Showing posts with label Professional Genealogist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Professional Genealogist. Show all posts

Wednesday, 11 September 2013

Genealogical Comics And Toons - Price Genealogy


Genealogical Comics And Toons - Price Genealogy

Genealogical Comics And Toons - Price Genealogy

Genealogical Comics And Toons - Price Genealogy

Genealogical Comics And Toons - Price Genealogy

Genealogical Comics And Toons - Price Genealogy

Genealogical Comics And Toons - Price Genealogy



Website: http://pricegen.com

By Phone
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By Fax 801-359-4301

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Price & Associates Inc.
15 West South Temple
Suite 570
Salt Lake City, UT 84101


Just Start - Price & Associates Genealogists

I remember a time when I would get so overwhelmed with the myriad of chores that needed to be done that I would just sit and stare. One such time, my brother was living with us and he said a phrase that has motivated me since that time….He said, “Diane, just start!”   He was right! When I started, things started falling into place and the momentum continued until everything was done.
Source: http://www.pricegen.com/just-start/
 Website: http://pricegen.com

By Phone
800-288-0920
801-531-0920 (For local callers)
By Fax 801-359-4301

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Price & Associates Inc.
15 West South Temple
Suite 570
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Lost Ancestors Found

When the material arrived we had a houseful of company. I was frustrated that I could not view it any sooner. What is very helpful are the pedigree charts that you include…I do want to continue with more work…I still have more lost ancestors. You may be doing this for some time!
When we finish one line then another and another. I will appreciate a fully complete pedigree chart for as far as we can go…You do a wonderful job. I am having fun learning about them, thanks to your diligent efforts.

http://www.pricegen.com/lost-ancestors-found/

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Website: http://pricegen.com

By Phone
800-288-0920
801-531-0920 (For local callers)
By Fax 801-359-4301

By Postal Mail
Price & Associates Inc.
15 West South Temple
Suite 570
Salt Lake City, UT 84101

There are no coincidences in Genealogy!

Dear Family

Today I got a packet from a researcher I had hired to find what he could on your 4th great grandparents who came from Germany. You can’t believe what I received!!

Last year I had been frustrated for some time. I had done all I could in the United States and needed to go back into Germany. I can’t read German and so I hired a professional a considerable amount of money to locate Conrad Geis and Theresa Schuler (I think she is the Jew) I knew Conrad was born in 1810 and Theresa was born in 1807. I knew they came to New York in about 1837 and moved to Chicago about 10 years later. He was the first furniture dealer in Chicago. My professional could find nothing!!

One day I got on the Trax. There was only one seat left. I sat down next to a gentleman and started telling him all my family history problems. Why?? I had never seen him before in my life?? He said “Maybe I can help you.”

This was a different genealogy researcher

I told him I needed all the help I could get.

About four months later he calls me up to tell me he has found the parents, brothers and sisters, and grandparents of Conrad Geis in Wirtheim, Germany in Catholic Church records.

Just last week he calls me again to tell me he has found six more families connected to Conrad Geiss. I was so happy I cried. Today I got the package. 58 new persons were found who are directly related, with an additional 22 persons of the same name in this little Catholic Church in Wirtheim, which means they are most certainly related.
Do these people want to be found?? Yes. They are the reason there was only one seat on that Trax.

Love, Mama



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By Phone
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Price & Associates Inc.
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Monday, 9 September 2013

Our Researchers are the BEST!

Recently one of our researchers delved into Danish records which had no parish registers. Not having birth, marriage and death records can bring quite a challenge when searching for ancestors. - Continue Reading: : http://www.pricegen.com/our-researchers-are-the-best/

Website: http://pricegen.com

By Phone
800-288-0920
801-531-0920 (For local callers)
By Fax 801-359-4301

By Postal Mail
Price & Associates Inc.
15 West South Temple
Suite 570
Salt Lake City, UT 84101

Obituary proves attorneys can be loved by ALL! - Price & Assoc. Inc.

This obituary is one that must be shared.  It is for a fairly young attorney who died from a sudden illness.   In our current day, attorneys and lawyers are often the brunt of jokes regarding dishonesty and fraud, so it is heartening to read of an honest attorney who was loved by all. - See

Continue Reading: http://www.pricegen.com/obituary-proves-attorneys-can-be-loved-by-all/

Website: http://pricegen.com

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Price & Associates Inc.
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LAWSON (LAW SOME of the time) FRANKLIN EARLES PART 3 - Price & Assoc. Inc.

