Sunday, March 22, 2026

The Persistent Problem of Misattributed Ancestor Photos

We’ve all been there: you use a photo of an ancestor in a post or on a page, only to find it later on Ancestry (or another site) completely misidentified. Once those family trees are copied, the error propagates indefinitely.

There is rarely an easy fix. Even after a friendly correction, most users will thank you for the insight but leave their digital trees untouched, allowing the error to persist.

You can’t control what other people put in their trees, but you can write up the info that you know to be correct. Include the specific evidence—such as dating of clothing, hairstyles, or the type of photograph (like a tintype or daguerreotype)—that proves who the subject is (or isn’t). AI could help you to do this.



Copy the evidence info into a Google Doc, include a small version of the photo for reference, and then take a screenshot of that entire page. Upload that screenshot as an image to the ancestor’s profile. This ensures that the evidence and the image are permanently linked, making a real effort to stop the error in its tracks. Even if it doesn't stop the error from being passed, and it likely won't, at least you will have made an effort in getting the correct information out there.

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