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  • - An Index
    av Donald O Virdin
    285,-

  • av Sherida K Eddlemon
    345,-

    In this, her third volume of Tennessee newspaper abstracts, Mrs. Eddlemon has again attempted to capture all names of local residents from all types of announcements, ads, and notices. They are drawn from three early Tennessee newspapers, all of which predate the first complete Federal census, and hence, are of great genealogical interest. The material includes lists of delinquent taxpayers, dead letters at the post office, runaway spouses and slaves, and all kinds of sales of goods and services, in addition to the usual marriage and death notices. The papers covered in this volume are: The Jackson Gazette, 1825-1828, The Sparta Review, 1823-1825, and The Knoxville Register, 1821-1822.

  • - Volume 2, 1855-1869
    av Roberta J Wearmouth
    315,-

  • av Ruth W Dayton
    389,-

    The first Englishman to explore the Kanawha Valley was Captain Thomas Batts of Virginia, who went so far west as the Falls in 1671, but permanent settlement did not begin until just over 100 years later. This history deals primarily with the upper valley from its origin near Gauley Bridge west past Charleston to Davis Creek. It provides a wealth of historical and genealogical information on dozens of early families, and is very attractively illustrated with over a dozen drawings. An appendix gives additional genealogies, and military and other lists. A bibliography and a full-name index complete this work.

  • av University of Cincinnati & Lois E Hughes
    619,-

  • - New Garden Monthly Meeting, Chester County, Pennsylvania, 1704-1799
    av Gwen Boyer Bjorkman
    359,-

  • av James Bradley
    359,-

    This is a charming eyewitness account of the battles, marches, and hardships of the 1st and 2nd Brigades of Missouri troops enlisted to serve the Confederacy. Interwoven into the story is a description of how members of these two brigades corresponded with their families back home while blocked from easy, direct communication by intervening Union forces. The mail carriers, one Capt. Grimes and a Miss Ella Herbert, were the major instruments of the "Underground" mail service. Battles mentioned include: Wilson's Creek, Pea Ridge, Corinth, Iuka, Port Gibson, Siege of Vicksburg, Sherman's Georgia Campaign, Franklin, and Nashville. The author includes comments about the brutal, costly, marauder-bandit warfare in Missouri conducted by irregular troops and common criminal elements taking advantage of wartime conditions. A short appendage to the volume gives a history of the Confederate Home in Higginsville, Missouri, and biographical sketches of the people responsible for its establishment. Students of Civil War operations west of Appalachia will find this history fascinating and eye-opening in many ways. The text is attractively illustrated with photos of many of the principals. A new full-name index has been added.

  • av Elizabeth B Plimpton & Verne M Hall
    419

  • - Comprising a Complete History of all the Operations of the American Armies in Mexico, with Biographical Sketches & Anecdotes of the Most Distinguished Officers in the Regular Army & Volunteer Force
    av Major General J Frost
    345,-

  • av Stillman Carter Larkin
    315,-

  • av Marilyn Jordan-Solari
    469

    This excellent genealogy traces eleven generations of descendants of Michael Mitchell, born circa 1670. Primarily a male-line genealogy, a few female lines are traced in recent generations. Michael's ancestry is unknown. A brief account of his wife's ancestry is given along with some mention of the origin of the surname and of several Mitchell immigrants. The text is extensively documented, with a lengthy bibliography, a complete full name index, and a chart outlining the family.

  • av Ralph Clayton
    299,-

  • av Dr William B Jordan, Jr Jordan & William B
    285,-

  • - Record Group 52. with Supplement Compiled by Harry Schwart
    av Kenneth F Bartlett
    165,-

  • - Records of the Judge Advocate General (Navy), PC 32 - Preliminary Checklist of the Records of the Office of the Judge
    av Harry Schwartz & James R Masterson
    179,-

    This slender volume was compiled primarily for internal use in the National Archives; and, as its title indicates, it is intended to be only a "preliminary" description of the records to which it relates.

  • - Preliminary Inventory of the Records of United States Army Commands
    av Sarah Powell & Maizie Johnson
    185

    Most of the entries in this inventory describe orderly books and company books. These were the two main books kept by each office or unit. An orderly book typically contains War Department General Orders; division, department, and district orders; and regimental and garrison orders (both received and issued). A company book may contain registers of commissioned officers, noncommissioned officers, men transferred out, men transferred in, deaths, desertions, men fined by court-martial, men discharged, men furloughed, men in captivity, descriptive lists of officers and enlisted men; clothing accounts; accounts of arms and ammunition; and accounts of camp equipage and stationary.This inventory has been organized according to geographical command and units of the Army. The geographical command entries are divided into three periods: 1784-1813, March 1813-May 1815, and May 1815-May 1821. The entries for the units are arranged alphabetically by type of unit, and regiment number (if applicable). "Companies seldom issued orders and all companies copied all the orders they received into their orderly books, as did adjutants and inspectors. Consequently, if all companies of a regiment were at the same post, all company orderly books of that regiment generally duplicate each other. In the belief that the searcher would be aided by having theses orderly books grouped in series, even if incorrectly identified, an attempt has been made to assign these books to companies by name when a reasonable choice of name could be made."

