This is wonderful!! I started doing this with my moms family in the boot heel of MO starting with the 1900 census and working backwards first and eventually forward. However, I kept seeing so many surnames I recognized, I stopped and am now doing the entire county for all of the censuses. This is saving SO much time!! In the end it will benefit me AND tons of other people!!
When filtering, you can also just type the name in the search as opposed to scrolling to find. This is awesome. Great idea can’t wait to utilize this on my research.
This copy and pasting doesn't work in Firefox browser (everything converts to one column), but it works exactly as you describe in Chrome. This is AMAZING, Connie. I'm not a slouch when it comes to Excel, but you taught me a couple new tricks. The whole FAN searching has new life. Thank you! Thank you!
Thanks Annette. I thought it was my MacBook OS that didn't work. I was thinking I had to use Windows OS (and I don't like Windows). With my MacBook, I was using Firefox and as you have observed, Firefox was the problem. I was able to do Connie's trick using Chrome. Thank You! Thank You! Now, I can work on my MacBook where I am more comfortable.
@@GenealogyTV I was going to ask you but I found Annette's comments first. Ha Ha! I saved another dead end. I know that neither Apple nor Microsoft was going to help me. The Internet is where the useful support is. Thanks to you especially Connie - this was a particularly useful video. 6 Stars!
Annette, this used to work in Firefox but I don't know at which update it stopped working. I also use Libre & thought it was Libre that wasn't working. After several frustrating attempts, I went on to other genealogy probs. But I often review Connie's videos, and this time, I read ALL the comments. That's now my MO when I watch genealogy vids bc the community is so so helpful. I've installed Chrome, it works & I'm going to hop back-and-forth between Chrome & Firefox since all of my bookmarks are in Firefox. Connie (Genealogy TV) - thanks for the update. I review your vids often bc each time I pick up or understand more or am at the stage in my genealogy that you're addressing. Thanks to you and the community at large!
Tip If you want your page to look a little neater, more compact reduce the long name, for example, Dwelling Number can be changed to Dwelling # or Dwell #, Family Number to Fam #. Reduce anything that is larger than the information below it will have a much more narrow row for a single-digit answer below. For longer titles at the top, you can add a row below the description so you could put half of the description on the top line and the rest below which will reduce the column to a much thinner column.
Day before yesterday I was able to break through a more than one-hundred year old mystery. I used the Ancestry Thru-lines following my paternal line with the last name and state for my GG last name Jones (of course!). I then reviewed my matches and began to wild card attached their trees to my own and kablam! I know know who my GGG is and found the family in Panola County, MS. I am able to see faces of people who have been phantoms to me. I'm trying to fit some other pieces together so it's still a work in progress.
Self taught Excel & use Excel regularly in my family history research, however you have given me another avenue to use spreadsheets in solving some of my brick walls. I'm looking forward to using this trick. I have been doing my research for 31 years but new to this site due to COVID isolation & because our Family History Centre is still closed which I am a Volunteer of. Thank you Constance for waking up my zest for researching my family history again. Cheers from Down under.
There are rare occasions that Ancestry has not indexed people on the census page. I've seen it for people in my tree at least twice maybe more. So It would probably be useful to check to see if at least the heads of households are indexed on each page before entering the information into a spreadsheet. Or at the very least keep in mind that while Ancestry is amazing it's not perfect, so you might have to be extra vigilant at times.
Connie, I know next to nothing about Excel but thanks to you there is hope. You make even someone like me catch on. I have lost track how many times I watch this but feel confident it will start coming natural. I love this and all your videos. You are such a great teacher. Thank you for all you do.
I have not looked thru all the comments, but you could do a "freeze" on a range to rows as opposed to doing the split. For freeze, the options are, 1 top row, 1 left column or "selection". So if you selected the first few lines they can be frozen, or likewise a few columns such as A-D if the labels are on the left.
Brilliant! Funnily my husband has always spruiked how great Excel is (He is a database engineer/software developer). He has asked me numerous times if I want to learn to "Program" in Excel, and I always answer "NO, not your nerd stuff". It is amazing that I am now very keen to follow your instructions for my family tree. I can't wait to show my husband. :)
Made the first mistake in the book, started at page 7 and tried to insert previous pages before it in the spreadheet. Bah. I am using LibreOffice and it works nearly the same, but I discovered that if you are on a page, and click into the bottom section, and then right click and draw from the top left box down to the bottom right to select those cells, then CTRL-C and do the paste special into the spreadsheet, you don't get all the bumph at the top. And next trick, on Ancestry move to the next page and the table at the bottom is already highlighted so just CTRL-C anywhere on the page to copy and then use the paste special into the spreadsheet. Much faster. But thank you for this trick. PS just discovered that there is more than one 'book' for Llanelli and I did the wrong one first.
Never thought to do this for Census records to find "related" persons in this way. Thank you for the insight, will help much with my research. Every day is a new day to learn :-)
Connie, I did a test in Google Sheets and almost everything is the same as Excel except these two points: 1. To insert the text click on Edit, paste special, paste format only and 2. to insert the filters click on Data, turn on filter. I hope this helps.
Last tip. On the left hand side on the top excel green strip of menu is a quick links area. I would create a button to allow me to click just once to bring of the paste special box, and if possible the text radio button selected. I am posting via iPad, and pc is shut down so I’ll have to try another day to create this to reduce the number of mouse clicks needed.
Thank you! Excel also lets you filter and/or sort by the shading color and/or the font color you use. Hope this gives you more options when you're looking at the data.
Absolutely awesome information!!! I love how you show us to do filters on Excel because I did that before at work, but not in the past 5 years and it's so easy the way you explained it. Thank you so much. Now I'm going to do this spreadsheet for all my peeps! I'll be done about 2095! lol But seriously, thanks for being so clear in your explanations of things we might not use everyday or forgotten how to do!
Outstanding video! BTW, the paste special command in Google sheets would be, copy the selection that you want to paste into your sheet, right-click on the cell where you want to paste your selection, then click "Paste special", and then click "Paste values only".
Agreed, I learned so much from this video, thank you! I followed along and did this with you. FYI- someone may have already discussed this but I did want to mention that in the 1870 Census for an infant the census taker put 4/12 for 4 months old in July. It downloaded as born in April but there is also a column that asked for month born that has February listed. Just might want to check to correct the month. Thanks again!
What a fantastic way to do this. Since most of my ancestors are in somewhat rural areas, at least until the 20th century, I'll likely bite the bullet and do the entire ED (and maybe even some surrounding ones) and not just a few pages on either side. I figure they were likely to have at least some contact with folks living a little further away through church and other activities. Since I'll still be able to see how close they are page number-wise, having a larger group might just save me some time later when I need to look for another ancestor or a collateral family. This will be a great way to kill some hours and will certainly pay off in spades down the road. Thanks for the tip!
I really like your site and appreciate all the information you share. I don’t know if you covered this before. When I tried to download the census information to my excel, I had no luck at all. I followed your instructions exactly. Still no joy. I then noticed you did not mention the browser you were using. I was using Firefox. So, I switched to a different browser and everything worked. Thanks again for all you do.
