The Digital Library of American Slavery indexes thousands of petitions and court documents that directly or indirectly involve slaves. Your enslaved relative or your slaving owning relative may be located in this index.
http://library.uncg.edu/slavery/about.aspx
Images of the documents are not included, but the index is invaluable.
Tuesday, May 14, 2013
Blank Agricultural Census Forms
These pages, located on the United States Bureau of the Census website, provide information on United States agricultural census from 1850-1900. http://www.census.gov/history/pdf/agcensusschedules.pdf
Tuesday, May 7, 2013
My Genealogy Blogs
For those of you who did not know, this is not my only genealogy blog. Here's list with the links. Enjoy!
North American English Dialects
This website may be of interest to some of our readers who have an interest in dialects: North American English Dialects, Based on Pronunciation Patterns
Monday, May 6, 2013
Was Your Ancestor a Member of the Brethren Church?
There are digital scans of nearly 750 items from the Brethren church archives on Archive.org.
From the index page:
The Mission of the Brethren Digital Archives is to digitize some or all of the periodicals produced from the beginning of publication to the year 2000 by each of the Brethren bodies who trace their origin to the baptism near Schwarzenau, Germany in 1708.
From the index page:
The Mission of the Brethren Digital Archives is to digitize some or all of the periodicals produced from the beginning of publication to the year 2000 by each of the Brethren bodies who trace their origin to the baptism near Schwarzenau, Germany in 1708.
Friday, May 3, 2013
Minneapolis City Directories
There are a variety of Minneapolis city directories online at this site hosted by the Hennepin County Library http://box2.nmtvault.com/Hennepin2/jsp/RcWebBrowse.jsp
Thursday, May 2, 2013
US Pension Indexes Online at FamilySearch
I received this summary of military pension indexes that are online from the lady who obtains copies of things for me from the National Archives. I thought I'd pass it along to blog readers:
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All of the pension files noted on these indexes can be scanned from the original documents at NARA DC with the exception of the Revolutionary War. Those files are on microfilm--originals cannot be scanned.
The items online at FamilySearch--which is what these links are for--are finding aids only, not the actual records.
REVOLUTIONARY WAR:https://www.familysearch.org/ search/collection/1417475
WAR OF 1812 - The FGS volunteers are working to scan the 1812 pensions in color and they are being put on Fold3 (for free--through "D" as of this post) and are free without a subscription. https://www.familysearch.org/ search/collection/1834325
"OLD WARS" (1815-1926):https://www.familysearch.org/ search/collection/1979425
INDIAN WARS (1817 to 1898):https://www.familysearch.org/ search/collection/1979427
MEXICAN WAR:https://www.familysearch.org/ search/collection/1979390
CIVIL WAR - Besides the soldiers, this also includes Navy pension cards, which are difficult to read. The cards turned very dark when they were microfilmed, because the person doing the filming had the machine set to scan white cards that had the soldiers' pensions and did not adjust the machine for the blue sailors' pension cards:
https://www.familysearch.org/ search/collection/1919699
SPANISH-AMERICAN WAR - The Civil War index (above) is for claims filed up to about 1930. It includes many Spanish-American War pension cards. The cards look the same as the Civil War, but any veterans of the SA War will have a tiny little letter handwritten "s" beside the word "invalid" next to where the application number is written.
------------------------------
All of the pension files noted on these indexes can be scanned from the original documents at NARA DC with the exception of the Revolutionary War. Those files are on microfilm--originals cannot be scanned.
The items online at FamilySearch--which is what these links are for--are finding aids only, not the actual records.
REVOLUTIONARY WAR:https://www.familysearch.org/
WAR OF 1812 - The FGS volunteers are working to scan the 1812 pensions in color and they are being put on Fold3 (for free--through "D" as of this post) and are free without a subscription. https://www.familysearch.org/
"OLD WARS" (1815-1926):https://www.familysearch.org/
INDIAN WARS (1817 to 1898):https://www.familysearch.org/
MEXICAN WAR:https://www.familysearch.org/
CIVIL WAR - Besides the soldiers, this also includes Navy pension cards, which are difficult to read. The cards turned very dark when they were microfilmed, because the person doing the filming had the machine set to scan white cards that had the soldiers' pensions and did not adjust the machine for the blue sailors' pension cards:
https://www.familysearch.org/
SPANISH-AMERICAN WAR - The Civil War index (above) is for claims filed up to about 1930. It includes many Spanish-American War pension cards. The cards look the same as the Civil War, but any veterans of the SA War will have a tiny little letter handwritten "s" beside the word "invalid" next to where the application number is written.
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