"The material in this book is an abstract of, and index to, information reported by the National Society Daughters of the American Revolution, and published in their annual reports to the Smithsonian Institute [sic], printed as Senate documents (1900-1974), published by the Society in a separate volume (1975-1977) and published annually in the DAR magazine (1978-1987)"--T.p. verso.
Examine the brick wall in detail -- Use brute force -- Go around the wall -- Talk to a friend -- Use crowdsourcing -- Apply technological solutions -- Hire a demolition expert.
Summary
Learn how to use innovative techniques to unearth hard-to-find ancestors. The authors use up-to-date and highly organized methods and techniques to show you how to find the elusive details to round out your genealogy research, and get past the brick walls that have stumped you. They cover a variety of software programs and specialized genealogy tools, and even address using modern social networking as a practical source.
Reprinted for Clearfield Co., by Genealogical Pub. Co.,
Date of Publication
2003.
Physical Description
liii, 337 p. ; 23 cm.
Notes
Includes bibliographical references (p. xxix-xxx) and index.
Contents
Chapters: Chronology of frontier, national, and international events from 1783-1796 -- Sources and abbreviations -- Kentucky militia -- Ohio Territory milita -- Southwest Territory militia -- Virginia militia -- New Jersey militia -- Pennsylvania -- Georgia.
Summary
"This book is a transcription of the muster rolls and pay rolls of the state militia troops who were paid to protect the frontier or who fought alongside federal troops in the various frontier campaigns. From the records of the Adjutant General's Office located in the National Archives, Murtie June Clark compiled data from the surviving federal records of the militia organizations of the following states and territories: Georgia, Kentucky, New Jersey, Ohio Territory, Pennsylvania, Southwest Territory (modern Tennessee), and Virginia. Named in these records, with dates of enlistment, rank, and other items of information, are militia troops participating in St. Clair's defeat in the Northwest Territory, Anthony Wayne's expeditions, the Whiskey Rebellion, the Battle of Fallen Timbers, and a host of other campaigns in areas north of the Ohio River, in Tennessee, along the Oconee in Georgia, and elsewhere." [from Amazon.com]
"The authors spent years collecting, researching, and verifying definitions of terms they discovered while researching cemetery, probate, court, medical, and other records. The mystery of terms and abbreviations that many researchers face has been solved with this essential, quick-reference source geared to the needs of the genealogist. " [from Amazon.com]