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Cecilia Kondrc was the daughter of Jan Kondrc and Anna Kondrc (dont know mother's maiden name). I believe that she was born in Brestov...
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Over the past few days, I have made a few more connections in the Toomey line of my family. One new development was that I was able to con...
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Todays spotlight on family will be on my maternal great grandmother Anna Benjak Kondrc. I hope to post at least on Spotlight a week on a f...
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Now that I have been going to FHC for two day to look over the microfilm I am starting to wonder if I could not just get a large enough thum...
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Surname – Muhlig Meaning/Origin – unkown From this link In our conversation he disclosed his Jewish origin, his ancestors having ...
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I know that I have made many posts about this story, but I like to bring it up every once in a while in the hopes that I might be able to fi...
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I am trying to add the Facebook Like widget to my blog, it may take a bit of time to get it all cleared up and working. I was hoping that ...
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So one of my ancestors has on their birth certificate that they were born in Dublin, Ireland, while the rest of the family, I have listed a...
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Unsure of who anyone is here, they are family I believe but its from Teplitz according to a cousin.
David
ReplyDeleteWhat about importing both into a genealogy app like Family Tree Maker, doing a merge there then exporting out to GEDCOM?
For a faster way of merging GEDCOM files, have a look at GEDblend (http://www.pertecrr.com/gedblend/).
ReplyDeleteAt the same site (http://www.pertecrr.com/gedblend/), you can pick up GBcompare - it is free! This provides a very detailed comparison of two GEDCOM files. This means you can spot the changes in the two GEDCOM files. Once you know what the changes are, you can update them manually (slow), or use GEDblend to do the merge for you (much faster). And you also then have a comprehensive history of the merge, which is rather nice.
ReplyDelete