That was so helpful. I'm not very good with Excel and you have given such wonderful step by step on how to use it to help break down brick walls. I will definitely watch this video more than once! Thanks so much.
Wow, I just found this video and your channel, been up late for 3 nites trying to get over a dead end, and BINGO, I used this and figured it out! Never thought to download the census data either--DUH!! Joined your patreon. Thanks!
Thanks for yet another informative video! I remember back when I saw the original one that it was such a light-bulb illuminating moment for me. I learned a lot of new tips and tricks from that one and now there's even more with this video. The handout is fantastic with it's step-by-step detailed info. Thanks, Debbie Jones
Another awesome video! I’ve watched this a couple times now, and I regularly make these lists (I do the whole census sometimes, to help find families that I can’t find a census for. It’s usually a spelling issue.). But what popped out at me today was the bastardy bonds. Maybe you can do a short video on when you are prompted to look for those, and where we would find them. Thanks again. I always come away with a new or refreshed angle on my searches. 🤓
Hi Carol. I've thought about doing a video on Bastardy Bonds, but they are such an obscure record and really doesn't apply to everyone. They are a holdover from English law. I look at them when there is a missing parent or there is a missing marriage record. They are not available everywhere, but are usually in court records at the county level when found. Go to FamilySearch.org/wiki... and search for Bastardy Bonds in the area you're researching to see if the records exist.
If you place the cursor on the cell above the row number and left of the column A you can then click on any of the column or cell separation lines to expand the column or row. Additionally if some of the header titles are too long for the text in the cells, it is possible to force the two works to be split onto two lines, just position the cursor in the white space between say two words, hold the Alt down and press the return key, hey presto header is two on two lines in one cell, you can now make the column narrower.
Thanks for sharing this technique. It's a very logical strategy. It does work with Google Sheets. One must use Paste Special and select "Values only." The spacing worked well.
I followed this step by step, in your case you had a last name to go by, but what if you don't have a name to go by? I suspect my "great grandfather" was either adopted or his BF was someone other that what's on his birth cert. Adoption is where I'm leaning as I'm not finding direct connections to either his dad's (Hammond) or his mom's (Sortor) side of the family. Those I do show to be connected to them are also connected to another line (Turple) who I do have a lot of connections with. P.S. I have tested with both 23andme as well as Ancestry and uploaded to all the other sites.
Karen there are lots of strategies you can try. Start with the F.A.N. Club. What is F.A.N. Club Research for Genealogy and Family History? ua-cam.com/video/pXODnErWXFw/v-deo.html
I’m not sure this can help with my accumulating brick walls , but both sides of my family are from rural county in Virginia , I can imagine I’ll come some rabbit holes if I’m just browsing. Great idea . I’m going to start with maybe 3 pages on either side and see what I can garner. Thanks for the great tip.
My dad's side is from Virginia connected to some influential names. I never liked the story Alice in Wonderland as a child but I run down so many rabbit holes I have become her in my older age. Frustrating and fun at the same time.
Hi Connie - I’m just catching up with this video and don’t know if you answer questions from old ones, but I figured I’d try. I’ve been looking for my paternal grandfather’s father for over 10 years - that is, since I was first able to access all the census data that show that the family story was a fabrication. Ack! My grandfather was born in England in 1888. I have a full brother, and he got a Y-chromosome test via FamilyTree, up to the 111 level. At this time, it’s too expensive to get the “Big Y” test. The results are scattered as to surnames. There are a couple that are slightly more frequent - one of which shows up around the birthplace of the generation older than my great-grandmother, who was born quite a distance away. But I’m keeping it in mind. My grandfather’s original middle name is a surname, as was common, and it’s not a family name among his mother’s relatives. So I’ve been taking that as a big clue. His birth registry entry seems falsified, as the US immigration and other records here have been. In fact, it’s possible that my grandfather’s mother my be an aunt or cousin. But I’m sticking with her as the bio mom for now. (They were very poor, and she was unwed, so unless she was paid to raise him, she wouldn’t have just taken him on. Her own father abandoned her mother when she was a teen, so they had a tough time of it.) I’ve slowly been researching the family name, seeking age-appropriate men who might have lived in or near the same city, or ones who might have been “travelers,” aka traveling salesmen or similar. On Ancestry, we have a tantalizing few cousin matches with that middle name in their trees. Alas, not enough people make their trees available. Still, a few have popped up in the 20-40 Cm range, which is pretty good for this many generations on. Alas, my father passed before I thought to test him. He has no brothers. A first cousin on my father’s sister’s side passed unexpectedly, and we aren’t in contact with his sister or her kids. Unfortunately. And since I don’t know what cousins to ask on the mystery great-grandfather’s side, DNA has to be trusted to luck. I’m trying to work up the courage to contact the larger DNA matches to ask about their families. It’s a tricky topic, obviously. I want to try this census method, but need to ask: the censuses in England are done in the “1” years. So I can do 1881 (6 years prior to conception) and 1891 (4 years after conception). I know most people didn’t move around as much then as we do today. But I’m wondering about whether searching for city directories closer to the conception year might not be as helpful in this case. I don’t know how accurate such info was for the poorer areas back then, but would you try that first, for indexed directories? So far, I know of one, but there may be more. If not, would it be likely that the father of an out-of-wedlock child would have lingered in the area for four years? I’ve tried checking bastardy lists and similar records, and so far haven’t gotten lucky with them. Thanks for any help.
Neat. I'll have to keep that in mind. I had done similar things with just pen and paper. I need to stop being old, I guess. I'm kind of hoping some of your videos will answer my longest running questions. Good tips so far, so I have a few hundred videos to go.
Thanks for sharing these steps and showing how this can be done. Just wish that Ancestry or Family Search would make such index searching possible in their databases without having to go through all the extraction techniques. But absent that, it is always great to find ways to work around that limitation!
Fantastic video! One thing. You dont need to split the page. Some folks get confused if they see the same info in two places. Just like you did for Freeze Pane, you can highlight the row (in yours you wanted to freeze 1 through 5), click in cell A6, then go back click on Freeze pane and instead of selecting top row or first column, you select Freeze Pane. Now all 5 rows are frozen without the split showing duplicate data. Just tried the copy/paste function and it appears that my census records dont have the same thing on the bottom as yours!!! Mine looks more like a JPG than a file.
Thank you, thank you, thank you!!! Great and easy explanation. I figured out how to make it work with Google spreadsheets quite rapidly. Love your channel!😍
If you click off the cell that has the link then right click on the same cell, a list of options will appear. The last item is Link, paste the url into the box that appears and that cell when clicked on will open a web page or a new tab in an open browser based on the link.
Thank you! This is so helpful! I was just getting frustrated trying to do something similar but just not getting there. I find that I spend way too much time in Excel trying to make it look pretty and organized instead of trying to answer my question. This will help so much.
