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Are you searching for female ancestors? I hope so! This is my own
great-grandmother with my grandma in the 1920s:

Although we’re giving lots of attention to Irish roots this week, we haven’t forgotten
that March is also Women’s History Month.
This rundown of the best genealogy records for finding the women in your family tree
comes from this
month’s Ultimate Collection: Tracing Female Ancestors.
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Cemetery records: Check the woman’s tombstone and note surrounding ones,
which may belong to her family.
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Church records: Witnesses on a woman’s or her children’s religious
records may be her relatives.
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Court records: Women typically didn’t leave wills (in many times and
places, married women legally couldn’t), though a widowed or unmarried woman may have.
Your female ancestor or her relatives may be named in her father’s or husband’s
will. Also check divorce records, which may have been filed even if a divorce wasn’t
granted.
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Home sources: Examine letters, needlework and quilts, recipe books, address
books, baby books, wedding albums, Bibles and calenders for names of—and details
about—female ancestors.
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Land records: Women rarely owned land but may be named in deeds. A married
woman may have signed a release of dower when her husband sold land. Those selling
land to a couple, especially for a small sum, may be the woman’s relatives.
Also consider that the neighbors may be her family.
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Marriage records: These might include a license, certificate, return, church
register, banns, bond or newspaper announcement.
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Military pensions: A woman could file for a military pension when her husband
or unmarried son died of war-related injuries. Widows had to send marriage records
to prove the marital relationship.
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Naturalizations: Until 1922, wives automatically became naturalized when their
husbands did. Unmarried women rarely sought naturalization. Post-1922, look for separate
records for married women.
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Newspapers: Pay special attention to society columns, announcements of births,
engagements or anniversaries, and obituaries.
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Vital records: A woman’s death record may name her father (later records
are more detailed). Birth records often give the mother’s maiden name.
The Ultimate
Tracing Female Ancestors Collection gives you a 63 percent discount on our best
tools for learning more about the women in your family tree. It includes:
-
Finding Female Ancestors Family Tree University Independent Study Course from Family
Tree University - Secrets to Tracing Female Ancestors video class
- Research Strategies: Female Ancestors 7-page digital download
- Female Ancestors Cheat Sheet
-
The Hidden Half of Family: A Sourcebook for Women’s Genealogy by Christina
K. Schaefer (Genealogical Publishing Co.)
Start searching for your grandmothers, great-great-grandmothers, aunts and other
female relatives. Click
here to learn more about this Ultimate Collection!

