Today I'm mainly aggregating, not creating!
* Writing in NEHGR's "Weekly Genealogist," Valerie Beaudreault calls attention to a new on-line index to the Wisconsin Medical Journal, 1903-2003. Also a work-in-progress, the Appleton, Wisconsin, public library obituary index for various years.
* Most issues 1899-2005 of the Indianapolis Recorder, an African-American newspaper, are now searchable on line thanks to IUPUI.
* Just one of the best genealogy records blog posts I've seen, about the records of the Chicago Lying-In Hospital, a must-see if you have non-wealthy Chicago ancestors.
* If you need microhistorical raw data on the Black Hawk War, the 40-year-old compilations compiled and edited by Ellen M. Whitney and published by the Illinois State Historical Library, The Black Hawk War 1831-1832, remain the gold standard. If you need a microhistorical narrative -- for instance, to track where an ancestor may have participated in this war -- I have been very impressed by Patrick J. Jung's The Black Hawk War of 1832 (Norman OK: University of Oklahoma Press, 2007). I have not read it through or purchased my own copy, but I have used it for research (I know, they should usually be the same thing, but not today). The worst thing I can say about it so far is that he cites like a historian (one footnote per paragraph, no matter how many sources were involved).
Showing posts with label Chicago Lying-In Hospital. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chicago Lying-In Hospital. Show all posts
Monday, January 16, 2012
More Midwestern Resources
Posted by
Harold Henderson
at
3:18 AM
2
comments
Labels: Appleton Wisconsin, Black Hawk War, Chicago Lying-In Hospital, Ellen M. Whitney, Indianapolis Recorder, Patrick J. Jung, Wisconsin Medical Journal
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