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  • af Eric Eugene Johnson
    398,95 kr.

    This is a transcription of War of 1812 prisoner of war records of American sailors, marines, soldiers and merchantmen which were transcribed from the ledgers of the British Admiralty. Chatham received prisoners directly from the prison facilities at Halifax, Canada, and at Plymouth and Portsmouth in England. A large number of men were captured at the ports in Great Britain at the beginning of the war and sent to Chatham. The Royal Navy's Chatham Dockyard was the home of one of the three prisoner of war prison ship facilities which were used during the War of 1812 to house American prisoners of war. The facility had been used since 1796 to intern French prisoners of war during the Napoleonic Wars. A total of 3,955 Americans, including 543 African-Americans, were interned at Chatman before being transferred to Dartmoor, or released and sent back to the United States. The ledgers from Chatham include the partial listing of the crews from the U.S. Frigate President, the U.S. Brig Argus, the U.S. Schooners Growler and Julia, and the U.S. Revenue Marine Cutters James Madison and Surveyor. Mr. Johnson is a lineal descendant of seven veterans of the War of 1812, and he is the past president of the Society of the War of 1812 in the State of Ohio (2008-2011). He is currently the Registrar General for the General Society of the War of 1812; and has served as the Historian General (2011-2014) and the Archivist General (2014-2017) for this society.

  • af Mrs Joseph J Beals Sr & Mrs Sandra Kirchner
    248,95 kr.

    The town of Clayton was established on February 9, 1836 by order of its proprietors, Charles K. McCoy, John McCoy and Reuben K. McCoy. It is situated on the T. W. Railroad, at the junction of a road running towards Quincy and the road diverging to Keokuk, Iowa. The marriage and related entries in this work were abstracted from The Clayton Enterprise newspaper of Clayton, Illinois, dating from 1879 through 1900. Any items mentioning a family name, such as advertisements, jury lists, criminal court records and letters remaining at the post office have been abstracted. Useful information contained in each entry can include: wedding dates and places: name of spouse; name of clergy; and occupation. Surnames are alphabetically arranged for quick and easy reference.

  • - Comprising Sundry Notices of That Old City from the Period of the First Settlements in its Vicinity in the Year 1649, until the War of 1812: Together with Various Incidents in the History of Maryland Derived from Early Records, Public
    af David Ridgely
    338,95 kr.

    This fascinating historical journey begins in 1632; preceding the settlement in 1633 of the city originally known as Providence. This chronological account continues to the War of 1812, followed by a description of Annapolis and its more prominent public building, including the Naval Academy and St. John's College. Puritan settlers, conflict with Indians, disputes with England, churches, military organizations, General Washington's arrival, and much more are discussed. "In those periods where nothing immediately connected with Annapolis was found, incidents in relation to the history of the Province and State of Maryland, have been introduced." The Appendix contains an abundance of letters from notable figures such as General George Washington, Governor Lee, John Hancock, and others.

  • af Ruth Sparacio
    248,95 kr.

    Middlesex County, Virginia Order Book Abstracts, 1697-1700 contains entries from Middlesex County, Virginia Order Book No. 3, 1694-1705 beginning on page 170 and ending on page 336 for courts held March 1, 1696/7 through April 1, 1700. County court order books contain records of all matters brought before the court while in session. The information contained in these records may not appear elsewhere. The order books typically provide a synopsis of court cases in a relatively organized format. Records you may find include appointments of local officials, records of legal disputes such as property disputes, estate disputes, and disputes involving slaves and servants, certificates granted for apprehending runaway servants and delivering letters, and much more. This information is similar to our present day small claims and civil courts. An index to full-names, places and subjects adds to the value of this work.

  • af C H Turner
    418,95 kr.

    This county in southern Delaware was the site of the first Dutch settlement in the area in 1631. Initially, the county was only twelve miles wide and thirty miles long because what is now the western side of the county was claimed by Lord Baltimore until 1767 when the Maryland boundary was finally settled. "Previous to the settlement of the dispute between Lord Baltimore and Penn[,] Sussex County was only 30 miles long and 12 miles wide. That is the portion referred to in these records." This volume contains a wealth of records for that original county, including civil, court, church, and Bible records. The civil records include many letters, petitions, and resident lists; the court records include land grants, civil suits, wills, administrations, and marriage records; the church records include letters, petitions, subscriber lists, and the vestry records of St. Peter's Church for the early 1800s; the Bible records section includes a wealth of birth, marriage, and death data. Some Kent County records are also included. Several facsimile reprints of vintage photographs and an index to full-names, places and subjects add to the value of this work.