Thank you for the excel spreadsheet tips! Question maybe you can help with! I have over 19000 hints on Ancestry, is there a good way to go through them?
Great info, I will have to have a play with this technique. Once all the data is collated I would create a pivot table to see the most common names/data.
Oh wow, a tedious process, but it helped me out so much! I wish this feature was built into the census image on Ancestry. I provided feedback to the site years ago requesting they add an option to search for a person of interest inside the images and to add a feature that will redirect us to another person in a different household/dwelling in the image by clicking on their name.
I have a relative with little to no info. And then In the 1920 census when he’s 46 is the last time he’s seen no death certificate no marriage certificate no anything he just disappears or was killed 🥺
Although 10 images is sensible. If you can you should do the whole neighborhood. I see on census where they skip a house on one page and don't record it till they reach the last page.
My ancestor only shows up on the 1880 census, Family tale is he took the fall for whatever and went to the pin. Supposedly dying in 1888, his wife remarried in 1889. And that's my 20yr+ brickwall my 3rd great grandpa.
Is it possible to find possible parents for ancestor that is listed as illegitimate. I have the original 1882 church marriage solemnization certificate for my great grandfather in England. It shows the father of my great grandmother but in the space for father of my great grandfather it has the statement that he was illegitimate. Any ideas?
See if you can find something like a Bastardy a bond for the mother. Sometimes the Bastardy bonds will name the father. Sometimes the bondsman is actually the father. Also, do some DNA research.
Thanks for a prod to try this again. I don't use Microsoft Excel; I use Libre Office Spreadsheet instead. I suspect what I'm going to describe would also work in Open Office since LO and OO are from the same background. The commands are a bit different, so I had to do a little research. This may help others. To use the drag and fill feature to enter the page number down a column, hold down the ctrl key before clicking on the handle and dragging. Otherwise if you just drag the handle, you get series of numbers, e.g. 1, 2, 3, .... To attach filters to the column heads, select the headings of the columns you want to filter, and choose the Auto Filter funnel across the top icons next to the sort, or under the data menu. Finally, I tried this technique on the Family Search indexes, but it doesn't work because they use a first name last name single cell instead of the last name cell, first name cell separation that is used in Ancestry. So you can't sort on last name unless you wanted to go back and add a new column yourself.
Great update, Connie! I used the original video to sort my Browns in eastern CT...yes, my mind was a "Brown out." This makes it so much easier. Thank you for teaching us!
This is brilliant! Thanks so much for sharing this so that the process can be followed. Beats the daylights out of scooting back and forth among images hoping to see a relevant detail.
Absolutely brilliant! I’ve identified a family tree (NPE) I belong to but can to figure out where they cross with one of my ancestors.. this will help! Thanks
Looking at this also would provide a series of census sheets for the same family. So instead of placing the image number in the far left column, I would only need to copy the family in 1850 then 1860 then etc which might provide information that would be useful?
After your first paste, select all of your data, and then on your HOME ribbon, look to the right for "Format". Drop that down and select "Autofit Column Width" and it will fit all of your columns to the data and headings.
This is a very helpful idea and came at just the right time as I am searching a neighborhood for siblings and cousins who immigrated together but their names were all mangled with different spelling variations. Excel's filtering features are a much more robust searching tool than trying to wrestle with the search tool on the websites. Thank you Connie!
@@GenealogyTV I made a comment to them that their version is now different to what is available. I had a hard time pulling all the info on Family Search and Ancestry.
This is such a great video- informative and clear instruction on using the data. The methodical analysis of the data and perseverance that yields such satisfying results- love it! Thank you.
Note to Firefox users: excel will paste in one column from Firefox. We have to use a different browser. I finally saw a comment someone else made on the first video or I wouldn't know this either.
@@sherryfreeman5431 I’m sorry, I have absolutely no idea what you are trying to say as far as my family. I have found great info from my Pro Genealogist. Rossla am Harz, Sachsen, Prussia. The church records for Rossla start in 1656. For my family. His German Colleague had a team who had to go into the Church documents and find them. They have not allowed pictures or copying. That is why we were unable to find the information.
@@GenealogyTV Connie, do you know any where that I could find information on a relative from Russia from 1620? I don’t know if anyone has Russian information
Once you have captured all the info in a Excel file, save your original file in a folder and then use copy and paste to make copies to play with so you don't mess up all your work. That way you can try different ways to search. Sort by country of birth, or by sex, or by occupation.
One thing I do is keep a master of all the data on the first tab (at the bottom) and then duplicate the tab to have a second tab as my sandbox to play in. That way I don't loose my original data export.
Thank you so much for this!! I had been trying to think through how I could import census information into a spreadsheet; this is much easier than what I was contemplating thanks to some of your tricks. Also, I used to teach Excel but I even learned some new tricks about Excel! You said you had gotten the surname of Davis through DNA. Could you explain a little further on how you got the surnames and how you narrowed down to that one. Thanks for your help!
Glad it was helpful! I asked my 1st cousin to take a YDNA test. All four matches had the surname of Davis. Then I cross referenced the surname Davis on Ancestry to find other cousins who matched with me and him. So I knew that Davis (on that line) was what I was looking for. Then after much descendant research, the closest DNA was specific to one family of four brothers... then more research, those four narrowed to one... Joel Davis Jr... his descendants had higher DNA than any other cluster of descendants from that line. I hope that makes sense.
I just finished my Excel for one of my ancestors trying to find my late mother's parents. I only did one enumeration district. I didn't realized it! Now I will have to do the rest of the counties in South Alabama so I can find the one name I am searching for! But this is a great tool! Thank you! Btw, how did you find the link for the census record via Ancestry? I think I did mine wrong. Lol.
Interesting. I didn't know you could copy the census data like that. FYI tho - I ran across pages in the 1940 census where the entries were NOT transcribed (yet?).
okay if you are likely to remember you have done this table in excel I guess it might work. For such as myself I would have used search then dropdown menu to census then to US 1860 then filled in Davis for surname then any particulars from your ancestors district, town etc. Search fields allow basically filter your results but adding a date of birth with plus/minus number of years you would think best age span, selecting only Males too. I am not likely to go back to an Excel sheet myself hence my method of searching If I was sent such a sheet I would have simply used Control F to search for DAVIS surname it would allow me to see if there was a ton of them before using filters. It was not a wasted effort though I have to say. I rarely use Excel so all the tips you showed refreshed and added to what I already knew as a casual user of the software. Thanks though for providing an alternate method that indeed will suit a lot of folks at home with Excel.
I agree with you method but... with the Excel, you can filter several surnames together at one time. For example, I was trying to determine a relationship between DAVIS families and HENLEY families. By filtering to just those two names, I was able to see all in the community with those names, and how they related geographically to each other. There is always more than one way to do things, so it is what works best for you, is the right move. Thanks for your feedback.
Oh my goodness! I didn't know about saving the census data to Excel. I did a number on my eyes reviewing page after page of census images. Never again! Thanks!!!!
