The way you ask an AI for genealogy research questions directly shapes whether it gives you generic suggestions or genuinely useful leads, which means learning to prompt it properly is a practical skill worth developing. A well-crafted prompt that includes your specific brick walls, document types you've already checked, and geographic or temporal constraints yields research directions you might not have considered alone.
Getting stuck in genealogy research is like having one puzzle piece and staring at 1,000-piece boxes wondering which one it belongs to. You have a fragment—maybe a name, a date, a place—but no obvious next step. This is where AI's ability to generate research questions becomes incredibly useful.
Think of AI as a brainstorming partner who's read thousands of family history research guides. When you give the AI the scattered information you have (your ancestor was named Thomas, lived in Pennsylvania in 1850, and worked in coal mining), the AI can suggest questions you might not have thought of: "Do coal mining records from that region exist? Could he have moved from another state? What were naming patterns in his probable family? Did naturalization records exist for that timeframe?"
Here's how it works: You tell an AI tool: "I'm looking for my ancestor Thomas, male, Pennsylvania 1850s, coal miner. I have his name from one census but no birth record. What should I research next?" The AI analyzes what you know, considers what's typically available for that time and place, and generates a prioritized list of research avenues. It might suggest ship manifests (if he immigrated), county tax records, mining company archives, or church records—organized by likelihood and accessibility.
The power is in the specificity. Instead of vague suggestions like "try more searching," AI can produce targeted questions: "If Thomas was a naturalized citizen by 1850, his naturalization papers would be in federal court records. Have you checked the Eastern District of Pennsylvania archives?"
AI is especially good at spotting patterns. If it knows Thomas was a Welsh coal miner, it can suggest Welsh naming patterns, which might help you identify his parents. If the census shows his children's birthplaces shifting over years, it can suggest he followed mining opportunities—pointing you toward regional mining towns to research.
Try this: Write down everything you know about an ancestor you're stuck on—names, dates, places, occupations, any scraps of information. Feed this to Claude or ChatGPT with: "Based only on this information, what are the top 5 research questions I should investigate next, and where would I find the answers?" You'll likely discover research angles you hadn't considered.
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