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Are you curious about your Family History and want to know more, but just don't have the ability or time to do the research yourself? Would you like to discover what interesting things might have happened to your Ancestors?

How much do you know about your ancestors? Were they pioneers, entrepreneurs, immigrants looking for a better life or just for religious freedom? What challenges did they face, what was their day-to-day life like? Do you know what motivated them to come to America?

Do you look like your ancestors? What characteristics or traits have you inherited from your ancestors? And what can they teach you about yourself and about your own life patterns and choices?


These are some of the questions that encourage us to gain more knowledge about our ancestors. Are there additional questions that have motivated you to explore your family history?

If you are curious about who your ancestors are and what places and events shaped their lives, then you have come to the right place. Genealogy research can help you learn about your family's unique history, traditions, origins, and how those things led to your life.

Allow The Genealogy Assistant be your guide on a voyage into the past. The Genealogy Assistant offers a number of genealogical and historical research services that can be tailored to meet your needs to can help you in the search for your ancestors. For us the reward is in the journey, whether we are researching your ancestors or our own.

In Their Words - Translation Guides for Genealogy

ITWRussian442aMost of us encounter languages other than English when we are doing our ancestral research. For those brave enough to tackle translating these documents, I would highly recommend a series of books called "In Their Words - A Genealogist's Translation Guide to Polish, German, Latin, and Russian Documents".

These guides were created for Polish genealogy research, but of course, the language guides can be applied for other areas of the world as well. Poland did not exist for well over 100 years and during this time it was split up into areas known as Prussian, Russian, and Galicja (Austrian). Languages from each of these countries became the language used in legal documentation, so eventually you will encounter those languages for the specific area of Poland your ancestors lived in. Latin is found in the Catholic Church in many countries in the world, so this language guide can be used by many people doing research. Polish will be useful for Polish research. Russian translation guides will be perfect for any of the areas that Russia occupied over the years and the German guide for Germany.

This incomplete series is being written by two language specialists Jonathan D. Shea & William F Hoffman, Published by Language and Lineage Press. Out of the four books to the series, three have been completed. The first three volumes are - Volume I: Polish, Volume II: Russian & Volume III: Latin. The fourth volume (German) is being worked on, and I know there is great expectation for its release, although the exact date is not yet known. Each volume ranges from about 375 to 500 pages. Each guide includes numerous examples of documents and extracts from multiple sources, analyzed and translated. Examples  include extracts from birth, death, and marriage records of various formats; gazetteer entries; revision lists; obituaries; population registers; military service records; passports; etc.. There are sections on grammar, phonetics, and spelling. They also include information on how to locate records in America and Europe, including contact information for various archives in Poland and neighboring countries. There are chapters on gazetteers and how to use them, with maps showing Poland's changing borders and administrative subdivisions. The vocabulary lists have thousands of words, especially those words most likely to be found in records, including many overlooked by most dictionaries. These guides are so popular that the Russian guide has already had to go to press a second time.

I HIGHLY recommend  that you included these books in your research library. I see them as an absolute neccessity for extracting information out of records written in foreign languages. Get up your copy here.

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 T he long awaited day has arrived. The series of books that are guides to researching docments in other languages is complete. For awhile now, the translation guide books for Polish, Latin & Russ...

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