Many military records are available at the National Archives, located in Kew, Richmond, Surrey, TW9 4DU. If travelling by tube, the nearest station is Kew Gardens (District line). If travelling by train, the nearest station is Kew Bridge. Some buses stop nearby, which include routes R68, 65, 237, 267 and 391. Further information regarding
Have you ever wondered how to search family history for free? Now, you can use all of the available resources online. I'd like you to please discover
Learn search tips on EllisIsland.org, and how you can find your ancestors on other Ellis Island records websites.
How to find offline genealogy records. Where to find online catalogs that can help you find genealogy records in archives.
For more than three decades, veteran music journalist Pete Frame has specialized in creating fantastic Rock Family Trees that map relationships between musicians and bands. In the comments on my…
Need a new at home hobby while cooped up at home? How about researching your family history with a free 14 day trial of Ancestry.com?
Keeping a family genealogic record of some kind is as much the duty of the intelligent head of a family as providing food, shelter and schooling.
The following announcement was sent out by Library and Archives Canada: As of today, 347,005 of 640,000 files are available online in our Soldiers of the First World War: 1914–1918 database. Please visit Digitization of the Canadian Expeditionary Force Service Files for more details on the digitization project. Library and Archives Canada is digitizing the service files systematically, from box 1 to box 10,686, which roughly corresponds to alphabetical order. Please note that over the years, the contents of some boxes have been moved. You might find that the file you want (with a surname that should have been digitized) is now located in another box that has not yet been digitized. So far, we have digitized the following files: Latest box digitized: Box 5848 and Mahony.
27 million records online among the largest online Irish genealogy resource to date and more will follow.
We work with researchers all over the globe to access records for our clients. We asked a researcher in France to share top resources for French genealogy.
How to Grow Your Family Tree for Less Sarah Williams looks at some of the ways that family historians can make their pennies stretch further Like all good hobbies, researching your family history can come with a few costs. Although there’s plenty you can do for free, once you get stuck into your research, you will find there are things you need to pay for, from birth, marriage and death records to genealogy subscription websites. Although we cover plenty of free websites in this magazine, many