Curated Claude Code catalog
Updated 07.05.2026 · 19:39 CET
01 / Skill
emaynard

claude-family-history-research-skill

Quality
9.0

This Claude Skill provides specialized knowledge and workflows for family history and genealogy research. It guides users through creating structured research plans, generates properly formatted genealogical citations following the Evidence Explained methodology, and systematically analyzes conflicting evidence according to the Genealogical Proof Standard (GPS). It also assists in creating professional research logs. The skill emphasizes privacy and responsible AI use, adhering to CRAIGEN principles, and ensures a methodical approach to research, prohibiting unsolicited web searches.

USP

Enforces professional genealogical standards (GPS, Evidence Explained) for rigorous, privacy-conscious research. It prevents AI from performing unsolicited searches, ensuring a structured, planned approach to family history.

Use cases

  • 01Creating structured family history research plans with specific questions and strategies.
  • 02Generating accurate genealogical citations for various source types.
  • 03Systematically analyzing conflicting evidence and assessing source reliability.
  • 04Documenting research sessions and findings in professional logs.
  • 05Learning and applying Genealogical Proof Standard (GPS) principles.

Detected files (1)

  • SKILL.mdskill
    Show content (16551 bytes)
    ---
    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
    7. **Apply GPS framework** - Ensure plan addresses all five GPS elements
    8. **Define success criteria** - What constitutes adequate proof?
    9.  **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
    4. **Build comparison matrix** - Show what each source says
    5. **Identify conflicts** - Document specific discrepancies
    6. **Rank source reliability:**
       - Information timing (primary > secondary)
       - Source type (original > derivative)
       - Informant quality (direct knowledge > hearsay)
       - Consistency (corroborated > standalone)
    7. **Identify agreements** - Note corroborating evidence patterns
    8. **Apply conflict resolution framework:**
       - Evaluate each side of conflict
       - Consider explanations (error, informant mistake, both partially true)
       - Apply evidence weight
       - Determine preponderance
    9. **GPS compliance assessment** - Check all five elements
    10. **Write proof argument:**
        - State conclusion
        - Assign proof level
        - Explain reasoning from evidence
    11. **Document gaps and recommendations** - What research remains?
    
    Reference `references/evidence-evaluation.md` for detailed guidance.
    
    ## Key Genealogical Concepts
    
    ### Source Types
    - **Original Source** - First recording in original form (courthouse deed book, original certificate)
    - **Derivative Source** - Copy, transcription, or database entry
    - **Authored Work** - Compiled or analyzed work (published genealogy)
    
    ### Information Types
    - **Primary Information** - Recorded at/near time of event by knowledgeable person
    - **Secondary Information** - Recorded later from memory or hearsay
    - **Important:** Original sources can contain secondary information! (e.g., death certificate shows birth date recorded 80 years later)
    
    ### Evidence Types
    - **Direct Evidence** - Explicitly states the fact needed
    - **Indirect Evidence** - Implies fact when combined with other sources
    - **Negative Evidence** - Expected information that's absent
    
    ### Proof Levels
    - **Proven** - Beyond reasonable doubt, no credible conflicts, GPS fully satisfied
    - **Probable** - Preponderance of evidence supports, minor conflicts resolved
    - **Possible** - Some evidence supports, significant gaps remain
    - **Unproven** - Insufficient evidence
    - **Disproven** - Evidence contradicts hypothesis
    
    ## References
    
    For detailed guidance on specific topics, load these reference files as needed:
    
    - `references/citation-templates.md` - Complete templates for 14+ source types
    - `references/evidence-evaluation.md` - Detailed frameworks for conflict resolution
    - `references/research-strategies.md` - Advanced research methodologies
    - `references/gps-guidelines.md` - Genealogical Proof Standard detailed requirements
    - `research-log-guidance.md` - Comprehensive guidance with examples and best practices
    - `research-plan-guidance.md` - Comprehensive guidance with examples and best practices
    - 
    ## Templates
    
    Output templates are available in `assets/templates/`:
    
    - `research-plan-template.md` - Simplified research project planning (practical, day-to-day use)
    - `citation-template.md` - Citation library entry
    - `evidence-analysis-template.md` - Evidence analysis report
    - `research-log-template.md` - Research session documentation
    
