6 Things to Look for in FamilySearch in 2017
Worldwide interest in online genealogy services and activities will continue to grow solidly in 2017. And FamilySearch plans to play a major role in creating millions of new, fun family discoveries and online connections. Here are 6 exciting developments to look forward to from FamilySearch in 2017, a global leader in free online family history services.
1. Personalized Dashboard
Now available in 2017, if you log in to your free FamilySearch account today, you will be greeted with your own, customized home page full of interesting, relevant activity feeds, notifications, and suggestions on your personal dashboard. The more you work on your personal FamilySearch family tree, the more new, applicable content the system will automatically send to you through your dashboard throughout the year. In other words, it continues to work for you even when you're not.
New features include:
- Recommended Tasks. "Next-step" suggestions for specific ancestors in FamilySearch Family Tree that can lead to new discoveries.
- Ancestor Hints. As millions of new historical records are added to FamilySearch weekly, the savvy search engine maps them against your Family Tree. High probability matches are presented for your consideration as "hints" on your dashboard. Keep checking back to see what new information it has been dug up on your ancestors. Add it to your ancestor’s source page.
- Recent Ancestors. Forgot what you did the last time you visited your tree? Your new dashboard will automatically keep track of the ancestors you are researching each time and create a list that makes it easy to pick up where you left off a few minutes ago or during a previous visit.
- To-do Lists. Make quick notes in this convenient new feature to help you remember what you want to do on your next visit to your Family Tree. Jot short reminder notes about records to search, people to contact, photos or documents to upload and add to an ancestor’s profile, or personal and family stories you want to capture for posterity in the Memories feature.
- To-do Cards. See fun new photos, stories, and relevant documents about your ancestors that have been recently added by other family members and cousins to your collective family tree. It's a fun way to identify relatives who are currently working on your family lines and make new discoveries or connections with extended family members.
2. New and improved Mobile Apps
FamilySearch's two mobile apps—FamilySearch Family Tree and FamilySearch Memories—will see cool new updates. Users will be able to search Ancestry.com from the convenience of the FamilySearch mobile app. Imagine being able to search the two largest online sources of family history records from your mobile device! A new descendancy view feature will give users the ability to create notes for specific ancestors, easily see a log of any changes made by others, and download user-contributed memories (Memories app). Multiple windows in the Family Tree app will significantly increase the speed of research from mobile devices.
3. Improved Searching
The FamilySearch.org search engine is already best-in-class, but in 2017, users will notice even faster search results from newly published historic records worldwide, and quicker hints from those new records and user-contributed trees.

“We are really excited to launch the web-based version of our successful indexing software in 2017. It will be easy to use and will work on any digital device with a web browser (excluding cell phones), eliminating the need to download the indexing software. That means more volunteers worldwide will be able to contribute in making more of the world’s historical records searchable by name online, and more quickly.”
4. New Indexing Tools
“We are really excited to launch the web-based version of our successful indexing software in 2017," said Craig Miller, FamilySearch's Senior Vice President of Product Development and Engineering. "It will be easy to use and will work on any digital device with a web browser (excluding cell phones), eliminating the need to download the indexing software. That means more volunteers worldwide will be able to contribute in making more of the world’s historical records searchable by name online, and more quickly.”
Indexing is the nifty, web-based tool FamilySearch volunteers use to make hundreds of millions of historic records worldwide searchable by name for free online each year. These indexes are the secret ingredient to your ability to discover ancestral connections online quickly and easily. Additional innovations to the tool in 2017 will include more rapid completion of tasks, improved help, and even automated indexing for some record sets (obituaries) which means more records searchable at your fingertips, faster.
5. New Discovery Experiences
The Family History Library in Salt Lake City is a top tourist attraction for the state of Utah. In February, 2017, FamilySearch will open a wonderful, state-of-the-art Discovery Experience attraction on the Library's main floor. The new feature will enable guests to have fun, large-as-life personal discovery experiences with their family history using the latest technologies. Similar discovery experiences will be implemented in select locations worldwide in 2017.
6. More Free Historic Records
Over 330 FamilySearch digital camera teams worldwide will digitally preserve 125–150 million historical records in 2017 for free online access. Another 200 million images will be added from FamilySearch's microfilm conversion project that uses 25 specialized machines to convert its vast microfilm collection at its Granite Mountain Records Vault for online access. Over 30 percent of the 2.4 million rolls of microfilm have already been digitized and published online. The digital collections can be located in the FamilySearch catalog online and by perusing collection lists by location.
