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We can place an ancestor on a map at any given point in time. We know their occupation, their neighbors, their faith. In some cases, we know whether they struggled with their mental health. We know how many children they had, whether they owned land, whether they ever ran into trouble with the law.

What we don’t know is what they looked like.

That’s the part that gets us. Which side of the family did we take after? Did great-grandmother have the same nose? Was great-grandfather as serious as his death record makes him sound?

Family photographs answer questions that documents can’t. And more of them exist than most researchers realize — in archives, online trees, church directories, orphaned photo sites, and boxes sitting in cousins’ closets right now.

Here are nine places to look.

Black and white old family photo of young girl and her father

Family photographs provide a unique window into our ancestors’ lives, bringing names and dates on a family tree to life. These visual connections help us understand who our ancestors were as people—their appearances, fashion choices, and even personalities.

When you locate old family photographs, you gain:

  • Visual confirmation of family resemblances
  • Context about time periods and living conditions
  • Personal connections to ancestors beyond vital records
  • Clues about relationships and family dynamics

Many genealogy researchers focus primarily on documents and records, but photographs can reveal details that written records simply cannot.

9 Effective Ways to Find Old Family Photos

1.Ask Close and Extended Family Members

I know. I know.  This seems pretty basic but one of the most direct approaches to finding family photos is reaching out to extended family members, but remember family resemblance runs through collateral lines, too. Often, relatives you rarely contact may have albums, boxes, or digital collections of family photos you’ve never seen.

Consider that your ancestors shared family photos. My great grandmother was a young woman when the Brownie camera gained popularity in the early 1900’s, and photography became more affordable for the general public. She shared a large number of photos with her cousins and her friends. Many of those photographs found their way down collateral family lines.

Red and white words on tan background reading How to Find Old Family Photo. Collage of black and white photos under words.

Start with these relatives:

  • Older aunts, uncles, and cousins
  • Family members who inherited items from shared ancestors
  • The designated “family historian” in different branches
  • Relatives who still live in ancestral hometowns

How to approach family members:

  1. Begin with a friendly explanation of your research
  2. Ask specific questions about photos of particular ancestors
  3. Offer to share what you’ve already collected
  4. Suggest digitizing their photos to preserve them

Many successful genealogists report finding old family photos simply by asking relatives they hadn’t connected with in years.

2. Archives and Libraries

Archives and libraries house extensive photograph collections that might include images of your ancestors. These institutions preserve visual records from communities, organizations, and families that span generations.

Where to search in archives:

  • County historical societies with local photograph collections
  • State archives with regional historical photos
  • University special collections focusing on community history
  • Religious archives documenting congregation members
  • Government repositories with institutional photographs
  • Cemetery offices that sometimes maintain photo records

Many archives now offer both digital collections accessible online and physical collections available only on-site. When planning an archive visit, contact staff beforehand to learn about their photograph holdings and any specialized collections relevant to your family’s location or affiliations.

Archive expert Melissa Barker (known as “The Archive Lady”) shares a valuable insider tip: “Always ask archive staff about uncataloged photograph collections. Many repositories have boxes or albums of photographs that haven’t been processed into their formal catalog systems yet.” [Watch my interview with Melissa where she shares more expert photograph research strategies.]

When visiting archives in person:

  1. Bring identifying information about your ancestors
  2. Ask about community photograph collections from relevant time periods
  3. Check newspaper clipping files, which often contain photographs
  4. Look through organizational records where ancestors might have been members
  5. Request access to manuscript collections that might include family photos

Remember that many smaller archives operate with limited hours and staff, so calling ahead can save you time and help staff prepare materials for your visit.

long aisle of shelving with archive folders and boxes.

3.Search Social Media and Photo-Sharing Platforms

Social media and photo-sharing platforms have become valuable repositories for historical photographs, with many institutions and individuals using these services to share and preserve images.

Flickr: An Underutilized Genealogy Resource

Flickr has emerged as a significant platform for genealogy research, with numerous archives, libraries, and historical societies using it to host their digital photo collections. Unlike traditional archive websites, Flickr offers powerful search capabilities and community engagement features.

