Overview
An ancestor timeline organizes known events and source gaps without pretending that every same-name record belongs to the same person. It is a research aid for comparison, not a certificate of descent.
What this helps you learn
- A timeline can place census, marriage, military, pension, court, land, church, cemetery, newspaper, school, and migration clues in order.
- It helps researchers see conflicts in age, name, location, relationship, race/color wording, occupation, and household structure.
- It can show where community memory, oral tradition, spiritual interpretation, and DNA leads need separate labels.
Careful claims
- Do not use a timeline to certify ancestry, tribe, nationality, DNA conclusions, legal status, descent, or membership.
- Do not merge two people with the same name without corroborating details.
- Do not publish recent-family details or living-person information without safe-sharing review.
Research path
- Create one row per dated event with source, exact wording, location, people named, confidence, and next check.
- Mark conflicts as conflicts instead of smoothing them away.
- Pair the timeline with a source table before making public identity-adjacent claims.
Source trail
- FOBA Safe Sharing – Living-person and privacy guidance.
- FOBA Claim Review – Claim wording and myth-vs-fact frame.
Evidence note: This starter entry is educational. Add sources, dates, maps, Community Notes, and Fact Checks as research develops.