- 8 ½ X 11 inches
- 2-6 players
- Ages: 8 and up
This fun and interesting game is great for adults and children! It is a game of family tree building, where players prove their lineage as the greatest of all! The winner is the player who best balances tiles of generation, wealth and marriage points. Designed by award winning game designer Eric M. Lang, it is easy to play and introduces drafting mechanisms to newcomers.
The National Archives Catalog contains many descriptions of records that are of interest to genealogists and family historians, including applications for enrollment in Native American tribes, court records, fugitive slave cases, land records, military personnel records, naturalization records and federal employees.
Census records can also provide the building blocks for ancestry and family tree research. The first Federal Population Census was taken in 1790, and has been taken every ten years since.
Vital records most commonly refer to records such as birth and death certificates, marriage licenses and divorce decrees, wills and the like. These records are created by local authorities, and with possible exceptions for events overseas, in the military, or in the District of Columbia.