Family Tree Research

Family history research for people who want more than names on a chart.

A family tree should explain how people, places and records connect. It should help you understand where your family came from, how branches formed, and why certain stories were remembered while others disappeared.

Heir Trace Heritage carries out structured genealogical research using documentary evidence, archive material and record-led investigation. Whether you are starting with one name or trying to solve a difficult family mystery, the work begins with what can be proven.

Research File Verified Lines
Start A name, certificate, address, photograph or family story provides the first route into the records.
Trace Births, marriages, deaths, census returns, parish registers and probate sources are examined.
Confirm Each connection is checked before it becomes part of the family line.
Present The findings are organised into a clear family tree with supporting research notes.

The difference is not searching. It is knowing what to trust.

Many online family trees look convincing because they contain names, dates and locations. The problem is that those details are often copied from other trees without checking the original evidence.

Professional genealogy research is different. It compares records, questions assumptions and follows the most reliable line of evidence before conclusions are made.

One wrong link can send an entire family tree down the wrong branch.

Typical research goals

  • Tracing a maternal or paternal line back through several generations.
  • Investigating a family branch that has become unclear or disconnected.
  • Checking whether an online family tree is accurate before relying on it.
  • Researching an ancestor connected to a place, occupation, migration or military record.
  • Turning inherited documents, photographs or certificates into a clearer family story.
What The Work Can Reveal

Genealogy is not just backwards. It is layered.

A proper family tree does not only move from parent to grandparent. It builds context around each generation, showing where people lived, how families changed, and which records support the connection.

People Parents, grandparents, siblings, spouses, children and wider family branches.
Places Addresses, parishes, towns, counties, migration routes and family movements.
Records Civil registration, census returns, parish material, probate records, military documents and archive sources.
Story The wider picture behind the names: occupations, relationships, movements, losses and discoveries.
Begin Your Family Tree Enquiry

Tell us what you already know.

You do not need a complete history to begin. A name, place, certificate, photograph or unanswered family question may be enough to start the research.