FUN WITH MILITARY RECORDS

And now we pick up again with the law sliding antics of Lawson. Shortly before his death in 1931, Lawson applied for a confederacy pension in Oklahoma for the Civil War military service. But, remember, Lawson was born in 1862 so he would have had to been a gun toting toddler in order to have participated in this war.

Lawson applied for this pension under the name of Richard N. Earls and was eventually approved. Richard N. Earls, the one being impersonated, was actually Lawson’s half cousin and he DID participate in the Civil War and also received a pension in Texas.

Continue Reading: http://www.pricegen.com/lawson-law-some-of-the-time-franklin-earles-part-3/

Website: http://pricegen.com

By Phone
800-288-0920
801-531-0920 (For local callers)
By Fax 801-359-4301

By Postal Mail
Price & Associates Inc.
15 West South Temple
Suite 570
Salt Lake City, UT 84101

Summary of BEST KEPT SECRETS - Price & Assoc. Inc.

This is a summary of the BEST KEPT SECRETS thread posted on Price and Associates Facebook page.
   
UNITED STATES

ALABAMA  WPA Alabama Writer’s Project includes 6,900 pages of material including ex-slave tales, life histories, short stories and folklore of Alabama life. (Digitized by Genealogical Society of Utah in 2007).  The website also has a Civil War Soldiers database, 1867 Voter Registration database and a digital archive with all name search engine.   http://www.archives.alabama.gov/searchcoll.html

ALASKA   The Alaska State Historical Library has had a Newspaper Project underway for a number of years with the object of capturing all the newspapers from 1866-1998 on microfilm.  http://www.library.state.ak.us/hist/newspaper/newspaper.html

Also see the Digital Collection available at the Sealaska Heritage Institute website http://www.sealaskaheritage.org/collection/digital%20collections.htm

ARIZONA  Arizona is one of the few states with free online access to birth and death records.  Births 1855-1936 and deaths 1844-1961.  http://genealogy.az.gov/

ARKANSAS  Genealogical “diamonds” in Arkansas.  Their website CARAT (Catalog of Arkansas Resources and Treasures) includes:

Biodex (a file which provides access to much of the state archives’ holdings including obituaries, vertical files and the small manuscript collection), Arkansas land records, Arkansas confederate pensions and home records, World War I discharge papers, and an index to County records. http://www.ark-ives.com/

CALIFORNIA  The virtual Museum of the City of San Francisco has online information regarding those who perished in the San Francisco Earthquake of April 18, 1906.  They also have records of the California Gold Rush, interment of the Japanese during World War II and more.  http://www.sfmuseum.org/

COLORADO  The Colorado State Archives has an online index of records including marriage, military, inheritance tax, penitentiary, divorce, probate records and more!  (http://www.colorado.gov/dpa/doit/archives/online.htm )

CONNECTICUT  Connecticut Historical Society Unveils “New” Resources for Historians & Genealogists http://www.chron.com/business/press-releases/article/Connecticut-Historical-Society-Unveils-New-3595050.php

NORTHERN NEW YORK  This website has fully indexed historical newspapers for the counties of Clinton, Essex, Franklin, Jefferson, Lewis, Oswego and St. Lawrenve. http://news.nnyln.net/

OKLAHOMA The Indian-Pioneer Papers oral history collection spans from 1861 to 1936. It includes typescripts of interviews conducted during the 1930s by government workers with thousands of Oklahomans regarding the settlement of Oklahoma and Indian territories, as well as the condition and conduct of life there. Consisting of approximately 80,000 entries, the index to this collection may be accessed via personal name, place name, or subject.  http://digital.libraries.ou.edu/whc/pioneer/

WASHINGTON   The Washington State Digital Archives “the nation’s first archives dedicated specifically to the preservation of electronic records from both State and Local agencies that have permanent legal, fiscal or historical value.” http://www.digitalarchives.wa.gov/Home

EUROPE

AUSTRIA AND PASSAU, GERMANY Online church records for Austrian and Passau,Germany at Matricula www.matricula-online.eu

SHEFFIELD, ENGLAND  Sheffield (England) Indexers.  Their mission is to “provide, via the internet, accurate indexed transcriptions of genealogical records for access by all, free of charge.” Projects include the 1841 Census index, parish registers, school admission registers, BMD certificates. http://www.sheffieldindexers.com/

GERMANS FROM RUSSIA  AHSGR.org  and Volgagerman.net  provide a wealth of information surrounding the villages and inhabitants of the Volga River Germans who emigrated from Russia. (www.ahsgr.org and www.volgagerman.net  )

Website: http://pricegen.com

Price & Assoc. Inc.



