Francine Crowley Griffis, MSc, CG®, AG®, QG™

Francine Crowley Griffis, MSc, CG®, AG®, QG™ is a New England–based professional genealogist specializing in forensic heirship and land probate research. Her work centers on complex alias-based identity reconstruction and the recovery of lost, forgotten, and hidden identities—particularly the marginalized and women whose legal and social identity are obscured in the historical record. Francine is a postgraduate researcher in the doctoral school at the University of Strathclyde. Her work, Women’s Visibility: Ephemera, Agency, and Civic Identity in Boston, Massachusetts, 1840–1920, explores women’s civic identity through their everyday acts of material and social agency.

Francine's Upcoming Live Webinars (1)

Wed, November 18 2026: 1:00 UTC
Proving Identity from a Network of Deception
Wed, November 18 2026: 1:00 UTC
Across continents and marriages, a woman of many identities wove a web of lies—yet the wills she left behind included a token bequest to a daughter she never acknowledged, unraveling her carefully constructed life. This case study uses the FAN Club and the Genealogical Proof Standard (GPS) to merge multiple identities, untangle a trail of deception, and prove identity.
Across continents and marriages, a woman of many identities wove a web of lies—yet the wills she left behind included a token bequest to a daughter she never acknowledged, unraveling her carefully constructed life. This case study uses the FAN Club and the Genealogical Proof Standard (GPS) to merge multiple identities, untangle a trail of deception, and prove identity.
Wed, November 18 2026: 1:00 UTC

Francine's Webinars (1)