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claude-family-history-research-skill

Eemaynard
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emaynard/claude-family-history-research-skill
82
Agent Score

💡 Summary

This skill assists users in planning and executing family history and genealogy research projects systematically.

🎯 Target Audience

Genealogy enthusiastsProfessional genealogistsFamily historiansAcademic researchers in historyIndividuals seeking to trace their ancestry

🤖 AI Roast:Powerful, but the setup might scare off the impatient.

Security AnalysisMedium Risk

Risk: Medium. Review: outbound network access (SSRF, data egress). Run with least privilege and audit before enabling in production.


name: family-history-planning description: Provides assistance with planning family history and genealogy research projects.

Family History Research Planning Skill

Version: 1.0.6 Last Updated: November 6, 2025

CRITICAL: Always Plan Before Researching

ABSOLUTELY PROHIBITED: DO NOT perform unsolicited web searches or research.

When a user mentions an ancestor or asks for help researching, you MUST follow this sequence:

  1. Gather information from the user first - Ask what they already know about the ancestor
  2. Define the research objective - Work with the user to clarify their specific goals
  3. Create a research plan - Use the Research Planning Workflow below
  4. Present the plan to the user - Give them a structured plan with prioritized sources and search strategies

NEVER jump immediately to web searches when a user mentions an ancestor.

The value of professional genealogy research is in systematic planning and methodology, not in rushing to find records. Always build a proper foundation through planning first.

AFTER creating a research plan: If the user explicitly requests that you execute the research (perform searches), you may do so, but ONLY by following the approved research plan systematically. Document all searches, findings, and citations as you go.

When to Use This Skill

Trigger this skill when users:

  • Ask for help researching an ancestor → START with research planning workflow, gather known info, CREATE a plan first (do NOT search immediately)
  • Plan or organize genealogy research projects → Use research planning workflow
  • Need to create proper genealogical citations → Use citation workflow
  • Have conflicting information from multiple sources → Use evidence analysis workflow
  • Want to analyze evidence quality and reliability
  • Need to build proof arguments for genealogical conclusions
  • Ask for help with census records, vital records, or other historical documents → Provide guidance and analysis
  • Need guidance on research strategies or methodologies → Teach concepts, create plans

Remember: Always START with planning. Web searches and research execution are permitted ONLY AFTER a research plan is created AND the user explicitly requests execution.

Core Capabilities

1. Research Planning and Strategy

Guide researchers through creating structured research plans that incorporate professional standards.

Key Process:

  1. Define specific research questions (who, what, when, where)
  2. Identify target individuals and relationships
  3. List potential record sources and repositories
  4. Develop search strategy using FAN principle (Family, Associates, Neighbors)
  5. Create timeline with milestones
  6. Establish success criteria and proof requirements

Output: Create a research plan document using the template in assets/templates/research-plan-template.md (simplified for practical use). For detailed guidance, examples, and checklists, refer to assets/templates/research-plan-guidance.md

2. Citation Creation

Generate properly formatted genealogical citations following Evidence Explained standards.

Supported Source Types:

  • Census records (federal, state, territorial)
  • Vital records (birth, marriage, death)
  • Church records (baptism, marriage, burial)
  • Land records (deeds, grants, tax records)
  • Probate records (wills, estate files)
  • Military records (service, pensions)
  • Immigration records (passenger lists, naturalizations)
  • Newspapers (obituaries, notices)
  • Court records, city directories
  • Online databases (Ancestry, FamilySearch, etc.)
  • Published books and manuscripts

Citation Process:

  1. Identify source type and access method
  2. Gather core information (who, what, when, where)
  3. Build full reference note citation using appropriate template from references/citation-templates.md
  4. Create short form for subsequent references
  5. Generate source list entry for bibliography
  6. Assess source quality (original vs. derivative, primary vs. secondary)

Output: Citation entry using template in assets/templates/citation-template.md

3. Evidence Analysis and Conflict Resolution

Systematically analyze and resolve conflicts between genealogical sources.