Unfortunately, this doesn't work with Libre Office. With "paste special, text" nothing happens. If I use paste, everything goes in one column but text sizes differ; and if I use paste special>paste special>unformatted text, it goes in one column with text sizes all the same. Does anyone know how to do this with Libre Office Calc?
I always check the neighbors. Found the gr gr grandmother, mother to my illegitimate gr grandfather. We had not knows about him until he went to live with his father at age 10. We suspect the parents would not let them marry. She was a neighbor. My most puzzling ancestor is a James Brown, Born Canada and worked on a ship. Shipping was a big industry on that river. Lived St Lawrence Co NY 1820, 1830 then followed the Mormons west and died in Illinois. HIs daughter my ancestor was raised by fellow Mormons who had treked to Illinois also. But the puzzler is that I have 17 DNA matches with a Brown family in VA. Ancestry is suggesting they are the family of this James Brown. You have to be careful what Ancestry suggests. I think most likely I am related by way of a different Brown family in another areaof my tree. And that family was from VA, but Ancestry did not relate them that way. PUzzled by this.
loved this can we do something like this to copy names from let's say family tree maker to import to excel bc I have an excel sheets to track data and there is way too many names to put in manually?
Connie, I am using Microsoft Excel 2010 and for some reason the "Paste - Special" isn't working when I try to paste the info from a 1860 census from Ancestry. Would you have any input on why this isn't working?
You need to upgrade to a more recent version. Alternatively, you can do the same thing on Google Sheets for free. If so, use Edit>Paste Special> Values Only.
On my version of Excel(360), after copying data (cntrl A & Cntrl C), instead of selecting "paste special/text" you must right click and choose "paste/values". It performs the same function. There is no option for "paste special" in this version of Excel. Thanks so much for this video, it's a big, big help.
No worries. Thanks for the tip. I just shot a video today about doing the same thing using Google Sheets for those who don't have excel. It also uses "Paste Special > Values Only." This is good to know. Thanks
Nice! I knew about looking at neighbors on census records but saving records on Excel (etc.) is great to know. Also nice to know about are the bastardy bonds.
Hey Jackie. Yes... I just reposted it in the Community Tab for Information Access Level Channel Members. Go here to find it. ua-cam.com/users/genealogytvcommunity
This might be a way to find a 1 year old baby in the 1830 census and an 11 year old in the 1840 census. I know where she was born and where she might have been in 1840. She was living with an uncle in 1840, but don't know if he was paternal of maternal. Hope the odds are in my favor.
@@GenealogyTV Thank you. I'm going to need it. The town in the 1830 census where she was born has 501 head of households. It's going to take some work.
She should be 15 in 1900, likely named living with her parents. If you know the county, that is a huge plus. I'd start there. Look for all the immediate family to help know you have the right records.
@@GenealogyTV Thank you! I think I did find her. We knew she was an orphan and I found her with her “adopted” family, although she kept her birth surname and not their name. My grandmother always wanted to know what happened to Pearl’s parents. This is my brick wall.
Another super interesting video. I have been researching my ancestry for at least ten years. I have over 1,200 pages of data and just over 2,200 pages of historical documents, but I also have a major brick wall. My 2nd great-grandfather was born in 1826. He was Black, so I suspect he could have been a slave before the Civil War. In all my years of researching, I cannot find his parents. Any suggestions?? Thanks.
No. I used to have one and never use it anymore. Most public libraries have them... but most microfilm is available on FamilySearch.org or Ancestry.com these days.
@@GenealogyTV ok updated the excel and I still can’t get it to work-like yours. I’ve followed your steps and it always comes out down a single column. So I am taking a tutorial class. I must not have the program set up right!! Thanks for your help. I will keep watching!
I cannot thank you enough..I found the parents of my 4x great grandma! After so many years! Thanks a million!!!
Wonderful!
This is wonderful!! I started doing this with my moms family in the boot heel of MO starting with the 1900 census and working backwards first and eventually forward. However, I kept seeing so many surnames I recognized, I stopped and am now doing the entire county for all of the censuses. This is saving SO much time!! In the end it will benefit me AND tons of other people!!
Awesome!
When filtering, you can also just type the name in the search as opposed to scrolling to find.
This is awesome. Great idea can’t wait to utilize this on my research.
This copy and pasting doesn't work in Firefox browser (everything converts to one column), but it works exactly as you describe in Chrome. This is AMAZING, Connie. I'm not a slouch when it comes to Excel, but you taught me a couple new tricks. The whole FAN searching has new life. Thank you! Thank you!
You’re welcome. 👏👏👏👏
Thanks Annette. I thought it was my MacBook OS that didn't work. I was thinking I had to use Windows OS (and I don't like Windows). With my MacBook, I was using Firefox and as you have observed, Firefox was the problem. I was able to do Connie's trick using Chrome. Thank You! Thank You! Now, I can work on my MacBook where I am more comfortable.
Thank you both for the info. I’m not a Mac user. Mac’s are a completely different language to me. Good to know.
@@GenealogyTV I was going to ask you but I found Annette's comments first. Ha Ha! I saved another dead end. I know that neither Apple nor Microsoft was going to help me. The Internet is where the useful support is. Thanks to you especially Connie - this was a particularly useful video. 6 Stars!
Annette, this used to work in Firefox but I don't know at which update it stopped working. I also use Libre & thought it was Libre that wasn't working. After several frustrating attempts, I went on to other genealogy probs. But I often review Connie's videos, and this time, I read ALL the comments. That's now my MO when I watch genealogy vids bc the community is so so helpful. I've installed Chrome, it works & I'm going to hop back-and-forth between Chrome & Firefox since all of my bookmarks are in Firefox.
Connie (Genealogy TV) - thanks for the update. I review your vids often bc each time I pick up or understand more or am at the stage in my genealogy that you're addressing. Thanks to you and the community at large!
Tip If you want your page to look a little neater, more compact reduce the long name, for example, Dwelling Number can be changed to Dwelling # or Dwell #, Family Number to Fam #. Reduce anything that is larger than the information below it will have a much more narrow row for a single-digit answer below. For longer titles at the top, you can add a row below the description so you could put half of the description on the top line and the rest below which will reduce the column to a much thinner column.
Yes agreed. On longer titles I use word wrap in the same cell.
Day before yesterday I was able to break through a more than one-hundred year old mystery. I used the Ancestry Thru-lines following my paternal line with the last name and state for my GG last name Jones (of course!). I then reviewed my matches and began to wild card attached their trees to my own and kablam! I know know who my GGG is and found the family in Panola County, MS. I am able to see faces of people who have been phantoms to me. I'm trying to fit some other pieces together so it's still a work in progress.
Congratulations!
This is one of the most helpful genealogy videos I've seen. Thank you.
Glad it was helpful!
Wow! I’ve been self taught and you’ve pushed me to go farther! Thank you!
Excellent
Self taught Excel & use Excel regularly in my family history research, however you have given me another avenue to use spreadsheets in solving some of my brick walls. I'm looking forward to using this trick. I have been doing my research for 31 years but new to this site due to COVID isolation & because our Family History Centre is still closed which I am a Volunteer of. Thank you Constance for waking up my zest for researching my family history again. Cheers from Down under.