Key institutions with Flickr collections:

  • Library of Congress (with over 34,000 historical photographs)
  • National Archives
  • Smithsonian Institution
  • State historical societies
  • University special collections
  • Local libraries and history rooms
  • Community historical groups

How to search Flickr effectively:

  1. Use the advanced search options to filter by dates and keywords
  2. Search for location names combined with family surnames
  3. Look for group collections focused on specific regions
  4. Check comments on photos for additional identification information
  5. Follow institutional accounts for updates on new photo additions

Beyond Flickr, other platforms like Instagram, Pinterest, and dedicated Facebook groups now host curated historical photo collections. Many small historical societies maintain active social media accounts where they regularly share community photographs from their archives.

Once you find them, identifying them in the next challenge.

Old family photo album which is a great place to find old family photos

4. Track Down School Yearbooks and Publications

Yearbooks provide a remarkable opportunity to find photographs of ancestors at various life stages. These publications captured not only formal portraits but also candid moments of students participating in clubs, sports, and special events.

Where to find digitized yearbooks:

Physical yearbook repositories:

  • Public libraries in the town where your ancestor attended school
  • County and state historical societies
  • University and college archives (for alumni yearbooks)
  • High school libraries (many maintain historical collections)
  • Local genealogical societies
  • State archives and libraries

Research tips for yearbook searches:

  1. Check multiple years—not just graduation years
  2. Look through activity pages and club photos
  3. Examine faculty sections if your ancestor was a teacher
  4. Review special event pages featuring community members
  5. Search for siblings and cousins who might appear in group photos

Many researchers overlook yearbooks from elementary and middle schools, which often contain class group photos. These publications were typically produced in smaller quantities but can be found in local historical collections.

Don’t limit your search to student photos. Yearbooks often featured parents involved in PTA organizations, community sponsors, and special events that included family members of students.

Learn how school yearbooks can help build your family tree in How To Find Your Ancestors in School Yearbooks!

🖼️Found some photos but not sure what to do with them next?

My Cracking the Family Photo Code webinar walks you through the full process — from dating the photograph to identifying who’s in it. Get instant access →

5. Search Church Directories and Religious Archives

Church directories represent an often-overlooked source of family photographs, capturing ancestors in both individual portraits and group settings. These publications typically include family units, making them especially valuable for seeing multiple generations together.

Why church directories are valuable photo sources:

  • They often include formal family portraits taken by professional photographers
  • Many directories date back to the early 1900s for established congregations
  • Smaller churches frequently photographed their entire membership
  • Directories typically identify individuals by name and sometimes family relationships
  • They capture everyday appearance rather than just special occasions
  • Some directories include activity photos showing church events and committees

How to locate church directories:

  • Contact the church directly if it still exists
  • Reach out to denomination regional offices for records of closed churches
  • Check with current members who might have personal copies
  • Visit local libraries that maintain community history collections
  • Inquire at county historical societies and archives
  • Search genealogical society holdings in the area
  • Look for church archive collections at affiliated religious colleges

Research strategies for church directories:

  1. Identify all churches your ancestors might have attended, not just their primary denomination
  2. Check multiple years, as directories were often published periodically (every 5-10 years)
  3. Look through activity and committee pages where active members might appear
  4. Search for extended family members who attended the same congregation
  5. Review anniversary booklets that often included historical photographs

When contacting churches, reach out to the church historian. Churches of all sizes often have an official or unofficial historian named.

Beyond directories: Many churches maintained photograph collections documenting baptisms, confirmations, Sunday School classes, choir groups, and special events. These images often remain in church archives or have been transferred to denominational historical societies.

Colorized old family photo of woman in plaid dress and sunbonnet.

6. Explore Orphaned Photo Websites and Vintage Photo Marketplaces

Family photographs sometimes become separated from their families through estate sales, antique shops, or decades of moves and estate splits. Dedicated websites now work to reconnect those images with descendants.

