Family Tree UK

Your steps to getting started with family history

Research conducted by leading UK family history website Findmypast has revealed a national family history knowledge gap, with only 10% of Brits knowing any general information about their ancestors beyond their grandparents’ generation, including names, addresses or the jobs that they did. Nearly half (47%) have never even seen a photo of them.

Is this you? And would you like to change this? Help is at hand. Read on for your first 7 steps to getting started with family history. With celebrity revelations of hit genealogy programmes like the BBC’s “Who Do You Think You Are?” and Channel 4’s “My Grandparents’ War” showing a growing trend and providing inspiration for many to trace their roots, the research reveals that people are struggling to know where to start. Around 1/3 of people have already started researching their own family history, but nearly half say it’s difficult to start. Few realise that the tools to begin your journey are right at your fingertips, with many family revelations ready to be unlocked at the click of a mouse. Family history websites such as Findmypast provide many of the resources needed to trace your roots back to the reign of

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Family Tree UK

Family Tree UK8 min read
Census
Look out for the questions on the Academy pages, suitable for beginners, intermediate and more advanced. To save you hunting for the answers, we will circulate them in the FREE Family Tree enewsletter. Simply sign up by 21 April www.family-tree.co.uk
Family Tree UK6 min read
Photo Corner
I have just acquired the photo (shown below) from my late aunt’s house. On the back it says “grandpa & grandma Lidderdale”. My problem is I don’t know who wrote the comment and therefore whose grandparents they are. Initially they were thought to be
Family Tree UK11 min read
HOW SHOULD WE DEAL WITH OUR family secrets?
All families have mysteries, secrets and even scandals – or at least events that would have been regarded as scandals at the time. But how do we, the family’s historian, deal with them? Should you share them? Tell them? Write them down? Charlotte Soa

Related Books & Audiobooks