The Phillips DNA Project

Adding branches to your Family Tree

Phillips DNA Blog

07/29/2010: Otzi the Iceman's secrets about to be revealed

For the first time since his discovery almost...

07/27/2010: FamilySearch Indexing completes 100 million records

FamilySearch Indexing has announced volunteers have...

07/25/2010: Phillips DNA Tests in Progress at Family Tree DNA

The following tests were underway at FTDNA...

07/24/2010: Wealthy landlords helped build Birmingham, England

Here is a link to an interesting story about...


07/18/2010: Phillips DNA Tests in Progress at Family Tree DNA

The following tests were underway at FTDNA...

07/17/2010: Atlas of Historical County Boundaries in the USA

Rex Phillips, one of our participants, clued...

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Research Help

This is a list of websites that will help you with your genealogical research online. Some of them will require a paid subscription and others are free of charge.

Display # 
# Web Link Hits
1   Link   USGenWeb
Volunteers working together to provide free genealogy websites for research.
198
2   Link   Ancestry.com
A website with everything including census records, family trees & community boards.
183
3   Link   Genealogy Bank
A great website to look for your family in old newspapers.
187
4   Link   Phillips Board on Genforum
Phillips Genforum at Genealogy.com is a great place to post and search inquiries.
193
5   Link   All Phillips Mail Lists Main Page
The main page of the Phillips Mail Lists - Phillips, Phillips-North & Phillips-UK.
199
6   Link   Footnote
A website to look for and view original documents held at the National Archives.
179
7   Link   Early NC Phillips Families
Google group that is dedicated to the discussion and research of the Phillips Family Surname & Surnames Associated with the Phillips Families that are found in North Carolina during the 1700's and early 1800's.

204
8   Link   John Barrett Robb, Family Historian
A professional family historian (“genealogist”) offering a full range of services to the public—from transcribing and interpreting ancient documents, through specific lineage research, to full-blown multi-family compilations over several generations. I am also available strictly as a consultant, to help less-expert family historians deal with specific knotty problems.

My particular areas of expertise include colonial Virginia, Pennsylvania, and New England, and their westward emanations into Tennessee, Kentucky, and the old Northwest Territories, and I am making a specialty of the difficult problem of linking mid-westerners in the first every-name USCensus of 1850, to their roots in the original 13 colonies.
90