
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


This is the second part of our interview with John and Angela Cahill. This time we talk a bit about our other day trips south to Gallipoli and Lecce, and then we get into what you can do if you are looking to research your Italian heritage while visiting Italy.
You’ll learn:
Sit down with your grandparents, parents, uncles, aunts, and anybody else who might know your family history. You're looking to get names, birth dates, dates of death, marriage dates and other specific information they might have. Many family members may have already done their own research, so definitely use their knowledge and their previous work to your advantage.
Get the stories.Names and dates are great but having stories associated with the information is priceless. So get that video cam working (your phone will do) and at the next family reunion or get together have your relatives tell stories about your family. Use photo albums to jog their memories and bring up stories you’ve never even heard. This is the part of genealogy research that is truly exciting and rewarding. Having your history told through experiences and memories is what it’s all about.
Get the documents.Once you have the names dates and stories you want to start verifying information by getting copies of birth and death certificates, marriage licenses, immigration and naturalization papers, Census records, gravestones and more. If family numbers have copies of these be sure to photocopy them and be prepared to do a lot of research to find your own copy.
Put it down on paper.Now that you have all the info, start building your family tree, adding in photos documents, and stories/notes whenever possible. There are so software programs out there to help you with this, but call us old school, nothing beats putting it an in a nice notebook or photo album to share with family and friends.
Researching online
Below are some specific genealogy sites relating to Italian heritage. Honestly, we haven’t use any of these, so we can’t speak of how good or bad they may be. It does look like “MyItalianFamily.com” has extra services like the ability to hire experts to help in your research, which could be helpful if you get stuck somewhere.
www.italiangenealogy.com
www.italianancestry.com
www.myitalianfamily.com
These sites below are general genealogical sites. We have used Ancestry.com in the past. The biggest issue, at least at the time, was that no records went past your family’s arrival in America. So eventually you’ll be stuck if you need to research history in the old country.
www.familysearch.org (this is the extensive Mormon database)
www.ancestry.com
www.genealogy.com
libertyellisfoundation.org (Note that the Ellis Island site only covers those who would have gone through Ellis Island. Many Italian immigrants arrived in Boston, Philadelphia and New Orleans.)
Terlizzi, USA Facebook Group
Before coming to Italy to do any research:If you have other resources you’ve had success with, please let us all know in the comments section. We’d all love to hear what’s worked for you!
By Paul Cappelli & Steven Crutchfield, discussing all things Italian: food, cu4.7
168168 ratings
This is the second part of our interview with John and Angela Cahill. This time we talk a bit about our other day trips south to Gallipoli and Lecce, and then we get into what you can do if you are looking to research your Italian heritage while visiting Italy.
You’ll learn:
Sit down with your grandparents, parents, uncles, aunts, and anybody else who might know your family history. You're looking to get names, birth dates, dates of death, marriage dates and other specific information they might have. Many family members may have already done their own research, so definitely use their knowledge and their previous work to your advantage.
Get the stories.Names and dates are great but having stories associated with the information is priceless. So get that video cam working (your phone will do) and at the next family reunion or get together have your relatives tell stories about your family. Use photo albums to jog their memories and bring up stories you’ve never even heard. This is the part of genealogy research that is truly exciting and rewarding. Having your history told through experiences and memories is what it’s all about.
Get the documents.Once you have the names dates and stories you want to start verifying information by getting copies of birth and death certificates, marriage licenses, immigration and naturalization papers, Census records, gravestones and more. If family numbers have copies of these be sure to photocopy them and be prepared to do a lot of research to find your own copy.
Put it down on paper.Now that you have all the info, start building your family tree, adding in photos documents, and stories/notes whenever possible. There are so software programs out there to help you with this, but call us old school, nothing beats putting it an in a nice notebook or photo album to share with family and friends.
Researching online
Below are some specific genealogy sites relating to Italian heritage. Honestly, we haven’t use any of these, so we can’t speak of how good or bad they may be. It does look like “MyItalianFamily.com” has extra services like the ability to hire experts to help in your research, which could be helpful if you get stuck somewhere.
www.italiangenealogy.com
www.italianancestry.com
www.myitalianfamily.com
These sites below are general genealogical sites. We have used Ancestry.com in the past. The biggest issue, at least at the time, was that no records went past your family’s arrival in America. So eventually you’ll be stuck if you need to research history in the old country.
www.familysearch.org (this is the extensive Mormon database)
www.ancestry.com
www.genealogy.com
libertyellisfoundation.org (Note that the Ellis Island site only covers those who would have gone through Ellis Island. Many Italian immigrants arrived in Boston, Philadelphia and New Orleans.)
Terlizzi, USA Facebook Group
Before coming to Italy to do any research:If you have other resources you’ve had success with, please let us all know in the comments section. We’d all love to hear what’s worked for you!