Auchterlonis, Banes, Barnhart, Barron, Baumann, Benedict, Bishop, Blanchard, Brewer, Brock, Browning, Burk, Burke, Caylor, Ceynar, Corrolus, Cunnington, Davis, Dawson, Degnan, Dolezal, Donohue, Dow, Dreeves, Drews, Dry, Dvorak, Emmot, Engels, Faircloth, Feathersten, Feilke, Feuerhelm, Frey, Gannoe, Garcia, Gardner, Gazzoway, Gesslot, Graham, Guffy, Hackencamp, Hale, Hall, Hannan, Hathaway, Hawkins, Helmick, Hendren, Herrald?, Hinds, Hodges, Jacoby, Johnson, Jones, Jordan, Key, Kirkpatrick, Krall, Kucera, Laswell, LeDoux, Lillie, Logan, Lott, Maltsberger, Martell, Martin, Mayhew, McDaniel, McElveen, McElvine, Merritt, Moon, Murphy, Nancy, Nelson, Nixon, Parish, Parizek, Phillips, Pruett, Radschlag, Robbins, Roberts, Rodriguez, Rosenbaum, Roth, Russell, Saxdal, Sedlacek, Shaffer-Ford, Shelby, Shupitar, Slechta, Smart, Smith, Solomon, Soukup, Sparling, Steadly, Stitzline, Sullivan, Svoboda, Swygart, Taylor, Thompson, Tony, Truhlar, Tucker, Turner, Van Norman, Varnell, Watkins, Weaver, Wiggins, Wilkerson, Wilson, Wray
go to the Index of Individuals
Andrew
Burk
family
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Clyde & Minnie Burk |
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Hubert & Billie (Ruth) Burke |
How to do this: links to utilities that can help you create your own genealogy web site
I maintain my genealogical information using the Reunion program from Leister productions. It is very easy to use, and has a really intuitive interface for loading new information. There are also a handful of other genealogy utilities available on the web as shareware or demo's, like David Eppstein's Gene, which I used before I got Reunion.
Whatever program you use, it should have the ability to export your data into a file format called "GEDCOM". Most genealogical databases will export GEDCOM format data. The GEDCOM file is actually just a text file arranged in a specific format. Each line consists of three parts: a number indicating connection to other lines, a tag identifying the info on the line, and finally, the information. It's fairly incomprehensable to read, but fortunately you don't have to. Those same databases that can export files as GEDCOM can also read them, and automatically load them into your database. So, you might say that GEDCOM is the universal currency of genealogy transactions.
Once you've got your GEDCOM file you can use one of the nifty utilities available on the web to convert the GEDCOM automatically into HTML files. I used Sparrowhawk, a Mac utility, to create mine. If you're a PC user, you can use the program on which Sparrowhawk is based: GED2HTML.