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Describes the kinds of population, immigration, military, and land records found in the National Archives, and shows how to use them for genealogical research.
This book is the answer to the perennial question, "What's out there in the world of genealogy?" What organizations, institutions, special resources, and websites can help me? Where do I write or phone or send e-mail? Once again, Elizabeth Bentley's Address Book answers these questions and more. Now in its 6th edition, The Genealogist's Address Book gives you access to all the key sources of genealogical information, providing names, addresses, phone numbers, fax numbers, e-mail addresses, websites, names of contact persons, and other pertinent information for more than 27,000 organizations, including libraries, archives, societies, government agencies, vital records offices, professional bodies, publications, research centers, and special interest groups.
This genealogy notebook contains individual data sheets for 127 ancestors, giving you an organized way to record your ancestors' names, and the names of their parents, brothers and sisters, as well as their birth dates, birthplaces, marriages, children, death dates, burial places, biographies and so forth. The last chapter of the notebook is an index of all the ancestors, so you'll know where to find each one's data sheet. This notebook helps you make a family tree that includes seven generations using a so-called Ahnentafel. Furthermore, it has specific pages for notes about the places your ancestors lived, church records, archives and alternative name spellings. To help you keep track of your searches, the notebook offers a research log and to do list. And to keep track of your documents, it also offers a file index.
A two volume set which provides researchers with more than 70,000 links to every conceivable genealogical resource on the Internet.
Profiling more than 1400 print and electronic sources, this book helps connect librarians and researchers to the most relevant sources of information in genealogy and biography.
In this work, Bruce Brandt and his father, Edward, furnish us with the surname of every German-speaking individual who appears in thirteen authoritative histories--eleven of them written in German--that document the massive emigration of Germanic individuals to Eastern Europe. In all, this work lists 19,720 surnames of German-speaking ancestors who emigrated to Russia, Poland, Romania, and elsewhere in Eastern Europe. In the introductory chapters to the book the authors provide an extremely informative history of German settlement in Eastern Europe and detailed summaries of each of their sources.