  • af Barbara C Baughan & Betty a Pilson
    278,95 kr.

    Birth records are an important research area for genealogists. Although Patrick County was formed from Henry County in 1791, birth records were not recorded for the county until 1853. This four-volume series contains abstracted records from the register at the Patrick County Courthouse, Stuart, Virginia, which provide name, date of birth, race, sex, and parents' names.

  • af Barbara C Baughan & Betty a Pilson
    298,95 kr.

    Birth records are an important research area for genealogists. Although Patrick County was formed from Henry County in 1791, birth records were not recorded for the county until 1853. This four-volume series contains abstracted records from Patrick County, which provide name, date of birth, race, sex, and parents' names. This volume contains 3,989 entries.

  • af Mary Marshall Brewer
    313,95 kr.

    This work consists primarily of deeds, but these early land records sometimes served as a "catch-all" for recording events including powers of attorney, patents, articles of agreement, acknowledgment of receipt of estate portion, deeds of gift to family members, contracts, and quit claims.

  • af Virginia D Stenley
    258,95 kr.

    Many names and relationships are uncovered in Chancery Court records. Abstracts of foreclosures, partition or sale of real estate to settle an estate, satisfy creditors, divorces etc. Every name and tract name abstracted.

  • af Sandra Barlau
    313,95 kr.

    Will Books are a good source in the search for slaves only if the owner named the slave(s). Many times a will lists property without specifying if it includes slaves. For example: "I will and bequeath to my (wife, son, daughter, etc.) all my estate both real and personal of every sort;" or, "...the property I have already given to my (wife, son, daughter, etc.)..." The documents often do not include the slave's name, sometimes only girl, runaway, boy, etc. Each chapter in this work contains information gleaned from one Will Book. The documents include Administrator's Estate, Executor and Guardian Accounts, Wills, and, Inventory and Appraisals. Each entry gives the name of the slave owner, page number, date, and type of document followed by a list of slaves. The new owner is listed if known. Surnames of the owner's children are indexed only if noted in the document. The slaves who were emancipated, freed or manumitted are listed in the index under Emancipated. A full-name index adds to the value of this work.

  • - Will Books 1-10, 1759-1829
    af Sandra Barlau
    283,95 kr.

    The author was inspired to create this helpful resource book while researching her second great-grandmother Mildred Timbers. It is not known how Mildred became a slave. Was Mildred willed to someone? Was she purchased at a sale? Was her mother already property when she was born? Without a helpful aid, like the books in this series, the author was faced with the daunting task of reading every page of every Will Book to find the answers. This is the book the author wished she had to help her with her research. Is your ancestor within these pages? Will books are a good source in the search for slaves only if the owner named the slave(s). This series provides researchers with easy access to information that could otherwise require several months of reading through microfilm. Each chapter contains one Will Book. Documents include administrators, estate, executors and guardian accounts, wills, inventory and appraisals. Entries list each slave owner, followed by the page number, date and type of document. The list of slaves follows and the new owner is listed if known. Surnames of the owner's children are indexed only if noted in the document. First names have been standardized in order to make it easier to search for a name. A full-name index adds to the value of this work. This series is a MUST for researchers of slaves and/or owners of Fauquier County, Virginia.

  • af An Irish C C
    223,95 kr.

    "Castledermot, properly Dysert-Diarmada, is a small town of about 700 inhabitants in County Kildare. The name by itself is worth talking about. It shows up the vicissitudes of Irish place-names; and it illustrates this, too, that much of the glory of the past, suggested by the original name, is obscured and hidden away by barbarous modern un-Irish terms." Chapters include: County Kildare: its clans, round towers, castles, monasteries and convents, and more; Dysert: what it means, the place and the word; Dyserts, What They Were: Croagh Patrick and Slieve Donard and others; The Lake Dysert; The Ocean Dysert; Faded Memories: Should Saints Be Forgotten?; The Irish Lay Brother; Towns Cradled in Hermits's Cells; A Duel Between Names: Dysert-Diarmada or Castledermot?; Dysert-Diarmada Wins as a Place Name; An Objection From Shakespeare; Irish Place-Names Disfigured: Loop Head, Mutton Island, The Ovens and others; Ireland as a National Art Gallery: battles, portraits, groups, legends, sports, historical events, penal scenes and landscapes; Dysert-Diarmada as a Painting: key to a gallery of local pictures; A Ready-Made History of Dysert-Diarmada: local writers, the Sacred Promontory, Camden's Mistake, the Gaelic League and supplementary facts. An Index of Place-Names Explained and a General Index complete this work.

  • af Monyene Stearns
    298,95 kr.