Hi Carol, from Berwick Victoria!
Yay
There are rare occasions that Ancestry has not indexed people on the census page. I've seen it for people in my tree at least twice maybe more. So It would probably be useful to check to see if at least the heads of households are indexed on each page before entering the information into a spreadsheet. Or at the very least keep in mind that while Ancestry is amazing it's not perfect, so you might have to be extra vigilant at times.
Which is why FamilySearch census can be a backup - their indexing picks up things missed by Ancestry.
Connie, I know next to nothing about Excel but thanks to you there is hope. You make even someone like me catch on. I have lost track how many times I watch this but feel confident it will start coming natural. I love this and all your videos. You are such a great teacher. Thank you for all you do.
The only way to learn, is the dive in. My biggest advice is to save early and save often
I used your Trifecta Strategy and found my great grandmother's obit. I also found out she was a Seven Day Advent in Auburn, Maine.
Yay. See it works!
A Seventh-day Adventist
I have not looked thru all the comments, but you could do a "freeze" on a range to rows as opposed to doing the split. For freeze, the options are, 1 top row, 1 left column or "selection". So if you selected the first few lines they can be frozen, or likewise a few columns such as A-D if the labels are on the left.
Thank you for the tip.
Thanks for this great video. I learned so much about Excel.
Super. Glad it helped. Thanks for supporting GTV.
Thanks for supporting GTV.
Brilliant! Funnily my husband has always spruiked how great Excel is (He is a database engineer/software developer). He has asked me numerous times if I want to learn to "Program" in Excel, and I always answer "NO, not your nerd stuff". It is amazing that I am now very keen to follow your instructions for my family tree. I can't wait to show my husband. :)
That is awesome! Love it... and so will he.
Made the first mistake in the book, started at page 7 and tried to insert previous pages before it in the spreadheet. Bah. I am using LibreOffice and it works nearly the same, but I discovered that if you are on a page, and click into the bottom section, and then right click and draw from the top left box down to the bottom right to select those cells, then CTRL-C and do the paste special into the spreadsheet, you don't get all the bumph at the top. And next trick, on Ancestry move to the next page and the table at the bottom is already highlighted so just CTRL-C anywhere on the page to copy and then use the paste special into the spreadsheet. Much faster. But thank you for this trick. PS just discovered that there is more than one 'book' for Llanelli and I did the wrong one first.
Excellent. Thanks.
Never thought to do this for Census records to find "related" persons in this way. Thank you for the insight, will help much with my research.
Every day is a new day to learn :-)
So true. Thanks.
Connie, I did a test in Google Sheets and almost everything is the same as Excel except these two points: 1. To insert the text click on Edit, paste special, paste format only and 2. to insert the filters click on Data, turn on filter. I hope this helps.
It does thank you.
Last tip.
On the left hand side on the top excel green strip of menu is a quick links area.
I would create a button to allow me to click just once to bring of the paste special box, and if possible the text radio button selected.
I am posting via iPad, and pc is shut down so I’ll have to try another day to create this to reduce the number of mouse clicks needed.
Another great idea. I learn something new every day.
Thank you! Excel also lets you filter and/or sort by the shading color and/or the font color you use. Hope this gives you more options when you're looking at the data.
ooh good to know. I did not know that. thanks
The second button on your first paste click is paste text. You can also use Delimiting if formatting is uniform.
Absolutely awesome information!!! I love how you show us to do filters on Excel because I did that before at work, but not in the past 5 years and it's so easy the way you explained it. Thank you so much. Now I'm going to do this spreadsheet for all my peeps! I'll be done about 2095! lol But seriously, thanks for being so clear in your explanations of things we might not use everyday or forgotten how to do!
You are so welcome.
This was just Fantastic! I immediately went to my computer and downloaded several censuses into excel. I love your videos.
Thank you Joanne.
Outstanding video! BTW, the paste special command in Google sheets would be, copy the selection that you want to paste into your sheet, right-click on the cell where you want to paste your selection, then click "Paste special", and then click "Paste values only".
Thank you
Thank you spent hours trying to figure this out. Appreciate it.
Agreed, I learned so much from this video, thank you! I followed along and did this with you.
FYI- someone may have already discussed this but I did want to mention that in the 1870 Census for an infant the census taker put 4/12 for 4 months old in July. It downloaded as born in April but there is also a column that asked for month born that has February listed. Just might want to check to correct the month. Thanks again!
What a fantastic way to do this. Since most of my ancestors are in somewhat rural areas, at least until the 20th century, I'll likely bite the bullet and do the entire ED (and maybe even some surrounding ones) and not just a few pages on either side. I figure they were likely to have at least some contact with folks living a little further away through church and other activities. Since I'll still be able to see how close they are page number-wise, having a larger group might just save me some time later when I need to look for another ancestor or a collateral family. This will be a great way to kill some hours and will certainly pay off in spades down the road. Thanks for the tip!
Super idea.
Thanks for your support as a channel member!
I really like your site and appreciate all the information you share. I don’t know if you covered this before. When I tried to download the census information to my excel, I had no luck at all. I followed your instructions exactly. Still no joy. I then noticed you did not mention the browser you were using. I was using Firefox. So, I switched to a different browser and everything worked. Thanks again for all you do.
Good to know. I use Chrome 99% of the time and didn't think to try another browser.
That was so helpful. I'm not very good with Excel and you have given such wonderful step by step on how to use it to help break down brick walls. I will definitely watch this video more than once! Thanks so much.
Thanks Kris
Amazing! Thank you for explaining this in detail. I will be trying this out today!
Glad it was helpful!
Wow, I just found this video and your channel, been up late for 3 nites trying to get over a dead end, and BINGO, I used this and figured it out! Never thought to download the census data either--DUH!! Joined your patreon. Thanks!
Fantastic! Woo-Hoo! Happy Dance!
Thanks for joining me on Patreon. I really appreciate it!!!
Thanks for yet another informative video! I remember back when I saw the original one that it was such a light-bulb illuminating moment for me. I learned a lot of new tips and tricks from that one and now there's even more with this video. The handout is fantastic with it's step-by-step detailed info. Thanks, Debbie Jones
Fabulous. Thanks for the kind words and for supporting my work.
Another awesome video! I’ve watched this a couple times now, and I regularly make these lists (I do the whole census sometimes, to help find families that I can’t find a census for. It’s usually a spelling issue.). But what popped out at me today was the bastardy bonds. Maybe you can do a short video on when you are prompted to look for those, and where we would find them. Thanks again. I always come away with a new or refreshed angle on my searches. 🤓
Hi Carol. I've thought about doing a video on Bastardy Bonds, but they are such an obscure record and really doesn't apply to everyone. They are a holdover from English law. I look at them when there is a missing parent or there is a missing marriage record. They are not available everywhere, but are usually in court records at the county level when found. Go to FamilySearch.org/wiki... and search for Bastardy Bonds in the area you're researching to see if the records exist.
