This webinar follows the life and service of Private Gandolfo Scarnici, an Italian-born American soldier of World War I, to demonstrate how military and genealogical records can be woven into a rich family narrative. Using one man’s story—from a Sicilian village to New Jersey mills, through training camps, the Meuse-Argonne offensive, and home again—the presenter shows how to locate, interpret, and correlate diverse sources, even when key files were destroyed in the 1973 personnel records fire. The case study highlights strategies that any genealogist can adapt to uncover an ancestor’s military path, social context, and postwar life.
Turning a “burned” file into a full story
The webinar explains how to work around destroyed Official Military Personnel Files by combining auxiliary pay records, state adjutant general files, draft registrations, unit muster rolls, and transport lists. Viewers learn how each fragment adds a different layer—enlistment details, unit assignments, promotions, overseas dates, and combat participation—until a surprisingly complete service history emerges.
Placing ancestors in their historical and social landscape
Beyond documents, the presentation emphasizes context: Italian immigration, prejudice and loyalty pressures, changing neutrality policies, the Selective Service Act, enemy alien regulations, and the Zimmerman Telegram. Understanding this backdrop helps genealogists interpret why an ancestor enlisted, how draft classifications worked, and what daily life may have felt like for ethnic communities during wartime.
Decoding uniforms, numbers, and unit structure
The case shows how service numbers, shoulder patches, collar discs, and campaign ribbons reveal whether a soldier was drafted or regular army, the division and brigade they belonged to, where they trained, and which battles they likely saw. Morning reports and published orders of battle then refine the picture to specific locations, dates, and actions on the Western Front.
Genealogists who want to see how all these sources work together—in real time, with document images, artifacts, and step-by-step reasoning—are encouraged to watch the full webinar. Viewing the complete presentation will provide a deeper understanding of both the records and the research logic behind them, and will help apply the same methods to other World War I ancestors. After watching, explore the additional resources listed in the syllabus, where curated links, archives, and suggested readings offer further guidance for advancing military and family history research.
Comments (22)
Very interesting. I learned some new stuff and learned I have been using some of the data already. I also found out why the Navy file I ordered was complete. The Navy did not burn.
A comprehensive digging into World War I research
Good information. I really like how Michael followed the one person through the entire war and his life before and after. Always like case studies!
Great presentation
Michael's presentations are always filled with great examples and information. The syllabus is extremely helpful for doing my own research at a later time.
Wow, such a thorough and interesting webinar with lots of tips.
WOW! The level of detail was amazing - both the outline of WWI history and the types of records available re WWI soldiers. Thank you so much!
A great deal of information.