Major orphaned photo websites:

How to search effectively:

  1. Use multiple spelling variations of surnames
  2. Search by geographical location as well as names
  3. Check back periodically — new photos are added regularly
  4. Register for email alerts when photos matching your criteria are uploaded
  5. Submit your own contact information for anyone searching descendants of your ancestors

Don’t limit your search to direct ancestors. Photos of siblings, cousins, and extended relatives can surface family resemblances — and sometimes your direct ancestor appears in a group shot you weren’t expecting.

When you do find a match, the work isn’t over. Once you’ve located an orphaned photo that might belong to your family, you’ll need to figure out who’s actually in it. These tips on identifying the mystery faces you find are a practical next step.

7. Family History Books

Published family histories can contain photographs you won’t find anywhere else — images contributed by multiple branches of the family, spanning several generations, that never made it into any digital archive or online tree.

Where to find them:

Search strategies:

  1. Search by surname combined with “family history” or “genealogy”
  2. Try spelling variations of your family name
  3. Search by region — many family histories are organized geographically
  4. Check the surname resources at major genealogical libraries
  5. Contact genealogical societies in relevant locations

Early in my research, a fellow genealogist pointed me to a family history book sitting in a library three miles from my house. It had a photograph of my GGG grandparents. I hadn’t known to look there. The introduction and acknowledgments sections are worth reading carefully too — they often name who contributed photographs, which can lead you to living relatives with more.

Many family history books published before the digital age contain photographs that have never been scanned or shared online. They’re unique. And once you’ve collected them, organizing them is the next step.age contain photographs that have never been digitized or shared online, making them unique resources for visual family history.

8. Online Family Trees

As genealogy researchers, we know to be careful when getting information from someone’s family tree. We never accept the information as fact unless we can confirm the facts ourselves. You can use these online family trees as clues, and many contain those coveted old family photos.

If you find a photograph of your ancestor in an online family tree, I recommend you reach out to the tree owner. You are both researching the same family line, and they may have additional photos they haven’t uploaded to their tree.

Where to check for photos in online family trees:

Tips for using online family trees for photos:

  1. Check all available media attachments on ancestor profiles
  2. Look for “Gallery” or “Media” sections of online trees
  3. Search public member trees using your ancestor’s name with “photo” or “picture” in the search terms
  4. Review shared trees of your DNA matches, who often add photos
  5. Be respectful when contacting tree owners—offer to exchange information

Many genealogists have found that photos appear in online trees when distant cousins have inherited family albums from different branches of the family.

If you find a photograph of your ancestor in an online family tree, I recommend you reach out to the tree owner. You are both researching the same person and they may have other photographs for that family.

Simple, and more effective than most researchers expect. A basic Google search for your ancestor’s name can surface photographs shared on personal websites, local historical society pages, or family blogs that never appear in genealogy-specific databases.

How to search effectively:

  1. Type the ancestor’s name and click “Images” in the results
  2. Add qualifiers — birthplace, death place, occupation
  3. Include family relationships: “John Smith family Rockford Illinois”
  4. Try unusual name combinations specific to your family
  5. Add a date range: “James Williams 1880-1920” narrows results considerably

If you find a photograph and want to trace where else it might exist online — or find other versions of the same image — Google’s reverse image search is worth a separate strategy. Upload the photo instead of searching by name, and see what comes back.

Have you found old family photos in an unusual place? Share your experience in the comments below.

Before you start the search, it helps to know what you’re looking at.

Grab my free guide — What Is That Family Photo Really Telling You? — and learn how to read the clues hiding in plain sight.

Download it free →

Keep Learning with These Posts and Video

lisa lisson

About Lisa

I believe researching your genealogy does not have to be overwhelming. All you need is a solid plan, a genealogy toolbox and the knowledge to use those tools.

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27 Comments

  1. Mary says:

    Than you, much needed information in above article regarding photos. Mary

    1. LisaL says:

      You are welcome! So glad you found the information helpful!

