OneGreatFamily Blog

  • How to Use the Tracer Feature in Genealogy Browser

    The Tracer lets you see how the anchor individual is related to any ancestor in the StarfieldT.

    The Tracer is simple to use:
    1. Locate your toolbar at the top of your screen.
    2. Click on the Tracer icon.
    3. Click on any individual in your Starfield.
    4. A blue line will appear showing how the anchor is related to the selected ancestor.

    In the illustration below, I am the anchor individual. To see how I am related to my ancestor John William Prunty I turn on the Tracer feature by clicking on the toolbar icon. I then click on John William Prunty in my Starfield. The blue line appears showing how I am related to John. He is my mother's, mother's, mother's, father.

    Full story

    Comments (0)

  • Happy Halloween from OneGreatFamily!

    Ghosts, haunted houses, and graveyards.what better time to get into your genealogy than Halloween? If you're one of us who likes to research your family history, you probably visit graveyards, explore old houses, and re-tell family legends all year round, and you probably wish that you could be visited by family ghosts. But Halloween is the time of year when everyone else gets in on our fun. So here are some fun ways to celebrate the holiday.and your genealogy.

    • Help one of your kids dress like an ancestor for Halloween, or do it yourself. Tell your ancestor's story to anyone who will listen.

    • Forget store-bought Halloween candy. Make a fall-time treat that your ancestors would have enjoyed. Prepare toffee, dip some caramel apples, or pull taffy.

    • Make one last cemetery expedition before it snows. Gather the information you need for the family lines you're working on. Bonus points if you tow family members along.

    • Visit an old house that one of your ancestors lived in. Maybe it's haunted!

    See if you can use Halloween as an excuse to fandangle your family into joining the genealogy cause, because Halloween isn't just for ghouls and goblins anymore.

    Full story

    Comments (0)

  • The History of Halloween


    Modern-day Halloween festivities are a result of hybridization of Celtic, Catholic, and English traditions. The Celts, who lived two thousand years ago in what is now Britain, France, and northern Spain, celebrated the festival of Samhain in late October. Samhain marked the beginning of winter-a time commonly associated with death-and was believed to be a time when the boundary between the world of the dead and the world of the living could easily be crossed. People wore masks and disguises so that they wouldn't be recognized by evil spirits who had come to visit the earth. Turnips, rutabagas, or large beets were carved to look like faces; and as with all Celtic festivals, Samhain was celebrated with bonfires.

    Later, after the Celtic territories had come under the influence of Catholicism, Pope Gregory IV saw fit to Christianize the Celts and sought to eradicate their "pagan" holidays by replacing them with Christian ones. Thus in the ninth century All Saints' Day was moved from 13 May to 1 November, and the festival of Samhain and the Catholic day for the dead were made one. The new celebration became known as All-hallow's day, or the day of all saints. The night before became known as All-Hallow's Eve. 

    As European immigrants came to America, they brought their Halloween traditions with them. Naturally, the "pagan" holiday of Halloween did not flourish in Puritan New England; Halloween festivities were much more widespread in Virginia and in the mid-Atlantic colonies. It wasn't until the late 1840s, however, that Halloween really became popular in America. During this time, Irish immigrants were pouring into the United States by the tens of thousands as a result of the Great Potato Famine. Inheritors of the Celtic traditions, the Irish celebrated Halloween as it had been celebrated in Ireland for centuries. Instead of carving jack o' lanterns out of root vegetables, however, as was traditional in old Ireland, they were carved out of pumpkins, which were more readily available in America.

    English traditions have also influenced the way Halloween is celebrated today; the practice of trick-or-treating can be traced back to All Saints' Day parades, when the poor went from door to door begging food (usually a "soul cake") for their families, and in exchange promised to pray for the dead relatives of those giving them food. Later children began dressing in costume and going from door to door asking for food or money.

    Halloween is primarily celebrated in places with Celtic roots, and is not popular worldwide. However, El Día de los Muertos is widely celebrated in Catholic countries. Unlike Halloween, which is now nothing more than a secular holiday, the Day of the Dead has not lost its original religious meaning. On El Día de los Muertos, people burn candles and leave food and flowers for their dead relatives. 

    Evidently the legacy of the Celts-and the early Catholics-lives on.



