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2011年8月1日星期一

I need to find birthdate I have month and year?

-If you know where they live/lived try the census recordssherry, a little more info would greatly aid in answering your question.



Is it for an ancestor? If so, where in the world and how long ago? My most recent gaps are those for my great-grandparents. It is so frustrating, but no amount of effort has resolved even one issue, such as my mom's paternal grandmother's name, dates/places of birth/marriage/death. But that was probably the 1820s...



Since you did not provide a location setting or a time period, I can only suggest the broadscope: start with yourself and work backwards one generation at a time.



Try:

You should start by asking all your living relatives about family history. Then, armed with that information, you can go to your public library and check to see if it has a genealogy department. Most do nowadays; also, don't forget to check at community colleges, universities, etc. Our public library has both www.ancestry.com and www.heritagequest.com free for anyone to use (no library card required).

Another place to check out is any of the Mormon's Family History Centers. They allow people to search for their family history (and, NO, they don't try to convert you).

A third option is one of the following websites:

http://www.searchforancestors.com/...



http://www.censusrecords.net/?o_xid=2739鈥?/a>



www dot usgenweb dot com/



www dot census dot gov/



http://www.rootsweb.com/



www dot ukgenweb dot com/



www dot archives dot gov/



http://www.familysearch.org/



http://www.accessgenealogy.com/...



http://www.cyndislist.com/



www dot geni dot com/



Cyndi's has the most links to genealogy websites, whether ship's passenger lists, ancestors from Africa, ancestors from the Philippines, where ever and whatever.



Of course, you may be successful by googling: "john doe, born 1620, plimouth, massachusetts" as an example.



Good luck and have fun!



Check out this article on five great free genealogy websites:



www dot associatedcontent dot com/article...



Then there is the DNA test; if you decide you want to REALLY know where your ancestors came from opt for the DNA test. Besides all the mistakes that officials commonly make, from 10% to 20% of birth certificates list the father wrong; that is, mama was doing the hanky-panky and someone else was the REAL father. That won't show up on the internet or in books; it WILL show up in DNA.

I used www.familytreedna.com which works with the National Geographics Genotype Program.
As you have posted in genealogy...then an ancestor.........no easy unless it is within civil registration which is different depending on the country of birth, so you will then get it from a birth certificate, pre civil registration you would be looking at baptism/christening date, which can be a day to years after the birth, you will find these in parish/church records, cross referencing with census returns ( eg some will say 4 months old), family bibles...people did write birth dates, bap dates etc if you are lucky enough to have one
your question came into the genealogy area.

Is the person dead or alive? US or other country?

If the person is living, their info is protected by privacy laws. If dead, we can possibly direct you to other sources like tombstones.

Please be more specific when asking a question.
You need the full name and where the birth occurred and you will be able to have people search look it up or you could contact the country recorder where the birth occurred.
Is it a person? Type their name on google.

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