Websites for Family History Beginners

Introduction
There are many family history web sites that can help a beginner with their research. This article will list websites that can be used at the Family History Library, Family History Centers, from home, or wherever one has access to the Internet such as cyber cafes or libraries.

Electronic Family Trees and Family Websites
1. FamilySearch: Largest free online collection of genealogical databases including Ancestral File, International Genealogical Index, 1880 U.S. federal census index, Pedigree Resource File, U.S. Social Security Death Index, and the Vital Records Index—North America. 2. RootsWeb:

Research Aids
3. FamilySearch Wiki: The FamilySearch research Wiki is similar to Wikipedia in nature. It is a place to search for any genealogical information to help you with your research. This page is a part of the FamilySearch Wiki. 4. BYU Guides and Tutorials: This web site includes online family history tutorials and area-specific research guides.

Genealogical Directories
5. ProGenealogists: A professional genealogical company that does family history research. Their web site has two pages that are useful, a United States Genealogy Sleuth page, and an International Genealogy Sleuth page. Both of these pages are filled with links to other genealogy web sites. 6. Cyndi's List: A large genealogical directory that can be searched by location, or topic. Select a location or topic, then select a a category of records or topics, and scroll to the specific record or topic desired. 7. Family Genealogy and History Internet Education Directory 8. A genealogy guide for finding vital records:

Original Records
9. FamilySearch Record Search: Free index to U.S., Canada, and international records. For the U.S., it includes selected federal and state censuses, birth, marriage, and death records, funeral home records, Freedman's Bank and Freedman's Bureau records, military pensions, probate records, passenger lists, WWI draft registrations, and land records. Check back often as this web site is updated with new records regularly.

10. Ancestry or Ancestry Institution $: Ancestry is a paid site, but if you are in the Family History Library you may have the Family History Library access. This access is called Ancestry Institution.

11. HeritageQuest $: The Family History Library has access to this web site. Free at Family History Library, larger Family History Centers, and many public libraries. Check with your local public or academic library for free access to HeritageQuest. Web site includes Indexes and images to U.S. federal censuses 1790-1820, 1860-1880, and 1900-1930, over 22,000 family and local histories, 2 million genealogical periodical articles, Revolutionary War pension and bounty-land warrants, Freedman’s Bank records, and U.S. congressional records. 12. Footnote.com $: Free at Family History Library and many Family History Centers. Digital original sources such as naturalizations, Revolutionary War papers, Civil War papers, Mormon Battalion pensions, newspapers, Southern Claims Commission, and Texas births and deaths.

13. World Vital Records $: Free access available at many Family History Centers. 14. USGenWeb: Free web sites for genealogy research in every state and county in the United States. 15. WorldGenWeb: Free web sites for genealogy research in different countries of the world.

Books
16. BYU Family History Archives: The Family History Archives is a collection of digitized books that can be viewed online. The collection includes family histories, series, and some oral histories. It is sponsered by the Brigham Young University Harold B. Lee library. 17. Google: Google Books contains a large number of public-domain books of family histories and genealogies, plus many local and regional histories of value to the researcher.

Libraries
18. WorldCat: WorldCat is a union catalog which itemizes the collections of 71,000 libraries in 112 countries[1] which participate in the Online Computer Library Center (OCLC) global cooperative. It is built and maintained collectively by the participating libraries. Created in 1971, it contains more than 150 million different records pointing to over 1.4 billion physical and digital assets in more than 470 languages.[1] It is the world's largest bibliographic database. OCLC makes WorldCat itself available free to libraries, but the catalog is the foundation for other fee-based OCLC services. 19. International Library Index by Country:

Maps and Gazetteers
20. United States and its Territories Geographic Names Information System 21. Getty Thesaurus of Geographic Names: This website allows you to search for a geographic name and shows the heirarchy of jurisdictions associated with that location. 22. David Rumsey Map Collection: A collection of over 21,000 historic maps online. The website includes a link to the David Rumsey Blog for additional information. 23. Perry-Castañeda Library Map Collection: The Perry-Castañeda Library Map Collection is an extensive collection of maps at The University of Texas at Austin. Many have been scanned and are available online, most of which are public domain

Passenger Lists
24. Ellis Island: 1892-1924 New York City passenger arrival index showing ethnicity, arrival date, residence, age, ship, port of departure, passenger manifest image, and ship’s image. The best index for this site is at Ellis Island in One Step. 25. US Passenger Lists 26. The Olive Tree Genealogy:

Search Engines
27. Google 28. DogPile:DogPile is a metasearch engine. It gathers information from several search engines and displays then under one search site. This allows the user to search several search engines with only one display list. 29. Clusty: Clusty is also a metasearch engine, but the results are delivered in clusters of information. 30. Steve Morse: Steve Morse is a genealogical search web page.

State Archives
31. Council of State Archivists: This website lists each state alphabetically and the web address of their state archives.

Related Wiki Article
See also Major Databases for Beginning United States Research.