What Is a Pedigree Chart?
A pedigree chart is one of the most basic and important tools in genealogy. It’s a visual snapshot of your direct-line ancestors, showing parents, grandparents, great-grandparents, and earlier generations. Unlike a family group sheet or descendant chart, a pedigree chart looks backward in time, answering the question: Who are my ancestors?
Most pedigree charts begin with one person, often you, and branch outward as each generation doubles. Two parents become four grandparents, then eight great-grandparents, and so on. The layout makes lineage easy to see at a glance and helps you understand how each person fits into your family line.
What Information Goes on a Pedigree Chart?
A pedigree chart focuses on essential facts rather than life stories. Typically, each person’s space includes their name along with dates and places of birth, marriage, and death. Some charts allow room for notes or source references, but the goal is clarity, not detail.
Especially when you’re starting out, it’s perfectly normal for many spaces to be blank. Genealogy is built gradually, and a chart with unanswered questions is far more honest and useful than one filled with assumptions.
How a Pedigree Chart Is Used
The pedigree chart serves as your organizational anchor. It gives you a clear picture of what you already know and where your research still needs work. One glance can tell you which family lines are well-documented and which ones trail off after a generation or two.
It also helps you spot problems early. When dates or relationships don’t make sense, a pedigree chart makes those inconsistencies obvious. This visual check can save you from following the wrong person simply because they share a name or lived in the same place.
Just as importantly, the pedigree chart keeps your research focused. Genealogy can easily wander into side branches and unrelated families. By concentrating only on direct ancestors, the chart helps you stay oriented and intentional as you build your foundation.
Pedigree Charts as a Research Roadmap
Once you’ve filled in what you know, each blank space on your pedigree chart becomes a research goal. A missing parent suggests marriage records. An unknown birthplace points you toward census records or church registers. In this way, the chart doesn’t just record information, it actively guides your next steps.
Experienced genealogists often return to their pedigree charts again and again, updating them as new evidence is found. It’s a living document, not a one-time exercise.
Paper Charts and Digital Charts
Pedigree charts exist both on paper and in digital form. Paper charts encourage careful thinking and are excellent for beginners. Digital charts, generated by genealogy software or online trees, are easy to update and share.
Using both can be helpful. What matters most is understanding how the chart works, not which format you choose.
Why Pedigree Charts Still Matter
Even with modern databases and DNA tools, pedigree charts remain essential because they bring structure to complex information. They help you think like a genealogist, weighing evidence, checking relationships, and building your family history one generation at a time.
At its heart, a pedigree chart is more than a form. It’s a visual reminder that your story didn’t begin with you, and that every name on the page represents a life that helped shape the one you’re living now.
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James Burnham SMITH (b. July 1840, Ledyard, New York, USA (Aurora) d. April 1904, Chicago, Illinois, USA) |
Sherman SMITH (b. 24 November 1800, Hamden, Connecticut, USA (Centerville) (Mount Carmel) d. 29 February 1864, Ledyard, New York, USA (Aurora)) |
Abram (Abraham) SMITH (b. 30 May 1760, Woodbridge, Connecticut, USA (Amity) d. 19 April 1849, Bethlehem, Connecticut, USA (Bethlem)) |
Isaac SMITH (b. 27 November 1727, Wallingford, Connecticut, USA d. 28 February 1771, Woodbridge, Connecticut, USA (Amity)) |
| Katherine COOK (b. April 1731, Wallingford, Connecticut, USA d.18 September 1781, Wallingford, Connecticut, USA) |
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| Elizabeth MINOT (b. 1761, Concord, New Hampshire, USA (East, West) (Penacook) (Concord Heights) d. 4 April 1832, Woodbury, Connecticut, USA (Hotchkissville)) |
James MINOT (b. 20 January 1726, Concord, Massachusetts, USA d. 2 August 1773, New Haven, Connecticut, USA (Westville)) |
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| Rebecca BLANCHARD (b. 20 July 1732, Dunstable, Massachusetts, USA d. 9 February 1767, New Haven, Connecticut, USA (Westville)) |
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Charlotte Maria BURNHAM (b. 9 June 1803, Shaftsbury, Vermont, USA (South, Center) d. 31 January 1882, Auburn, New York, USA) |
Asa W BURNHAM (b. 28 August 1753, Norwich, Connecticut, USA (Norwichtown) (Yantic) (Greeneville) (Occum) (Taftville) d.1 January 1846, Ledyard, New York, USA (Aurora)) |
Eleazer (Eleazar) BURNHAM (b. 12 March 1722, Norwich, Connecticut, USA (Norwichtown) (Yantic) (Greeneville) (Occum) (Taftville) d. January 1766, Norwich, Connecticut, USA (Norwichtown) (Yantic) (Greeneville) (Occum) (Taftville)) |
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| Mary NORMAN (b. 1729, Norwich, Connecticut, USA (Norwichtown) (Yantic) (Greeneville) (Occum) (Taftville) d. 9 June 1811, Norwich, Connecticut, USA (Norwichtown) (Yantic) (Greeneville) (Occum) (Taftville)) |
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| Lucy HUNTINGTON (b. 26 February 1756, Norwich, Connecticut, USA (Norwichtown) (Yantic) (Greeneville) (Occum) (Taftville) d. 31 August 1828, Ledyard, New York, USA (Aurora)) |
Nathan HUNTINGTON (b. 30 October 1730, Norwich, Connecticut, USA (Norwichtown) (Yantic) (Greeneville) (Occum) (Taftville) d.14 November 1794, Shaftsbury, Vermont, USA (South, Center)) |
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| Amie BROWN (BROWNE) (b. 4 October 1732, Preston, Connecticut, USA (Poquetanuck) d. 8 March 1796, Shaftsbury, Vermont, USA (South, Center)) |