How to Build a Lasting Family History with Legacy Family Tree

How to Build a Lasting Family History with Legacy Family Tree

Preserving your family’s story creates a legacy for future generations. Legacy Family Tree (Legacy) is a full-featured genealogy program that helps you collect, organize, and share vital records, photos, and stories. This guide gives a clear, actionable workflow to build a durable, well-sourced family history using Legacy.

1. Set clear goals and project scope

  • Decide purpose: family keepsake, research repository, or printable book.
  • Choose depth: immediate family, four-generation pedigree, or comprehensive ancestral lines.
  • Set milestones: gather documents, verify sources, add media, produce a family book.

2. Create a clean starting file

  1. Install Legacy and create a new family file.
  2. Use a consistent naming convention for your file (e.g., Lastname_Legacy_2026).
  3. Import existing data (GEDCOM or CSV) but keep an untouched backup of original imports.

3. Enter core individuals with minimal required data

  • Add living and deceased family members with full names, vital dates, and places.
  • Enter relationships (parents, spouses, children) to build a correct pedigree.
  • Tip: Enter facts chronologically to avoid duplicate entries.

4. Source everything — reliably and consistently

  • For each fact, attach a source citation in Legacy. Use templates for census, birth, marriage, death, and immigration records.
  • Include full citation text and attach the digital image/PDF when possible.
  • Use the SourceWriter tool in Legacy for consistent, properly formatted citations.

5. Attach documents and media

  • Scan original documents at 300–600 DPI and save as JPEG or PDF.
  • Use Legacy’s Media tab to attach photos, certificates, and audio files to individuals or events.
  • Add descriptive captions, dates, and place names to each media item.

6. Standardize names, dates, and places

  • Use consistent spellings and formats for names (given name order, prefixes).
  • For dates use day-month-year or ISO (YYYY-MM-DD) consistently.
  • Normalize places using Legacy’s place standardization tools — include county, state/province, and country where applicable.

7. Use research log and To-Do lists

  • Track search attempts and results using Legacy’s Research Log or custom notes.
  • Create prioritized To-Do tasks (e.g., order vital records, contact distant cousin, check parish registers).

8. Validate and merge duplicates

  • Regularly run Legacy’s Research Guidance and duplicate-check tools.
  • When merging duplicates, review all attached sources and media before confirming.

9. Build narratives and biographies

  • Use the Individual and Family Notes fields to write short biographies synthesizing facts and sources.
  • For longer narratives, export data to a report or use Legacy’s Publish feature to format chapters by family lines.

10. Produce shareable outputs

  • Generate standard reports: Pedigree Chart, Family Group Sheets, and Narrative Reports.
  • Create a PDF family book or use Legacy’s web publishing/export to GEDCOM for sharing with relatives or online trees.
  • Export high-resolution media separately for printing.

11. Preserve and back up your work

  • Keep at least three backups: one local, one external (USB/hard drive), and one cloud copy.
  • Export GEDCOM and an archived copy of your Legacy file regularly (monthly or after major updates).
  • Store copies of original scanned documents in their original file structure as well as attached in Legacy.

12. Collaborate and gather family contributions

  • Share printed reports or PDFs and ask relatives for corrections, memories, and additional documents.
  • Use clearly labeled templates to request oral histories (questions about childhood, migration, occupations, nicknames).
  • Incorporate new contributions with proper sourcing and media attachments.

13. Keep the project alive

  • Schedule annual reviews to add newly found records and update living relatives’ information.
  • Celebrate milestones (publish a family book, host a family history night) to keep engagement high.

14. Advanced tips

  • Use Legacy’s mapping and timeline features to visualize migrations and life events.
  • Tag records with keywords for faster filtering (e.g., military, immigration, parish).
  • Consider DNA matches: import results carefully and cite matches as clues rather than definitive proof.

Quick checklist

  • New Legacy file created and backed up
  • All core individuals entered with basic facts
  • Sources attached for every fact where possible
  • Documents/media scanned and attached with captions
  • Duplicate records reviewed and merged
  • Reports exported and shared with family
  • Regular backup schedule established

Follow this workflow to create a verifiable, organized, and shareable family history that will endure.

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