FamilySearch's online community of volunteers will be focused on creating searchable name indexes to two major collections in the United States (marriage records and immigration records that will include passenger lists, border crossings, and naturalization petitions), and core record collections from select high priority countries.
If you are not familiar with all the wonderful free benefits of FamilySearch, create your free account at FamilySearch.org, and start your fun journey of discovery.
FamilySearch International is the largest genealogy organization in the world. FamilySearch is a nonprofit, volunteer-driven organization sponsored by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Millions of people use FamilySearch records, resources, and services to learn more about their family history. To help in this great pursuit, FamilySearch and its predecessors have been actively gathering, preserving, and sharing genealogical records worldwide for over 100 years. Patrons may access FamilySearch services and resources free online at FamilySearch.org or through over 4,957 family history centers in 129 countries, including the main Family History Library in Salt Lake City, Utah.
please let me have access.
Darleen Blackburn
We are sorry you are having login challenges. Please call FamilySearch Support for help working through it. 1-866-406-1830. Thank you.
Fred
Case: Request for an update re: Smolensk birth and death records. (03655706)
After teaching a lesson on indexing to the ward's high priest group this morning, I received a telephone call from one of the brethren who was present. He and his wife had lived in Moscow, Russia while serving for the Church:
From Nad Brown (age 80)-(paraphrased)
“When Sister (Markay) Brown and I were serving a humanitarian services mission as country directors in Russia in 1999-2000, we came across an old Orthodox church building in Smolensk that had been closed for worship services but was being used as a records domicile, containing millions of birth and death records. The stacks of records were in many places higher than a man could reach. The area involved was the equivalent of our current stake center chapel from the stand to the stage at the end of the cultural hall.
There was an older lady at the church, and they inquired about these records. They were told that towards the end of World War II, the Germans had all the records loaded into trains and sent to Germany. After the Russians won the war, they demanded all the records be returned, and the Germans sent them back.
Brother and Sister Brown then notified Church Headquarters and efforts to obtain permission to copy and preserve those records began in earnest. The Russians would only allow so many records to be copied per year. The final results of this effort are not known. "
Could you please provide an update on the efforts to obtain these records, or forward this request to the appropriate department, e. g. Humanitarian Services Department?
comparing existing file Ids.
Doing a Search for the Surname Rock yields 24,440 results. If you click one of them, such as Edna Harriet Rock (4th one down) it will pull up her tree with her centered and her data filling the data panel on the left hand side. Scroll to the bottom of that data panel and you can see that this tree has a Submission ID of MM95-X5B Clicking that ID will do a search that will bring back all the deceased people in the specific tree.
If you were asking something completely different let me know.
I am old and cannot run around looking for a library that might be of help. It does seem to be a shame that I know the birth date and death of this woman and where she is buried, which was not on your entry. So someone out there who entered the other information on her would likely be very happy to get what I have. But there is just no way to contact sources---at least, on my Windows 7! I can tell you that I once found a marriage site on my great grandma in 1884 of Rietzig, Arnswalde County, Brandenburg State---all Poland now. She was noted as Mina Prei---with an i at the end. She was never known by anything other than Minnie, except on her immigration record where she was Anna Harmel. She was married to my great grandfather, Robert Harmel and they came to the US in September 1884 on the Salient out of Bremen. They are in the same cemetery with her sister.
I am sorry for the length, but wanted you to know that it is a shame that we cannot connect with people who put information out there. At least, not me, as I am not so great on a computer. I have found many obvious discrepancies over the years---have worked on several lines for relatives---but I don't attempt to correct anything. It is hard enough just trying to search now and then! If you can be of any help it would be more than appreciated. Thank you. Oh, I did note on a 1920 census of Louise Ritzenthaler that her father was from Pomerania and mother from Brandenburg State. I was once told by a deceased relative that their mother died about 1921 in Germany. Also, there was a brother in Germany who had a boy and a girl. No more is known.
Thanks for all your assistance.
Mark Gum
Columbine Colorado Stake Indexing Director
In the few cases where the record custodian has requested restricted access, we are obliged to accommodate their wishes and limit access to their records to our nearly 5,000 family history centers worldwide. This may be an inconvenience compared to broad online access, but it is still far more cost and time effective for patrons in most cases than a trip to the repository where the originals are currently located.
Thanks for your understanding and support.
Only a small percentage of the published searchable records have event day, month and year. Almost all have the event year. To make the full date searchable indexing teams would need to go back and extract that data from he images on most of the collections and republish the collections. I don't think that is planned.
There is one workaround which is to export the search results into a spreadsheet. The dates will come out into a column and be sortable.
-Robert