User:National Institute sandbox 14G

Relationships
Now that you are the family historian you will be expected to be able to tell members of your family the degree of relationship they have to another member, for example to the lady who just emailed you from Australia, or the ‘cousin-of-some-sort’ who has the family bible.

There is a simple way to calculate in your head the relationship between any two people who share a common ancestor. First decide what relation the common ancestor is to each of you. Then count the ‘G’s’ i.e., the number of greats and grand and that number is your cousinship. For example: If you share a 3rd Great Grandfather this makes 4 ‘Gs’ (great, great, great grand) and thus you are 4th cousins. If the number is different, say it is your 3rd GG and her 4th GG, then take the lower number for the cousinship and add ‘once removed’, since you are one generation ‘out-of-kilter.’ In this case you would be 4th cousins once removed. Simple ain’t it! This works for most situations that you are likely to run into with living people. For the more obscure situations there is a standard chart which is reproduced here.

Relationship Chart

Notes on using the Relationship Chart  The relationships all refer to Yourself on the chart.  Male gender has been used although both are implied.  Those joined by horizontal lines are siblings.  Those in one vertical column are in a direct lineal descent (father-son- grandson etc.)  Those in same horizontal row are of the same generation.  1c 2r = First cousin once removed etc. The term ‘removed’ just means ‘of a different generation’. ‘Once removed’ being one generation removed from yourself.  To your 2GG father you are his 2GG son, likewise to your 4GG uncle you are his 4GG Nephew.  1st cousins share the same grandparents, 2nd cousins the same GG parents and so on.

Instructions 1. Those of your generation and their descendants a) Your generation includes your brother, and all 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th etc. cousins who form the Main Cousin Line across the Chart. b) Starting with Yourself your brother is to the right. His son is your nephew, his grandson your grand (or great) nephew etc. c) Your father’s brother is your uncle. His son is your 1st cousin, his grandson your 1st cousin once removed, and his GG son is still your first cousin but twice removed because he is two generations different from yourself. d) You can extend this to your grandfather’s brother and his descendants, working to the right and downwards as before.

2. Those of previous generations (above the Main Cousin Line) This is a little harder as we are not so used to it. a) The terms 3c 2r etc. are used slightly differently above the Main Cousin Line. b) The easiest one is 1c 1r. Your father’s first cousin is of the same generation as him, and thus ‘once removed’ from you, but he is still a 1st cousin. c) Following this progression vertically, (you will actually be moving NE on your chart), your grandfather’s 1st cousin is your 1c 2r, and your GG father’s 1st cousin is your 1c 3r. The amount of removal changes because they are of different generations. d) Following it horizontally from 1c 1r (with whom you share descent from your GG father), your 2c1r shares descent from your 2GG father, and your 3c 1r from your 3GG father. The cousinship changes because they share less and less common heritage.

Lists of Ancestral Names &amp; Places

Keeping an up-to-date list of your Ancestral Surnames and Ancestral Places in your briefcase is incredibly useful in focussing your endeavours and saving time when browsing book indexes or lists of films in at your FSC, or when contacting possible cousins. The list was typed once onto the computer and then sorted two ways and given appropriate headings, and it is thus quickly updated as research proceeds. When you join a FHS you will be asked to provide at least the first list of Ancestral Surnames for publication in their journal to assist in contacting other researchers.

Ancestral Surnames ANCESTRAL SURNAMES ONE-NAME STUDIES: I collect all references, anywhere to: BRICKETT, CHOWEN/CHOWINGS, DARTNALL/DURTNELL/DUTNAIL, DASHWOOD, JUPP

