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Genealogy 101: Translation Tools for Your Spanish-Language Research

Photo: a classroom at the De La Salle University in Manila, Philippines. Credit: Malate269; Wikimedia Commons.

Introduction: In this article – in honor of Cinco de Mayo this Sunday – Gena Philibert-Ortega provides tips and links to resources to help you translate Spanish-language newspapers and records. Gena is a genealogist and author of the book “From the Family Kitchen.”

With Cinco de Mayo celebrations this Sunday, some genealogists will be inspired to explore their Hispanic roots this weekend. Researching your Spanish-speaking ancestors in old newspapers and genealogical documents can be intimidating if you don’t read or speak Spanish – but it doesn’t have to be. With a little planning and preparation, you can be ready to tackle that branch of your family tree.

Photo: Cinco de Mayo parade in Saint Paul, Minnesota. Credit: Rena Dehler; Wikimedia Commons.

Before you even begin to search for your ancestor, I would recommend compiling a research guide to help you with the resources you need to research your family. Your research guide should include information about the place/s your ancestor lived and take into consideration resources that might help you answer your research questions. This guide should include maps, links to online genealogical collections, relevant repositories, and research tools – such as letter writing and word guides – so that you can research non-English newspaper articles and records.

Don’t forget to identify Spanish-language newspapers in GenealogyBank and add those to your research guide so that you can learn more about your ancestor and their life.

Prensa (San Antonio, Texas), 23 September 1934, page 6

Plenty of online tools exist to help you translate and conduct searches for Spanish-language historical newspapers and documents. Consider what you want to learn about your ancestor and then identify genealogically relevant words that might be used to describe a birth, marriage, or a death. The following are just some of the tools that may be of help.

Prensa (San Antonio, Texas), 20 January 1936, page 5

If you want to do more than some simple translation, consider learning Spanish. Today, many different options exist to learn a language – including books, website tutorials on YouTube, and apps for your mobile device. Apps to consider include the free Duolingo. A Google search will bring up multiple options for learning a language.

But I think it’s important to point out that you don’t need to learn how to speak a language in order to read Spanish-language newspapers and records. With the translation tools above, you can be searching and finding what you need. Se puede investigar su historia familiar en español.

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