Ancestry dot com

I’m unclear about your recommendation. Do you suggest share with or discontinue? She’s not trying to save $99 (or whatever it is), just wants to be able to access everything from a single account.

What is the mechanism to share DNA results with another account?

If she wants to discontinue, that seems the simplest solution unless there’s a reason she doesn’t want to give up the account. I was puzzled why this has gone on for years so assumed she had a reason for wanting the DNA attached to the original account rather than just abandoning it and moving her subscription on to the DNA account.

If there’s no reason to keep the original, ditch it.

If she doesn’t want to ditch the original, she could share the results with the original account. On my mobile, there is a gear icon on the main DNA results page that takes you into settings, and from there you can access the sharing options.

My mother is on Ancestry.com and there is a personal family tree you can install on your pc and that is printable, copyable, etc. It is linked to your family tree on Ancestry, so it updates both trees.

My credit card company is going to be sending out the chipped cards sometime this summer. Maybe when I get it I will sign up with my existing card, use it for a few days, and then activate my chipped card, thus deactivating the card Ancestry has on file.

What if I want to view another member’s public tree? Would I need to (or even be able to) download it to the pc before getting friendly access to it?

Just a note on others’ Family Trees on Ancestry. I found some useful info, linked to the town one grandmother was born in. She was related to some pioneering families in that little corner of Indiana.

Tracing back further, one finds that other folks just accept data on people with similar names to their ancestors’. Rich & famous families tend to have more documentation.

One ggg?-grandmother had the maiden name of Calvert; she was apparently born & died in Ulster. (That branch of the family had several lines that went Ulster–>Pennsylvania–>Kentucky–>Indiana.) Obviously, she must be one of* the *Calverts–aristocratic Catholics who founded Maryland! At the same time she was living her non-aristocratic life in Ulster. Other people accepted the link. Nope. Show me real documentation.

So, take strange Family Trees with several grains of salt. And there are only so many names making the rounds. Not just Scots-Irish–my Popish Bogtrotter ancestors (the majority) named their kids Michael, Patrick, William, Mary, Margaret or Bridget. (Yes, I was almost baptized Bridget–but my parents picked a more lace curtain option.)

By
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

By bye
Sent from my mom’s Palm Vx

Yeah, the first time you get clickbait-and-switched, a little chunk of your optimism dies.

(The second through tenth time? whoa…)

Sorry, didn’t mean to post.

I literally just had a great two weeks with Ancestry. I researched way further than I thought possible and found a ton of really amazing photos, including some dating back to the Civil War. Kind of incredible.

No need to go to extremes. You can “cancel” your membership immediately and not get charged. Requiring a card number for a trial is not uncommon, and since it’s their service, I’m not really in a position to complain.

I’ve occasionally used leftover MC/Visa gift cards (that had only small amounts left on them) for free trials. Usually you can add a name and address via the card issuer’s website to make the card usable for online shopping. You can use a fake name and address if you wish.

Another thing I’ve done before signing up is check justdelete.me and deleteyouraccount.com to see if the cancellation process is problematic.

Just make sure you dont accidentally sign up with incestry. com.
That site offers only the family trees of the Lannisters, the Ptolemies and few others.

San Diego PL has that arrangement as well.

There’s no way to make changes to someone else’s tree. You can only make your own tree with the correct data.

Once you have a basic tree in place, Ancestry.com will start suggesting links to more information, either from databases (census, military, social security, etc.) or from other trees. You can click to compare to one of the people on your tree. if you accept the information, it’s added to your tree. You have to be careful about adding information from other trees. You used to be able to see if they had supporting documentation, but the interface has been changed and I’m not sure if you still can.

For most trees, you can’t see the full names of living people.

Oh, I think there’s a way to message people, if you think their tree is inaccurate.

I just did that to three people last weekend. So far, no response. I’ve had about a 50% success rate over the years in getting people to change things.

I’m not sure…I’ll ask her.

Sorry took so long. You can’t download entire trees, only individual documents. So yea, back to your original dilemna.

Do not clink on that link, it goes to a malware site.

Yes, it does. I’ve asked that a mod break the link in the post.

done

Why would you want to correct errors on Ancestry dot com anyway, by creating a tree on there all you are doing is helping the LDS church proxy-baptize your dead relatives.

Outside of that their main function is to offer a middling service that is just good enough to prevent government orgs from developing public owned access solutions to public information.