JDERIC2017 wrote: » Thanks will do. Hitting a wall in my search in the late 1700s.
pinkypinky wrote: » I am always surprised when people add in the ancestry of married in connections.
BowWow wrote: » When I started Genealogy a couple of years ago I went off on several tangents with the families of those who "married in". My rule now is to put in full details of just the parents of those who married in. I look at this as a link for others to see what happened to a member of their family.
BowWow wrote: » I'd be tempted to write back and say you have absolute proof of the DNA connection, it was needed in court to claim the inheritance, and that you would now respect their wishes and would be ceasing correspondence...
Hermy wrote: » .....It's a lot of work but you meet some interesting people along the way and you sometimes end up back where you started.
Jellybaby1 wrote: » I agree. My family history is very ordinary and its only when I look further outwards that I find interesting people. Apologies to my own Grandfather who died a very young man and didn't have a chance to do anything.
Hermy wrote: » Anyone who is related by blood or marriage is eligible for inclusion.
Deja Boo wrote: » How does one handle adoption, from a direct ancestral line?
Deja Boo wrote: » It's a paid focus group? Odd, since LDS are generally volunteer oriented.