Please go on "Google"
www.google.com (U.S.) www.google.ca (Canada)
When "google" comes up put in:
free websites for ancestry
or try this:
free genealogy websites
There are so many good ones out there that this will keep you busy for quite sometime and allow you to pick your favorites.
Happy hunting!
Marcy
ANSWER
There are two essential paid for Web Sites that are indispensable for British Isles researchers, they are Ancestry.com which gives all of the Census records from 1837 to 1901. and Genesreunited.com which will allow you to view other researchers family Trees. A good free one is FreeBMD
As already mentioned www.familysearch.com has the largest collection of world records in the world. They are stored inside Granite Mountain in Utah. The records contain billions of names for free research. The Mormon church has been doing Family History since the 1800's.
http://www.rootsweb.com/ and http://www.ancestralfindings.com/ are both really good, free websites. You can also search Google, as Marcy stated. Also try http://www.familysearch.org
try zabbasearch.com
it gives you an initial free search and then you have to pay for more details rootsweb free pages.com is great. you can do tree searches and find other people doing the same family who are willing to exchange info
you can try to search online phone books. Im trying to find my aunt and that hasn't helped, but there are alot of free listed phone numbers. Can try searching myspace.com or facebook.com. If who ever you are looking for has a account there you will find them. just search for there name on the site. I found my aunt on myspace but unfortanatley she hasn't logged in in about a year. Ever other place seems to charge.
If you were born in California, there is a free reunion registry for adoptees and biological birth family members including birthmother, birthfather, and birthsiblings to locate each other and reunite thru a mutual consent search process. As of this writing there are over 7,000 adoption cases listed in the registry: http://www.CaliforniaAdoptionRegistry.org
There are many different websites available to find people living anywhere in the world. You should first try simply searching their name on a common search engine such as google or Yahoo! You could then try ancestry.com or other websites of that type. There are many different websites available to find people living anywhere in the world. You should first try simply searching their name on a common search engine such as google or Yahoo! You could then try ancestry.com or other websites of that type.
There are several online resources that may be able to help.
You can try a Google Search, look for the sibling on social networking sites such as Facebook and MySpace, check out a public records-based website such as USPhonebook.com or look for them on business-oriented websites like LinkedIn.com.
Another option may be to talk to other relatives - cousins, aunts, etc. - friends or anyone else who might still be in touch with your sibling. Leave no stone unturned; chances are someone has information that can at least set you on the right path.
A third possibility is to hire a private investigator, but their services are likely to be very expensive.
Answer:All suggestions here are listed below as related links. - These are free searches initially, with links to pay-for services. Most of the free information is what professional Skip Tracers use to build a profile on peoplefor whom they are searching.If all else fails, a more cost effective way would be to hire a professional Skip Tracer. Skip Tracers typically work in the collections industry, however some do work for invetigative services, and the cost may be lower; although, the more information you can give, the more likelihood there is of success.
If you aren't kidding, call the police!
Well your mother should have your birth certificate but you can find it in the hospital where you were born.
the mother will find a safe den and wait to give birth
The hospital you were born in has your records, or you can look on your birth certificate.
A birth mother is the woman who gives birth to a child.
ring your adoption agency and go from there good luck
Either birth mother or legal adoptive mother. In the case of adoption the adoptive mother becomes the birth mother in the eyes of the state
Their birth mother is Debbie Rowe
Normally. Yes. If you don't provide a secure place for your cat to give birth, the mother cat will find a place to hide. My mother cat gave birth on Father's Day and just before she gave birth she was hunting for a hiding place. It is best to provide a secure place for the mother cat to give birth, which I did and she had 6 beautiful kittens (Manx).
His real birth mother was Mary Ball.
Ask them, a parent, child or other relative.
Hesiod's Theogony
She may not want to be found however, if you have your birth certificate try the names that is hers in the town you were born in and surrounding areas - its a start. Since she may also be looking for you, you can also try a mutual consent search. For California born adoptees, the free adoption registry is http://www.CaliforniaAdoptionRegistry.org