Did you ever do an online family tree?
No. Mostly communicating (mail/ phone) with elder (some very distance) relatives.
Did trace my moms to This this land…1630… from England…
Dads side This land …1750… prisoner from England, crime stole a sheep, prison / death sentence, commuted to ( colony / 7 year indentured servant/ under GB king…) skipped out, headed westward, a few hundred miles, in war 1812.
A woman was doing this same line, had good reliable records, stopped, put it away, because (she was trying to lead back to royalty (ha ha, I thought, why)… anyway, she was ashamed of the prisoner thing and gave me her research works…!!
Also contacted years ago, with a very elderly relative, in her 80’s sharp memory, widow, no children, and lived half of year in Michigan and other half in DC and regularly went to the National Archives and shared with me oodles of information.
I found a Civil War diary, written by my G+uncle ( by a strange fluke ) located in a library, where none of my relatives lived. (Different State).
This guy wrote about him and his 5 brothers, all in the war… one my G+father.
Had the library copy all 137 pages for me.
Wildly interesting.
Written in pencil, no punctuations!
I am not on Ancestry, nor did their dna offering.
Two of my sisters, separately did the dna thing with Ancestry…
Both came back…
Moms… English
Dads….. English / Scots/ Irish
Which is what my records reflected.
Haven’t done much in the last few years, busy with other time consuming works, Have a large file cabinet full!
If in US… large local public libraries, genealogy societies, often have Old “County” Book info on early settlers. Often a photo or Sketch, of a person, home, and short story about them.
Also something in Libraries, called Polk Directory. I think that continued to the 1950’s / 60’s, not ancient… but listed addresses, name of everyone in the household, occupations, kids, “student”. Kinda cool for a more recent interest.