&path=Pennsylvania

The 9th regiment also included some Chester residents as well as those from other counties, and apparently later was merged with the 5th. The Continental Line records should be just a small portion of what’s offered from the Revolutionary War.

Here’s part of the press info on this:

“On Thursday, Ancestry.com unveils more than 90 million U.S. war records from the first English settlement at Jamestown in 1607 through the Vietnam War’s end in 1975. The site also has the names of 3.5 million U.S. soldiers killed in action, including 2,000 who died in Iraq. … The records, which can be accessed free until the anniversary of D-Day on June 6, came from the National Archives and Records Administration and include 37 million images, draft registration cards from both world wars, military yearbooks, prisoner-of-war records from four wars, unit rosters from the Marine Corps from 1893 through 1958, and Civil War pension records, among others.”

Flowchart Guide to Internet Genealogy

May 8th, 2007

From Christopher Dunham’s Genealogue Blog, here’s a fun flowchart showing how genealogists use the Internet.

Try our custom genealogy Google Search

May 7th, 2007

We’ve created a custom Google search tool to search a selected group of genealogy and history web sites. Try it, and add it to your Google Home page if you like it. Let us know what you think of if there are additional sites you think we should add.

Tips: try names in quotes as “Firstname Lastname” and also try again with “Lastname, Firstname”

Try pairing surnames with place names, such as : Graham Carlisle

Welcome to ColonialRoots.Net

April 29th, 2007

Welcome to ColonialRoots.Net.

Our focus is on the changing face of online genealogy and tools, and we hop to also offer a blend of genealogy, history, timelines and maps related to Colonial America. This grows out of my own interest in genealogy research which is rooted largely in early Pennsylvania families that arrived in the America but is also intended to include far more than that.

Our ColonialRoots Wiki Project is building a database of people, places and events linked to historical accounts and info in the public domain, initially centered largely around Pennsylvania and the Mid-Atlantic states. Through this I hope to create a resource that can can help me and others find to understand the context of Colonial American times from the 17th to 19th Century.

We’ve also added a ColonialRoots.Net Bookstore of products we find useful or of possible interest to our readers.

We highly recommend the Family Tree Maker 16 Collector’s Edition listed in our shop. This software includes a year of access to Ancestry.com at a discounted price, and makes it easy to build your own family tree by searching online through the FTM/Ancestry.com interface. The ability to search Census records and save copies of the original documents is an invaluable feature in this software bundle. At this point in time I do not recommend the new FTM 2008 version. The Ancestry bundling has reduced the free subscription periods and the software is in my opinion an inferior new product that bears little resemblance to the older FTM software.

Please note that the other versions of FTM 16 and 2006 software come with different trial period of access to Ancestry, and that we recommend the Collector’s Edition as the best value for a full year of Ancestry Deluxe membership at less than the regular subscription rate.