Genealogy periodicals don't get enough respect as research sources. And the Periodical Source Index (PERSI) -- once a print volume, now a virtual entity, but always based at the Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center in Fort Wayne -- is almost the only way to get at them in bulk. (And that's important because people often publish where they are living and not where the ancestors were.)
Having used it for years, I recently learned that it has always been designed as a subject index -- not a
title index nor an every-name index. This means that when you title your great new article, putting more than three surnames in the title will not help! The rule is that up to
three principal surnames covered in the article or transcription qualify
as "subjects" to be indexed; beyond that, not. I'm sorry if I misled
anybody on this point.
The general subject headings PERSI uses are:
* biography
* cemeteries
* census records
* church records
* court records
* deeds
* directories
* history
* institutions
* land records other than deeds
* maps
* military
records
* miscellaneous
records
* naturalization records
* obituaries
* passenger lists
* probate records other than wills
* school
records
* tax records
* vital records
* voter records
* wills
Now and again folks ask for a checklist of important source types so that they don't miss any. There is no such animal, and no checklist you can run down in any given case and be sure you haven't missed something. But for a
quick rundown of generally available record types, here you have it!
When you think about it, there is an awful lot of research
that never gets known beyond the local or state periodical level. I
would hesitate to start a sweepstakes for the "most underused" record
type, considering that there are so many contenders, but genealogy
periodicals are very much underused in my experience. I think the new Find My Past interface will entice more of us to use them (it's already got me going!). Those of us
who live close enough to visit the Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center on a regular basis can use that search function, and then locate
the promising originals on our own on the site -- #1 in the world for genealogy periodicals. For this purpose I would rather be in Fort Wayne than in Salt Lake City!
Harold Henderson, "What I knew about PERSI that wasn't so," Midwestern Microhistory: A Genealogy Blog, posted 22 February 2014 (http://midwesternmicrohistory.blogspot.com : viewed [date]). [Please feel free to link to the specific post if you prefer.]
Saturday, February 22, 2014
What I knew about PERSI that wasn't so
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Harold Henderson
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Labels: ACPLGC, Find My Past, Fort Wayne, genealogy periodicals, PERSI
Friday, July 5, 2013
Nine indexes and finding aids on the web site
Continuing our holiday observance of free, here are five indexes and four finding aids available in full for your consultation at Midwestroots.net:
INDIANA
1857 Porter County, Indiana, Assessor's Book (all townships)
1902-1933 Indiana small city directories on microfilm; where to find specific cities and years on 5 otherwise unlabeled films, Adams County to Winchester.
List of Indiana newspapers available at the Mishawaka Heritage Center.
Finding Ancestors in Fort Wayne: The Genealogist's Unofficial One-Stop Guide to the Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center
ILLINOIS
1902-1933 Illinois small city directories on microfilm: where to find specific cities and years on 12 otherwise unlabeled films, Addison to Winfield.
MICHIGAN
1902-1935 Michigan small city directories on microfilm: where to find specific cities and years on 7 otherwise unlabeled films, Allegan to Sturgis.
MIDWEST
List of Midwestern city directories available on microfilm at the Valparaiso Public Library.
NEW YORK
Estate Papers 1807-1930, Box 2, Allegany County, New York, indexed by name and initial image number as found in the FamilySearch collection, “New York, Probate Records, 1629-1972.” These would be deaths in the 1830s and 1840s.
FHL MICROFILM
FHL
microfilms already in the Midwest, including a listing by number of
those held at the Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center.
Harold Henderson, "Nine indexes and finding aids on the web site," Midwestern Microhistory: A Genealogy Blog, posted 5 July 2013 (http://midwesternmicrohistory.blogspot.com : accessed [access date]). [Please feel free to link to the specific post if you prefer.]
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Labels: ACPLGC, Allegany County New York, city directories, FHL microfilm, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan, Midwest Roots, Mishawaka Heritage Center, newspapers, Porter County Indiana, tax records, Valparaiso Public Library


















