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Reconstructing Ancestral Neighborhoods and Networks

This course will be available soon
  • Description
  • Curriculum

Understanding the physical and social landscapes where our ancestors lived can be crucial to solving problems of identity, kinship, and origin. This hands-on, advanced course, for students with experience in land records and platting, offers critical skills and practical strategies for constructing community networks around elusive ancestors. We’ll explore the integration of advanced land platting techniques with modern mapping technologies and historical maps to place ancestors in a specific location, trace the development of the neighborhoods in which they lived, and uncover insights into historical relationships and migration patterns. In-class examples and exercises will also demonstrate triangulation techniques for determining approximate location from partial data and the use of reconstructed ancestral networks to identify key associates, disambiguate same-name people, and locate “missing” individuals.

Details specific to each class session will be coming soon.

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UGA Members receive a 10% discount.
Course details
Duration 17 February-28 April
Basic info

Classes will be held Tuesdays, beginning 17 February until 28 April. There will be no class on 3 March due to RootsTech.

Sessions run from 10am-2pm Mountain Time.

Course Coordinators:

Kimberly Powell

Gerald H. Smith, CG