    
    ## Best Practices
    
    ### Creating Citations
    - Cite what you actually consulted (if using database, cite both database and original)
    - Include enough detail for others to find the same record
    - Follow specific-to-general pattern (item → source → repository)
    - Distinguish between original records and database transcriptions
    
    ### Analyzing Evidence
    - Quality matters more than quantity - one strong source beats three weak ones
    - Always consider informant knowledge and proximity to event
    - Look for independent corroboration, not derivative repetition
    - Acknowledge conflicts honestly rather than ignoring them
    
    ### Building Proof Arguments
    - State conclusion clearly and precisely
    - Choose appropriate proof level for evidence strength
    - Explain reasoning transparently
    - Address conflicts explicitly and show resolution process
    - Acknowledge limitations and gaps
    
    ### Research Strategy
    - Apply FAN principle - research family, associates, and neighbors
    - Document negative results - they're valuable research data
    - Work chronologically or geographically in systematic way
    - Consider collateral lines for clues about direct ancestors
    
    ## Example Usage Patterns
    
    **User:** "I found three census records that say my ancestor was born in Ohio, but his death certificate says Pennsylvania. How do I figure out which is right?"
    
    **Response:** Load `references/evidence-evaluation.md`, apply conflict resolution framework. Evaluate each source for reliability (original vs. derivative, primary vs. secondary information, informant quality). Weight the three consistent earlier sources (John as likely informant) against single later source (unknown informant, secondary information). Analyze possible explanations. Determine preponderance of evidence. Create evidence analysis report documenting reasoning.
    
    **User:** "Help me create a citation for a census record I found on Ancestry."
    
    **Response:** Load `references/citation-templates.md` for census citation template. Gather: year, county, state, page number, household, database name, URL, access date, NARA microfilm info. Build full citation following Evidence Explained format. Create short form and source list entry. Assess source quality (derivative source with digital image of original, secondary information about birth, direct evidence of residence). Document key information extracted.
    
    **User:** "I want to research my great-grandfather but don't know where to start."
    
    **Response:** Guide through research planning workflow. Define objective (identify parents? determine birth location?). Formulate specific research questions. List known information and gaps. Identify potential sources (census, vital records, probate, military). Develop search strategy with priorities. Create timeline. Apply GPS framework. Generate research plan document with concrete next actions. Present the plan to the user. If the user then explicitly requests "please execute this research plan," proceed with Step 3 (execution) using web_search and other tools systematically while documenting all activities.
    
    ## Writing Style
    
    Follow genealogical professional standards:
    - Use precise, objective language
    - Cite sources consistently
    - Acknowledge uncertainty appropriately
    - Apply technical terms correctly (primary/secondary, original/derivative)
    - Structure proof arguments logically
    - Balance scholarly rigor with clarity
    
    Always operate within the Genealogical Proof Standard framework, helping researchers build defensible, well-documented conclusions based on thorough evidence analysis.
    

README

Family History Research Planning Skill for Claude

Claude Skill to provide assistance with planning family history and genealogy research projects.

⚠️ Privacy and Responsible AI Use

Protect Private Information: When using AI tools for genealogy research, take reasonable measures to safeguard private and sensitive information about living individuals and recently deceased persons.

Best Practices:

  • DO NOT share personal identifying information (Social Security Numbers, birth certificates, addresses of living people, medical records, or other sensitive data) with AI systems
  • DO NOT upload documents containing information about living individuals or recently deceased persons (generally within the last 75-100 years)
  • DO remove or redact private information before sharing research materials with AI
  • DO focus on historical records and deceased individuals when using AI assistance
  • DO verify all AI-generated information with primary sources
  • DO comply with applicable privacy laws, terms of service, and ethical genealogical standards

This skill follows the principles of the Coalition for Responsible AI in Genealogy (CRAIGEN), which promotes accuracy, privacy protection, disclosure, education, and compliance in genealogical AI use.

Remember: AI systems may retain and learn from information you provide. Always prioritize privacy and use discretion when sharing genealogical data.