    Full story

    Comments (0)

  • Religious Documentation

    Regardless of whether or not we are religious, religion plays an important role in family history. Before government records were kept on a regular basis, church records kept steady accounts of births, marriages, and deaths. Sometimes, these records are vital to us in that they can provide the much needed information that we have been searching for.


    One Great Family offers the ability to keep track of religious information. Christening information is kept track by clicking on the Christening "dot" instead of the default birth "dot" on the "Details For" box when you are editing an individual (see the image to the left).

    For more specific information for Catholic, Protestant, LDS (Mormon) and Jewish information, you simply need to change your settings in Genealogy BrowserT:

    You can change your religious settings by clicking on the "View or Edit My Family Tree" button on the Family Dashboard page.  Once in Genealogy Browser, go to the "FILE" menu in the tool bar. Then select "USER PREFERENCES".  Make sure that you are on the "SETTINGS" tab (it usually defaults here) and then look towards the bottom. At the bottom of the settings box, you will be able to click the Catholic, Protestant, LDS (Mormon), and/or the Jewish box. You may select more than one. Once you have clicked the appropriate boxes, click on "OK". Now, every time you open up a record to edit it, you will be able to access new tabs to enter in the religious information that you find.

    Full story

    Comments (0)

  • Mexican Genealogy

    Since 1820, Mexico has been the fourth largest source of immigrants to the United States, and the number of Mexican immigrants is only increasing. If you are Mexican-born or have Mexican ancestors, consider yourself lucky. Unique surname traditions and widespread availability of church records make it easy to trace Mexican ancestry.

    Understanding how surnames were passed down will help you in your search for ancestors. Traditionally, a child was given her father's surname followed by her mother's. For example, a child named Maria whose father's surname was Garcia and whose mother's surname was Sanchez would be named Maria de Garcia y Sanchez. In more recent times, her name would be listed as Maria Garcia Sanchez or Maria Garcia-Sanchez. Once Maria married, her name would change. If she married a man with the surname Gonzalez, she would become "Maria de Garcia y Sanchez de Gonzalez." This traditional surname inheritance is very helpful for researching your genealogy. If you have Mexican ancestry, you'll never face the common genealogical problem of having the trail going cold because you don't know an ancestor's maiden name. Be aware, however, that in recent years many family members may just to take their father's surname. When you are searching for individuals in the census and other records, search under their mother's surnames, father's surnames, and both surnames put together.

    To find records of your Mexican ancestors, start by locating them in census records to find out approximately when they came to the United States. If they immigrated before about 1906, their immigration records can be found in the county where they settled, if the records exist at all. More recent immigrants filed with the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services, and you can write to the immigration office to obtain their records.

    Vital records are easy to come by in Mexico. Local governments have been keeping these records since about 1857, and Catholic church records have been kept since the Spanish conquest. Catholic church records record christenings, marriages, and burials, and their accuracy and usefulness is unrivaled in the world of genealogy.

    If you are fortunate enough to be able to cross the Atlantic and trace your genealogy back to the mother country, knowing the origin of your ancestral surname can help locate your ancestors in Spain. In early times, a Spanish surname was derived from one's father's name by adding "es" or "ez" on the end. For example, if your father's name was Alvaro, your surname would become Alvarez, and Gonzalo would become Gonzalez. Some Spanish surnames came from occupations; for example, "Molina" means miller. Some surnames come from regions in Spain, and these are especially useful in determining where your ancestors came from. The surname "Vasco," for instance, is a sure indication that your ancestors are from the Basque country in northern Spain.

    If you know the basics, finding your Mexican ancestry is easy and fun. ¡Buena suerte!

    Full story

    Comments (0)

  1. «
  2. 20
  3. 21
  4. 22
  5. 23
  6. 24
  7. 25
  8. 26
  9. 27
  10. 28
  11. 29
  12. »

Ancestor Search

Enter Ancestor's Last Name:
Advanced Search
See what information we have in our database of over 190 million unique entries. Browse Alphabetically
  • Photos
  • Biographies
  • Histories
  • Country Origin
  • Alternate Spellings
  • Number of Generations
“...One person can't possibly do all of the work alone. They need help to speed up the work...The only way to do this is with your wonderful service...”
—Jeff Bagley
More Success Stories



Watch Demo

Use the buttons below to navigate through all four demos.

Previous Restart Next

Demo: Introduction

Learn More

Close