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Barbour Connecticut Town Records Killingworth Ledyard Lisbon Genealogy Book

$ 13.19

Availability: 89 in stock
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    Description

    The Barbour  Collection of Connecticut Vital Town Records
    Volume 21
    Killingworth 1667-1850
    Ledyard 1836-1855
    Lisbon 1786-1850
    Softbound    volume  totaling
    244
    pages. Book  is in new condition. Just what you need  for genealogy research. Per the publisher;
    The twenty-first      book in
    The Barbour Collection
    names about 27,500 individuals from      the aforementioned three towns. Entries are in strict alphabetical order by      town and give, typically, name, date of event, names of parents, names of      children, names of both spouses, and items such as age, occupation, and      residence. As in all volumes published to date, entries are keyed to the      volume and page number of the original records.
    Take a Look at My Other Genealogical Books up for Auction Norwegian Connections
    From Arctic Fjord to American Prairie
    Author: Jacobson, Judy
    Volume  totaling
    268
    pages. Book is in new  condition.  Per  the publisher.
    As she has done in a number of her other publications (e.g.,
    Southold  (Long Island) Connections
    , and
    Detroit  River Connections
    ), genealogist and librarian Judy Jacobson has  universalized an individual family history by giving it broader significance as  an example of settlement patterns. In this case, her focus is upon her husband’s  Norwegian ancestors, the Jacobsons, and others who left the Arctic circle  fishing communities like Arberg, Harstad, Moen, and Fredriksberg, commencing  with the outbreak of the American Civil War, for homesteading and other  opportunities in Minnesota, North Dakota, and other states of the Great Plains.  Although many Norwegians emigrated for religious and political reasons, the  author reminds us economic dislocation in Norway–owing to the uncertainties of  the fishing and mercantile industries–reached such proportions that  approximately 200,000 Norwegians emigrated in the 1880s. By the turn of the  century, Norwegians represented the largest ethnic group among the 183,000  persons living in North Dakota.
    After providing the reader with ample background on the history  of Norwegian immigration, Mrs. Jacobson turns to her principal objective: to  record the genealogies of families from the Arctic fjords. In this context, she  sheds light upon the unusual naming practices that make identifying Norwegian  ancestors difficult. For example, Norwegian children typically did not take  their father’s surname, and surnames were in fact derived from the father’s  given name. This phenomenon helps to explain why the book ends with a given-name  index and a surname index (as well as with indexes of subjects and place names).  This important lesson in Norwegian onomastics is followed by detailed  genealogical and biographical accounts, drawn from primary and secondary  sources, of the following families: Eide, Eidissen, Erichsen, Frostad, Gjertsen,  Hemmingsen, Ingebrigtsen, Jacobson, Johansen, Pedersen, Rasmussen, Sagan,  Seversen, and Simonsen. Rounding out this fascinating volume are illustrations  of various Norwegian communities of origin, several genealogical appendices, and  an extensive list of sources.
    Take a Look at My Other Genealogical Books up for Auction