Tracing Your Pennsylvania Ancestors

Tracing Your Pennsylvania Ancestors


Do you have Pennsylvania ancestors but don’t know how to get started tracing them? There are plenty of resources available to you. As one of the original 13 colonies, Pennsylvania has a long history and a lot of records available for tracing your ancestors who lived there. Some sources are online, some are offline, some are free, and some have a membership fee to access. They are all worthwhile in using in your Pennsylvania research. Here are the best sources for beginning your search.

 

1. The Genealogical Society of Pennsylvania

This free website has an online database to help you begin your Pennsylvania genealogy research. It has a collection of family resources submitted by users, cemetery databases, naturalization indexes, resources for researching Pennsylvania miners, and county level research resources. It is perfect for the beginning Pennsylvania genealogist.

 

2. FamilySearch.org

FamilySearch.org is a free website run by the Jesus Christ Church of Latter Day Saints (also known as the Mormons). They have one of the largest genealogy collections in the world. In addition to user-submitted family trees, the website also has an entire section devoted to Pennsylvania. Included in this section are things like vital records, obituaries, naturalization records, passenger records, and probate records. All of these things are perfect for taking your Pennsylvania family history research back farther and giving you the information and clues you need to discover those important details on your family.

 

3. The PA GenWeb Project

This free website is part of the US GenWeb Project. It has user-submitted documents that you aren’t likely to find anywhere else. Some of these records come from private family collections and haven’t been published anywhere else. You will find vital records, church records, family Bible records, land records, census records, personal letters and correspondence, wills, probate records, military records, and more. It is the perfect site for finding that one special thing you need to really take your Pennsylvania research to the next level.

 

4. The Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission

This free online website is an extension of the actual physical building you can visit in Pennsylvania. It has an online catalog of things that are only available at the building. These records include census records, county and municipal records, free immigration records, coal miner records, military records, prison and indentured servant records, railroad employee records, and more. The website itself also has land records that are searchable and viewable without having to go to the actual building.

 

5. County Courthouses and Archives

County courthouses and archives are located throughout Pennsylvania, and are excellent resources for finding documents pertaining to your family history. You will find things there that haven’t been published anywhere, and may not have been seen in centuries. Things like wills, probate records, land records, tax records, cemetery records, church records, and old newspaper records on microfilm are all potentially available at these places. If you know the county in which your ancestor lived, it is well worth your time to make a trip there and explore the contents of the local courthouses and archives buildings.

 

6. Ancestry

The undisputed king of online genealogy resources, this site has a membership fee to use it (though there is a 14 day free trial if you just want to briefly explore it). You will find family histories from other users on Pennsylvania families, old photographs of Pennsylvania people from long ago (some of whom may be in your family tree), old newspaper records, census records, scanned pages of published books on Pennsylvania genealogy and family histories, vital records of all kinds, old yearbooks, and so much more. This is a treasure trove of Pennsylvania genealogical research you don’t want to ignore. You’ll find a lot here.

 

7. GenealogyBank.com

If you are looking for old newspaper records from Pennsylvania, this subscription-based genealogy website is an excellent place to go. You will find newspaper records going back 150 to 200 years for various counties. The records are searchable by name and place. Old newspaper records are a terrific source of information, because you will find personal stories about your ancestors here that you won’t find anywhere else. You will also find obituaries and birth and marriage records that can help you discover missing names and dates in your family tree, especially if these vital records were lost in courthouse fires or other natural disasters. You can spend a lot of time searching the newspaper records here and find a lot of valuable family history information.

Searching for your Pennsylvania ancestors is easy when you know where to go to begin the search. All of these places will give you both direct information and clues as to where to look for further documents. Use these resources, and your Pennsylvania family history will soon be opened up to you, and you will finally meet and get to know those ancestors.

 


Free Genealogy Lookups for Pennsylvania


This Week’s Free Genealogy Lookups

This Week’s Free Genealogy Lookups - April 18, 2015

 

Immigrants to Pennsylvania, 1600s-1800s

Pennsylvania’s most influential early settlement was organized by a Quaker, William Penn. Chartered in 1681 by King Charles II, Penn’s colony was primarily made up of English Quakers but also included German, Dutch, Welsh, Scottish, and Irish. Over the next century, Penn’s “Holy Experiment” attracted huge groups of immigrants to Pennsylvania.

 

Massachusetts Probate, Town, and Vital Records, 1600s-1900s

Between 1630 and 1642, approximately 30,000 people left England for Massachusetts. By the time of the American Revolution, nearly everyone still in Massachusetts could trace their ancestry to one of those 30,000 people.

 

Virginia Colonial Records, 1600s-1800s

Anyone with suspected colonial Virginia ancestry will almost certainly find something of interest here in the form of original source records, manuscripts, lineage records, or family histories, for this database contains a treasure-trove of records that identify many of Virginia’s earliest immigrants and settlers.

 

Early New England Settlers, 1600s-1800s

Within the lineages, family histories, vital records and historical essays compiled and indexed in this database, you’ll find information on approximately 190,000 individuals.


This Week’s Free Genealogy Lookups

This Week’s Free Genealogy Lookups


  • The Pennsylvania Genealogical Magazine, Vols. 1-39, 1650-1900s
    Published by the Genealogical Society of Pennsylvania, the Magazine is distributed semi-annually to its members. This scholarly journal contains book reviews, methodological case studies, discussions of major resources, family histories and genealogies, and research guides.
  • New York Deaths, 1700s-1900s
    This information derives from a great variety of local sources including cemeteries, churches, newspapers, and town records. Because it originated with local sources, the information included here is especially valuable and would otherwise be quite difficult to find.
  • Rhode Island Vital Records, 1500s-1800s
    Referencing approximately 550,000 individuals, this database includes pages of 20 volumes of the Rhode Island Genealogical Register and 13 volumes of Rhode Island Vital Records.