#FREE FAMILY TREE SOFTWARE ONLINE HOW TO#
Some groups have their own resources and run seminars to help educate people on how to find out about their ancestry. Joining a family history group can introduce you to others with similar interests and provide help if you run into a dead end with your research. Links for many of these and other sites can be found on the National Library of Australia's family history page. Some other areas for your research include cemetery, war and immigration records newspaper archives for notices convict registers The Australian Institute of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Studies ( AIATSIS) Family History Unit and service records. Local libraries hold copies of births, deaths and marriages records on microfiche. Birth records in NSW can be found online from 1788 to 1911, death records from 1788 to 1981 and marriage records up to 1961, but records for more recent years can only be viewed by those named on the certificate. Be aware though that recent records are restricted by privacy laws. Go to the births, deaths and marriages registries to mine their database for information. Also think about recording your relatives' stories to add a bit of colour to your family tree – most family history software will let you attach multimedia files. Get as many of the important details as you can, such as names, dates and places. Gather as many family details from living relatives as you can before going online to kick off your search, so that you have somewhere solid to start.