Published 1989
by The Society in [Whittier, Calif.] (P.O. Box 4367, Whittier 90607) .
Written in English
Edition Notes
Statement | compiled by Richard and Audrey Soll. |
Contributions | Soll, Audrey., Whittier Area Genealogical Society. Seminar |
Classifications | |
---|---|
LC Classifications | F3 .S633 1989 |
The Physical Object | |
Pagination | 28 p. ; |
Number of Pages | 28 |
ID Numbers | |
Open Library | OL1790763M |
LC Control Number | 89187831 |
New England Surname Index. I have been exploring the WWW and have found many places that have the same ancestors that I have been researching and they have been kind enough to have posted information on there websites.. Instead of me posting the same information my Surname Index has links to those Common Ancestors. Millions of New England vital records are among newly-published genealogy records online. So are English parish records, Irish Easter Rising records, Italian civil registrations, South African church records, and records for Georgia WWI soldiers and Louisiana women. New online this week are millions of new genealogy records from around the world! Includes index of names with a compilation of various records pertaining to immigration of early people to the New York and New Jersey area. (Also includes 3 other volumes covering other areas.) Coldham, Peter Wilson. "The Complete Book of Emigrants". 4 volumes. Surry, England: Genealogical Publishing Co., Baltimore Directory of Ancestral Heads of New England Families, , by Frank R. Holmes Peirce's Colonial List, by Ebenezer Peirce The Pioneers of Maine and New Hampshire, , by Charles H. Pope Genealogical Notes of New York and New England Families, by Sebastian V. Talcott The History of New England, by James Savage.
Old New England Names I have a huge family tree from Ten Generations in New England, by the New England Historical and Geneological Society, published In the following, I list the family names involved. The first item on each line is a family name, followed by placename(s). In , England and Holland were at war, and New England colonists were worried that the Dutch in New York would enlist the aide of Indian allies to attack the English. Robert Sedgwick, commander of the militia at Massachusetts Bay Colony, went to England to seek help in the winter of / The New York Herald (–) is just one of several hundred New York historic newspapers online at GenealogyBank, by subscription. View the full list of New York newspaper titles for information on coverage locations and dates. You can also . The surname Scott was originally given by the Romans to Gaelic raiders from Ireland. Scott is derived from the Old English pre 7th century word Scotti, or the Latin Scottus, meaning Irishman, specifically a Gael. Given the warlike conditions which applied in the English border counties the name was not always complimentary. Scott can also be an ethnic or geographical name signifying a native.
The Chase family is an American family whose members included early American pioneers and those involved in politics, the clergy, business and the military. Originating in Chesham, England, brothers Aquila Chase II and Thomas Chase journeyed to New England. In June, the brothers received land grants in Hampton, now a part of the State of New Hampshire. Much of American Genealogy can be traced to about 4, core families that first settled in the New England area between The first group was parted of Plymouth Colony started by the Mayflower pilgrims in The second and much larger group came over between with Gov John Winthrop to settle the Massachusetts Bay Colony. In later years immigrants from elsewhere in . New England Marriages to A compilation of approximat known or presumed marriages that occurred prior to in New England, often called Torrey's Marriage Index. A principal resource for seventeenth-century New England genealogy. Banks, Charles Edward. Topographical Dictionary of English Emigrants to New England, Philadelphia: E. E. Brownell, Alphabetical arrangement of English counties, listing the name of the emigrant, his parish, ship’s name, the New England town he settled in, and the reference source of .