I can’t be the only one excited about this…. right??
So what do you do?
One principle that Elizabeth Shown Mills has created is called the FAN principle, or the FAN club, or cluster research. FAN stands for friends, associates, and neighbors, and the acronym makes it easier to remember, so I prefer that name. The idea here is to broaden your research scope to those whom your ancestor associated with on a daily basis. Who were his neighbors? Were they always his neighbors? Using census records, were there any families that moved with him or stayed nearby? Whom did he sell land to? Or buy land from? What about church associates? Colleagues? His children’s spouse’s family? Who were the witnesses to his marriage(s) or baptisms for his children? Did his children ever live with other people before getting married?
This goes beyond just searching for those with the same surname in the county and surrounding counties of your ancestor (but that is also a good idea)! It gives you a much wider picture of your ancestor’s life. The FAN principle is also EXCELLENT when documents you want/need have been destroyed or just don’t seem to exist. By using indirect and negative evidence like this, you can come up with a soundly researched, coherently written conclusion for a proof argument.
For more reading on using this principle, check out these resources:
Have you used the FAN principle before? Leave comments/questions below about your experience!
Happy hunting!
How to do you plan and prep to go to an archive, library, or county building for genealogy research? Is it just a quick list of names? Do you know who you’re looking for and what you’re hoping to find? Do you have a plan in mind? You should!
Okay, so your research planning probably wouldn’t involve this many people – but there could be this much paper and needed table room! 🙂
I’ll be honest, when I first started, I did not do that. So I ended up getting information rather haphazardly without really knowing what I was doing. Research plans stopped that for me. What is a research plan? It’s pretty much your plan of attack when it comes to a specific wall you may have hit. And that is the key here – it’s looking at a specific question to answer. That makes your work a LOT more focused. And, if you’re like me, it helps keep my lovely Genealogy ADD in check 🙂
I prefer my plans to be incredibly simple. The more complicated, the less likely I am to do something. So I first sit down and examine what specifically I wish to focus on:
The Question/Objective
This can be a birth/death/marriage date, a maiden name, parentage, etc. Anything that you’ve come across that you haven’t answered and you want it answered. This should be VERY specific – not a “what else can I find” type of question. So, for example, I would like to know an ancestor’s birth year.
Review Known Information
This can be a simple list – write down everything you know about that person. Where they lived, who they married, their children, census record information, etc. etc. Reviewing all of this information can sometimes make things very clear, and sometimes the answer you needed was there all along. I often have missed something in my information gathering and when I get to this point, it becomes quite clear!
Working Hypothesis
I don’t know if this is always necessary but sometimes after reviewing all of your known information, you may have an idea of your answer already or some clues about it. Go ahead and jot it down as this can also help keep you focused. I want to emphasize though that your results should be based on the information you gathered and your analysis of the information.
Sources
Here’s where you list what you have for the focus person. You can include this in your known information section too, which I’ll tend to do. I will include an analysis there too. Here’s where you really look at the information. Do you have a death certificate? Note who gave the information. Is that a person who would know? Why? Is a census record always accurate? Who lived nearby (neighbors may have given the census taker the information)? Etc. Etc. Really look at your sources and analyze the information that could come from them. This helps make your planning much easier.
Plan
Now is the good part! What is it you need? What records may have your answer? Do those records even exist?
This list should include the records/sources you wish to find: marriage information, death certificate, baptism information, obituary, land records, etc. This part should also include WHERE those documents are. I normally list them in the order of the best record for what I need to the least.
Examples
Gathering information is what we do best! So, here is a list of places to get examples and more information on research planning:
Elizabeth Shown Mills Analysis and Research Plan (This is quite detailed and a great idea of what a professional may do).
Genealogy Research Plan by Genealogy.About.Com (simple and straightforward)
Cyndi’s List for Research Plans
Anything to add to this? Comment below! 🙂
Along with that celebration is also Memorial Day. A day when we remember those who served and are no longer with us. Interestingly enough, I did not know that Memorial Day usually meant some sort of event in a cemetery until I had met my husband. We were in his hometown one Memorial Day weekend and went to Memorial Day program that all his family was attending in their local cemetery. It was wonderful and moving. I’m sad that I didn’t know this was quite common until I was an adult!
Along with the cemetery events, parades, and family cook-outs, there are also many free searches you can do in military records this weekend!
Enjoy your weekend, be safe, and discover some new ancestors!
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