Educational experiences by our experts, at your convenience
Whether you're just starting to explore your family history, or you're a seasoned researcher looking to gain new skills, American Ancestors offers a variety of online seminars in topics across the field of genealogy. Now, you can enjoy some of our most recent and popular courses at your convenience, including recorded lectures, handouts, activities, and more. Any course you purchase will be accessible through your American Ancestors account for the foreseeable future—course materials do not expire. Choose a course below and start learning today!
On Demand: Demystifying DNA: Getting Started with Genetic Genealogy
Advances in DNA research have had huge implications for the field of genealogy. Yet, with the growing number of companies and options, it can be difficult to know what test is best for you and how to interpret your results. In this online seminar, Senior Genealogist Melanie McComb will demystify the practice of using genetic testing to trace family roots.
Available for purchase until:
The Brue Family Learning Center
On Demand: Irish Land Records
Land records are a critical part of Irish family history research. As many public records were destroyed in 1922, land records become a bright spot in Irish genealogical research. Discussing—but also moving beyond—Griffith’s Valuation, this online seminar delves more deeply into leveraging land records in your family history research. NOTE: This course covers both Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland.
Available for purchase until:
The Brue Family Learning Center
On Demand: Basics of Early New England Research
As a group, 17th-century New Englanders are arguably one of the most studied groups on the planet, and thus descendants are blessed with a multitude of resources. This online course will discuss the settlement of and migrations within New England, how to locate and utilize original and published records, and strategies for breaking down brick walls. This course will cover the colonial period (1620–1776) in the area of what is today Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont.
Available for purchase until:
The Brue Family Learning Center
On Demand: Ohio Family History Research
Throughout its history as a territory and state, Ohio has long been a destination for people migrating for new opportunities, from early fur traders and homesteaders to African Americans travelling in the Great Migration of the 20th century. This four-part online seminar will provide an overview of the records, resources, repositories, and strategies for exploring your Ohio roots.
Available for purchase until:
The Brue Family Learning Center
On Demand: Using Probate Records in Family History Research
Probate records are crucial—but sometimes overlooked—sources for family historians. This online course will provide an in-depth tutorial on how to understand, locate, and leverage wills, inventories, guardianships, and other probate records in your family history research.
Available for purchase until:
The Brue Family Learning Center
On Demand: Researching Catholic Ancestors
If you have Catholic Ancestors, there is a wealth of information available when it comes to family history research. The Catholic Church keeps meticulous records of its congregants, and there are many records documenting baptisms, marriages, and more, which can help you trace your Catholic ancestors. Join us for this 5-session online seminar, where we’ll discuss the records, repositories, and strategies for tracing your Catholic ancestors.
Available for purchase until:
The Brue Family Learning Center
On Demand: Researching Scottish Ancestors
Scots have been migrating to and settling in America and Canada for centuries. Today, there are an estimated 25 million Americans of Scottish descent. Tracing your Scottish heritage is rewarding, but not without its challenges. This four-session online seminar will provide you with key historical context, strategies, and resources setting you on the right path to trace your ancestry back several generations in Scotland.
Available for purchase until:
The Brue Family Learning Center
On Demand: The Cock & Lion: French Design in British Historic Houses 2024
Enemies for centuries, the British and French frequently found common ground on art—French art, that is! Join Curator of Special Collections Curt DiCamillo for a brilliantly illustrated exposé of French design and decorative arts within British townhouses, country estates, and palaces.
Available for purchase until:
Arts & Architecture
On Demand: Civil War Research: Tracing Union & Confederate Ancestors
In Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address, he acknowledged the soldiers who fought and died in battle declaring, “the world will little note, nor long remember what we say here, but it can never forget what they did here.” This online course will delve into the many primary and published resources that exist to document your ancestors’ role in the Civil War and their contributions to either the Union or Confederate cause.
Available for purchase now:
The Brue Family Learning Center
On Demand: Researching Immigrant Ancestors to America, 1620–1965
For centuries, people have immigrated to America to escape religious or social persecution, claim a better life, or seek adventure. No matter what century your ancestors arrived in America, this online seminar will provide you with the historical context, records, resources, and research strategies for understanding immigration and naturalization in the United States since 1620.
Available for purchase until:
The Brue Family Learning Center
On Demand: From Plinth to Pen: How the English Country House Inspired the Writings of Jane Austen
Perhaps no novelist inspired the idealized vision of the English country house more than Jane Austen. The reality is that Jane herself visited many of the great houses of England and used them as models in almost all of her books. This lecture will examine country houses that inspired Jane and left us with a fanciful world of English rural beauty unequaled in literature.
Available for purchase until:
Arts & Architecture
On Demand: Louisiana Family History Research: Four Centuries of History and Genealogy
Characterized by the convergence of diverse cultures—primarily French, Spanish, African, Native American, and Caribbean—Louisiana embodies a unique blend of people, geography, and history; a unique blend that has had a lasting impact on how family historians trace their Louisiana roots. While the Indigenous people and cultures of Louisiana have existed for millennia, this four-week online course will focus on the four centuries since colonization.
The Brue Family Learning Center
On Demand: Expert Strategies for Breaking Down Genealogical Brick Walls
Research your ancestry long enough and you’re bound to hit a brick wall—the paper trail vanishes, the family seemingly disappears, and you’re unable to go back to earlier generations. Tackling a different research challenge each session, expert genealogists David Allen Lambert, Rhonda R. McClure, and Melanie McComb will provide real life examples and successful strategies for breaking down your genealogical brick wall.
Available for purchase until:
The Brue Family Learning Center
On Demand: Greed, Lust & Murder: King Henry VIII, the Tudor Court, and How It Changed England Forever
The Tudor dynasty was one of the most dramatic and troubled of all English royal families. Join Curator of Special Collections Curt DiCamillo for a sweeping lecture that sheds light on the Tudors' loves, personalities, art, architecture, and literature, all of which has come down to us today in many and surprising ways.
Available for purchase until:
Arts & Architecture
On-Demand: The 17th-Century Great Migration to New England and Beyond
The participants in the 17th-century Great Migration to New England were drawn from the most committed English protestant reformers, those who most wanted the Church of England to make a full break with the Church of Rome. In this five-week course, Director of the Great Migration Study Project Robert Charles Anderson will explain the who, what, and why of the mass movement of people to New England from Old England in the 1620s and 1630s and the subsequent migrations in the generations to follow.
Available for purchase until:
The Brue Family Learning Center
On Demand: New Jersey Research: Four Centuries of History and Genealogy
Throughout its history—from Dutch colony to English Province to statehood—New Jersey has been characterized by its ethnic and religious diversity. This online course will help fill those gaps, providing a century-by-century look at the records, resources, repositories, and research strategies essential to exploring your New Jersey roots. We will also look at the historical context, settlement patterns, and migrations within the state.
Available for purchase until:
The Brue Family Learning Center