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This voluminous work treating 18,000 individuals in all consists of genealogical notes on specific New York and New England families, as well as a miscellaneous section of source records pertaining to families of the region. The genealogical notes provide exact dates of births, marriages, and deaths of all members of a given family, working back to the original immigrants to this country and forward to the last quarter of the 19th century. The section of miscellaneous notes includes Bible records (with cross references to the above genealogies), records of burials in New York from 1727 to 1757, and an index of intermarriages for both New York and New England families. A dense 50-page index contains the names of all persons referred to in the genealogies.
A roster of the families of the members of the General Society of Mayflower Descendants. Compiled from the master cards of the lineages in the files of the General Society at Plymouth.
Abstracts of claims compiled in a WPA project in 1938, published in seven typescript volumes as "Georgia Indian depredation claims against the Creek Indians," dating from 1787-1825. This compilation was from original documents in the Georgia Dept. of Archives and History. An 8th volume has the spine title "Georgia Indian depredations 1827-1830," and is a part of this series of claims, but it is a federal document, entitled Indian Depredations in Georgia, 21st Congress, 1st session, House of Representatives, War Department, Document no. 25, and is dated 1830. These claims and letters tell a story of frontier life found nowhere else than in diaries and letters. They mention the deaths of husbands, wives and children and the loss of homes, horses and farm animals, crops and personal property. Many of these claims are witnessed by neighbors and local officials, so there are many names involved other than those of the claimants. This book contains abstracts of documents, full text of some documents which could not be easily abstracted, a name index and a place name index.--From Preface, p. iv.
The Tolstoy family claims to descend from a man named Indris who traveled from the Holy Roman Empire in the 1200s and converted to the Russian Orthodox Church. He became a Boyar in Chernigov and his son took the name of Konstantin. One of their descendants was Andrei who moved to Moscow in the 1400s and was given the name Tolstoy by Grand Prince Vasily II. Descendants live in Russia, throughout Europe and in other parts of the world.