It's Family History Month, and I want to show one of my indispensable tools for genealogy.
Above, my trusty label maker sitting on top of genealogy file folders for intermarried families Roth/Mandel, and Lebowitz/Markell, and Waldman. Rather than alphabetize, I prefer to group files according to connected families.
I have separate file folders labeled for documents about donated artifacts (with my counter-signed copies of the deeds of gift), Civil War ancestors in the Wood family tree, and other non-surname records.
Over time, I've culled these files to get rid of printed Census records and other redundant paperwork now digitized and attached to my online family trees. Still in my file folders are letters and notes from discussions with cousins, plus recent vital records, requests for genealogy info, and research plans.
I also have digital files with scanned genealogy items, organized by surname or surname groupings or topic, backed up in the cloud and on an external hard drive for extra safety.
Plus I have archival boxes clearly labeled by family and contents ("Edgar Wood negatives" is specific enough to identify what's inside).
Printed labels make my files and boxes look neat, legible, and accessible for today and tomorrow. I want my heirs to know what's what and what's where.
For more ideas about keeping family history safe for the sake of future generations please see my genealogy book, Planning a Future for Your Family's Past.
So well organized! My writing is definitely messy! You can also do this on the computer, using a label template. ;) I have one, small file box for vital records, photos, and correspondence, the rest is digitized. :)
ReplyDeleteI have been working on this too. Love your book!
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