-40%
Twelve Hours of Professional Online French American/Canadian Genealogy Research
$ 60.72
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Description
Genealogy and Family History Online ResearchAs a professional genealogist I can assist you in meeting your genealogy goals by providing affordable genealogy services. I have membership in a variety of worldwide genealogy subscription databases so I can do look-ups for many different countries. I can interpret records in French and English and have access to specialty French American, French Canadian, and French genealogical resources. Since many French Americans/Canadians are Metis, I have a collection of Metis genealogical resources at my fingertips. Delivery is electronic so no shipping costs. To deliver I will need your e-mail address or to deliver via Dropbox or other electronic platform that you use. Delivery times vary between 1-4 weeks depending on current workload and the extent of your project.
What I provide:
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Within the allotted time I will search the appropriate online genealogical databases that
I have access to
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Genealogy charts, reports and lists (sent via e-mail)
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List of the documents and indexes found for each person (sent via e-mail)
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The documents, indexes and any photos I may find (sent via e-mail)
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Gedcom file (sent via e-mail)
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Accurate information
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Carefully documented ancestral connections
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Customized work to match your goals
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Quality products and services
Qualifications:
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Post-graduate diploma in genealogical studies
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More than fifteen years of extensive experience as a family historian
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Ph.D. in a social science
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Recognized expert in qualitative research practice
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Continuing education to keep my practice up-to-date
Please tell me:
• What your genealogical question or goal is
• The information you already have in regard to your genealogical question or goal
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If you have created a family tree that I can browse, please provide the information or URL
It is important to me to find what my client wants, but sometimes the information is not available online, or just does not exist. For example, during the Civil War many courthouses and the records stored in them were destroyed. Because of this, what you are purchasing is research time so no refunds are offered if no results are found. I do though guarantee that I will do all I can to meet your project goal in the time allotted. If this is not possible, you will receive a short list of sources and/or ideas that might be helpful to you to continue your research.
Please contact me through eBay if you have any questions about me or my services
Scottish Quakers And Early America
1650-1700
David Dobson
Softbound volume totaling
52
pages. Book is in new condition. Per the publisher;
Mr. Dobson continues with his series of booklets pertaining to unexplored aspects of Scottish genealogy.
Scottish Quakers and Early America
aims to identify members of the Society of Friends in Scotland prior to 1700 and the Scottish origins of many of the Quakers who settled in East Jersey in the 1680s.
Quakerism came to Scotland with the Cromwellian occupation of the 1650s. Scottish missionaries eventually spread the faith to various locations throughout the country, including Aberdeen in the Northeast, Edinburgh and Kelso in the southeast, and Hamilton in the west. The Society of Friends never grew to large numbers in Scotland, however, owing to its persecution by both the Episcopal and Presbyterian churches, as well as civic authorities. Understandably, a number of Scottish Quakers ultimately emigrated to the North American colonies; for example, there were some Scottish Quakers among the landowners of West Jersey as early as 1664, and between 1682 and 1685 several shiploads of emigrants left the ports of Leith, Montrose, and Aberdeen for East Jersey.
Drawing upon research conducted in both Scotland and the United States in manuscript and in published sources, David Dobson has here amassed all the genealogical data that we know of concerning members of the Society of Friends in Scotland prior to 1700 and the origins of Scottish Quakers living in East New Jersey in the 1680s. While there is great deal of variation in the descriptions of the roughly 500 Scottish Quakers listed in the volume, the entries typically give the individual's name, date or place of birth, and occupation, and sometimes the name of a spouse or date of marriage, name of parents, place and reason for imprisonment in Scotland, place of indenture, date of death, and the source of the information. Without a doubt this is a ground-breaking work on the subject of Scottish emigration to North America during the colonial period.
Just what you need for genealogy research.
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