    This information is culled from local newspaper obituaries, cemetery records, death records and funeral home records. Typical entries include name, age, date and place of birth, date of death, names of spouse and children, and source of information.

  • af Monyene Stearns & Pat Fehler
    333,95 kr.

    This information is culled from local newspaper obituaries, cemetery records, death records and funeral home records. Typical entries include name, age, date and place of birth, date of death, names of spouse and children, and source of information.

  • af James Phinney Baxter
    473,95 kr.

    Revolutionary War historians as well as genealogists seeking ancestors in Maine will devour these documents, which dates from June 1766 to July 1777. Documents are arranged chronologically and are miscellaneous in nature, concerning land grants, Indian troubles and the increasing tension between the crown and the colonies. The first two documents concern the garrisons at Fort Pownall and Castle William. The next is a petition regarding a landowner's dispute with the government of New Hampshire, which ran a township line through his property. Petitions for the establishment of towns include names of the earliest settlers. The Boston Tea Party left in its wake an anxious state of vigilance and suspicion. Letters and petitions describe the difficulties of raising militias, the distress of the people in isolated areas lacking food and other supplies, the detainment of spies and other aspects of the prevailing instability. The final documents in this volume are letters from Meschech Weare to the council of Massachusetts Bay, "confirming the unhappy affair at Ticonderoga." and urging that "some spirited measures should be immediately taken." Fans of the famous Revolutionary War novels by Kenneth Roberts will recognize the names of ships, places and leaders who took part in the defense of the coast of Maine. Several exciting reports of naval battles are included. Read the account of the capture of the king's cutter at Machias in 1775, and the list of terrible losses following the attack by the British on Falmouth.

  • af Brent H Holcomb
    298,95 kr.

    Prince George Winyah Parish was established in 1721 from St. James Santee Parish. The first known register of Prince George Winyah Parish begins in 1815 and ends in 1916. The format of the original register has been followed as closely as possible. The second register covers baptisms, burials, confirmations, marriages, and lists of communicants, 1916-1936. The entries in these registers include slaves, Negroes, and free persons of color. Chapters include: Baptisms, 1815-1916; Confirmations, 1816-1909; Marriages, 1816-1911; Communicants, 1866-1915; Burials, 1816-1915; Communicants, 1916-1936; Baptisms, 1916-1936; Confirmations, 1916-1936; Burials, 1916-1936; and Marriages, 1916-1936. A sketch of the Prince George Winyah Church, a facsimile reprint of a marriage page from the original register, and a full-name index add to the value of this work.

  • - Houston to McBride, 1739-1856
    af Mary Marshall Brewer
    318,95 kr.

    The term guardian accounts can be misleading. These records span a greater range of human activity than one might envision. The fact that a child has lost his father creates records which reveal older siblings, widows and their new husbands, uncles, aunts, division of land, questions of guardian abuse, spouses of the older children - all the stuff that genealogy is made of! These records are filled with genealogical information covering a period in which there is a scarcity of data - from the 1750s to the 1850s. Information on relationships between parties is often revealed (stated or implied). Ages are evident, sometimes exact and other times approximate. Approximate dates of death can also be inferred. Clues to relative wealth are interspersed throughout. Names of court officials in the proceedings have been omitted for purposes of economy. Records are grouped by the decedent's surname. Mary Marshall Brewer has gleaned a myriad of records, condensing and re-arranging them in a most useable package. An index to full-names and places adds to the value of this work.

  • af Mary Frances Carey, Barry W Miles & Moody K Miles
    258,95 kr.

    This is the first volume of a planned series of Colonial Families of the Eastern Shore of Virginia. The first volume is devoted to the works of Mary Frances Carey, whereas subsequent volumes also include the works of Barry Miles and M. K. Miles. Mary Frances has devoted many years to research of early Accomack County families and is in the process of turning over her research to Barry and M. K., whose collaboration has generated a database of Accomack County families. The database initially focused on the upper portion of Accomack County, but it has expanded into the rest of Accomack and Northampton Counties. These three individuals have over twenty-five years of experience each with Accomack County families and the various local records, cemeteries, and people still living in Accomack County. Mary Frances has researched and locally printed over forty family booklets, and, with Barry and M. K., she has published the Tombstone Inscriptions of Upper Accomack County, Virginia. The Miles team published the Marriage Records of Accomack County, Virginia, 1854-1896 in 1997 and the Abstract of the Wills and Administrations of Accomack County, Virginia, 1800-1860 in 2000. They have also assembled over 40,000 names in a genealogy database representing hundreds of Accomack families. This volume is devoted to families of Accomack and Northampton Counties including descendants of: James Bonnewell, Richard Bundick, William Mason, Edward Thornton, Henry Trader/Armitrader, and Henry Wright. A full-name and place index adds to the value of this work.

