Creating a Family Tree
Creating a family tree is a fun and educational pastime that
will allow you to delve into the history of your family, your
ancestors, and all those people who have branched out into the
large collection of people known as your extended family. These
easy to read and easy to create charts of your genealogy are
engaging ways to begin your studies of your own family. And, by
creating a family tree, you can add your own piece to your
family's historical record.
When creating a family tree, the easiest place to start is with
the person you know best: yourself. Write your name in a
rectangle on a sheet of paper. Draw a vertical line from that
rectangle. Then draw a horizontal line at the tome of the
vertical line such that it forms a T-shape. Draw rectangles on
the right and left ends of the cross of the T. In the left
rectangle, put your father's name, and in the right, your
mother's.
The next step in creating a family tree is to draw a horizontal
line extending across the base of the T. Draw as many vertical
lines from this horizontal line as you have siblings. At the end
of each vertical line, draw a rectangle. In each rectangle,
write a sibling's name. The family tree for your immediate
family is now complete.
Now you can go further in creating a family tree. From both your
father's and mother's rectangles, draw the T-shape and
rectangles that you drew above your own rectangle. Put the names
of your father's parents on your father's side and your mother's
parents on your mother's side. At the base of each T, put
horizontal lines with vertical lines extending down for each of
your father's siblings and your mother's siblings. Place the
required rectangles at the ends of the lines and fill in your
aunts and uncles.
Now you can attach various aunts and uncles by marriage to their
respective spouses with horizontal lines. Extend vertical lines
from each horizontal line and extend them out to include each of
your cousins. The format will become clear as you are creating a
family tree for your particular family.
The structure and format for these trees should be fairly clear.
Horizontal lines mean marriage. Vertical lines illustrate
descent. Thus, the various generations of your family will begin
to demarcate themselves and you will be able to see how you are
connected to all of them.
Creating a family tree is a fun little way to show the depth of
your known ancestors and the breadth of your extended family.
And as you fill in everyone you know, you can ask for more
information from family members to find out new names and new
people that will extend your family out that much more. And with
each successive generation added from your family's history, you
will be able to extend your family tree out to third, fourth,
fifth cousins and beyond. Just start with who you know and you
will soon learn things that you never imagined.