Overview

This skill provides Claude with specialized knowledge and workflows for family history and genealogy research following the Genealogical Proof Standard (GPS) and Evidence Explained citation methodology.

Skill Structure

genealogy-research-skill/
├── SKILL.md                              # Main skill file (loaded when skill triggers)
├── references/                           # Reference documentation (loaded as needed)
│   ├── citation-templates.md            # Citation formats for 14+ source types
│   ├── evidence-evaluation.md           # Conflict resolution frameworks
│   ├── gps-guidelines.md                # Genealogical Proof Standard details
│   └── research-strategies.md           # Advanced research methodologies
└── assets/                               # Templates for output documents
    └── templates/
        ├── research-plan-template.md    # Simplified research project planning (practical)
        ├── research-plan-guidance.md    # Detailed guidance and best practices
        ├── citation-template.md         # Citation library entry
        ├── evidence-analysis-template.md # Evidence analysis report
        └── research-log-template.md     # Research session documentation

What This Skill Does

1. Research Planning

Guides users through creating structured family history research plans with:

  • Specific research questions
  • Source identification
  • Search strategies
  • GPS framework integration
  • Timeline and milestones

Templates:

  • research-plan-template.md - Simplified, practical template for day-to-day research work
  • research-plan-guidance.md - Comprehensive guidance with examples, checklists, and best practices

2. Citation Creation

Generates properly formatted genealogical citations for:

  • Census records
  • Vital records (birth, marriage, death)
  • Church records
  • Land and probate records
  • Military records
  • Immigration records
  • Newspapers
  • Online databases
  • Published books and manuscripts

3. Evidence Analysis

Systematically analyzes conflicting genealogical evidence:

  • Individual source evaluation
  • Reliability assessment
  • Conflict identification
  • Resolution frameworks
  • Preponderance of evidence analysis
  • GPS compliance checking
  • Proof argument construction

4. Research Documentation

Creates professional research logs documenting:

  • Sources searched (positive and negative results)
  • Search strategies
  • Findings and discoveries
  • Evidence quality assessment
  • Next steps

When Claude Uses This Skill

Claude automatically loads this skill when users:

  • Ask about family history or genealogy research
  • Mention family history, genealogy or ancestry
  • Need help with genealogical citations
  • Have conflicting information from multiple sources
  • Ask about research planning methods or strategies
  • Reference census records, vital records, or historical documents
  • Need help analyzing evidence quality

Key Features

Professional Standards

  • Built on Genealogical Proof Standard (GPS)
  • Evidence Explained citation methodology
  • Board for Certification of Genealogists (BCG) standards

Progressive Disclosure

  • Core instructions in SKILL.md (~4k words)
  • Detailed reference material loaded as needed
  • Templates available for document creation

Comprehensive Coverage

  • 14+ citation templates
  • Detailed conflict resolution frameworks
  • Advanced research strategies
  • Complete GPS guidelines

Installation

Quick Start (Experienced Users)

  1. Download the latest release from Releases
  2. Claude.ai users: Enable Skills in Settings > Capabilities, then upload the skill folder
  3. Claude Code users: Extract the ZIP file
  4. Claude Code users: Move the family-history-planning folder to ~/.claude/skills/
  5. Start using: Just ask Claude about family history research!

Detailed Installation Instructions

Prerequisites

For Claude.ai:

  • Claude Pro, Max, Team, or Enterprise plan
  • Skills feature enabled (Settings > Capabilities)
  • Code execution enabled (Settings > Capabilities)

For Claude Code:

  • Claude Code installed
  • Access to your home directory

Step-by-Step Installation

Option 1: Install on Claude.ai

  1. Download the Skill

    • Go to the Releases page
    • Download the latest family-history-planning-vX.X.X.zip file
    • Extract the ZIP file to a location on your computer
  2. Enable Skills in Claude

    • Open Claude.ai
    • Click on your profile/settings (bottom left)
    • Navigate to Settings > Capabilities
    • Toggle Skills to ON
    • Toggle Code execution to ON (required for Skills)
  3. Upload the Skill

