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Heir and Beneficiary Tracing Through Probate Records

Probate records name the people an ancestor left money and property to, creating a snapshot of their relationships at the moment of death that often includes distant relatives, unequal treatment, and family dynamics that appear nowhere else. Following the heir chains through wills and court records can reveal previously unknown siblings, estrangements, and the economic reality of your ancestor's life.

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Why It Matters

Heir and beneficiary tracing through probate records involves analyzing wills, intestate proceedings, estate inventories, and administrator bonds to identify children, grandchildren, and collateral relatives who inherited from a deceased ancestor. Probate documents are among the most relationship-rich records in genealogy because they legally required naming all potential heirs, even those who lived in distant states or had changed their surnames through marriage.

These records can reveal family members who never appeared in census records together, confirm birth order, identify married daughters by their new surnames, and expose previously unknown siblings. AI workflows can extract heir lists from scanned probate files, match names to existing tree members, and flag new individuals who warrant their own research branches.

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