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Three John Smiths. Same parish. Same occupation. All married to women named Mary. Which one is YOUR ancestor?
If you research English or UK family history, you've hit this genealogy brick wall: multiple people with identical names in the same small community, and parish registers giving you almost nothing to tell them apart. This episode shows you exactly how to solve this using AI tools.
THE CHALLENGE: I tackle one of the most common English genealogy problems, distinguishing between three John Smiths in Market Rasen parish, Lincolnshire, England, 1790-1850. All agricultural laborers. All married women named Mary. Parish registers offered minimal detail. Traditional cluster genealogy methods weren't revealing the patterns I needed.
THE AI SOLUTION: Learn how Claude AI and Perplexity became invaluable research assistants in untangling this knot. I'll show you the exact prompts and complete workflow:
ENGLISH GENEALOGY ESSENTIALS:
AI TECHNIQUES YOU'LL LEARN:
✓ Five copy-paste prompts for parish record analysis
✓ Timeline comparisons using Claude
✓ When to use Perplexity vs. Claude
✓ Document comparison for handwritten records
✓ Verifying AI suggestions against primary sources
✓ Organizing complex family relationships
WHO THIS HELPS:
RESOURCES: All prompts and free tools at ancestorsandai.com
Whether researching Market Rasen, Manchester, or anywhere in the UK, these AI techniques work for any same-name genealogy challenge. International researchers can adapt these methods too.
Connect with Ancestors and Algorithms:
📧 Email: [email protected]
🌐 Website: https://ancestorsandai.com/
📘 Facebook Group: Ancestors and Algorithms: AI for Genealogy - www.facebook.com/groups/ancestorsandalgorithms/
Golden Rule Reminder: AI is your research assistant, not your researcher.
Join our Facebook group to share your AI genealogy breakthroughs, ask questions, and connect with fellow family historians who are embracing the future of genealogy research!
New episodes every Tuesday. Subscribe so you never miss the latest AI tools and techniques for family history research.
By Brian5
1111 ratings
Three John Smiths. Same parish. Same occupation. All married to women named Mary. Which one is YOUR ancestor?
If you research English or UK family history, you've hit this genealogy brick wall: multiple people with identical names in the same small community, and parish registers giving you almost nothing to tell them apart. This episode shows you exactly how to solve this using AI tools.
THE CHALLENGE: I tackle one of the most common English genealogy problems, distinguishing between three John Smiths in Market Rasen parish, Lincolnshire, England, 1790-1850. All agricultural laborers. All married women named Mary. Parish registers offered minimal detail. Traditional cluster genealogy methods weren't revealing the patterns I needed.
THE AI SOLUTION: Learn how Claude AI and Perplexity became invaluable research assistants in untangling this knot. I'll show you the exact prompts and complete workflow:
ENGLISH GENEALOGY ESSENTIALS:
AI TECHNIQUES YOU'LL LEARN:
✓ Five copy-paste prompts for parish record analysis
✓ Timeline comparisons using Claude
✓ When to use Perplexity vs. Claude
✓ Document comparison for handwritten records
✓ Verifying AI suggestions against primary sources
✓ Organizing complex family relationships
WHO THIS HELPS:
RESOURCES: All prompts and free tools at ancestorsandai.com
Whether researching Market Rasen, Manchester, or anywhere in the UK, these AI techniques work for any same-name genealogy challenge. International researchers can adapt these methods too.
Connect with Ancestors and Algorithms:
📧 Email: [email protected]
🌐 Website: https://ancestorsandai.com/
📘 Facebook Group: Ancestors and Algorithms: AI for Genealogy - www.facebook.com/groups/ancestorsandalgorithms/
Golden Rule Reminder: AI is your research assistant, not your researcher.
Join our Facebook group to share your AI genealogy breakthroughs, ask questions, and connect with fellow family historians who are embracing the future of genealogy research!
New episodes every Tuesday. Subscribe so you never miss the latest AI tools and techniques for family history research.

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