  • af June Whitehurst Johnson
    163,95 kr.

    The records that have been abstracted in this book were found in a suit in Loudoun County, Virginia, suit number M:2491 Lane & West vs Evans et als 1771. It was thought before the discovery of these records that none of the records of Cameron Parish were in existence; therefore it was most exciting to find these few documents. The surviving records cover only a few years (1763-1767) and only a part of the parish. The area of the county covered is above Goose Creek and Little River to Fauquier County line. It appears in these records there is a tithable list for this district above Goose Creek and Little River for the year 1765. A full-name index adds to the value of this work.

  • af E M Sanchez-Saavedra
    268,95 kr.

    During the American Revolution men from the Old Dominion served in both Continental and state military establishments consisting of a sometimes bewildering array of regiments, battalions, corps, legions, detachments, and companies. A valuable aid to the s

  • af F Edward Wright
    258,95 kr.

    This volume continues to focus on families living in Kent County and Sussex County, tracing lineages of early settlers into the early 1800s. The primary sources of information are court records (probate and orphans' court), land records, and church records. Many of the early settlers in these counties were Quakers.

  • af Helen Cox Tregillis
    268,95 kr.

    This book compiles three years' worth of issues of a bi-monthly periodical of the same name; it draws information from over 75 counties throughout the state of Illinois inclusive of dates ranging throughout the 19th century. Entries have been gleaned from newspapers and various other sources of records, and include death records, burial records, marriage records, tax lists, deed records, court records, bond records and military service records, among other genealogically rich data.

  • - The Descendants of Jeremiah Johns (1788-1869), of Colleton County, South Carolina, of Wayne County, Georgia, and of Hamilton County, Florida.
    af Burton E Johns
    673,95 kr.

    Jeremiah Johns was born in South Carolina on November 18, 1788. He married circa 1809, probably in Wayne County, Georgia, and then settled in Hamilton County, Florida. A special forward by Vera Mallon, past chairman of the Florida Pioneers Committee of the Florida State Genealogical Society is included with copies of original documentation suggesting that this Jeremiah is the one who signed off on the deed of Jacob Johns of Walterboro, South Carolina, as of January 23, 1817. Jeremiah appears in what is now Hamilton County, Florida in 1829, and he was listed in the 1830 Territorial Census of Florida as the head of the family, so descendants of Jeremiah E. Johns, upon presentation of the proper evidence, should qualify for "Florida Pioneer Descendants Certificates." The Florida State Genealogical Society urges members who have territorial Florida ancestors to apply for this certificate. This book identifies the relationships of almost 4,000 descendants of Jeremiah, including the following major surnames: Johns, Bryan, Cheshire, Ellis, Hogan, Brown, Johnson, Mickler, Smith, McGhin, Hutchinson, McMullen. Stewart, Dorman, Williams, Peeples, Knight, Miller, Turner, and Ward. There are also over 700 other surnames of people who were touched by "Jeremiah's Brand." Over 300 of his descendants contributed information including birth, death, burial location, marriages, children, and other textual data on themselves and their ancestors. A full-name index that includes birth and death date (if available), a list of sources, and facsimile reprints of original documents (including maps) enhance the text. Burton Johns is a member of the National Genealogical Society, the Florida State Genealogical Society, the Suwannee Valley Historical Association, the Colleton County Genealogical Society, and numerous other local groups. He has been working on this project since 1987. He is a Florida Pioneer descendant.

  • - A Bibliography of Books about Tennessee Families
    af Donald M Hehir
    223,95 kr.

    With over 1,500 Tennessean surnames, Mr. Hehir provides, in one source, a comprehensive listing of all printed Tennessean genealogies and family histories that have made their way into major library collections across the U.S. The author researched library listings and catalogs covering many genealogical libraries, including the Library of Congress, the National Genealogical Society Library and the Library of the Daughters of the American Revolution, along with historical association libraries from Massachusetts to California. Many of the books deal with multiple families, some with non-Tennessee roots. Arranged for ease of use, the entries are presented alphabetically according to surname, with a cross-reference index to family and secondary names to help researchers find surnames that would otherwise remain buried within the text. No genealogist working with Tennessee families should be without this time-saving volume. The author has also added an appendix with helpful hints on "Accessing the Library of Congress records via the internet."

  • af Henry C Peden
    333,95 kr.

