Digitized newspapers are everywhere, but so many different outfits -- both free and commercial -- are getting in on the act that it can be hard to keep with which ones are available where your ancestors lived. Kenneth R. Marks over at The Ancestor Hunt has a series of listings by state, including Wisconsin, Illinois, Ohio, Michigan, and Indiana, as well as New York, Pennsylvania, Kentucky, Tennessee, Alabama, Mississippi, New Jersey, Massachusetts, and Maine. I haven't used them all . . . yet.
Harold Henderson, "On-line newspapers by state," Midwestern Microhistory: A Genealogy Blog, posted 1 March 2014 (http://midwesternmicrohistory.blogspot.com : viewed [date]). [Please feel free to link to the specific post if you prefer.]
Saturday, March 1, 2014
On-line newspapers by state
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Harold Henderson
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8:26 AM
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Labels: Alabama, digitized newspapers, Illinois, Indiana, Kenneth R. Marks, Kentucky, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Mississippi, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Tennessee, The Ancestor Hunt, Wisconsin
Friday, August 9, 2013
Sleuthing for Smiths in Alabama and Mississippi
This blog doesn't normally reach so far south of the Mason-Dixon Line, but blog rules were made to be broken. And what better time than to take note of Laurel Baty's methodological tour de force that leads off the current (June) National Genealogical Society Quarterly (online issues free to NGS members)?
Given a Smith family, she deals smoothly with an array of erroneous records, not to mention the ones that aren't there at all: "Three generations of Martha's family left no estate records. Her parents' marriage record is missing, her father owned no land, and he appears in a single census, which supplies no ages and birthplaces."
She maps and lists land, court, and church records to help identify a father who appears in none of them. The footnotes are revealing: the four words "He witnessed no deeds" are backed up by an every-page search of 23 years of Wilcox County, Alabama, deed books. This article will benefit any researcher, in the South or elsewhere, who's troubled by common-name ancestor issues.
Laurel T. Baty, "Parentage of Martha Smith of Alabama and Mississippi: Overcoming Inconsistent, Incorrect, and Missing Records," National Genealogical Society Quarterly 101 (June 2013): 85-102.
Harold Henderson, "Sleuthing for Smiths in Alabama and Mississippi," Midwestern Microhistory: A Genealogy Blog, posted 9 August 2013 (http://midwesternmicrohistory.blogspot.com : accessed [access date]). [Please feel free to link to the specific post if you prefer.]
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Harold Henderson
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12:30 AM
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Labels: advanced methodology, Alabama, Laurel Baty, Mississippi, National Genealogical Society Quarterly, Smith family, Wilcox County Alabama
Wednesday, July 21, 2010
Could a Methodist minister get away with murdering a Catholic priest?
Maybe so, in Birmingham, Alabama, in 1921. Ohio State law professor Sharon Davies has written what sounds like a book too harsh for me to read -- about a nearly forgotten case that mesmerized the nation at the time -- but I can at least mention it. Rising Road is discussed in the Legal History Blog with additional links.
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Harold Henderson
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7:48 PM
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Labels: Alabama, books, Ohio State University, racism, Rising Road, Sharon Davies
Thursday, July 30, 2009
Social Science Research Network? What?
Sometimes as a genealogist, you can feel like a dog underneath a banquet table -- so many of the succulent scraps of information are out of reach, requiring access to those few libraries that have access to JSTOR or NBER papers. But the Social Science Research Network has thousands of papers anyone can download for free (PDF). And some of them are even relevant to our work. Here are four titles I picked up in a few minutes of searching:
"'Social Equality Does Not Exist among Themsleves, nor among Us': Baylies vs. Curry and Civil Rights in Chicago, 1888," by Dale
"History in the Law Library: Using Legal Materials to Explore the Past and Find Lawyers, Felons, and Other Scoundrels in Your Family Tree," by Metzmeier (2008, Kentucky)
"Anglo-American Land Law: Diverging Developments from a Shared History. Part II: How Anglo-American Land Law Diverged after American Colonization and Independence," by Thomas (1999, BYU)
"'The Most Esteemed Act of My Life': Family, Property, Will, and Trust in the Antebellum South," by Davis and Brophy (2009) -- on antebellum probate practices in Greene County, Alabama -- a county that was both wealthy and unburnt.
I'm sure there's more. Arf!
Hat tip to this post from the Samford University Library's Institute of Genealogical and Historical Research on Facebook.
Posted by
Harold Henderson
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3:21 AM
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Labels: Alabama, Chicago, Illinois, Kentucky, land records, Legal History, probate records, Social Science Research Network