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Tips for Reading Old Genealogy Records

By Fern Glazer Premium

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You’re trying to read an ancestor’s record and you keep coming across puzzling words that don’t seem to make sense. These tips will help you sort out old-fashioned writing:

1. Since spelling wasn’t standardized until education became universal in the 20th century, many people spelled phonetically. How someone pronounced a word also affected his spellling. Read the word aloud: Hearing it may reveal what the author meant to write.

2. Familiarize yourself with these common spelling irregularities:

  • Using y for i (fyne instead of fine)
  • Interchanging i and j (Iohn for John)
  • Interchanging u and v (neuer for never and vnto for unto)
  • In the Colonial era, an elongated s, resembling an f, in words that have a double s (pafs for pass)
  • A single consonant where you’d find two in modern English (al instead of all)
  • A double consonant where you’d find one in modern English (allways instead of always)
  • ff for F
  • the thorn, an Old English symbol that represents a th sound. The thorn looks like a y in writing, so ye means the (this is where “ye,” as in Ye Olde Curiosity Shoppe, comes from).

3. Paper and ink were costly and writing with a quill was laborious, so our forebears often  shortened common words and proper names. Get to know these types of abbreviations:

  • Contractions, which remove letters from the middle of a word, may substitute a tilde (~) or an apostrophe for the missing letters: dec’d for deceased
  • A writer would lop off half a word and sometimes add a semicolon, colon or period to form a shorter suspension: wid. for widow
  • Abbreviations with superiors are shortened words featuring the final letter in superscript, such as Abm (Abraham)

4. Look for these common abbreviations

  • do for ditto
  • chh for church
  • sd or sd for said
  • rect for receipt (what our ancestors often called a recipe)
  • f. for son of and fa. for daughter of (derived from Latin)

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