What’s Next When You Are Told Those Records Were “Burnt up”

J. Mark Lowe, FUGA
Sep 9, 2022
1.5K views
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Content

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Welcome
39s
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Speaker's Introduction
1m 18s
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Introduction
2m 43s
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Start Here
8m 12s
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Substitutes
17m 35s
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State Records
3m 01s
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Private Records
6m 01s
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Libraries
11m 15s
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Announcements / prizes
2m 06s
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Questions / answers
5m 29s

About this webinar

Bad news about records can often be overcome with persistence and flexibility. Put on your own Discovery hat and create your treasure maps to lead you to the answers.

About the speaker

About the speaker

J. Mark Lowe is a professional genealogist, author, and lecturer who specializes in original records and manuscripts throughout the South. Mark lives in Robertson County, Tennessee that lies in northern Middle Tennessee along the Kentucky border.
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Comments (125)

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  1. MS
    MichAel Smith
    2 years ago

    About 70% of the World War 1 records were destroyed in a raid on London during World War 2 in 1940.
    My Grandfather fought in WW1 and was gassed. While he survived he died very young at 41 in India. The Indian records office was burned down after independence. There are no records of his service.

    Reply
  2. CC
    Cathy Cline
    2 years ago

    My grndmother was told her 1893 adoption file burned in a courthouse fire. No one quetioned this until I began asking questions in 2013. Guess, what, it was a lie. No fire. The file was with the local historical society’s collection.

    Reply
  3. WV
    Webinar Viewer
    2 years ago

    Great reminders!

    Reply
  4. WV
    Webinar Viewer
    2 years ago

    The speaker was very informative. It will help me with my research.

    Reply
  5. WV
    Webinar Viewer
    2 years ago

    Love the enthusiasm of the presenter for the subject! Unfortunately my genealogical research focuses on UK records so I’m less aware of some of the sources he mentioned, however the key principles still apply.

    Reply
  6. WV
    Webinar Viewer
    2 years ago

    I’ve got a lot of tips that will help me get started again on my research. I was getting frustrated in not knowing where to look. The information in this webinar has reinvigorated me to get moving again.

    Reply
  7. WV
    Webinar Viewer
    2 years ago

    Lots of great resources to consider; most of my black holes stem from records not existing — but usually due to the era when they were not kept, so hopefully this will lend some good insight to other places to look.

    Reply
  8. WV
    Webinar Viewer
    2 years ago

    Anything by Mark Lowe is always great!

    Reply

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