The recording of today's webinar, "The Great War: Researching Your World
War I Ancestors" by Michael L. Strauss, AG is now available to view at
www.FamilyTreeWebinars.com <http://familytreewebinars.com/> for free for a
limited time.

*Webinar Description*

Researching your World War 1 ancestors can be challenging. With the losses
of records by fire in St. Louis in 1973 and stricter privacy laws; this
lecture focuses on ways to reconstruct military service for family who
served their country including records of draft registrations, war
casualties, troop manifests, and many other related records.

*View the Recording at FamilyTree Webinars.com*

If you could not make it to the live event or just want to watch it again,
the 1 hour 47 minute recording of "The Great War: Researching Your World
War I Ancestors" PLUS the after-webinar party is now available to view in
our webinar library
<http://familytreewebinars.com/archived_webinars_bydates.php> for free. Or
watch it at your convenience with an annual or monthly webinar membership
<http://legacy.familytreewebinars.com/memberships-c11.php>.

*[image: 5178]
<http://legacy.familytreewebinars.com/the-great-war-a-guide-to-the-service-records-of-all-the-world-s-fighting-men-and-volunteers-by-christina-k-schaefer-p844.php?retain_errors=Y&retain_notices=Y>The
Great War: A Guide to the Service Records of All the World's Fighting Men
and Volunteers by Christina K. Schaefer - 13.95*
World War I has passed from living memory into the history books, receding
far enough into the distance to provide a genealogical challenge. In order
to reconstruct the lives and locate the records of those who served,
fought, volunteered, or were conscripted, we must rely on a vast but
relatively unknown body of resources. Counting all combatants, the number
of men who served in the Great War runs into the millions; needless to say,
finding records on them in the two dozen countries that participated in the
war is a daunting and laborious task--now made infinitely simpler with the
publication of this magnificent guide to WWI service records. The only book
of its kind, this ambitious effort to catalogue service records and related
sources is international in scope, covering the soldiers of all countries
participating in the war, from Britain, Germany, and France, to Russia,
Canada, and the U.S.; and from India, Australia, and Japan, to South Africa
and Brazil! This is a key to a motherlode of genealogical data and should
grow in value as our need for WWI-era information increases. Right now it
represents a whole new path in genealogical research, with fresh
possibilities and discoveries at every turn.

The first part of the book is designed to provide background on the
organization of the military in 1914, the order of battle, how to use the
records, and a general time-line of events, focusing on 1914 to 1918. The
second part concentrates on the combatants, describing each country's armed
forces, conscription history, and its military and naval records, and, to
the greatest extent possible, their location. (Records that have been
microfilmed and are available worldwide through the Family History Library
System of the LDS Church are identified by roll number.) The third part of
the book describes casualty lists and POW records, and provides a table
showing changes in place names, while the final section of the book, an
appendix, contains a glossary of abbreviations, Internet addresses, and a
select bibliography of books in English.

The disposition of personnel files varies from country to country,
depending on privacy laws and archival practices. In some cases documents
are held by a military archive, in others by a national repository. In a
few cases, such as Great Britain, service files are in the process of being
transferred from one agency to another. Whatever their disposition--and it
is an important aim of this book to identify their disposition--the records
covered here fall under the following headings: draft records, personnel
papers, unit records, embarkation lists, death records and casualty
reports, military parish registers, regimental returns, medal lists,
entitlement lists, hospital registers, pension records, and diaries. A
particularly useful section of the book, "Research Tips," describes the
general organization of military records, the organization of those records
in specific countries, and the condition and comprehensiveness of the
records.

With help from dozens of individuals and institutions throughout the world,
in particular from libraries such as the Army Pentagon Library, the Navy
Department Library, the Library of Congress, the Family History Library,
the Hoover Institute (Stanford University), the Public Record Office
(England), and the national archives of at least a dozen countries, the
author has managed to compile a guide to WWI service records that is not
only unique but totally comprehensive. She has taken a mountain of material
and cut it down to size, transforming an unwieldy body of sources into a
streamlined archive. Her pioneering efforts will save researchers untold
hours of toil, adding limbs to family trees and providing opportunities for
further research.

189 pages | Published 1998, reprinted 2006 | PDF Edition

Click here to purchase
<http://legacy.familytreewebinars.com/the-great-war-a-guide-to-the-service-records-of-all-the-world-s-fighting-men-and-volunteers-by-christina-k-schaefer-p844.php>
.