@@GenealogyTV Thank you. That’s interesting. I will try that idea soon. 😊
My family is all recently from UK, and I need to know how to look for the father of a gggrandfather.
If you place the cursor on the cell above the row number and left of the column A you can then click on any of the column or cell separation lines to expand the column or row.
Additionally if some of the header titles are too long for the text in the cells, it is possible to force the two works to be split onto two lines, just position the cursor in the white space between say two words, hold the Alt down and press the return key, hey presto header is two on two lines in one cell, you can now make the column narrower.
Thank you for sharing. 👏👏👏
Thanks for sharing this technique. It's a very logical strategy. It does work with Google Sheets. One must use Paste Special and select "Values only." The spacing worked well.
Thanks
I followed this step by step, in your case you had a last name to go by, but what if you don't have a name to go by?
I suspect my "great grandfather" was either adopted or his BF was someone other that what's on his birth cert. Adoption is where I'm leaning as I'm not finding direct connections to either his dad's (Hammond) or his mom's (Sortor) side of the family. Those I do show to be connected to them are also connected to another line (Turple) who I do have a lot of connections with.
P.S. I have tested with both 23andme as well as Ancestry and uploaded to all the other sites.
Karen there are lots of strategies you can try. Start with the F.A.N. Club. What is F.A.N. Club Research for Genealogy and Family History? ua-cam.com/video/pXODnErWXFw/v-deo.html
@@GenealogyTV thank you
I’m not sure this can help with my accumulating brick walls , but both sides of my family are from rural county in Virginia , I can imagine I’ll come some rabbit holes if I’m just browsing. Great idea . I’m going to start with maybe 3 pages on either side and see what I can garner. Thanks for the great tip.
I recommend at least five pages either side. You could start with three and go back later and add to the file.
My dad's side is from Virginia connected to some influential names. I never liked the story Alice in Wonderland as a child but I run down so many rabbit holes I have become her in my older age. Frustrating and fun at the same time.
So helpful. Can’t wait to try these tips when on my computer. Thankyou
My pleasure.
Thanks so much Connie. Perhaps this will work as many other attempts have not.
I hope so, for your sake.
Thank you Connie. Great Info
Glad it was helpful!
Hi Connie - I’m just catching up with this video and don’t know if you answer questions from old ones, but I figured I’d try. I’ve been looking for my paternal grandfather’s father for over 10 years - that is, since I was first able to access all the census data that show that the family story was a fabrication. Ack!
My grandfather was born in England in 1888. I have a full brother, and he got a Y-chromosome test via FamilyTree, up to the 111 level. At this time, it’s too expensive to get the “Big Y” test. The results are scattered as to surnames. There are a couple that are slightly more frequent - one of which shows up around the birthplace of the generation older than my great-grandmother, who was born quite a distance away. But I’m keeping it in mind.
My grandfather’s original middle name is a surname, as was common, and it’s not a family name among his mother’s relatives. So I’ve been taking that as a big clue. His birth registry entry seems falsified, as the US immigration and other records here have been. In fact, it’s possible that my grandfather’s mother my be an aunt or cousin. But I’m sticking with her as the bio mom for now. (They were very poor, and she was unwed, so unless she was paid to raise him, she wouldn’t have just taken him on. Her own father abandoned her mother when she was a teen, so they had a tough time of it.)
I’ve slowly been researching the family name, seeking age-appropriate men who might have lived in or near the same city, or ones who might have been “travelers,” aka traveling salesmen or similar.
On Ancestry, we have a tantalizing few cousin matches with that middle name in their trees. Alas, not enough people make their trees available. Still, a few have popped up in the 20-40 Cm range, which is pretty good for this many generations on. Alas, my father passed before I thought to test him. He has no brothers. A first cousin on my father’s sister’s side passed unexpectedly, and we aren’t in contact with his sister or her kids. Unfortunately.
And since I don’t know what cousins to ask on the mystery great-grandfather’s side, DNA has to be trusted to luck. I’m trying to work up the courage to contact the larger DNA matches to ask about their families. It’s a tricky topic, obviously.
I want to try this census method, but need to ask: the censuses in England are done in the “1” years. So I can do 1881 (6 years prior to conception) and 1891 (4 years after conception). I know most people didn’t move around as much then as we do today. But I’m wondering about whether searching for city directories closer to the conception year might not be as helpful in this case. I don’t know how accurate such info was for the poorer areas back then, but would you try that first, for indexed directories? So far, I know of one, but there may be more.
If not, would it be likely that the father of an out-of-wedlock child would have lingered in the area for four years? I’ve tried checking bastardy lists and similar records, and so far haven’t gotten lucky with them.
Thanks for any help.
Neat. I'll have to keep that in mind. I had done similar things with just pen and paper. I need to stop being old, I guess. I'm kind of hoping some of your videos will answer my longest running questions. Good tips so far, so I have a few hundred videos to go.
Thanks
Thanks for sharing these steps and showing how this can be done. Just wish that Ancestry or Family Search would make such index searching possible in their databases without having to go through all the extraction techniques. But absent that, it is always great to find ways to work around that limitation!
Thanks Steve. Sometimes I think when we do the work ourselves, we look closer at the data.
Fantastic video! One thing. You dont need to split the page. Some folks get confused if they see the same info in two places. Just like you did for Freeze Pane, you can highlight the row (in yours you wanted to freeze 1 through 5), click in cell A6, then go back click on Freeze pane and instead of selecting top row or first column, you select Freeze Pane. Now all 5 rows are frozen without the split showing duplicate data.
Just tried the copy/paste function and it appears that my census records dont have the same thing on the bottom as yours!!! Mine looks more like a JPG than a file.
Thanks for the compliment and the suggestion. When you go to paste, make sure you paste as "Special" and choose text.
Thank you, thank you, thank you!!! Great and easy explanation. I figured out how to make it work with Google spreadsheets quite rapidly. Love your channel!😍
Thanks Barbara!
If you click off the cell that has the link then right click on the same cell, a list of options will appear. The last item is Link, paste the url into the box that appears and that cell when clicked on will open a web page or a new tab in an open browser based on the link.
Oh... great tip!
This is an awesome trick. I actually found my 2nd gr grandmother and another uncle I had been trying to find for years. Thank you so much.
Fantastic! Yes... this is one of my better tricks.
Thank you! This is so helpful! I was just getting frustrated trying to do something similar but just not getting there. I find that I spend way too much time in Excel trying to make it look pretty and organized instead of trying to answer my question. This will help so much.
Fabulous
Thank you for the excel spreadsheet tips! Question maybe you can help with! I have over 19000 hints on Ancestry, is there a good way to go through them?
Yes. Don’t worry about any of them except the ones that surround your research question and Target Ancestors.
Great info, I will have to have a play with this technique.
Once all the data is collated I would create a pivot table to see the most common names/data.
Great idea. Keep me posted.
