Title: Introduction to familysearch.org Week 5
1Introduction to familysearch.orgWeek 5
Presentation designed by Barry J. Ewell.
2Introduction
3Family History Lesson Schedule
Week 1 Family History Spirit of Sacrifice
Week 2 Identify Your Ancestors
Begin a Personal Record Week 3 Effectively Using
PAFPart 1 Week 4 Effectively Using PAFPart 2
Week 5 Introduction to familysearch.org Week 6
Introduction to Temple Ready
4Questions/Comments?
5Thoughts to Ponder
6Completion of required ordinances
We want the Latter-day Saints from this time to
trace their genealogies as far as they can, and
to be sealed to their fathers and mothers. Have
children sealed to their parents, and run this
chain through as far as you can get itThis is
the will of the Lord to this people (The
Discourses of Wilford Woodruff, 157).
President Wilford Woodruff
7Pray to the Lord to open the way
Let us think over these things, and pray to
the Lord to open the way, and the way will be
opened by which we will learn about our
ancestors. And when the time comes that we have
done all we can in a natural way, the veil will
be drawn aside, and the Priesthood behind the
veil will minister to the Priesthood in the
flesh, and reveal many things that we could not
ordinarily obtain knowledge of here but we will
get them by this kind of revelation (Penrose,
Salvation for the Dead, 18).
President Charles W. Penrose
8www.familysearch.org
9www.familysearch.org
10Search on www.familysearch.org
The more data you enter-- the narrower the
search.
Choose to search All Resources or individual
resources shown.
Search Example
1.
Search All Resources
2. Search Individual Franklin
Marion Ewell 3. Father of Individual
Francis Marion Ewell 4. Country Origin
United States 5.
Click
11Search Information return
All Resources Franklin Marion Ewell
12Search IGI View
IGI Franklin Marion Ewell
Since all of these persons are likely
candidates, I began with 1.
13Search IGI Individual View
IGI Franklin Marion Ewell
Download File View Pedigree Chart View Family
Group Record View Each Parents Line View Spouse
Line
14Search IGI Family Group Record View
IGI Franklin Marion Ewell
Family Group Record View
Ability to go multiple directions in your
family search.
Scroll down on page and view children.
UnavailablePerson was living at the time
of record submission.
15Search IGI Ordinance Record View
IGI Franklin Marion Ewell
IGI Individual View
Ordinance Record Individual View
Ordinance Record View requires one to sign
in using Membership Record and Date of
Confirmation. Information can be
obtained from Ward Clerk.
16Search Pedigree Resource File
Pedigree Resource File Franklin Marion Ewell
The Pedigree Resource File is a new lineage
linked database of records available on compact
disc containing family history records submitted
by individuals through FamilySearch Internet
Genealogy Service.
17Pedigree Resource File Detail
Pedigree Resource File Franklin Marion Ewell
Family information is organized in family groups
and pedigrees and includes submitted notes and
sources. Many charts and reports can be printed
from this data. With the publication of every
five discs, a master index for those discs will
be published and packaged with that set of discs.
With the publication of every 25 discs, a master
index for those discs will also be published and
packaged with that volume of discs. Discs may be
purchased as sets or volumes.
18Search US SS Death Index
US SS Death Index Franklin Marion Ewell
Search did not return a U.S. Social
Security Death Index for Franklin Marion Ewell
because he died before Social Secuirty Program
was begun in 1934 .
19Search US SS Death Index
US SS Death Index Ora Jones
20Search IGI Ordinance Record View
IGI Franklin Marion Ewell
IGI Family View
Ordinance Record Family View
As part of Temple Ready, we will check the
IGI Ordinance views to confirm what ordinance
work needs has and needs to be done for our
deceased kindred family. (More detail when we
discuss Temple Ready process.)
21Conclusion
22Completion of required ordinances
Get a cardboard box. Any kind of a box will do.
Put it some place where it is in the way,
perhaps on the couch or on the counter in the
kitchenanywhere where it cannot go unnoticed.
Then, over a period of a few weeks, collect and
put into the box every record of your life, such
as your birth certificate, your certificate of
blessing, your certificate of baptism, your
certificate of ordination, your certificate of
graduation. Collect diplomas, all of the
photographs, honors, or awards, a dairy if you
have kept one, everything that you can find
pertaining to your life anything that is
written, or registered, or recorded that
testifies that you are alive and what you have
done. Dont try to do this in a day. Take some
time on itGather all these papers together and
put them in the box (Packer, The Holy Temple,
232-33).
President Boyd K. Packer
23Accelerated family history work
Going hand in hand with this increased temple
activity is an increase in our family history
work. The computer in its various ramifications
is accelerating the work, and people are taking
advantage of the new techniques being offered to
them. How can one escape the conclusion that the
Lord is in all of this? As computer facilities
improve, the number of temple grows to
accommodate the accelerated family history work
(Hinckley, Welcome to Conference, 4-5).
President Gordon B. Hinckley
24Completion of required ordinances
The exaltation of our Fathers children rests
upon the completion of required ordinances, if
all are to move forward on the road that leads to
immortality and eternal life. The determination
of accurate family history records and the work
which follows in the temple are basic in this
vast undertaking which the Lord has placed upon
our shoulders (Hinckley, The State of the
Church, 52).
President Gordon B. Hinckley