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Grow your family tree on your phone

By Sarah Cavill, Techlicious.comIt’s a heady thing, looking over my family tree.  All of those Samuels, James and Graces lead to me.When I started creating my family tree, it was with the intention of getting to know my family better and find out more about who I am. Fortunately, a lot of the information I needed to fill in the boxes on my family tree could be found online.I started with Ancest
Shrubs by Benoit Bousquet / Today

By Sarah Cavill, Techlicious.com

It’s a heady thing, looking over my family tree.  All of those Samuels, James and Graces lead to me.

When I started creating my family tree, it was with the intention of getting to know my family better and find out more about who I am. Fortunately, a lot of the information I needed to fill in the boxes on my family tree could be found online.

I started with Ancestry.com, the market leader in online genealogy. I found its interface to be straightforward and user-friendly as I entered the names of the people I knew in my family tree. Ancestry.com then flagged people on my tree that had potential matches in the service’s collection of 6 billion records so I could fill in more details.

Babe Ruth's World War II draft card
Babe Ruth's World War II draft cardAncestry.com / Today

Documents include census data, birth, marriage and death certificates, court, land and probate documents, military papers, immigration records, newspapers and much more. So it can be relatively easy to find out when your ancestors immigrated to the United States, whether there are any black-sheep relatives who were conveniently expunged from the family record and other interesting tidbits. 

The U.S. Deluxe subscription, which provides access to these resources, costs a hefty $19.95 per month or $155.40 annually, after a 14-day free trial. There’s also a World Deluxe membership ($29.99 per month or $299.40 annually), which includes fairly good records from the UK and Canada, as well as other sources. 

If you don’t want to commit to a subscription, check out FamilySearch.org, a free service with more than 1 billion names in searchable databases from around the world. You can then input your findings into a free account on Geni, a free family-tree maker service.

As good as the online resources are today, you’ll inevitably find some blanks you just can fill in without doing some fieldwork. Luckily, that doesn’t mean you have lug around your laptop or paper copies of your records to your family reunions. There are apps that let you view and edit your materials on your smartphone.

Ancestry by Ancestry.com / Today

For Ancestry.com subscribers, there’s the Ancestry app (free on iTunes) that lets you access your account, make edits, notes, and view records that are already attached. It is also handy for field research, but for further online work on Ancestry’s database, you will get bounced to the Web version.

Shrubs by Benoit Bousquet / Today

Or check out one of the GEDCOM viewer apps. GEDCOM is an industry-standard file format for saving genealogical data, so files created and saved in the GEDCOM file format can be uploaded for use in genealogy programs and services like Ancestry.com. There are several good options: Family Bee ($10 on Android Market), Shrubs ($7.99 on iTunes), and GedView ($3.99 on iTunes). These apps are good for research trips and annotation. Emailing, syncing and editing capabilities vary between apps. 

For better or worse, working on a family tree is never finished. There’s always another cousin to track down or a picture of a marriage certificate to find. But with the technology available today, the process is a whole lot easier, and more fun.

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