The Researcher's Method: Core Techniques for Breakthrough Genealogy

The reality of successful genealogical research is that there is no single "trick" or instant solution to complex problems. Instead, progress comes from adopting a rigorous, systematic methodology—a set of essential best practices that minimize error and maximize the chance of uncovering new evidence.

These guides outline approaches that can solidly anchor your family history work.

Literary Researches, Carl Wilhelm Anton Seiler

Literary Researches, Carl Wilhelm Anton Seiler | Public domain painting - free to use, no copyright restrictions - Picryl description


I. The Foundation: Documentation and Learning

A strong foundation prevents future brick walls and ensures your findings are credible.

1. Citing Your Sources (Mandatory)

2. Deep Local Knowledge

II. The Process: Execution and Record Acquisition

This is the active phase of data collection and evidence gathering.

3. Obtain All Relevant Records

4. Use Compiled Sources as Stepping Stones

III. The Quality Check: Analysis and Review

The final, and most critical, phase involves rigorous self-correction and validation.

5. Challenge Assumptions

6. Continuous Learning

7. Proofing and Double Checking (The Gold Standard)


Full disclosure:

All content is based on information from publicly available sources. No classified or speculative information is used. We do not track or sell any user information or use patterns.

Note on Content & Attribution: The methodological content and external resource lists in this tutorial were compiled based on the extensive research of Mark Rabideau (ManyRoads/Ardens Genealogy) and structured in collaboration with the Gemini AI model to optimize for the Ardens Documentation System.

This site uses Machine-Intelligence (aka. AI) to assist in content development and maintenance.


Credits and Licensing

Compiled by Mark Rabideau, Opa & Professional Genealogist.

All materials licensed: CC BY-ND 4.0 by eirenicon llc.