By Phone
800-288-0920
801-531-0920 (For local callers)
By Fax 801-359-4301

By Postal Mail
Price & Associates Inc.
15 West South Temple
Suite 570
Salt Lake City, UT 84101

Wednesday, 4 September 2013

Price & AssociatesFor many years the Herman’s German village of origin was unknown. His father, Joseph’s military record was consistent in stating he was from Koln, Germany. A search for records of Joseph’s birth in Koln produced nothing. It appeared that saying he was from Koln was like someone saying they were from Dallas, when in actuality the town was in the general vicinity.

Read More Here: http://www.pricegen.com/life-with-herman-his-ancestors-or-how-to-find-the-ancestral-village/

About Price & Associates Genealogy

Price & Associates professional genealogy researchers have been helping people discover their heritage for more than thirty years. As one of the United States’ largest genealogical firms, we have assisted thousands of families to organize, chart, and verify their ancestral lines. Price & Associates uses the best software and genealogy resources available, and even provides access to free databases and researching aids to everyone interested in their family history.
Website: http://pricegen.com

By Phone
800-288-0920
801-531-0920 (For local callers)
By Fax 801-359-4301

By Postal Mail
Price & Associates Inc.
15 West South Temple
Suite 570
Salt Lake City, UT 84101

Monday, 26 August 2013

Professional Genealogy Blog: LIFE WITH HERMAN – His Parents


Herman was born 17 June 1906 in Christopher, Franklin County, Illinois to Joseph Steinbuchel (Steinbeigle) and Elizabeth Ann Wallwork. Both parents were immigrants with Joseph arriving from Germany around 1883 as a young boy of about five, and Elizabeth “Lizzie” arriving 6 June 1887, about 9 years old, on the ship Alaska. Elizabeth came with her mother, Jane, brothers Joseph and George and sister, Victoria. Their father, Joseph Wallwork, came a month later in July. -

Continue Reading Here:

http://www.pricegen.com/life-with-herman-his-parents/



About Price & Associates Genealogy

Price & Associates professional genealogy researchers have been helping people discover their heritage for more than thirty years. As one of the United States' largest genealogical firms, we have assisted thousands of families to organize, chart, and verify their ancestral lines. Price & Associates uses the best software and genealogy resources available, and even provides access to free databases and researching aids to everyone interested in their family history.

Website: http://pricegen.com

By Phone
800-288-0920
801-531-0920 (For local callers)
By Fax 801-359-4301

By Postal Mail
Price & Associates Inc.
15 West South Temple
Suite 570
Salt Lake City, UT 84101

Sunday, 11 August 2013

Life With Herman – The Mechanic- Price & Associates Genealogists

Life With Herman – The Mechanic- Price & Associates Genealogists
“That car is not running right, we will have to work on it today. Ray go over to George Stacey and get my box of tools,”

Ray comes back, says, “Pa, George wants to know why you want the whole box of tools; why don’t you come and borrow what you need.”

“Borrow,” screams Pa, “they are my tools! I’ll go get them myself.” He comes back with tool box, muttering and growling under his breath.

“Let’s get going. Donnie, hand me the socket wrench; Ray, go get a pan of kerosene so I can wash the parts; Iris, ask Ma for some rags. Hand me the wrench, hand me the etc., etc. O.K. boys now we will drive it around the block and see how she sounds.”

Continue Reading Here: http://www.pricegen.com/life-with-herman-the-mechanic/

Life With Herman – The Carpenter - Price & Associates Genealogists

Herman and Ray in front of the house they built.

Life With Herman – The Carpenter - Price & Associates Genealogists
“Boys, we are going to build a house, don’t make any plans. I have drawn the floor plan’ I am going to order the lumber.”

“O.K. kids, today we start. Ray, hand me that hammer; Donnie, hand me the saw; Iris, bring the nails; Ma, bring the shovel. We are going to make the forms for the foundation.”
So we build a house. “Hand me this, bring me that, fetch that over here, don’t touch that, don’t put that nail in there.”

The house is finished. We stand back and look at our super boss man. He says, “That is a dam good looking house, but if I ever start to build another, I hope someone shoots me.” We all agree (that it is the best looking house, that is).

