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The Clan Grant Society |
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Chief's Welcome
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Clan
Grant Genealogy
A. Notes for those who might be willing to contribute and/or offer help 1. Please get in touch!!! genealogy {at} clangrant {dot} org 2. GEDCOM Files are always welcome - though they may sit for quite some time before being used 3. We are particularly
anxious to develop family trees for 4. Please let
us know if you have any special knowledge or background or even just
enthusiasm you can offer.
We do not have a professional genealogist, so we cannot "do" any genealogy for anyone. Nevertheless there have been several people who have made enquiries and whom we have been able to help to a substantial extent by examining what they have done so far and by pointing them in the right direction(s) and so in recent years, we have had a significant number of successes. We also have extensive contacts and can often find the right person to get in touch with, often cutting through what appears to be an intractable problem very quickly. When you have completed the tasks below and still want some help or
advice, please Some enquiries have betrayed a very fundamental lack of understanding about clans in general, other enquirers seem to assume that we know personally every single Grant family which ever lived and so often it is quite hard to pitch a response in the right tone and so we hope that this page will provide an outline of the basics. The obverse side of this is that while we will take seriously any enquirer who tells us at the beginning that they have indeed read and heeded the contents of this page, it is not fair to expect us to take seriously those who do not. The first thing to be recommended to anyone seeking to trace their Grant ancestry is to arrange for a male-line Grant relative to join the Grant DNA project. This will establish from the outset whether or not you are a member of either of the chiefly lines or "mere" clansman, like the majority. It may also throw up relatives you did not know about and they may be able to fill in portions of your trees which you did not know existed. Go to http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~grantdna/index.html
and follow the links both to read all about what has been established
so far and to join the project. Second you should purchase
family tree software which
is GEDCOM compatible. It is hard to make specific recommendations
here, as different packages offer different freebies which may or may
not be relevant to yourself, but one good package is Family
Historian. It is helpful to have your family tree set
up in GEDCOM format because then you can email copies easily.. Several
people have sent images or .pdf files or even reports generated by a
Family Tree package, but frankly these are a real pain as too often
it is very difficult to isolate the section one wants to study etc. Third there are several elementary
things to do exhaustively: Fourthly you will probably
want to exhaust anything else in local
archives: http://www.highland.gov.uk/leisureandtourism/what-to-see/archives/highlandcouncilarchives/ So that is the basic groundwork you should be able to do without our intervention!
(1) If you want to know
about the chiefly family line the complete
family trees listed in Sir William Fraser's 1883 "Chiefs of Grant"
is available in GEDCOM format and can be downloaded from the history
sub-site via this link: TREES (2) For Local knowledge
it would not be wise to overlook the famous Aberdeen
and North East Scotland Family History Society - if
only to get good advice http://www.anesfhs.org.uk/ (3) The Church of Jesus
Christ of Latter Day Saints has been very helpful. They have established
the International Genealogical Index
(IGI). Their volunteers at their Family History Centres
are very helpful - and knowledgeable - and you can access their online
presence at http://www.familysearch.org/eng/default.asp (4) Some background knowledge about the local area where the ancestors came from can often be useful. In Scotland there were two "Statistical Accounts for Scotland" drawn up by parish ministers, one in the later 1700s and the other in the middle 1800s. These are available online. Use this link http://edina.ac.uk/stat-acc-scot/ and choose "Browse Scanned Pages" (5) If, having done all this, you are faced with a problem, the best thing to do is to formulate a hypothesis with a feasible timescale attached. Bear in mind also traditional naming
patterns. It was normal for many generations to name There are also exceptions: on the death of a child, the next one of
the same sex might often be named after the dead one. (6) For those in Australia
and the Americas our sister
societies have deep wells of expertise and if your search
is about ancestors in those countries you are best joining the local
society and consulting them. Use the menu link or click here (7) It is, of course, possible to engage professional genealogists/researchers. One or two such have been in touch with us touting their services. Unfortunately we do not have any basis for knowing how reliable any of these people are and so we cannot make specific recommendations. The following links are, therefore, no more than a starting suggestion http://www.scottishroots.com/ Good Luck with your ancestor hunting. We hope you will share and welook
forward to helping where wecan.
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