Quick Video Tutorial: Using the Internet Archive to Find Digitized County Histories

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Every good genealogist wants to find a county history for each locality where an ancestor resides.  Well, have you checked the Internet Archive lately?  There are over 10 million digitized books and texts, and you are likely to find one or more county histories for whatever locality you choose—and I’m not just talking U.S. counties.

In this quick video tutorial (5 minutes) you can learn how to find and download these free books.

 

Quick Video Tutorial: Cheatsheet Record Selection Table

Wondering which records have the information you need?  A record selection table might give you some ideas.

Quick Video Tutorial: Evernote for Genealogy – “To Do”lists using the Web Clipper

As you browse online catalogs for libraries and archives, create a ‘to do’ list of sources to search during your next visit to the repository.  Learn how to use the Evernote Web Clipper for your next research project in my practical and quick tutorial.

When was it a territory? When was it a state?

Mountain West FB

Here is a reference table to help you see at a glance when each state in the Mountain West was first a territory and then a state. I have also added a column for history which gives some key dates in each state’s history.  Feel free to copy this table for your own use.

After you have pinpointed where your ancestor was living, working, or passing through at a given time, it is important to find out what country/state/ territory/county had jurisdiction in that locality on that date. That will tell you where the records can be found—or at least who was creating the records. You may be surprised to find that Arizona ancestor in New Mexico territorial records, or that Nevada ancestor in Utah territorial records. And Colorado ancestors?  Take your pick of Nebraska, Kansas, Utah, or New Mexico territories…

Stay tuned for some advice on where to look for the records, especially territorial records—an important record group for research in any western state.  Click on the map link in the menu bar to access map resources which will be helpful in determining boundaries and jurisdictions.