Continue Reading Here: http://www.pricegen.com/life-with-herman-the-carpenter/


Website: http://pricegen.com

By Phone
800-288-0920
801-531-0920 (For local callers)
By Fax 801-359-4301

By Postal Mail
Price & Associates Inc.
15 West South Temple
Suite 570
Salt Lake City, UT 84101

We Go To LA GRANGE - Price & Associates Genealogists

We Go To LA GRANGE - Price & Associates Genealogists
After Pa (best mechanic in the world) finished working on the car and taken his bath (and dancing thru the house in his shorts) he said, “Come on everybody we are going shopping in LaGrange.” We all piled in the car; three kids, grandma, Pa and I. The dog, Tippee, and Junesy Poo (cat) tried to squeeze in too but we told Tippee he had to stay home and take care of the house and Junsey. Tippee sat down and Junsey sat between his legs and they looked at us with sad eyes. Watched us drive out of the drive way.

The car was a 1924 Chevy. The hood had a hinge down the middle and you lifted up both sides to work on the engine. We started off everybody singing and in a jolly mood. Kids looking forward to going to the five and dime store. It really was a five and dime, you could buy things for a dime or nickel. We usually gave them a quarter; sometimes grandma would add a dime or fifteen cents. Ray usually bought a model airplane kit and comic book. Don just bought comic books. Iris would buy a book and a toy or clothes for a doll or a cut out doll with clothes.

Continue Reading Here: http://www.pricegen.com/we-go-to-la-grange/

About Price and Associates:
Price & Associates professional genealogy researchers have been helping people discover their heritage for more than thirty years. As one of the United States' largest genealogical firms, we have assisted thousands of families to organize, chart, and verify their ancestral lines. Price & Associates uses the best software and genealogy resources available, and even provides access to free databases and researching aids to everyone interested in their family history.

Website: http://pricegen.com

By Phone
800-288-0920
801-531-0920 (For local callers)
By Fax 801-359-4301

By Postal Mail
Price & Associates Inc.
15 West South Temple
Suite 570
Salt Lake City, UT 84101

Tuesday, 6 August 2013

Life With Herman - Professional Genealogy Researchers | Price & Associates Genealogists

Life With Herman - Professional Genealogy Researchers | Price & Associates Genealogists
In light of the a talk heard at the BYU Family History conference regarding First Heart Then Chart, I would like to start a series on stories.

Some of the best family stories I heard were from Grandma who had a wonderful sense of humor and her stories generally centered around Grandpa, who gave her great material to work with. Grandpa and Grandma raised their children during the depression years in the Chicago area and survived because Grandpa thought he could do anything and Grandma always found the thin line between comedy and tragedy.

And so this series is called LIFE WITH HERMAN and will begin with just a short introduction by Grandma followed by a short paragraph leading us into a glimpse of Grandpa’s personality.

See more at: http://www.pricegen.com/life-with-herman/

About Price & Associates Genealogists:

Located one block from the Family History Library in Salt Lake City, Price & Associates is able to trace most family histories back four or five generations without difficulty. With additional assistance from our research professionals across the globe, we have successfully traced genealogies back as many as thirty generations—to William the Conqueror, 1066 A.D. and beyond.

Price & Associates professional genealogy researchers have been helping people discover their heritage for more than thirty years. As one of the United States' largest genealogical firms, we have assisted thousands of families to organize, chart, and verify their ancestral lines. Price & Associates uses the best software and genealogy resources available, and even provides access to free databases and researching aids to everyone interested in their family history.

http://www.pricegen.com


Sunday, 28 July 2013

Price & Associates Genealogists: Bastardy or Illegitimacy in England

Professional Genealogist(From Ancestral Trails, original edition and Tate’s The Parish Chest)
Compiled Nov 2004 by Richard W. Price

Bastard is properly the base child of a father of gentle or noble birth, but more generally any illegitimate child; child born out of wedlock, base-born child; basterino; pack-saddle child; natural child; of natural birth; unfathered, etc.

Percentage of children born illegitimate in three different parishes in three different counties:
1588-1600 None
1601-1650 .69%
1651-1700 1.35%
1701-1750 1.96%
1751-1800 9.97%
1801-1835 6.18%

A child born out of wedlock is legitimated by the subsequent marriage of his parents

1837-1965 about 4-7% of births were illegitimate

It is suggested the increase in illegitimacy in the 18th century was caused by the rapid growth in ale houses 1730s to 1780’s. Peter Laslett in The World We Have Lost (1965) states” Our ancestors, by this test of bastards born and registered as such, were rather more moral sexually than are we ourselves.”

