Besides containing one of the premier genealogy libraries -- the Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center -- and hosting next year's Federation of Genealogical Societies conference, Fort Wayne is
also surrounded in every direction by other useful repositories. The following (by me) was just posted on the FGS 2013 conference blog, third in a series of short posts on ways to pack in extra research on your way to or from the conference in Fort Wayne.
If Ohio is on your way to or from the 2013 FGS conference in Fort
Wayne, the Buckeye State offers a variety of research stopovers en
route. (Travel note: Drivers with the option may find US 30 west of
Mansfield more direct and less expensive than the Ohio Turnpike.)
Western Reserve Historical Society Research Library
10825 East Boulevard, Cleveland
http://www.wrhs.org/properties/Hours_Admission-3#Research_Center_Hours_and_Admission
Focus on Cleveland and the Western Reserve. Check website for hours and fees for non-members.
Cleveland Public Library
325 Superior Ave., N.E., Cleveland
http://www.cpl.org/Research/PopularTopics/Genealogy.aspx
Don't miss their guide to genealogy resources and records:
http://www.cpl.org/LinkClick.aspx?fileticket=UmtldL7pyY8%3d&tabid=158&mid=1831
Rutherford B. Hayes Presidential Center
Spiegel Grove, Fremont
www.rbhayes.org
Famous for its ever-growing obituary collection, located at the south edge of Fremont on well-shaded
grounds beautiful enough to keep your non-genealogist companions pleasantly occupied.
Ohio Genealogical Society Library
611 State Route 97 West (South side) Bellville (just east of I-71)
http://www.ogs.org/ogs_library/holdings.php
The newest genealogical library around, with many unique resources. Fee for non-members.
Columbus Metropolitan Library
96 South Grant Ave., Columbus
http://www.columbuslibrary.org/research/local-history-genealogy
Home to the State Library of Ohio's genealogical collections and much more.
Ohio Historical Society
800 East 17th Ave., Columbus
http://www.ohiohistory.org/collections—archives/archives-library
1.6 million objects and 70,000 cubic feet of records -- a unique source of information in all formats.
Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County
800 Vine Street, Cincinnati
http://www.cincinnatilibrary.org/main/genlocal.html
Strong in “local history and culture, river history, genealogy, and African American history.”
Harold Henderson, "Ohio Research on Your Way to FGS in Fort Wayne," Midwestern Microhistory: A Genealogy Blog, posted 17 January 2013 (http://midwesternmicrohistory.blogspot.com : accessed [access date]). [Please feel free to link to the specific post if you prefer.]
Thursday, January 17, 2013
Ohio Research on Your Way to FGS in Fort Wayne
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Harold Henderson
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Labels: Cincinnati Ohio, Cleveland Ohio, Columbus Ohio, FGS, FGS 2013, Ohio, Ohio Genealogical Society, Rutherford B. Hayes Presidential Center, Western Reserve Historical Society
Tuesday, June 16, 2009
Western Reserve Historical Society Library
It looks like my career of driving through Cleveland without stopping may soon come to an end. Reviewing Ann Sindelar's article on the Western Reserve Historical Society for last week's post on Ohio Genealogy News led me to just books, periodicals, and manuscripts galore, but also online databases. For instance:
an index to Cleveland's 1907 voter registration records, from a time when registration was required by law. Note that the online index serves as a pointer to additional information at WRHS that is not indexed, such as the registrant's age, length of residence, and signature.
an index to marriage and death notices in the Jewish Independent and Jewish Review and Observer 1889-1964.
an index to nine volumes of Bible records copied in nine volumes at WRHS.
an index to northeast Ohio servicemen's photographs (and sometimes articles) from the Plain Dealer, 1940-1955.
There's much more, including a listing of WRHS's holdings of obsolete Ohio paper money, including "demand notes, scrip, post notes, certificates of deposit, counterfeits, capital stock and fractional currency from over 100 Ohio cities." This is statewide: I found items described from Granville, Marietta, and Kenton. (The originals are in the Vault.)
If you start digging for the really good stuff in their manuscript lists, be aware of peculiarities in the search functions. For instance, title searches are for the first word in the title; names that appear later on are not indexed. Bulldog searching will be called for.
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Harold Henderson
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Labels: Bible records, Cleveland, Jewish Genealogy, military genealogy, Ohio, voting records, Western Reserve Historical Society
Friday, June 12, 2009
Ohio Genealogy News Spring 2009
Somehow the spring issue of Ohio Genealogy News got stuck at the bottom of my pile, which is too bad because it's a goodie:
"Armchair Sleuthing in the Internet Age: Reconstructing Family Stories," by Gail G. Whitchurch
"The Western Reserve Historical Society Library -- An American Family History Research Center," by Ann Sindelar. Besides library materials including the top periodicals, this Cleveland repository also boasts over 5000 manuscript collections, including Civil War and Shaker materials and papers of "local historians Charles Whittlesey, Joel Blakeslee, Alfred Mewitt and Winifred Wolcott," and Marion Turk's Channel Islands Genealogical Papers on "several hundred Channel Islands families from their earliest settlement to the 20th century." More on these resources next week.
"Cemetery Chronicles" from Trumbull, Henry, and Fairfield counties, by Lolita (Thayer) Guthrie
"George Washington's Valet Honored in Champaign County Cemetery," by Doris Hayden Gorgas
"Diocese of Toledo Parish Records and Ohio Tax Records Online" at FamilySearch Labs
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Harold Henderson
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Labels: Ann Sindelar, Champaign County Ohio, FamilySearch Record Search, Gail G. Whitchurch, Ohio, Ohio Genealogy News, Western Reserve Historical Society