Death records can be treasure troves, especially if the deceased is someone about whom we have little information. Official death records vary widely in their details, but often provide names of parents, spouses, and/or other family members who may be informants; dates..
Continue reading21 Chestnut Avenue, Boston, in 2024
Our neighbors affect us in direct and indirect ways. Whether you’ve only ever lived in single-family homes or you have experience residing in multi-family dwellings, you can likely remember your neighbors and the ways you impacted..
Continue reading →Postcard of the S.S. Romanic, created between 1903 and 1911
If you’re old enough to remember the popular ABC TV series The Love Boat which aired during the late ‘70s and early ‘80s, you will no doubt still be able to hear in your mind its melodic opening theme song (“..
Continue reading →Frank Caleb Stowell’s American craftsman home in Medford, Massachusetts, circa 1911-1920
Continue reading →Mural in Oswego, Kansas, depicting the Osage village of White Hair circa 1841 (via Wikimedia Commons)
Continue reading →At the turn of the twentieth century, Mary True Randall set up a photography studio with a dark room in her father’s house opposite Pittsford, Vermont’s Village Green. For almost 20 years, her camera captured children in formal poses and at play, quaint scenes of rural..
Continue reading →A barefooted Lucille Coffin, date unknown.
Names are the bedrock of family history research. Finding, sorting, and verifying them takes time. Shared names between generations can cause confusion—such as in the case of professional baseball player Wilmer Flores, whose..
Continue reading →Omaha Beach, 6 June 1944. By Robert F. Sargent
The world will pause today to remember the events in France which occurred eighty years ago during “Operation Overlord”—better remembered as D-Day. Many fine young men would not come home to their families from those..
Continue reading →Undated photo of Charles Anthony Stevens at home (in the family's collection)
In 1886, my great-grandfather Charles Anthony Stevens (1859–1932) opened a small retail shop in Chicago. At first, Chas. A. Stevens sold silk fabrics and notions to local women who made their..
Continue reading →A father attempts to enumerate his household for the census-taker while a few of his children hide from view, foiling his efforts. Painting from 1854, Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Many researchers assume that state and territorial census records are of limited value..
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