    • In Claude.ai, go to Settings > Skills
    • Click "Add Skill" or "Upload Skill"
    • Select the downloaded family-history-planning-vX.X.X.zip ZIP file
    • The skill will be uploaded and enabled automatically
    • Your skill will appear in your Skills list and can be toggled on or off
  4. Verify Installation

    • Start a new conversation with Claude
    • Ask: "What version of the family history skill are you using?"
    • Claude should recognize and load the skill

Option 2: Install on Claude Code

  1. Download the Skill

    • Go to the Releases page
    • Download the latest family-history-planning-vX.X.X.zip file
    • Extract the ZIP file
  2. Locate Your Skills Directory

    • Open your terminal
    • Navigate to your home directory: cd ~
    • Create the skills directory if it doesn't exist:
      mkdir -p ~/.claude/skills
      
  3. Install the Skill

    • Move the extracted skill folder to the skills directory:
      mv /path/to/extracted/family-history-planning ~/.claude/skills/
      
    • Or copy if you want to keep the original:
      cp -r /path/to/extracted/family-history-planning ~/.claude/skills/
      
  4. Verify Installation

    • Your skills directory structure should look like:
      ~/.claude/skills/
      └── family-history-planning/
          ├── SKILL.md
          ├── references/
          └── assets/
      
    • Restart Claude Code if it's currently running
    • Ask Claude: "What version of the family history skill are you using?"

Troubleshooting

Skill not loading?

  • Ensure Skills are enabled in Settings > Capabilities
  • Verify code execution is enabled
  • Check that the skill folder contains SKILL.md with proper frontmatter
  • Try restarting Claude or Claude Code

Permission issues (Claude Code)?

  • Check folder permissions: ls -la ~/.claude/skills/
  • Ensure you have read access: chmod -R 755 ~/.claude/skills/family-history-planning/

Skill not recognized?

  • Verify the skill name matches the frontmatter in SKILL.md
  • Check that all required files are present (SKILL.md, references/, assets/)

How to Use This Skill

As a User

Simply ask Claude for help with family history research:

  • "Help me plan research on my great-grandfather"
  • "Create a citation for this census record"
  • "I have conflicting birth dates - help me figure out which is right"
  • "How do I systematically research this ancestor?"

Claude will automatically detect your request and load the skill—no need to manually invoke it.

As Claude

When family history or genealogy research is detected:

  1. Load SKILL.md for procedural guidance
  2. Load specific reference files as needed:
    • references/citation-templates.md for citation help
    • references/evidence-evaluation.md for conflict resolution
    • references/gps-guidelines.md for GPS compliance
    • references/research-strategies.md for advanced techniques
  3. Use templates from assets/templates/ to create output documents
  4. Follow workflows systematically
  5. Apply professional standards throughout

Professional Standards Compliance

This skill ensures research follows:

Genealogical Proof Standard (GPS)

  • Reasonably exhaustive research
  • Complete and accurate citations
  • Analysis and correlation
  • Conflict resolution
  • Soundly reasoned conclusions

Evidence Explained

  • Proper citation format
  • Original vs. derivative distinction
  • Complete source documentation

BCG Standards

  • Professional genealogical methodology
  • Ethical research practices
  • Peer-reviewable work

Output Documents

Claude can create four types of genealogy documents using this skill:

  1. Research Plans - Strategic planning documents
  2. Citations - Properly formatted source citations
  3. Evidence Analysis Reports - Systematic conflict resolution
  4. Research Logs - Session documentation

All outputs follow professional genealogical standards and are ready for:

  • Personal research management
  • Professional genealogy work
  • Publication
  • Sharing with other researchers
  • GPS compliance review

Version

Version: 1.0 Created: October 2025 Source: BMAD Method genealogy-assistant module Converted by: Claude with skill-creator guidance

License

This skill was created from a genealogy research project. Please respect professional genealogical standards and properly attribute sources when using the workflows and methodologies contained herein.

Support

For questions about:

  • Genealogy methodology: Refer to professional resources (BCG, NGS, Evidence Explained)
  • Skill usage: Ask Claude for help - the skill is designed to guide you
  • Professional standards: See references/ files for detailed guidelines

Ready to start your family history research? Just ask Claude!