    This book contains information about the men and women from Maryland and Delaware who served in the military or in civil service and rendered aid to British and American soldiers during the war against the French and Indians. Approximately 6,000 soldiers, sailors and civilian supporters have been identified. In many cases genealogical information has been included about the soldier or patriot and his family. Names have been cross-referenced within the text, precluding the need for a separate index. This book should be a useful research tool for those seeking information about their Colonial Maryland and Delaware ancestors.

  • af Ph D Christopher DeMarco
    288,95 kr.

    This volume continues the series using a wide variety of primary and secondary records. It covers the following families: John Baskervyle/Baskerville, Henry Borodell, Ambrose Cobbs/Cobb, John Drewry, Ralph Graves, William and Charles Grymes, Edward Grymes, Anthony Lamb, Gabriel Maupin, Thomas Morgan, John Overstreet, Walter Patrick, John Rogers (and John Aduston), Captain William Rogers, The Reverend James Sclater, Nicholas Sebrell, Armiger Wade, Thomas Wade of James City County, Edward Wade, Thomas Wade of York County, and John Weldon. A full-name index adds to the value of this work. 'In all three volumes, while emphasis has been placed on using published copies of original records, the views of as many other reasonable interpreters of the historical record are included to give credible possibilities of where to begin to look to strengthen the historical record.'

  • af Ph D Christopher DeMarco
    333,95 kr.

    This volume continues the series using a wide variety of primary and secondary srecords. It covers the following families: Albrighton, (Albritton, Albridgton), Thomas Ballard, Chapman, John Doswell (Dozwell), Major James Goodwin, Isaac Gooding/Goodwin, John Gooding, John Hansford, William Hansford, Giles Moody (Mode), Augustine Moore, John Parsons, John and Stephen Pond, John Robinson, John Tomer (Toomer), Wagstaff. A full-name index adds to the value of this work.

  • - 1763-1767
    af James A McAllister
    243,95 kr.

    Abstracts from the Land Records of Dorchester County Maryland often reveal names of wives, sons, daughters, and other relationships. Included with the deeds are abstracts of land commissions that re-established the boundaries of land tracts at the request of a new owner. These hearings consisted of depositions of persons knowledgeable of the original markers. The individuals gave not only their knowledge of the history of the boundary markers of the tract of land in question but their own ages, and other bits of information. For research of families in Dorchester County, which has such a dearth of early material, the land records are a must. Fortunately, the abstracts were done with care and a keen knowledge of the records. An index to full-names and places adds to the value of this work.

  • af Ernest Poole
    438,95 kr.

    From his early years in the old world of peace and security, Ernest Poole has watched the great social forces here and abroad that have brought us over the Bridge of time into today's world of chaos and crisis. He is one of those rare men who have seen a great deal and been able to dramatize it; and he understood why things have happened. His book is packed with little stories, each one pointing to the larger events which were to come. His boyhood in Chicago in the nineties was full of lively incidents. After graduating from Princeton, then a college of a mere twelve hundred students, Ernest Poole went to live in New York on the lower East Side in the days when that was the melting pot. There he wrote stories of people and incidents that were part of his daily life. With his visit to Russia in 1905, the Bridge crosses into a world where he saw at first hand the early stirrings of revolution. Back in New York, Mr. Poole tells of writers he knew (Mark Twain, O. Henry, and others), of playwriting, the radical movement, and the writing of The Harbor. The year 1914 found him in Berlin and in the front-line German trenches doing articles for magazines in the United States, this country being still neutral. He visited Russia again in the first stages of the revolution, when many new political factions were giving rise to fresh discontent and the power of the Bolsheviki was growing day by day; by way of Siberia he returned to the United States and to Washington. The rest of the story tells of Wall Street in the mad twenties, the New Deal, life in fascist Italy, and life the White Mountains in New Hampshire. The Bridge is both an epic of vast social changes and the personal story of one who has felt and thought and grown in pace with the trends of his era. An index to full-names, places and subjects adds the value of this work.

  • af David Ellis Pendleton
    518,95 kr.

    This book contains the most complete genealogy of the Pendleton family to date. It includes all known descendants (with the Pendleton surname) of Philip Pendleton, the immigrant, and his wife, Elizabeth Hurt, whose descendents now number in the tens of thousands and are scattered throughout the United States. The family is considered from its known beginnings around 1500 in Manchester, England, through about 1920. The origin of the Pendleton name as well as historical perspectives that link thirteen generations of the bearers of this surname to their place and time are provided. Included are maps that show where Philip Pendleton (who came to Virginia from Norwich, England, in 1674) resided, as well as the home counties of the generations that followed. There is a wealth of vital and biographical information on thirteen generations of this Pendleton family and a complete full name index, with over 6,000 entries, that will allow the reader to easily trace a particular branch.