Researching In Germany - A Handbook For Your Visit To The Homeland Of Your Ancestors  by Roger P. Minert & Shirley J. Riemer

What experience could be more impressive and fulfilling than standing at the altar where generations of your ancestors were christened and married, or touring the home where your immigrant great-grandfather was born? Or walking down the road the family wagon would have traveled to their fields or standing in a narrow street in a town where your ancestors ran a tailor shop and picturing them selling their wares from a shop window? the adventures potentially awaiting you are essentially unlimited, and your trip to Germany could produce memories worth anything you pay for it.

Unfortunately, the opposite might be true as well. If your excursion is not properly planned, you might never find the  home they lived in, nor see the inside of the church where they worshiped. You might find the office closed or see records you cannot read or pass by crucial records you did not know even existed. You may not achieve any of your goals but simply spend a great deal of money and come home with nothing more than general impressions of a very beautiful and progressive Germany.

With this handbook we hope to assist you in fulfilling your dreams (assuming that your expectations are reasonable) - whether your research is finished and you simply want to "be there" or are still actively pursuing new family history data. The information and suggestions discussed on these pages focus specifically on Germany, but most are applicable to other German-language regions in Europe.

No handbook can cover every possible situation, nor do we have all of the answers, but we believe that what we present here will apply to the great majority of cases. We hope that our readers can adapt to the rest.

All You Need To Know - At Home And Abroad:

  • Types of record repositories         
  • Using the telephone
  • Scheduling appointments
  • Research papers to take along
  • Finding research help
  • Making reservations
  • Initial trip-planning
  • Locating needed records
  • Packing your suitcase
  • Writing letter to Germany
  • Archive rules and procedures
  • Photocopying records
  • Topical vocabularies
  • Your German town's Heimatmuseum
  • Passport, airline tickets
  • Financial planning for the trip
  • Finding local information
  • Photography tips, needs
  • Archive reading rooms
  • Making reservations
  • Introductions in Germany
  • You and your rental car
  • Visiting churches and cemeteries
  • Visiting the Antiquariat
  • What to take and not to take
  • Deciding when to go
  • Driving on the Autobahn
  • Research tips, tools
  • Local historians
  • Shipping packages home
  • Local festivals
  • Debit and credit card use
  • You and your money in Germany
  • Airport procedures
  • Lodging and restaurants
  • Time Zones