In family search there’s already a death date for him- 1850. But there’s also two marriages, and like 5 children that happened AFTER that date. So either the death date is wrong (there is no source cited for it) or all the children’s birth dates are wrong. I’m trying to figure out which
Known Info
- Searching for
- Death Details
- Birthyear
- 1825-1825
- Birthplace
- Nord - Pas-de-Calais
- Marriage Year
- Anytime
- Marriage Place
- Anywhere
- Childrens' Birthyears
- Anytime
- Childrens' Birthplaces
- Anywhere
- Death Year
- Anytime
- Death Place
- Anywhere
- Preferred Research Tip Type
- Free, LDS oriented, Meta Tip, Nearby, Online, Original, Official Documents, Paid Subscription, Under 30 minutes, Under 5 minutes
Work Done
Google it
Looked useful, but didn't find anything
Search Ancestry.com's public family trees
Looked useful, but didn't find anything
There's a million options, but I searched ancestry.com, .ca, and .fr.
Inspect sources in family search
Found a hint
I started this, but didn’t find anything. It did give me the idea to start a discussion on family search though, which led to achieving this research objective.
Start a discussion on the Individual in Family Search
Found Missing Info
While looking at the individual in family search, I decided to try starting a discussion about it. After a while, my cousin William checked the death registry for the year and place listed, and didn’t find the death registry. So it seems the death date and place is wrong. So my cousin removed the death date in Family Search. Also, after my cousin did that, it seems the LDS ordinances were done within a few months (on the other side of the world from him.)
Work To-Do
Contact Local familysearch.org Family History Consultants
You can find contact info for local Family History consultants on familysearch.org, who can help you with your research in-person, via phone and email. To do this, Go go familysearch.org Sign In, if you aren't already (button in the top-right corner) Click "Get Help" (button also in the top-right corner)… Read More...
Start a discussion on the Individual in Family Search
It can be helpful to start a discussion in family search, asking for help in researching information on an individual. Others may be watching that individual too, and may be able to help. To start a discussion in Family Search, log into familysearch.org website (note: at the time of writing,… Read More...
Inspect sources in family search
If your ancestor is listed in familysearch.org, chances are there are some sources attached to them about their birth, death, etc. Sometimes the details on the sources give you some other clues. Eg, the source on the person's birth might be from a relative's obituary. That relative might already be… Read More...
Google it
When using http://Google.com to search for family history data, here are a few tips to bear in mind: record what search terms you tried (eg "John Nelson Ireland reverend") in deadeasyfamilyhistory.org, or wherever you keep track of your research progress (this way you'll remember what you already tried) also record the urls… Read More...
Use Ancestry.com's record hints
Ancestry.com can give you automatic record hints (e.g. suggesting a birth certificate for one of your ancestors) without you doing nearly anything. To get their automatic record hints, you just need to sign up for ancestry.com and enter as much of your family tree as you know. After that, ancestry.com… Read More...
I searched for "Philippe Adolphe Gout pas-de-calais france" but didn't find anything that sounded useful.