If You Can’t Find Records

When you’re researching your ancestry, it’s normal to run into problems.

Records may have been lost or destroyed, or were never filed in the first place.

Or, the records you find may be confusing; they may not match what your family told you… not at all.

Don’t panic and don’t give up!

These are typical problems we all encounter.

You can find alternatives.

For example, if you don’t have a birth certificate for the person, but you know approximately where they lived, you may find their baptismal information in a local church’s records.

Or, you may find missing information in census records… and then go back and find the birth certificate with that new information. (In the U.S., many of these kinds of records are available at the National Archives’ Vital Records collections.)

A birth may have been announced in the local newspaper. If you’re lucky (“the luck of the Irish” perhaps?), you might find what you seek at the Library of Congress’ free archives.

And so on.

I’ll list more of these kinds of resources as time permits. For now, know that what seems like a “dead end,” may not be a problem. There’s almost always a way to work around it. It may take some creative thinking, but you can do it!

 

Step 1: Your Parents’ and Grandparents’ Information

The first thing you’ll do to find your Irish ancestry is to confirm your parents’ and grandparents’ information.

You’ll need:

    • When and where your parents were born. Confirm it with a birth certificate or similar record. (Now and then, a parent gets this wrong. Or wants to seem younger than they are.)
    • Their parents’ names and other information, on your parents’ birth records. (Notice any odd misspellings, and their addresses, if noted.)
    • When and where your grandparents were born, and their birth certificate info – especially their parents’ names, and addresses, if possible.

Note: Online, United States vital records may be found on a number of websites, such as FamilySearch.org, Ancestry.com, or state government sites.

Some may charge a fee. Others may offer you limited information as part of a free trial membership.

In some cases, free sites such as the U.S. National Archives’ Vital Records may be helpful.

With this information, you have a fairly solid foundation for your future research. (I said “fairly” because some records – even official ones – can contain errors.)

Next, I’ll explain two ways to proceed.