NAME PARISH COUNTY COUNTRY DATES BATEY, Samuel Greenwich, Chatham Any Kent Canada England Canada Post 1850 Post 1916 BAWCUTT All Kent England Post 1819 BISSET(T) SMiF Westminster, Whitechapel, St. Geo. East Middlesex England Pre-1858 BORCKHARDT Westminster Middlesex England Pre-1782 DODLER East London Middlesex England Post 1867 EVES Greenwich, Deptford, Lewisham Surbiton, Long/Thames Ditton Kent Surrey England England Pre-1944 Pre-1885 GARD(E/I)NER Crayford Stratford, West Ham Wandsworth, Sydenham Kent Essex Surrey England England England Post 1882 Pre-1865 Pre-1882 HAMMANT Crayford Kent England All LOVE Westminster Middlesex England Post 1863 MATTERFACE John &amp; Johanna in London &amp; Australia London All England Australia Post 1874 Post 1874 NELSON Lambeth Strand, Bethnal Green Surrey Middlesex England England Post 1800 Post 1800 REMNANT Chislehurst Kent England Pre-1780 THOM Rotherhithe Cruden, Peterhead Surrey Aberdeenshire England Scotland Post 1800 All TOPPING London London Middlesex Surrey England England All All

Ancestral Places ANCESTRAL PLACES ONE-NAME STUDIES: I collect all references, anywhere to: BRICKETT, CHOWEN/CHOWINGS, DARTNALL/DURTNELL/DUTNAIL, DASHWOOD, JUPP

COUNTRY COUNTY PARISH NAME DATES Australia Any Any MATTERFACE (m. Dashwood) Post 1874 England Beds Battlesden BARBER Pre-1606 England Beds Battlesden JOHNS/JONES Pre-1631 England Beds Billington LAKE Pre-1706 England Beds Chalgrave FILPOT Pre-1788 England Beds Chalgrave PHILPOT Pre-1788 England Beds Chalgrave HILLIARD Pre-1833 Scotland Aberdeen Cruden JOHNSTON 1800-26 Scotland Aberdeen Cruden THOM All Scotland Aberdeen Old Deer PRESLAY/ PRESLEY Pre-1780 Scotland Aberdeen Old Deer THOM Pre-1880 Scotland Aberdeen Old Machar THOM Pre-1880 Scotland Aberdeen Peterhead area? MOSS Pre-1812 Scotland Aberdeen Peterhead THOM All

A variation on the Ancestral Surnames chart is the Tiny Tafel (Tafel means table in German) which is shown in the chart below. This gives RIN (Record Identification Number) as well as Soundex code, which can be obtained from the RootsWeb’s Soundex Converter at: http://resources.rootsweb.ancestry.com/cgi-bin/soundexconverter and is useful when using many indexes.

Tiny Tafel Soundex code Birth Earliest Ancestor Death Latest Ancestor Surname\Birthplace 1st ancestor/ Place of death last ancestor (RIN #) A450 1799 1867 ALLEN\ Byfleet, Surrey/ Byfleet, Surrey (26) B623 1565 1938 BRICKETT\ Dunstable, Beds/ Crayford, Kent (130) B650 1727 1854 BROWN\ Chichester, Sussex/ Hunston, Sussex (520) B650 1731 1904 BROWN\ Tonbridge, Kent/ Crayford, Kent (249) C520 1658 1916 CHOWINS\ Coryton, Devon/ Greenwich, Kent C462 1799 1861 CLARK\ Dereham, Norfolk/ Marylebone, Middlesex (185) D635 1733 1927 DARTNELL\ Hadlow, Kent/ Crayford, Kent (187) D230 1572 1921 DASHWOOD\ Tarrant Monkton, Dorset/ Reigate, Surrey (6) D100 1697 1851 DAVEY\ Cuckfield, Sussex/ Hurstpierpoint, Sussex (211) J100 1647 1976 JUPP\ West Grinstead, Sussex/ Crayford, Kent (128)

Calculating An Exact Birth Date

If you have an exact age in years, months and days at death you may apply the 8870 Formula devised by the Hawkins County Genealogical &amp; Historical Society, Rogersville, Tennessee. Such details may be found on tombstones and in burial registers, especially Scandinavian ones. Say the person died on 6 May 1889 aged 71 years, 7 months and 9 days. Use the following calculation:

Died 1889 May 6 18890506 Subtract 71 yrs. 7 mos. 9 days - 710709 Gives 18179797

Now subtract the constant 8870 - 8870 This is the birth date 18170927 = 27 Sep 1817

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