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  2. Public Member Trees - Ancestry

    www.ancestry.com/search/collections/1030

    In this collection you'll find information from Ancestry members' public family trees. If you find a tree associated with your family you can contact the owner through Member Connect. Related data collections

  3. Searching Public Family Trees - Ancestry.com

    support.ancestry.com/s/article/Searching-Public-Family-Trees?language=en_US

    There are over 100 million family trees on Ancestry®, most of which are public. Family trees can contain a wealth of information, but they're only as accurate as the tree creators made them. Trees created by Ancestry members are not checked for accuracy. From a browser: Search Public Member Trees

  4. Family Trees - Ancestry

    www.ancestry.com/search/categories/42

    Online trees are a great way to organize your finds and connect with other family historians who share your ancestry and may have information to share. The trees in this collection have been contributed by Ancestry.com members.

  5. Searching Public Family Trees - Ancestry.com

    support.ancestry.com/articles/en_US/Support_Site/Searching-Public-Family-Trees

    Searching Public Family Trees. Printable View « Go BackGo Back

  6. Family Trees - Ancestry.com

    www.ancestry.com/family-tree/person/Default.aspx

    See a sample family tree. Watch your family tree come to life. Organize all the images and information you gather about your family history in one safe, convenient place online.

  7. Start your family tree for free. - Ancestry

    www.ancestry.com/c/family-tree

    Discover your story by starting your family tree on Ancestry®. By adding your parents’ and grandparents’ names, you can learn more about your family history.

  8. Ancestry® helps you understand your genealogy. A family tree takes you back generations—the world's largest collection of online family history records makes it easy to trace your lineage.

  9. Getting Started, Lesson 1: Starting Your Tree - Ancestry.com

    support.ancestry.com/s/article/Getting-Started-Lesson-1-Starting-Your-Tree?...

    The first step in building a family tree is gathering the records and information you already have. These records tend to be most useful: Family group sheets, pedigree charts, and books of remembrance

  10. Family Tree Privacy - Ancestry.com

    support.ancestry.com/s/article/Family-Tree-Privacy

    Facts, photos, and sources from a public tree may be viewed and added to other family trees on Ancestry®. Only a living person’s gender is publicly displayed; all other details about them are hidden.

  11. Moving Trees Between Accounts - support.ancestry.com

    support.ancestry.com/s/article/Moving-Trees-Between-Accounts?language=en_US

    By default, all trees are listed as public. In public family trees, all information is viewable and searchable except for information about living people . To make the tree private, uncheck Make my family tree public .