Where to find records of illegitimate children – especially the name and identity of the father:

The first and best place to locate information on illegitimacy, including the name of the father, was in the parish registers. 1538-present
Civil registration (birth and marriage certificates) 1837-present might name father, although note laws referenced below.

A parish Edgmond, Salop has a special bastard register 1797-1828

1614 Frendelesse the sonne of Joane Robinsonne base gotten as she saythe by one John Longe was baptysed the first day of November

1651 Roger ye sonne of I know not who was baptized I know not when
1652 12 June 1698 at Wolstanton, Staffs; Baptized Providence, an infant whom her father and mother abandoned; but God will take care of her

Vestry Minutes:

Bastardy bonds, bastardy orders or maintenance orders were often kept, showing the name of the father.

Fathers of illegitimate children were obliged by the parish to care for the child financially. Each case was handled differently. Sometimes there was a lump sum demanded to be paid to the parish (which then would care for the mother and child until the child reached adulthood – age of 21/18)
In 1800 in Stockton, Salop

- See more at: http://www.pricegen.com/bastardy-or-illegitimacy-in-england/

Monday, 15 July 2013

Price & Associates Genealogists: Busting Through the Genealogical “Wall”

Price & Associates Genealogists
When you’re in the business of genealogy, you sometimes have those cases that really try your research skills. That was definitely the case with William Dickins Cockerill. For many years, William’s paternity was a mystery. He was born in England, but immigrated to England as a young man. All William knew of his family was that his father was “Mr. Dickins” and his mother was “Mary Cockerill.”

With only that small seed of information to feed our search, we were able to locate William’s christening records in Kislingbury, Northamptonshire. According to record, William was christened on April 28 or 1823. Christening records during this time period reflect illegitimacy differently, and the father of the child is only sometimes identified. In the case of William, who was born out of wedlock, only his mother, Mary Cockerill is listened in the records.

Disappointed in the lack of information the christening records presented, we started digging deeper. We combed through documents from the Northamptonshire Country Record Office. These included the Quarter Sessions Record Books, Quarter Sessions Rolls and Kislinbury Charity Account. The charity accounts detailed payments to the poor within the parrish, but unfortunately, there was no mention of a Mary Cockerill or her child. However, we knew that Northampton, less than five miles from Kislingbury, held its own court of Quarter Sessions, and we wondered if perhaps Kislingbury might have fallen under the jurisdiction of Northampton Town Quarter Sessions, although we already knew that fewer records had survived this court than many others.

For More Details: http://www.pricegen.com/busting-through-the-genealogical-wall/

Website: http://pricegen.com

Price & Associates Genealogists: Wills And Probate Records

Price & Associates Genealogists
As a genealogist, there are few public records that are more exciting than a will. Only a small percentage of the population left wills prior to the 20th century, although some sources speculate that during the 15th century as much as 70% of men did. By the late 17th century, however, as few as two percent of common citizens left a will. During this time in England, the succession of land was rather straightforward. Land generally passed from husband to wife (for the course of her life) and then to children and heirs. English women were barred from owning land until 1883, and even after, women rarely left wills unless they were widowed.

Regardless, this document can offer us a great deal of information. The creation of a will was left almost entirely to attorneys, who would be summoned by the property holder and given specific instructions. Once the will had been completed, the testator would sign in the presence of the attorney and two witnesses. In the case of more common folks, a parson or curate would often step in to record last wishes due to the sole fact that they were literate. Prior to 1837, when England passed the Wills Act, it was not uncommon for attorneys to forge signatures, especially if the testator was ill or incapacitated. The Wills Act also made it illegal for beneficiaries to witness the signing of a will.

Some of the more customary practices found in these wills include the donation of assets to churches and charities, which society saw as a moral obligation. This custom now helps lend genealogists important clues about testators– like where he grew up, attended school, apprenticed, or a number of other associations or organizations in which he may have participated. In the medieval times, it was customary to divide assets three ways, with a third going to each; the man’s wife, his oldest son and to charities, bells and masses.

While typically the oldest son received the largest portion of assets, it was not unlikely for younger sons to receive smaller inheritances, or for daughters to receive a cash sum to serve as a dowry. However, all children are not always included or named within a will. This is especially true of married children, who would have received their inheritance at the time of marriage.

In the case of unmarried men, we have found that landladies, nurse-keepers and others who have offered them care and nurturing, are frequently chief beneficiaries.

