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Vital Records of Londonderry New Hampshire 1719-1910 Genealogy

$ 13.19

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    Description

    Untitled Document
    Vital Records of  Londonderry, New Hampshire 1719-1910
    Daniel Gage Annis
    Hardbound book of 328  pages. In April 1719, a small band of Scotch-Irish settlers under the guiding  spirit of Rev. James MacGregor founded the town of Londonderry in New Hampshire,  which was destined to be an early Presbyterian stronghold in America. The  keeping of vital records in Londonderry commenced almost at once. Years later,  when the town voted to fund the printing of these vital records for the period  from 1719 to 1910, there were approximately 25,000 records of births, marriages,  marriage intentions and deaths.
    Compiled by the former town clerk and tax collector, Daniel Annis, the records  are given here in alphabetical order under those four main headings. Not all  persons in these records are Scotch-Irish or of Scotch-Irish descent, but the  historically significant Scotch-Irish element is traceable through all the  nearly 200 years of records. Indiana Land Entries. Volume 2: Vincennes District 1807-1877
    Author: Waters, Margaret R.
    Volume totaling
    275
    pages. Book is in excellent  condition. Per The  Publisher:
    Although described as “Part 1,” this volume of Vincennes District  land records is apparently all that was published. It covers approximately the  central third of the Vincennes District, comprising all of the present counties  of Daviess, Gibson, Knox, Martin, and Pike; and over half of Monroe and  Lawrence. Beginning in 1807 and extending as late as 1877, the records  transcribed here give the names of about 12,000 purchasers of land as well as  the specific location of their land and the date of the record.
    Like the first volume of
    Indiana  Land Entries,” most descriptions of land are given as east or west of a  principal meridian, and townships are identified as being north or south of the  established base line. Ms. Waters copied the records exactly as they appeared in  the original tract books and in the exact order–by location. Consequently,  researchers may be able to identify other members of the family from nearby  entries. Equally important, these records serve as a partial index to the  1820-1880 Indiana censuses, in that they locate an individual in a definite  township and county.
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