25 June 2017

How to Visualize Your Ancestor-Finding Progress

I've seen lots of graphics lately showing how many direct ancestors we each have. Two parents, four grandparents, eight great grandparents, etc. It adds up fast!

How many direct ancestors can a person have?
Since I've been lucky enough to find a handful of 5th great grandparents lately, I thought it would be a good exercise to see where I stand.

I made a spreadsheet you can download with placeholders for grandparents in one column, great grandparents in the next column, and so on through 10th great grandparents.

Update: I've made a revised spreadsheet to include color coding for your four basic tree branches: one color for each grandparent. I've also created a row at the top to show how many ancestors we each have for each generation.

Then I used Family Tree Maker software to create a chart of my ancestors, labeling the generations. I scrolled across my chart and filled in the blanks on the spreadsheet.

Color coding the 4 branches helps a lot.
Color coding the 4 branches helps a lot.

My results are mixed. When I identified four of my 8th great grandparents and four of my 9th great grandparents, I couldn't have been happier. But now I can see that they aren't even the tip of the iceberg. They're a crystal of the iceberg!

To focus on the plus side, I'm missing only three of my 32 3rd great grandparents. That's pretty good considering they never came to America.

I'm missing 23 of my 64 4th great grandparents. After that, I'm not even counting. Yet.

On the plus side, now I can focus my work on finding as many of the missing "younger" generations as I can. (See "5 Steps to Grow Your Italian Family Tree" and "How I Gained 2 More Generations in 1 Day".)

See what this progress report can tell you about your research!

10 comments:

  1. Is there a way to download your color coded tree - but not to Dropbox?
    Thanks for any help!

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    1. Hi, Sunny. On that Dropbox page you can choose to download the file to your computer. IOr, if you want to email me, I can reply with the spreadsheet. diann@forthecousins.com

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  2. Amanda Ortman04 July, 2021 17:53

    I just discovered this wonderful resource! I know I'm late to the party, but what do you do when you DO have pedigree collapse? What number do you assign the couple with a duplicate location in your tree? The lowest number? How do you indicate they are a double in their additional locations?

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    1. Amanda, forgive my delay. I was traveling. In one of the images above you'll see some orange cells in the spreadsheet. Those are my double ancestors--a mixture of my paternal grandfather's yellow line and my paternal grandmother's pink line. I enter them twice in the spreadsheet and use orange to call attention to them. In Family Tree Maker, I have a custom Ahnentafel field, and I give each double ancestor both Ahnentafel numbers.

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  3. The problem I have with Ahnentafel is that I have two dads. My birth dad whom my mom Divorced and married my Dad. so I have Six lines to track. Craig.chandonnet@sbcglobal.net

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    1. You can and should track your Dad, but technically he doesn't get an Ahnentafel number.

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  4. But what about Daddy's paternal line, Daddy's maternal line, and mom's paternal line? Lol. Southern Appalachian Endogamy R Us. I have 3 or 4 sets of triple ancestors ....

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    1. And look at me with only 2 sets of duplicate ancestors! You'll need to carefully choose your colors so you can blend the right ones for another color to identify double ancestors.

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    2. I have 8 sets of duplicate ancestors ... 3 of them are in the tree 3 times!

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