Analysis Framework:

Step 1: Inventory Sources

  • List all sources providing information about the fact
  • Categorize by evidence type (direct/indirect/negative)

Step 2: Evaluate Each Source

  • Source classification (original/derivative/authored)
  • Information type (primary/secondary/undetermined)
  • Informant analysis (who, relationship, knowledge level)
  • Reliability factors (timing, bias, consistency)

Step 3: Compare and Identify Conflicts

  • Create evidence comparison matrix
  • Document specific discrepancies
  • Assess significance of conflicts

Step 4: Assess Reliability

  • Rank sources from most to least reliable
  • Weight sources by quality, not quantity
  • Consider corroboration patterns

Step 5: Resolve Conflicts

  • Explore possible explanations for conflicts
  • Apply evidence weight to determine preponderance
  • Resolve conflicts or acknowledge if unresolvable

Step 6: GPS Compliance Check Apply the five GPS elements:

  1. Reasonably exhaustive research
  2. Complete and accurate source citations
  3. Analysis and correlation of evidence
  4. Resolution of conflicting evidence
  5. Soundly reasoned, coherently written conclusion

Step 7: Build Proof Argument

  • State conclusion clearly
  • Assign appropriate proof level (proven/probable/possible/unproven/disproven)
  • Write coherent proof argument explaining reasoning

Output: Evidence analysis report using template in assets/templates/evidence-analysis-template.md

4. Research Logging

Document research activities systematically to avoid duplication and track progress.

Essential Elements:

  • Research session context (date, time, goal)
  • Research questions addressed
  • All sources searched (including negative results)
  • Search strategies and variations used
  • Positive findings with complete citations
  • Negative results documented
  • Evidence analysis and reliability notes
  • Next steps and follow-up actions

Output: Research log entry using template in assets/templates/research-log-template.md

Default Workflow: Start Every Research Request This Way

When a user asks for help researching an ancestor:

STEP 1: Information Gathering (Always do this first)

  • Ask what they already know (name, dates, locations)
  • Ask what records they've already found
  • Ask what specific questions they want answered
  • Ask about any conflicting information they've encountered

STEP 2: Research Planning (Required before any searches)

  • Work through the Research Planning Workflow (see below)
  • Create a structured plan document
  • Prioritize sources and strategies
  • Present the plan to the user

STEP 3: Research Execution (ONLY if user explicitly requests it)

  • Follow the approved research plan systematically
  • Use appropriate tools (web_search, etc.) as directed by the plan
  • Document all searches (including negative results)
  • Create proper citations for all findings
  • Log all research activities
  • Report findings and analysis to the user

NEVER skip Steps 1 and 2 to jump directly to Step 3.

The user may choose to execute the plan themselves, or they may explicitly ask you to execute the research. Either approach is acceptable, but planning MUST come first.

Procedural Guidelines

Research Planning Workflow

To plan a new research project:

  1. Define the objective - What specific genealogical question needs answering?
  2. Formulate research questions - Break into 3-7 specific, answerable questions
  3. Identify individuals - List primary subjects and associated family members
  4. List record sources - Organize by category (vital, census, land, probate, military, etc.)
  5. Develop strategy - Prioritize sources, plan FAN approach, work chronologically
  6. Set timeline - Break into phases with milestones When executing steps 5-6 (Develop strategy & Set timeline):
  • Provide links to research resources for the specific location
  • Prioritize: FamilySearch Wiki and LDSgenealogy.com above all other resources
  • Include links to relevant county/state pages
  • Identify record repositories and their online availability
  1. Apply GPS framework - Ensure plan addresses all five GPS elements
  2. Define success criteria - What constitutes adequate proof?
  3. Create next actions - List 5-10 immediate concrete steps

Reference references/research-strategies.md for detailed methodologies.

Citation Generation Workflow

To create a proper citation:

  1. Identify source type - Census, vital record, land record, etc.
  2. Determine access method - Original, microfilm, digital image, database, transcription
  3. Gather information:
    • Subject/individual name
    • Record type and date
    • Repository and collection
    • Specific location (volume, page, entry)
    • URL and access date (if online)
  4. Select appropriate template - See references/citation-templates.md
  5. Build full citation - Follow template for source type
  6. Create short form - Abbreviated version for subsequent references
  7. Generate source list entry - Formatted for bibliography
  8. Assess source quality:
    • Original, derivative, or authored?
    • Primary, secondary, or undetermined information?
    • Direct, indirect, or negative evidence?
  9. Extract key information - Document what the source says
  10. Link to research context - How does this answer research questions?

Evidence Analysis Workflow

To analyze conflicting evidence:

  1. Define the research question - What specific fact is being analyzed?
  2. Create evidence inventory - List all relevant sources
  3. Evaluate each source individually:
    • Apply source/information/evidence classification
    • Analyze informant and reliability factors
    • Assign reliability rating
5-Dim Analysis
Clarity8/10
Novelty7/10
Utility9/10
Completeness9/10
Maintainability8/10
Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Structured approach to genealogy research
  • Emphasizes planning over hasty searches
  • Supports citation generation and evidence analysis

Cons

  • May be too rigid for casual users
  • Requires user input for effective planning
  • Limited to genealogy-focused tasks

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Disclaimer: This content is sourced from GitHub open source projects for display and rating purposes only.

Copyright belongs to the original author emaynard.