Display Your Heritage
With a Family Genealogy Tree

Include a Family Genealogy Tree in Your Ethical Will


Ensure That the Legacies of the Past Endure in the Future!

Your Ethical Will can help you produce a personal legacy document that will give your loved ones a thorough idea of your deepest ethical values, as well as the influences that shaped your life. A person's family members - past and present - are among his or her influences.

A family genealogy tree is one of the best ways to inform readers of your spiritual ethical will about the rich history and legacy of your family.

Do you know some fascinating facts about the lives of your great-great-grandparents? Are you worried that this precious information might be lost by future generations? Ensure that it is not, by incorporating a family tree into an ethical will.

Your personal legacy statement can include a diagram showing the lifetimes of each ancestor as well as his or her siblings, spouse, and children. Make a presentation of the entire history of your family, from the earliest known members to the present day, in an informative, visually appealing family genealong tree!

Looking at a family tree, the readers of your ethical will can quickly learn anything they did not know about the lifetimes and relationships of the people who went before them.

A great supplement to a family tree can be a series of stories about each of your family ancestors, along with factual information you know about where and how they lived, what they did as a profession, and what their characters and ethical values were like. Their lives, as well as yours, can serve as ethical examples to posterity, and you might just be the only person capable of perpetuating their spiritual legacy!

image of ancestor treeLook at Smart Draw's Ancestor Tree to build your Family geneology because with every generation, a new series of stories, experiences, and memories are added to your family. Make sure that previous generations' spiritual treasures are not subtracted with the passage of time! Some families can trace their ancestry back for hundreds of years, whereas others barely remember the people who came two generations before them. What is the difference between them?

The people who know their ancestors have passed on information about them from one generation to the next by writing memoirs, ethical wills, and other documents designed to last and speak to posterity. A family tree, too, goes a long way to help preserve these wonderful memories!

So consider adding a family genealogy tree when creating your ethical will. There is a wealth of moral and factual history and lessons in your family's past; you might be surprised at what you discover and pass on.