  2. Karl Gansberg says:

    My biggest complaint is when you find matches thru DNA thru ancestry.com, and other similar genealogy sites, you draw up a message to send to people who are very close matches and those people will not reply. Why do people who put up a tree and then they ignore any requests for further information, they refuse to reply to your messages you send them. Another complaint is that when they put up a tree on-line, they make it private, but they readily are using the trees others have posted have for their own gains. Pretty selfish if you think about it.

    1. LisaL says:

      Often I think people who are DNA matches without trees are more interested in knowing the generalities of where they came from and are not genealogy researchers themselves. It can be trying when we are trying to break down those brick walls!

    2. Cathy Anderson says:

      I totally agree!! I have about hundred old photos, documents etc… that I downloaded to Ancestry and my tree is public. All my info, photos are free for for anyone to use and put on their families trees but I too get frustrated with families that have private trees that will not share what they have with me but use my photos and info. I hear some people say ” Privacy” well when did family history have HIPPA laws? I still have computer card with hundreds of pics i got from a cousin that i scanned but did so that i am going to have to get a program and edit them all and i still want to get more pics from other cousins as we lost our photos when i was young to a fire. Ancestry is not easy work

  3. Sue says:

    I have found photos in Passport Applications on Ancestry.

    1. LisaL says:

      Passport applications are another great potential source for an ancestor’s photo. Thanks for the reminder!

  4. Debbi says:

    I too have found several pictures in passport applications!

  5. Ann Haviland Amadori says:

    I often see photos of people at findagrave.com on their memorial page.

    And my husband and I found one on a grave marker for his paternal grandmother in a cemetery in Italy!

    1. LisaL says:

      Wow, finding a photo on a grave marker is amazing!

  6. Karl Gansberg says:

    Ann. Excellent suggestion.

  7. Jacki Wilson says:

    I belong to a group on Facebook called Lost and Found Genealogy Pictures. Groups like this are nice because absolute strangers who find pictures either in old albums, or maybe shopping in antique or thrift shops, etc. will post photos and a lot of times there will even be a notation of a name on it. They want nothing more than to reunite these photos with their real families. Or, if they have one that is an unknown in their own collection, they post their family names and places and ask if anyone may know how the person/s in the photo may connect or be related. Sometimes they are lucky enough to actually put a name to the face, and learn unexpected information that they would never have found otherwise.

    Also, if you are searching in a particular location, I would strongly suggest joining a Facebook genealogy site for that area. For example, I belong to one for Clinton County New York, because my HUGE brick wall is with my third great grandparents who lived there and all their children were born there before coming to Ohio. I know they were born in Quebec area, but I cannot fetnover the hurdle of who their parents are and how did they end up in NY? By following this FB group, I am able to connect with other people who are also researching their family in the same place in the same time frame, and who may be able to share or exchange information. Also, many times, people have also posted photos there trying to find out, “does anyone know…?”

    I hope you may find these helpful. I know I do!

    1. LisaL says:

      Excellent suggestions! Thank you for sharing these.

    2. Gloria Robles says:

      I will be looking at that website on Facebook. Thanks for the info!

  8. Roma Walker Deakin says:

    I found pictures of ancestors in a 1902 Plat Book of St. Clair County, Missouri. The last several pages of the plat book were devoted to pictures of local individuals/couples. I’m not sure how the individuals were selected. Maybe they contributed to the publishing cost, or maybe they were just somewhat known in the county. Great surprise!

    1. LisaL says:

      That was a nice find! It’s also a great reminder to check the back of the book!

  9. Ava (Sherlock) Cohn says:

    For those genealogists looking for Jewish family photographs, I have a small gallery of photographs from families I have worked with. It can be found on my website, http://www.sherlockcohn.com. The gallery is called “Matchmaker” and can also be accessed from google if people search on a specific surname. The gallery is small at the moment but I have many new photos that will be coming online in the coming months.

    1. LisaL says:

      Ava, that’s an interesting resource. I look forward seeing more photos!

  10. Ava (Sherlock) Cohn says:

    Thanks, Lisa.