*Webinar Memberships/Subscriptions*

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*Register for our upcoming webinars (free)*

   - Researching Your Minnesota Ancestors by Paula Stuart-Warren, CG, FMGS,
   FUGA. June 7.
   - How Harry Potter Can Teach You About DNA by Blaine Bettinger. June 14.
   - What Now? Your Next Steps with Autosomal DNA Testing by Diahan
   Southard. June 16.
   - Beating the Bushes: Using the GPS to Find Jacob Bush's Father
   by Elissa Scalise Powell, CG, CGL. June 20.
   - Virtual Family Reunions: Super Easy, Super Fun by Pat Richley and Russ
   Worthington. June 21.
   - Canada's Top 10 by Kathryn Lake Hogan. June 28.
   - Censational Census Strategies by Mary Kircher Roddy. July 5.
   - Google Books: the tool you should use every day! by Lisa Louise Cooke.
   July 12.
   - Tips for Snapping Pics: How to Take Perfect Family Photographs by
   Jared Hodges. July 14.
   - Analyzing Documents Sparks Ideas for Further Research by Angela Packer
   McGhie, CG. July 18.
   - The Firelands, The Connecticut Western Reserve, and the Ohio Territory
   by Peggy Clemens Lauritzen, AG. July 19.
   - Family History Adhesive: The Science of Why History Binds Families and
   the Simple Tech of How to Do It by Janet Hovorka. July 26.
   - Tracing Your West Country Ancestors by Kirsty Gray. August 2.
   - A Taxing Matter: Using Tax Lists in Genealogy by Judy G. Russell, JD,
   CG, CGL. August 9.
   - Using Pictures with Legacy Family Tree by Geoff Rasmussen. August 11.
   - Analyzing Probate Records of Slaveholders to Identify Enslaved
   Ancestors by LaBrenda Garrett-Nelson, JD, LLM, CG. August 15.
   - Finding Your Ancestors in German Directories by Ursula C. Krause.
   August 16.
   - How to do Mexican Research and Be Successful by Jonathan Walker.
   August 23.
   - Getting Started with Evidentia by Edward A. Thompson. August 30.
   - Top Tech Tips for the Technologist and the Genealogist by Geoff
   Rasmussen. September 6.
   - Finding Isaac Rogers by Nicka Smith. September 13.
   - The ABCs and 123s of Researching Your Ancestor's School Records by
   Melissa Barker. September 15.
   - When Does Newfound Evidence Overturn a Proved Conclusion? by Tom
   Jones, Ph.D, CG, CGL. September 19.
   - WolframAlpha for Genealogists by Thomas MacEntee. September 20.
   - Quick Guide to Texas Research by Deena Coutant. September 27.
   - No Easy Button: Using “Immersion Genealogy” to Understand Your
   Ancestors by Lisa Alzo. October 4.
   - Southern States Migration Patterns by Mary Hill, AG. October 11.
   - Is Your Society Growing? Social Media may be your saving grace by Pat
   Richley. October 13.
   - Databases, Search Engines, and the Genealogical Proof Standard
   by David Ouimette, CG. October 17.
   - The WPA: Sources for Your Genealogy by Gena Philibert-Ortega. October
   18.
   - Midwestern & Plains States Level Census Records by Paula
   Stuart-Warren, CG, FMGS, FUGA. October 25.
   - Is this the End? Taking Your German Brick Walls Down Piece by Piece by
   Luana Darby and Ursula C. Krause. November 1.
   - New York City Genealogical Research: Navigating Through The Five
   Boroughs by Michael L. Strauss, AG. November 8.
   - Using Non-Population Schedules for Context and Evidence by Jill
   Morelli. November 10.
   - British and Irish research: the differences by Brian Donovan. November
   15.
   - Research in Federal Records: Some Assembly Required by Malissa
   Ruffner, JD, CG. November 21.
   - Understanding Alabama by Rorey Cathcart. November 29.
   - Finding Your Roots in Catholic Records by Lisa Toth Salinas. December
   6.
   - I Thought He Was My Ancestor: Avoiding the Six Biggest Genealogy
   Mistakes by James M. Baker, PhD, CG. December 13.
   - Finding Your Nordic Parish of Birth by Jill Morelli. December 15.
   - The Law and the Reasonably Exhaustive (Re)Search by Judy G. Russell,
   JD, CG, CGL. December 19.
   - Palmetto Pride - South Carolina for Genealogist by Rorey Cathcart.
   December 20.
   - Problems and Pitfalls of a Reasonably Shallow Search by Elissa Scalise
   Powell, CG, CGL. December 27.

Print the 2017 webinar brochure here
<http://familytreewebinars.com/pdf/ftwbrochure-1481040970.pdf>.

See you online!

Thanks,

Geoff Rasmussen
Millennia Corporation
ge...@legacyfamilytree.com
www.LegacyFamilyTree.com
www.FamilyTreeWebinars.com
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