There's nothing I don't like in the NGS Magazine (that is actually a high standard for any publication to meet!) but in the current fall issue I did especially enjoy two items:
* Claire Prechtel-Kluskens explained something I had just begun to notice as a thing in itself, and not just a random additional item in a Civil War pension file: the "family data circulars" of 1898 and 1915. They are valuable to us for much the same reason they were valuable to the Pension Bureau -- as first-hand evidence of relationships.
* Sharon Tate Moody gave an extended law-enforcement perspective on methodology: "Those investigating the life of Samuel Maddox Jr. in Monroe County, Georgia, drew the conclusion that since he had been in the 1830 census but was not in the 1840 census, he must have died. Had they followed sound investigative techniques they would have conducted an exhaustive search of local records," which reveal that he wasn't dead -- merely "serving time in the state penitentiary for attempting to murder his wife."
In brief: the real past is always more interesting than the assumed past.
H Claire Prechtel-Kluskens, "Family data circulars of 1898 and 1915," NGS Magazine, volume 38, no. 4 (October-December 2012): 28-31.
Sharon Tate Moody, "If living were a crime...evidence your ancestor left at the scene," NGS Magazine, volume 38, no. 4 (October-December 2012): 32-36.
Harold Henderson, "Records and Methods in NGS Magazine," Midwestern Microhistory: A Genealogy Blog, posted 20 December 2012 (http://midwesternmicrohistory.blogspot.com : accessed [access date]). [Please feel free to link to the specific post if you prefer.]
Thursday, December 20, 2012
Records and Methods in NGS Magazine
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Harold Henderson
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12:30 AM
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Labels: Civil War Genealogy, Claire Prechtel-Kluskens, family data circulars, Georgia, Maddox family, NGS Magazine, pension files, Sharon Tate Moody
Thursday, June 2, 2011
NGS magazine
The Midwestern items in the current NGS Magazine include some examples in my evidence article and Carol Cooke Darrow's "Why was Joseph Gosling buried in Ann Arbor?" which reveals an unusual Michigan source for researchers.
Some other articles of methodological interest in this issue:
Jessica Albert's "Using OCR to search city directories by address" (applicable only to on-line images);
John P. Deeben on using unit records of combat organizations to overcome WWI veterans' record loss;
Claire Prechtel-Kluskens on innovative ways of using Soundex codes in searching; and
Robert Erland's case study of researching an unknown frequent witness on known relatives' records.
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Harold Henderson
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3:27 AM
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Labels: Ann Arbor Michigan, Carol Cooke Darrow, city directories, Claire Prechtel-Kluskens, Jessica Albert, John P. Deeben, NGS Magazine, Robert Erland, Soundex, WWI genealogy
Friday, April 10, 2009
Tracking Revolutionary War Pension Payments
I've heard top genealogists complain that we spend far more time learning where records are than what to do with them once we find them. NARA archivist Claire Prechtel-Kluskens does her darndest to right the balance with a blockbuster article in the Winter 2008 issue of Prologue, "Follow the Money: Tracking Revolutionary War Army Pension Payments." She writes,
Pension files of Revolutionary War veterans and their widows are well known as excellent genealogical and historical research sources. Few researchers, however, venture beyond the pension file to follow the "money trail" of records documenting the actual pension payments. . . .And what a gap it is. She leads the reader through a dozen or more record groups, following her example couple, Massachusetts patriot William McCullar and wife Chloe, through the decades to Chloe's probable death in the early 1840s in Licking County, Ohio. If you aspire to squeeze every ounce of information out of these records, print this one out and study it.
Researching the records relating to pension payments is time consuming and involves understanding and using arcane, obscure, and unindexed records. It is not surprising, therefore, that no guide to this research has ever been published. This article attempts to fill this gap by going step-by-step through the research process . . . .
Posted by
Harold Henderson
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3:19 AM
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Labels: Claire Prechtel-Kluskens, Licking County Ohio, McCullar family, methodology, Prologue, research advice, Revolutionary War


















