Where They Once Stood: Finding Your Immigrant Ancestor’s Place of Origin

Elizabeth Williams Gomoll, CG®
Jan 14, 2026
980 views
CC
Free
Free through January 21, 2026
Want to watch the full webinar?
Join now to access all 2,621 webinars and unlock all features.

Content

Play. Playing.
Welcome
1m 16s
Play. Playing.
Speaker's Introduction
56s
Play. Playing.
Introduction
3m 54s
Play. Playing.
Family Memorabilia
11m 15s
Play. Playing.
Online Sources
21m 41s
Play. Playing.
Repositories
13m 25s
Play. Playing.
Elusive Ancestors
17m 50s
Play. Playing.
Announcements / prizes
4m 47s
Play. Playing.
Questions / answers
8m 20s

About this webinar

Often family researchers know only the country from which their ancestor emigrated. This presentation offers examples of American records that can answer the question, “But, exactly where were they from?” Finding an ancestor’s specific place of origin in the old country can open doors to foreign records that can add generations to your family tree, and bring greater appreciation of your heritage. You may even be able to stand where they once stood.

Discount code: origin26 (valid at Familytreewebinars.com)

Valid through: January 20, 2026

About the speaker

About the speaker

Elizabeth Williams Gomoll, CG®, is a professional board-certified genealogist. She is in her fourth term as president of the Northland Chapter of the Association of Professional Genealogists, was co-editor for Generations quarterly journa
Learn more...

Key points and insights

Tracking down an immigrant ancestor’s exact place of origin—down to the village, parish, or even a farm name—can feel like the ultimate genealogical brick wall. In this Legacy Family Tree Webinars session, board-certified genealogist Elizabeth Gomoll lays out a practical, clue-driven roadmap for breaking through that wall by mining U.S. records and overlooked materials already at home. The webinar shows why pinpointing “where they once stood” matters: it unlocks overseas record sets, strengthens identity work, and can even make heritage travel meaningful and evidence-based.

  • Start with what is already within reach. Family memorabilia—letters, envelopes with postmarks, photo captions, books with inscriptions, trunks with addresses, family Bibles, oral history recordings, and undocumented compilations—often hold small, easily missed details that point to a specific locality (or reveal near-misses that need correcting).

  • Use online sources strategically, not randomly. The session highlights targeted tools and record types that can surface a hometown clue: advanced search approaches, specialized immigration databases, later passenger manifests with relatives’ addresses, passports, draft registrations, burial platforms, and especially newer discovery methods like full-text search that can uncover “hidden mentions” in legal and local records.

  • Research smarter when the trail goes cold. Emphasis is placed on collateral relatives and the FAN Club (friends, associates, neighbors), chain migration patterns, and flexible name handling (spelling shifts, Americanization, patronymics, farm names, diacritics). DNA cousin matches are presented as a powerful modern assist when paper records stay stubbornly vague.

Viewing the full webinar is the fastest way to absorb the complete workflow, see the record examples in context, and learn the subtle “gotchas” that commonly derail origin research—such as relying on indexes instead of originals, assuming a port of arrival, or overlooking page two of key documents. For deeper progress, the syllabus is worth opening alongside the replay: it gathers the referenced websites, search tips, and recommended repositories in one place, making it easy to turn promising clues into a repeatable research plan.

Comments (91)

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

1000 characters remaining

Sort by Newest
Sort by Close.
  • Newest
  • Oldest
  • Likes
  1. JH
    Jeannette Hargreaves
    4 days ago

    Thank YOU!

    Reply
  2. BL
    Beverly Leeming
    5 days ago

    Wow, I don’t think she missed anything. Well done and so interesting. I don’t give many 5s.

    Reply
  3. JE
    Jeff Eriksen
    5 days ago

    very extensive and exhaustive

    Reply
  4. LV
    Laura Vandenbosch
    5 days ago

    I really liked the concrete examples she showed. It helped keep the ideas flowing about how to be creative in searching for things.

    Reply
  5. AS
    Amy Sievert
    5 days ago

    Liz presents SO MANY great websites and tips! She does it so well that instead of feeling overwhelmed, you’ll feel EXCITED to dig in!

    Reply
  6. AO
    Ann Osisek
    5 days ago

    Excellent presentation that covered extensive resources including Cyndi’s List which a lot of researchers don’t know about. I think it was especially important on the immigration and naming process as many of the Eastern European names were drastically changed after coming to America.

    Reply
  7. RC
    Rebecca Corson
    5 days ago

    so much great information I can’t wait to watch this again when I start researching my German ancestors

    Reply
  8. LK
    Linda Kidde
    5 days ago

    Incredible !! The speaker knew so much information about her topic and went into great detail. My paternal relatives came from Sweden and settled in the Buffalo, Minnesota, area, so I was especially interested in the details given here. Thank you for sharing your work with other people like myself who are continually learning about the genealogy journey.

    Reply

Related Webinars