Thank you. I will go back and look at all of my brick walls this way
Oh wow, a tedious process, but it helped me out so much! I wish this feature was built into the census image on Ancestry. I provided feedback to the site years ago requesting they add an option to search for a person of interest inside the images and to add a feature that will redirect us to another person in a different household/dwelling in the image by clicking on their name.
I have a relative with little to no info. And then In the 1920 census when he’s 46 is the last time he’s seen no death certificate no marriage certificate no anything he just disappears or was killed 🥺
I’ve found so much info since that last message. How do I get more help if needed
Although 10 images is sensible. If you can you should do the whole neighborhood. I see on census where they skip a house on one page and don't record it till they reach the last page.
Good point
My ancestor only shows up on the 1880 census, Family tale is he took the fall for whatever and went to the pin. Supposedly dying in 1888, his wife remarried in 1889. And that's my 20yr+ brickwall my 3rd great grandpa.
Wow! Awesome tutorial... I can't wait to put it into practice....
Thank you. It’s one of my favorite inventions. 😀
Is it possible to find possible parents for ancestor that is listed as illegitimate. I have the original 1882 church marriage solemnization certificate for my great grandfather in England. It shows the father of my great grandmother but in the space for father of my great grandfather it has the statement that he was illegitimate. Any ideas?
See if you can find something like a Bastardy a bond for the mother. Sometimes the Bastardy bonds will name the father. Sometimes the bondsman is actually the father. Also, do some DNA research.
@@GenealogyTV Thanks for the help, your videos are great!
Thanks for a prod to try this again. I don't use Microsoft Excel; I use Libre Office Spreadsheet instead. I suspect what I'm going to describe would also work in Open Office since LO and OO are from the same background. The commands are a bit different, so I had to do a little research. This may help others. To use the drag and fill feature to enter the page number down a column, hold down the ctrl key before clicking on the handle and dragging. Otherwise if you just drag the handle, you get series of numbers, e.g. 1, 2, 3, ....
To attach filters to the column heads, select the headings of the columns you want to filter, and choose the Auto Filter funnel across the top icons next to the sort, or under the data menu.
Finally, I tried this technique on the Family Search indexes, but it doesn't work because they use a first name last name single cell instead of the last name cell, first name cell separation that is used in Ancestry. So you can't sort on last name unless you wanted to go back and add a new column yourself.
Thanks for sharing. It’s good to know.
This is so cool! Never knew we could do that with Ancestry images!
Yeah... it's a little trick I invented. I do this with a lot of data.
This works with Open Office and Chrome. It will not work with Open Office and Firefox. Thank you so much for sharing! I love all your videos!!
You're welcome!
Great update, Connie! I used the original video to sort my Browns in eastern CT...yes, my mind was a "Brown out." This makes it so much easier. Thank you for teaching us!
Thank you for the nice comment.
@@GenealogyTV you are very welcome, 😊
This is brilliant! Thanks so much for sharing this so that the process can be followed. Beats the daylights out of scooting back and forth among images hoping to see a relevant detail.
Thanks. I appreciate it.
Absolutely brilliant! I’ve identified a family tree (NPE) I belong to but can to figure out where they cross with one of my ancestors.. this will help! Thanks
Glad it was helpful!
This worked for me with an ancestor far back, thank you!
Glad it helped!
Looking at this also would provide a series of census sheets for the same family. So instead of placing the image number in the far left column, I would only need to copy the family in 1850 then 1860 then etc which might provide information that would be useful?
After your first paste, select all of your data, and then on your HOME ribbon, look to the right for "Format". Drop that down and select "Autofit Column Width" and it will fit all of your columns to the data and headings.
Yes... thank you. I think there are several ways to do the same functions. I forgot about that one.
This is a very helpful idea and came at just the right time as I am searching a neighborhood for siblings and cousins who immigrated together but their names were all mangled with different spelling variations. Excel's filtering features are a much more robust searching tool than trying to wrestle with the search tool on the websites. Thank you Connie!
Yep... This is one of my very favorite tricks.
There is a simpler version with the data miner extension for the browser you are using. Family History Fanatics has a video on this.
Thanks for the tip. I just went and watched it. Always good to learn different ways to do things.
@@GenealogyTV I made a comment to them that their version is now different to what is available. I had a hard time pulling all the info on Family Search and Ancestry.
Wow, recently stumbled on to your page. Great teacher, well done. Thank you
Thank you Cheri.
MOST AWESOME! I'm still watching. All of your videos are great, even for an intermediate refresher but I think this is the best one yet.
Glad you like them! I agree... this is one of my best tricks.
Great video, so informative. Always great stuff on your channel. Let’s go break down some brick walls!
Deal!
This is such a great video- informative and clear instruction on using the data. The methodical analysis of the data and perseverance that yields such satisfying results- love it! Thank you.
You're very welcome! Thanks again!
Note to Firefox users: excel will paste in one column from Firefox. We have to use a different browser. I finally saw a comment someone else made on the first video or I wouldn't know this either.
This is an awesome technique! Thanks.
Thank you Gary. And thank you for supporting the channel.
If our records had been transferred from Germany, some of this may have worked. Thank you for trying to help us in our searches.
John and mary heishman
The country is called Prussia back in 1860's where the Heishman came from (moravian) area.
@@sherryfreeman5431 I’m sorry, I have absolutely no idea what you are trying to say as far as my family. I have found great info from my Pro Genealogist. Rossla am Harz, Sachsen, Prussia. The church records for Rossla start in 1656. For my family. His German Colleague had a team who had to go into the Church documents and find them. They have not allowed pictures or copying. That is why we were unable to find the information.
Oh that is fantastic that you have a professional genealogist helping you. Excellent.
@@GenealogyTV Connie, do you know any where that I could find information on a relative from Russia from 1620? I don’t know if anyone has Russian information
Once you have captured all the info in a Excel file, save your original file in a folder and then use copy and paste to make copies to play with so you don't mess up all your work. That way you can try different ways to search. Sort by country of birth, or by sex, or by occupation.
One thing I do is keep a master of all the data on the first tab (at the bottom) and then duplicate the tab to have a second tab as my sandbox to play in. That way I don't loose my original data export.
Thank you so much for this!! I had been trying to think through how I could import census information into a spreadsheet; this is much easier than what I was contemplating thanks to some of your tricks. Also, I used to teach Excel but I even learned some new tricks about Excel! You said you had gotten the surname of Davis through DNA. Could you explain a little further on how you got the surnames and how you narrowed down to that one. Thanks for your help!
Glad it was helpful! I asked my 1st cousin to take a YDNA test. All four matches had the surname of Davis. Then I cross referenced the surname Davis on Ancestry to find other cousins who matched with me and him. So I knew that Davis (on that line) was what I was looking for. Then after much descendant research, the closest DNA was specific to one family of four brothers... then more research, those four narrowed to one... Joel Davis Jr... his descendants had higher DNA than any other cluster of descendants from that line. I hope that makes sense.
