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- Title:
GREAT MIGRATION BEGINS and GREAT MIGRATION Project
Robert Charles Anderson, The Great Migration Begins: Immigrants to N
ew England, 1620-1633 [database online] Provo, UT: Ancestry.com, 2000.
Original data: Robert Charles Anderson. The Great Migration Begins: I
mmigrants to New England, 1620-1633, vols. 1-3. (Boston, MA: New England Historic Genealogical Society, 1995)
- Title:
New England Marriages Prior To 1700
Clarence Almon Torrey, New England Marriages Prior To 1700 (Balt
imore, MD: Genealogical Publishing Company, Inc., 1985)
- Title: Baxter, Joseph Nickerson, Memorial of the Baxter Family (Boston: priv
ately printed, 1879)Page: 8
- Title: Baxter, Frances, The Baxter Family: Descendants of George and Thomas B
axter of Westchester County, New York, as well as some West Virginia and South Carolina Lines (New York: T.A. Wright, 1913)Page: p. 6
- Title:
Vinton Memorial
John Adams Vinton, The Vinton Memorial, Comprising a Genealogy o
f the Descendants of John Vinton of Lynn, 1648: Also, Genealogical Sketches of Several Allied Families. With an Appendix Containing a History of the Braintree Iron Works, and Other Historical Matters [John Vinton of Lynn, 1648] (Boston, MA: S. K. Whipple & Company, 1858)
John Vinton (ca.1620-1686/1689) immigrated from England or from Europe t
o Lynn, Massachusetts during or before 1643 and probably before 1643. They probably moved to Malden, Massachusetts about 1676. Descendants and relatives lived in New England, New York, Indiana and elsewhere.
Page: p. 297
- Title: Andrew N. Adams, A Genealogical History of Henry Adams of Braintree, M
assachusetts and His Descendants; Also John Adams of Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1632-1897 (Rutland, VT: Tuttle,1898 [Reprinted Newburyport, MA: Parker River Researchers, 1984])Page: p. 7
- Title: Crane, Albert, "Henry Crane of Milton, Mass.", from Register, V
ols. 46-47 [1893-94]Page: p. 23 and p. 25
- Title:
A Genealogical Dictionary of the First Settlers of New England, Sho
wing Three Generations of Those who Came before May, 1692, on the Basis of Farmer's Register
James Savage; compiled by O. P. Dexter, A Genealogical Dictionary of t
he First Settlers of New England, Showing Three Generations of Those who Came before May, 1692, on the Basis of Farmer's Register
(The best known and most frequently used genealogical dictionary.This m
onumental work gives the name of every settler who came to New England before 1692, regardless of his rank, station in life or fortune. Traces the descendants of each person, giving dates of marriage and death, dates of birth, marriage and death of his children, and the birth dates and names of his grandchildren, thus recording the beginning of the third generation in New England. Binding is 4 vols. 2,541 pp.) Library of Congress Catalog Card No. 65-18541
(Boston: 1860-1862
Reprinted with "Genealogical Notes and Errata," excerpted from T
he New England Historical and Genealogical Register, Vol. XXVII, No. 2, April, 1873, pp. 135-139, And A Genealogical Cross Index of the Four Volumes of the Genealogical Dictionary of James Savage, by O. P. Dexter, 1884.
Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc. Baltimore,
1965,1969,1977,1981,1986, 1990)
Page: Vol. 1, p. 141
- Title:
The New England Historical and Genealogical Register
New England Historical and Genealogical Register (Boston, MA
: New England Historical and Genealogical Society)
The NEHGR or "Register" is the oldest and best known genealogical publi
cation in North America. It focuses primarily on the genealogy of New England and the northeastern United States.
Page: Vol. 8, p. 100 and p. 356; Vol. 9, p. 136; Vol. 37, pp. 167-8
- Title:
Ancestry of Robert Harry McIntire and of Helen Annette McIntire, His Wi
fe
Robert Harry McIntire, Ancestry of Robert Harry McIntire and of Hele
n Annette McIntire, His Wife (Norfolk, VA: 1950)
Page: p. 282
- Title:
The American Genealogist (TAG)
Editor
For more than three quarters of a century, America's premier independen
t genealogical journal has been 'The American Genealogist,' affectionately known as TAG. TAG was founded in 1922 by Donald Line Jacobus (1887–1970), the father of scientific genealogy in this country and the first person elected to the National Genealogical Society's National Genealogy Hall of Fame. TAG was Jacobus’s vehicle for elevating genealogical scholarship to the same high standards as other scholarly disciplines, and it was at the center of what is now known as the “Jacobus School,” a group of professional and amateur genealogists who were dedicated to these standards. Throughout its long career, TAG has emphasized carefully documented compiled genealogy and analyses of difficult genealogical problems, all directed toward providing serious genealogists with examples of how they too might solve such problems.
('The American Genealogist' PO Box 398, Demorest GA 30535-0398 U. S. A
.)
Text:
Page: Vol. 21, p. 168
- Title: Nora Emma Snow, The Snow-Estes Ancestry, 2 vols. (Hillburn, NY: p
rivately printed, 1939)Page: Vol. 2, p. 107
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