  • - An Historical Symposium by Several Authors
    av Joseph Folsom
    299,-

  • - Covering the Counties of Marion, Stone, Baxter, Fulton, Izard, and Cleburne
    av Sherida K Eddlemon
    359,-

    Spanish explorer Hernando DeSoto blazed the trails of the Arkansas area in 1541, followed by French explorers Louis Joliet and Jacques Marquette. In 1682, French explorer La Salle claimed this wilderness in the name of France, naming it Louisiana. There were many Native American tribes living in this region: The Osage, Caddo, Akansa and the Quapaw. France then ceded this region to Spain in 1762. Spain permitted Americans to settle in the Arkansas area in 1783. In 1801 Spain returned the Louisiana area to France. The U.S. acquired this territory with the Louisiana Purchase in 1803, requiring residents to file claims with the government in order to prove legal ownership of the land. Between 1820 and 1906, more than 14,400 entries were filed for the eastern Arkansas counties of Marion, Stone, Baxter, Fulton, Izard, and Cleburne. Land was sometimes available for only $1.25 per acre, or a parcel could be bid upon. This index of land transactions filed with the General Land Office (GLO) is an excellent resource for the genealogist, containing abstracts of land transactions over an eighty-seven-year span beginning in 1820 after statehood. Records are arranged alphabetically by purchaser's last name, and include: first name, middle initial, a legal description and location of the land, the amount of land in acres, the date of purchase, and the county. Contact information is provided in the preface for obtaining access to the original records. This volume covers the following counties: Marion, Stone, Baxter, Fulton, Izard, and Cleburne.

  • - With Notices of His Father and Brothers, and Some Account of Other
    av William Clift & John Denison Baldwin
    379,-

  • - 1697-1703
    av Joann Riley McKey
    285,-

  • - Biographies of Nine Special Original People
    av James Dowd
    285,-

    Nine intimate portraits of notable Native Americans caught in the devastating clash between European and tribal cultures in the American West. Subjects of the biographies include:Shabni, the Paul Revere of Illinois. He Has Pawed Through was of mixed Ottawa and French parentage and fought for the British as an aid to Tecumseh during the War of 1812. Following Tecumseh's death at the Battle of the Thames, Shabni swore off violence against his white neighbors and became known as a peace-keeper in the Old Northwest. Shabni's nickname was earned during Black Hawk's War for his daring ride across the Illinois frontier to warn white settlers of an impending attack by warriors of the hostile Sac tribe. Shabni's actions were motivated by his desire to maintain peaceful relations between whites and Native Americans.Makesit. Big Foot is now a virtual unknown in the history of the Great Lakes region, a leader amongst the Potawatomi whose unfounded trust in the treaties offered by the United States cost him and his people their village overlooking beautiful Lake Geneva, now present-day William's Bay, Wisconsin.Captain Billy Caldwell. The son of a Mohawk woman and an Irish soldier in the British Army, Billy Caldwell is a historically misunderstood figure whose true character has been ignored and forgotten in favor of folktales and anecdotes. Often painted as a "noble savage," Billy was a failed entrepreneur and political opportunist reluctant to acknowledge his Native heritage until it could be used to his advantage in securing a job as an agent in the negotiation of the Treaty of Chicago with the Potawatomi tribe. This section was contributed by Dr. James A. Clifton.Brave Bear. This young Sioux will be forever remembered for his involvement in the notorious "Brave Bear Murder Case." He was a killer, a thief, allegedly a procurer of women, and a prison escapee whose life ended at the end of a hangman's rope. Was he a cold-blooded criminal or a man unable to adapt to the imposition of the white man's law on the Lakota Sioux?Other chapters describe the following: Starr Wilkenson, the Idaho Giant of mixed Cherokee and African descent; Totuya, last of the Yosemites; White Cloud, the Winnebago prophet of disaster; and Wabansi, the Potawatomi warrior chief known as First Light. The text is enriched by excellent period photographs, extensive notes and a full-name plus subject index.

  • - His Ancestors and Descendants
    av P Hamilton Baskerville
    315,-

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