Odds and Ends

Don’t assume that because your ancestors were poor that there aren’t records of them. Check out records from prisons, almshouses, orphanages, charity societies, and advertisements for runaway indentured servants.

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Search for Scottish POWs in the Colonies. You’ll find lists of men who came to America as indentured servants. They were listed as property.

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The Amesbury, Essex Co. Mass. public works department has a database for the cemeteries they maintain. This is a good reminder to see what other cemeteries have an online presence. It

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Look up the genealogical proof standard. It will explain what that means and there are also forms to help you do “due diligence” to achieve the standard. This is a

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Quakers issued certificates for many reasons including to be used as an introduction when they moved to a new town or even if they had been expelled from their group.

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Apparently, in the 1700s and 1800s, a bondsman came with the groom to validate his legal status. That person was probably a relative or a close friend. If a person

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Look at marriage records. Who performed the marriage? Was it a Rev. or a Justice of the Peace? Those are hints to where to look for records. The marriage license

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Check for obits and at the funeral home. The funeral home may have more information as they may have helped with the obit or even the paperwork to get a

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Remember that in genealogy, spelling doesn’t count. Because of name changes/spelling variants, you need to look for parents, siblings, and spouses, etc. on documents to help you figure out if

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As a reminder…make copies of vital records. Keep the originals at home and use the copies as working copies. You don’t want to misplace or lose the original in some

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