Furthermore, the description of relatives within the will can lend some confusion. In English records as well as early North American probate records, the term “son-in-law“ or “daughter-in-law” usually denoted a step-child, while those who married trueborn children are recognized simply as a son or daughter. Additionally, the word cousin may refer to any sort of relative. For example, Shakespeare described his granddaughter as his niece.

Before 1858, a large variety of courts proved wills. Most of these were ecclesiastical courts belonging to the Church of England. The Prerogative Courts of Canterbury or York held probate records of the wealthy and important. As genealogists, the indexes to these higher courts are always worthy of a search, as the courts were not confined to the wealthy. The best resource for wills is the Prerogative Court of Canterbury (P.C.C.), which took precedence of all other jurisdictions in England and Wales and holds records dating from 1383.

Lower courts of the diocese or peculiar or other jurisdictions exist in virtually every county, and many of these wills are now available online. Virtually all English and Welsh probate records are on microfilm at the LDS Family History Library. While the use of English and Welsh probate courts can be complicated, you can learn how to utilize these valuable resources by consulting the following sources:

www.genuki.org.uk – Click on the country, then the county, then Probate records

wiki.familysearch.org – Type in Wales Probates or England Probates to find articles with detailed descriptions of the British probate records.

www.ancestry.co.uk – Click on Search, then Wills & Probates

The National Wills Index is the largest on-line resource for pre-1858 English and Welsh probate material containing indexes, abstracts and sources documents, most not available anywhere else online. These date from the 14th century. It can be accessed at www.origins.net.

After 1858, all English and Welsh wills were proved and housed in a central location. These are all indexed and the calendars are available on Ancestry.co.uk.

Wills can be a wonderful resource to assist you in your search for possible ancestors. You should always check for a will, regardless of the socioeconomic class of the individual or family.

For More Details: http://www.pricegen.com/english-wills-and-other-probate-records/

Website: http://pricegen.com

By Phone
800-288-0920
801-531-0920 (For local callers)
By Fax 801-359-4301

By Postal Mail
Price & Associates Inc.
15 West South Temple
Suite 570
Salt Lake City, UT 84101

Monday, 20 May 2013

Robyn V. Gygi - Price & Associates Genealogists


Robyn V. Gygi
Director of Research

Biographical Sketch
Robyn V. Gygi, MA, is Director of Research for Price & Associates, Inc., having spent over thirty years in professional research. She graduated summa cum laude with a BA in European Studies from Brigham Young University and obtained her MA degree in Educational Psychology from the University of Utah before beginning her family history research career. While specializing in English sources, she also conducts US research in identifying the immigrant ancestor. One of her interesting experiences included tracing descendants of families with abnormally-high cholesterol levels.
Robyn has worked extensively with early LDS records. She is co-director of a local family history center and frequently conducts classes on genealogical research tools.

Research Specialties
England and United States, determining English origins of immigrants to North America.

Areas of Expertise
England, LDS, United States


Website: http://pricegen.com
Profile: http://www.pricegen.com/about-us/robyn-gygi/

By Phone
800-288-0920
801-531-0920 (For local callers)
By Fax 801-359-4301

By Postal Mail
Price & Associates Inc.
15 West South Temple
Suite 570
Salt Lake City, UT 84101

Richard W. Price - Professional Genealogy Researchers

Richard W. Price
President

Richard Woodruff Price is an Accredited Genealogist in English research and specializes in the research problems of English-descended families, with special emphasis on Colonial Immigration and Norfolk families.
His associates have professional expertise in lineage problems that span the globe and most record types over the past five centuries.
He has been involved in genealogy professionally since 1969, making regular research trips to England, Wales, Scotland, Germany, as well as many United States archives since 1974.  He was a contributing author to The Source: A Guidebook of American Genealogy and has presented papers for the National Genealogical Society and Utah Genealogical Association conferences.  He was a founder and president of the Association of Professional Genealogists and president of Utah Genealogical Association, Professional Chapter.  He was awarded a Master of Arts degree in Family and Local History from Brigham Young University.  His thesis studied English child naming patterns 1558-1740.

Research Specialties
England, especially Norfolk; Colonial Immigration from Europe to North America; LDS; DNA; One-Name Studies.

Price has logged more than 4000 hours of onsite professional genealogical research at British archives in the highlighted counties. Map generated using GenMapUK software.

Website: http://pricegen.com
http://www.pricegen.com/about-us/richard-price/

By Phone
800-288-0920
801-531-0920 (For local callers)
By Fax 801-359-4301

By Postal Mail
Price & Associates Inc.
15 West South Temple
Suite 570
Salt Lake City, UT 84101
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