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FamilySearch is a family history website provided by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. It provides its resources free of charge to the public and is one of the preeminent genealogy sites on the Internet. Family history is the study of multiple generations of people who appear to be related. ...
The Salt Lake Temple of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is the largest attraction in the citys Temple Square. ...
Genealogy is the study and tracing of family pedigrees. ...
Resources
The primary resources offered by FamilySearch are searchable databases, research guidance, and the catalog of the Family History Library. Research is often described as an active, diligent, and systematic process of inquiry aimed at discovering, interpreting and revising facts. ...
FamilySearch provides online access to several databases, which together contain over one billion names. - Ancestral File, a database of user-contributed data that has been replaced by the Pedigree Resource File mentioned below.
- Census indexes for the 1880 U.S., 1881 British Isles, and 1881 Canadian censuses.
- The International Genealogical Index (IGI), which contains data contributed by individuals as well as indexes of original records.
- Pedigree Resource File, an index to user-contributed family trees that are uploaded to the FamilySearch site.
- U.S. Social Security Death Index, which contains vital statistics for over 70 million deceased individuals.
- Vital Records Index, which includes Denmark, Finland, Mexico, Norway, and Sweden.
The website offers two types of research assistance. The Research Guidance service is an online wizard that offers detailed research advice to a user based on his or her answers to a series of questions. Research Helps are research guides that can be read online or, in many cases, downloaded as a PDF. There are dozens, if not hundreds, of guides available covering many geographic areas and most types of genealogical records. 1870 US Census for New York City A census is the process of obtaining information about every member of a population (not necessarily a human population). ...
The International Genealogical Index (IGI) is a database of genealogical records, compiled from a variety of different sources, and maintained by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. ...
The Social Security Death Index is provided by the United States Department of Social Security. ...
A wizard is an interactive computer program acting as an interface to lead a user through a complex task using dialog steps. ...
The catalog of the Family History Library is also available at FamilySearch. The library is located in Salt Lake City, Utah, and holds genealogical records for over 110 countries, territories, and possessions. Its collections include over 2.4 million rolls of microfilmed genealogical records; 742,000 microfiche; 310,000 books, serials, and other formats; and 4,500 periodicals. The microfilm and microfiche records can be ordered and viewed at over 4,000 library branches (called Family History Centers) worldwide. Microfilm machines may be available at libraries or record archives. ...
Microfiche is one of the most compact analog storage media in common use. ...
History of the website - May 1999: Website first opened to the public. It almost immediately went offline; overloaded due to extreme popularity.
- October 1999: Surpassed 1.5 billion hits.
- November 1999: 240 million names added, bringing the total number of entries to 640 million.[1]
- November 2005: New FamilySearch.org enters first beta test.
Future of the website Significant changes are forthcoming for FamilySearch.
Austro-Hungarian Map project The LDS Church is a partner in a project to create an "easy-to-use digital gazetteer" that "will enable users to find and view scanned ...images from 1877-1914 Austro-Hungarian topographic maps."[2] When completed, this gazetteer will be integrated with the FamilySearch databases, allowing users to click on a place name in the Austro-Hungarian Empire and retrieve a historical map.[3] Official languages Latin, German, Hungarian Established church Roman Catholic Capital & Largest City Vienna pop. ...
Integration with BYU Family History Archive Brigham Young University in Provo, Utah is digitizing copyright-free family histories and placing them online.[4] Links to the digitized books are being added to the Family History Library catalog at FamilySearch. Brigham Young University, often referred to as BYU (or in colloquial speech simply the Y), is the flagship university of the The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church; see also Mormon). ...
Map showing Provo, Utah Provo is a city in Utah and the county seat of Utah County, located about 50 miles south of Salt Lake City along the Wasatch Front. ...
FamilySearch v2 The LDS Church is currently (June 28, 2006) developing a web application for membership (and, eventually, everyone) to be able to interact with a very large, unified database full of connected genealogical information. When fully released, it will replace the current FamilySearch.org. The ultimate goal of this effort is to document the complete descendancy of Adam and Eve, or as much as can be done. Most of the development work on the new system takes place in offices in the Joseph Smith Memorial Building on Temple Square, Salt Lake City, Utah. The corner of Main Street and South Temple has long been important in Utah history. ...
This photo of Temple Square, circa 1897, shows that the plot housed the tallest buildings in Salt Lake City at the time, namely the Salt Lake Temple, Tabernacle and Assembly Hall. ...
The Salt Lake Temple of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints is Salt Lake Citys top tourist draw. ...
Official language(s) English Capital Salt Lake City Largest city Salt Lake City Area Ranked 13th - Total 84,876 sq. ...
Some prominent features of the new website are: - Support for multiple assertions on facts, allowing people to "agree to disagree".
- Very comprehensive source citations
- For membership of the LDS Church, it is connected to the Temple systems, making performing ordinance work for deceased ancestors much more convenient than it currently is, and greatly reducing duplicate ordinance work.
Digitization and indexing projects The Family History Library (FHL) is in the process of digitizing its entire microfilm collection. ScanStone, which was developed by the LDS Church, is a system (both hardware and software) to rapidly create digital images of genealogical records contained on microfilm. When fully implemented, the FHL will be able to convert 370,000 rolls of microfilm per year into digital images. It is estimated that the digitizing project will be completed about 2012.[3] An online index to the digitized records is also being created using FamilySearch Indexing software developed by the LDS Church. Indexing is still in the pilot phase, but, once the pilot is finished, the church hopes to recruit tens of thousands of volunteers to complete the indexing project. The database containing the digital images and index will be available through the FamilySearch website.
References - ^ News release (16 November 1999) — 240 Million New Names Added to FamilySearch.org
- ^ Building a Globally Distributed Historical Sheet Map Set of Austro-Hungarian Topographic Maps, 1877-1914
- ^ a b A Sneak Peak at the Near Future
- ^ BYU Family History Archive
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