Tuesday, January 22, 2013

Non Family Sources

In the current Independent Study class I am taking, I came across this list of "nonfamily" Sources which I thought would be a good thing to save for future reference.

Community Records

  • Published histories of the community, county, and state
  • Published biographies of people living when our people lived
  • School yearbooks and newspapers
  • Photographs of community events, places, and people
  • Old phone books
  • Old city directories
  • Maps for the time period
  • Unpublished life stories, diaries, letter collections

Local Government Records

  • Special censuses
  • Annual property tax records
  • Deed books for land sales and purchases
  • School records
  • City and county council or commission minutes
  • City and county courts (wills, citizenship, lawsuits, divorces, adoptions)
  • Official birth, marriage, and death records
  • Cemetery sexton’s records
  • Wills, probates of estates

State and Federal Government Records

  • Federal censuses every ten years
  • State censuses
  • Elections and voting
  • Maps
  • Land purchases, such as homesteading
  • Citizenship and naturalization
  • Ship arrival passenger lists
  • Passports, visas
  • Military service, pension applications
  • National Guard
  • Law and statute books for the period
  • Business licenses
  • Records of government employees
  • Social welfare agencies for deaf, blind, mentally ill
  • Prisons
  • Federal and state courts
  • Native American reservations
  • Natural resource usage (mining, road building, irrigation projects, land zoning)

Organizational Records

  • Private schools, colleges
  • Hospitals, medical
  • Employers, companies, businesses
  • Labor unions
  • Business organizations and associations: chambers of commerce, rotary, Kiwanis, cattlemen or livestock, farmers, transportation, water users, builders, medical
  • Fraternity orders and women’s auxiliaries (Masonic Order, Elks, Eagles, IOOF, Knights of Pythias, etc.)

Special Interest Groups

  • PTA, Grange, 4-H clubs, Ladies Literary Clubs, dancing or recreational clubs, history and genealogy
  • Societies, boat owners’ associations, pilots’ associations, Boy Scouts, Girl Scouts, Demolays

Church and Religious Organizations

  • Published histories of nations, state, local units
  • Lists of members
  • Employee files (including ministers)
  • Vital records—birth, baptism, confirmation, marriage, death
  • Newsletters, printed programs
  • Minister’s diaries
  • Missionary service
  • Photographs of local people, buildings, and events
  • Teachings and doctrinal positions at various points in time
  • Minute books, donation records, conduct hearings
  • Religious orders

Personal Unpublished Records of Our People’s Contemporaries and Associates

  • (These are usually in the hands of descendants, but some records are in local libraries and historical societies.)
  • Autobiographical accounts
  • Biographies written by relatives
  • Diaries, journals
  • Old letters
  • Photographs
  • Business records, property transactions

What to Look For

When researching in these nonfamily records, we are looking for two kinds of information:
  1. Mention of specific members of our family—birth, wedding, death notices, obituaries, anniversaries, properties, community involvements, etc.
  2. Time-and-place details about their current events, local customs, personalities, amusements, economics, and beliefs—even if your people are never mentioned

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