My Cheatsheet for Genealogy Boolean Searches

After blogging about the use of Boolean searches for genealogy, I decided to try and track down a compact cheatsheet or template I could use when searching in Google.  I didn’t come across anything that served my purposes completely, so I made my own.  I thought it might be helpful for others, so have posted it here for you to use. I’m sure my list will change as I work with it more and more, but it is a good starting place.

Using whichever search engine you prefer, just plug in your own data using this punctuation and format, and see what kind of results you get:

Cheatsheet- Genealogy BooleanWhile compiling this list I came across some previously untapped resources in the search results.  I am talking about some high quality original sources that enriched my research and were golden.  I encourage you to come up with your own template, and to mix and match the search terms and compare the number of hits you get.

Too many hits? Try adding additional search terms to your string until you have shaped it and narrowed it to suit you.  Then copy it and add it to your personal template.

To get an idea of how the construction of a search string affects the number of hits that will result, I’ve included a chart that illustrates my own results in one session:

Number of hits with diffferent search strings, by Dayna Jacobs of Ongrannystrail.co
Number of hits with different search strings, by Dayna Jacobs (Ongrannystrail.com)

When using a search engine it is helpful to know a few keyboard shortcuts.  I cannot keep track of more than a few in my head, so am sharing the ones I use most often:

Google keyboard shortcuts for genealogy and other searching, by Dayna Jacobs of Ongrannystrail.com
Google keyboard shortcuts for genealogy and other searching, by Dayna Jacobs (Ongrannystrail.com)

I hope this gives your online searching a boost.  I’d love to hear your success stories!

George Banks: Life After Mary Poppins

George Banks’ home, home on the range…it’s all in his Homestead file

Dayna Jacobs - "On Granny's Trail"'s avatarThe Fairy Tale Genealogist

George Banks

This is George Banks, looking considerably happier than he did the morning Mr. Dawes sacked him at the bank and his nanny, Mary Poppins, left his employ (something to do with the changing wind…)

When we last saw old George, he was in the park flying kites with his children, Jane and Michael.  He was jobless and nannyless, and Mr. Dawes had punched a hole in his hat. I know, he was singing a cheery song, but things could not look much bleaker.  And then he moved to Nebraska. You can be sure of it.  The Fairy Tale Genealogist has the Homestead records to prove it!

George Banks, Nebraska, Homestead Records, 1861-1936, Ancestry.com George Banks, Certificate No. 2048, Nebraska, Homestead Records, 1861-1936, Ancestry.com

Proving you can’t keep a good man down, George packed up the family and bid farewell to No. 17 Cherry Tree Lane for the promise of 160 acres of Nebraska prairieland, thanks to the…

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(+) Use Boolean Logic to Improve Your Online Search Results

Always good to have a refresher on Boolean searches for use in genealogy. I’m afraid Google searches are usually an afterthought for me, and I need to get into the habit of making them an earlier priority.

Mary Poppins: Life before No. 17 Cherry Tree Lane

Granny’s alter ego: The Fairy Tale Genealogist

Dayna Jacobs - "On Granny's Trail"'s avatarThe Fairy Tale Genealogist

Mary Poppins, practically perfect in every way Mary Poppins, practically perfect in every way I don’t know about you, but I just assumed Mary Poppins had always been a nanny when she arrived on the doorstep of No. 17 Cherry Tree Lane in London. Well, imagine my surprise when I discovered she started out as a telephone operator in San Francisco, California. That’s right. A telephone operator. And a registered Democrat! Records prove it, of course…

Mary Poppins in CA Voter Registrations 1900-1968, Ancestry.com Mary Poppins in CA Voter Registrations 1900-1968, Ancestry.com Voter registrations are an excellent census substitute, filling in the gaps between decennial federal censuses. They provide an address of residence, perhaps an occupation, and political affiliation. An address can lead to clues about neighbors and relatives, and neighborhood demographics can be derived from surnames and occupations. In Mary’s case we learn her marital status–Miss Mary Poppin. But of course, we already knew that, didn’t we?

Telephone operator with an eery resemblance to Mary Poppins... Telephone operator with an eery resemblance to…

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New class handouts added to ‘On Granny’s Trail’

The latest additions to the “Class Handout” section of On Granny’s Trail are:

  1. Archives and Libraries: Successful Research Onsite and Online
  2. Free Genealogy Classes, Webinars, and Online Learning

You are welcome to print out these handouts for personal use.  For the sparkling commentary that accompanies these and other presentations, you will need to attend the January 2016 Ancestor Roundup on California’s central coast. We hope to see you there!