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Busting Out
Defy your research dead ends with these 31 time-tested brick-wall busters.
You've traced Great-great-grandpa Jonah back to the old country in the 1830s, but there the trail suddenly goes cold. Who are his parents, your third-great-grandparents? You haven't a clue. It's as though Jonah simply materialized out of thin air (or, just like his Biblical namesake, was spat out of a passing whale).
Maybe you've painstakingly documented Great-grandma Edna from one census back to the next, even working around that pesky burned 1890 enumeration. Then she and her whole family mysteriously disappear. They should be in the 1870 Kansas census—but they're not. What happened? Did a Kansas tornado sweep up poor Edna and carry her clan off to Oz?
Sound familiar? It's the genealogist's nightmare: Your patient progress in discovering your family history comes up against the dreaded Brick Wall. Those darned ancestors of yours have pulled a fast one and left you banging your head in frustration. Maybe their records have disappeared, the courthouse has burned or your kin simply aren't where they're supposed to be. Perhaps they are there, but you can't find them in the morass of people with the same last name, or the maiden-name dilemma has stopped you. Or you've reached the point where your ancestors "crossed the pond," only to have their trail sink into the Atlantic.
Don't give up! Your brick-wall problems can be beaten. You just have to learn some tricks for going over and around the roadblocks to your family's past. Some of these "brick-wall busters" borrow from the techniques of professional genealogists. Others—don't tell!—bend the rules a bit. All 31 ideas can help you find new genealogical avenues, so you can resume your research.
Face it: A brick wall won't make a very pretty picture in your family album. So let's start busting.
1. Work sideways with siblings and cousins. Still stumped? Cheat a little: See if you can skip a generation, identifying Jonah's grandparents by using what you know about his cousins or aunts and uncles; then maybe you can work forward to the missing link of Jonah's parents.
This sideways approach can be particularly valuable if your brick-wall ancestors were on the move—across America or the Atlantic. Unlike today's far-flung families, people in olden times typically packed up and traveled in groups. For example, my great-grandfather Gustav Magnusson and his brother John left Sweden together in 1876, and both wound up in Moline, Ill. If I couldn't find Gustav back in the old country, I could follow John's much better-documented trail (since one of John's sons left a brief biography of him). In turn, their siblings Johanna and Carl followed in 1879. So a genealogist among Johanna's descendants could beat her brick wall by working sideways through Carl.
2. Follow the cluster. 3. Find fellow travelers. David A. Fryxell is a Family Tree Magazine contributing editor. For 28 more brick-wall busters, see the October
2004 Family Tree Magazine.
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