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Six Suggestions for Your Summer Vacation Reading I have been an avid reader since childhood. My parents, my aunts, and my grandmother read the newspaper from beginning to end and consumed scores of books each year. They encouraged me to read at an early age and spent a great deal of time helping me hone my reading skills. They were greatly assisted by the town librarian, a dear friend who also happened to be our neighbor across the street. It is therefore no coincidence that I usually have several books in progress in various parts of the house, including genealogical titles. Good genealogists are always seeking to expand their knowledge. This includes the areas of record types, methodologies, and history. In this electronic publishing age, it is gratifying to see vast numbers of new book titles being released every month. This makes selecting good books in each of the categories I mentioned a difficult task. However, in the interest of helping you find a few good books to wile away your summer vacation, I'd like to recommend six books that I have found particularly interesting. (Please check the bibliography at the end of the column for publishing details.)
Sources of Alternative Records Each resource is concisely described in easy-to-understand verbiage, including what information the resource may contain, how and where to look for the records, and how the records can help your research. Photographs and/or illustrations are included for every resource to give you an idea of how the document might appear. In addition, each entry includes selected recommended readings and Web sites of special interest to help you locate additional reference materials. This has become one of my instant favorite books! It makes for fascinating reading, and I think you will find it an excellent addition to your reference collection.
Accounts of Our Ancestors' Times In addition, if you are among the multitude of genealogists whose ancestors lived during colonial times in Massachusetts, you will revel in the republication of George Francis Dow's book, Every Day Life in the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Available in paperback, this book was originally published in 1935 and is considered a classic study of life in the Massachusetts Bay Colony in the 1600s. Shelters and dwellings, clothing, manners and customs, home furnishing, farming, trades and manufacturing, use of wampum and paper money, herbal and medicinal treatments, and crimes and punishments are among the topics discussed. Photographs and illustrations abound, as do appendixes containing lists of products manufactured and traded in the colony, sample estate inventories, and other interesting documents. This is a must-read for Massachusetts Bay Colony descendants and provides insight into life in the 1600s in New England.
Confederate Research Neagles starts with a brief historical overview of the formation of the Confederacy and a chronological account of the important campaigns and historical events. He then describes how to effectively search for records, first in the Confederate states, then in the border states, and finally at the National Archives. You will learn that there is very little duplication of materials between some archives; in fact, you will often find additional, complementary record collections. Neagles then discusses the wealth of potential information available in publications such as military histories, unit histories, biographies, and other publications. His comprehensive, state-by-state bibliography will provide you with new resources for additional details about your ancestors' service in the Confederate army. I strongly recommend this book for anyone who wants to locate Confederate ancestors' records in archives and other repositories.
A Guide to Solving Photographic Mysteries Karen Frisch-Ripley's book Unlocking the Secrets in Old Photographs provides an excellent guide for photographic research. In easy-to-understand language and a very logical presentation, she first provides a methodical approach to identifying what you have in hand. She recommends studying the photographs, talking to relatives, identifying locations, and recognizing patterns of repetitive groups of the same people. She then explains how to use clothing and hats, furniture, photographic props, and locations to help identify people and times. Frisch-Ripley details the history of photography and discusses the different processes used to produce photographic productsfrom daguerreotypes and tintypes to cartes de visite and cabinet cards to more recent photographic papers. All of these can help narrow the research range and help identify family members in photographs. She also discusses the important issues surrounding preservation of your family's photographic treasures, and she gives strategies for locating additional pictures, e.g., getting them from other relatives, on passports and driver's licenses, on work IDs, in newspapers, and in a variety of other places. Included is a list of additional sources and an extensive bibliography for further research. Genealogical photographic research can become another addictive branch of your family history research. This book is a great read and will serve you as an excellent handbook.
And There Will Be a Test . . . Happy Hunting!
George
Bibliography Frisch-Ripley, Karen. Unlocking the Secrets in Old Photographs. Salt Lake City, UT: Ancestry, Incorporated. 1991. ISBN: 0916489507. 202 pp. McCutcheon, Mark. The Writer's Guide to Everyday Life in the 1800s. Cincinnati, OH: Writer's Digest Books. 1993. ISBN: 0898795419. 308 pp. Neagles, James C. Confederate Research Sources: A Guide to Archive Collections. 2nd Ed. Salt Lake City, UT: Ancestry, Incorporated. 1986. ISBN: 0916489167. 286 pp. Pfeiffer, Laura Szucs. Hidden Sources: Family History in Unlikely Places. Orem, UT: Ancestry Publishing. 2000. ISBN: 0916489868. 224 pp. (Today’s Product Specialon sale for only $29.95see below for details) Taylor, Dale. The Writer's Guide to Everyday Life in Colonial America from 1607-1783. Cincinnati, OH: Writer's Digest Books. 1999. ISBN: 0898799422. 288 pp. George G. Morgan is a proud member of the International Society of Family History Writers and Editors, Inc. (ISFHWE). He would like to hear from you at atl@ahaseminars.com, but due to the volume of e-mail received, he is unable to answer every e-mail message received. Please note that he cannot assist you with your individual research. Visit George's Web site for information about speaking engagements. George is also the author of The Genealogy Forum on America Online, which is available in the Ancestry Online Store. © Copyright 2000, MyFamily.com. All rights reserved.
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