I just finished my Excel for one of my ancestors trying to find my late mother's parents. I only did one enumeration district. I didn't realized it! Now I will have to do the rest of the counties in South Alabama so I can find the one name I am searching for! But this is a great tool! Thank you! Btw, how did you find the link for the census record via Ancestry? I think I did mine wrong. Lol.
Through the card catalog.
Thank you, Connie. This is very helpful.
Interesting. I didn't know you could copy the census data like that. FYI tho - I ran across pages in the 1940 census where the entries were NOT transcribed (yet?).
Yes true
Nifty trick. Great tutorial. Thanks!
Glad it was helpful!
okay if you are likely to remember you have done this table in excel I guess it might work.
For such as myself I would have used search then dropdown menu to census then to US 1860 then filled in Davis for surname then any particulars from your ancestors district, town etc. Search fields allow basically filter your results but adding a date of birth with plus/minus number of years you would think best age span, selecting only Males too.
I am not likely to go back to an Excel sheet myself hence my method of searching
If I was sent such a sheet I would have simply used Control F to search for DAVIS surname it would allow me to see if there was a ton of them before using filters.
It was not a wasted effort though I have to say. I rarely use Excel so all the tips you showed refreshed and added to what I already knew as a casual user of the software. Thanks though for providing an alternate method that indeed will suit a lot of folks at home with Excel.
I agree with you method but... with the Excel, you can filter several surnames together at one time. For example, I was trying to determine a relationship between DAVIS families and HENLEY families. By filtering to just those two names, I was able to see all in the community with those names, and how they related geographically to each other. There is always more than one way to do things, so it is what works best for you, is the right move. Thanks for your feedback.
Oh my goodness! I didn't know about saving the census data to Excel. I did a number on my eyes reviewing page after page of census images. Never again! Thanks!!!!
Glad it was helpful!
Unfortunately, this doesn't work with Libre Office. With "paste special, text" nothing happens. If I use paste, everything goes in one column but text sizes differ; and if I use paste special>paste special>unformatted text, it goes in one column with text sizes all the same.
Does anyone know how to do this with Libre Office Calc?
I don't use Libre Office but you can also do this on Google Sheets using paste special > values only. (if I recall correctly.
I always check the neighbors. Found the gr gr grandmother, mother to my illegitimate gr grandfather. We had not knows about him until he went to live with his father at age 10. We suspect the parents would not let them marry. She was a neighbor. My most puzzling ancestor is a James Brown, Born Canada and worked on a ship. Shipping was a big industry on that river. Lived St Lawrence Co NY 1820, 1830 then followed the Mormons west and died in Illinois. HIs daughter my ancestor was raised by fellow Mormons who had treked to Illinois also. But the puzzler is that I have 17 DNA matches with a Brown family in VA. Ancestry is suggesting they are the family of this James Brown. You have to be careful what Ancestry suggests. I think most likely I am related by way of a different Brown family in another areaof my tree. And that family was from VA, but Ancestry did not relate them that way. PUzzled by this.
Thanks. This was really helpful.
You're welcome!
loved this can we do something like this to copy names from let's say family tree maker to import to excel bc I have an excel sheets to track data and there is way too many names to put in manually?
I think that would be a bit much because you can just search names from within FTM. The idea is to find those we have not discovered yet.
Connie, I am using Microsoft Excel 2010 and for some reason the "Paste - Special" isn't working when I try to paste the info from a 1860 census from Ancestry. Would you have any input on why this isn't working?
You need to upgrade to a more recent version. Alternatively, you can do the same thing on Google Sheets for free. If so, use Edit>Paste Special> Values Only.
Such an excellent explanation!!! Thank you so much
Thanks Linda
On my version of Excel(360), after copying data (cntrl A & Cntrl C), instead of selecting "paste special/text" you must right click and choose "paste/values". It performs the same function. There is no option for "paste special" in this version of Excel. Thanks so much for this video, it's a big, big help.
I'm bad, this version of Excel is the online version, not 360/365. So sorry.
No worries. Thanks for the tip. I just shot a video today about doing the same thing using Google Sheets for those who don't have excel. It also uses "Paste Special > Values Only." This is good to know. Thanks
Nice! I knew about looking at neighbors on census records but saving records on Excel (etc.) is great to know. Also nice to know about are the bastardy bonds.
Thanks. I use this trick all the time. 😀
Is this handout still available? I can't figure out where to find the link.
Hey Jackie. Yes... I just reposted it in the Community Tab for Information Access Level Channel Members. Go here to find it. ua-cam.com/users/genealogytvcommunity
This might be a way to find a 1 year old baby in the 1830 census and an 11 year old in the 1840 census. I know where she was born and where she might have been in 1840. She was living with an uncle in 1840, but don't know if he was paternal of maternal. Hope the odds are in my favor.
Good luck!
@@GenealogyTV Thank you. I'm going to need it. The town in the 1830 census where she was born has 501 head of households. It's going to take some work.
What I have done is do a command F and then search for Davis...yes you have to go page by page..but not that time consuming
Hi! How could I proceed with my great grandmother who was born in 1885? There is no 1890 census for Kentucky. 😢
She should be 15 in 1900, likely named living with her parents. If you know the county, that is a huge plus. I'd start there. Look for all the immediate family to help know you have the right records.
@@GenealogyTV Thank you! I think I did find her. We knew she was an orphan and I found her with her “adopted” family, although she kept her birth surname and not their name. My grandmother always wanted to know what happened to Pearl’s parents. This is my brick wall.
Keep digging. You’ll figure it out.
Why did you need to do all that when you already had the Bastard Bond information giving you the potential names of the father?
To verify the records.
Another super interesting video. I have been researching my ancestry for at least ten years. I have over 1,200 pages of data and just over 2,200 pages of historical documents, but I also have a major brick wall. My 2nd great-grandfather was born in 1826. He was Black, so I suspect he could have been a slave before the Civil War. In all my years of researching, I cannot find his parents. Any suggestions?? Thanks.
Here is a videos that might help. Researching Persons of Color ua-cam.com/video/rTBkpEL_Bjk/v-deo.html
Thank you for another great and useful video.
Thanks Kathy
Do you think it is worth buying a used microfilm reader?
No. I used to have one and never use it anymore. Most public libraries have them... but most microfilm is available on FamilySearch.org or Ancestry.com these days.
@@GenealogyTV Thanks. :)
Terrific ideas! I don't have Excel but I can't wait to try the basic principle for a mystery ggg grandfather who's parents remain elusive.
I think you can do it in Google Sheets as well, and it is free.
Great video however my excel won’t do what yours does. It just copies to a single column. Any suggestions?
Paste as Special... then choose text. If you're using Google Sheets is a little different.
@@GenealogyTV thank you for answering. My excel is an old version (2013). I just upgraded to a current version and will try again. Love your videos!
Thanks Sharon. Hope the née Excel works for you.
@@GenealogyTV ok updated the excel and I still can’t get it to work-like yours. I’ve followed your steps and it always comes out down a single column. So I am taking a tutorial class. I must not have the program set up right!! Thanks for your help. I will keep watching!
I hope you can figure it out.