Genealogical Publishing, Author at Genealogical.com https://genealogical.com/author/ryansherr/ The Best Source for Genealogy and Family History Books and eBooks Mon, 02 Jun 2025 15:36:59 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 https://genealogical.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/02/cropped-genappicon-300x300-1-125x125.png Genealogical Publishing, Author at Genealogical.com https://genealogical.com/author/ryansherr/ 32 32 Using One’s Self as a Source – by Elizabeth Shown Mills, CG, CG, FASG https://genealogical.com/2025/06/02/using-ones-self-as-a-source-by-elizabeth-shown-mills-cg-cg-fasg/ https://genealogical.com/2025/06/02/using-ones-self-as-a-source-by-elizabeth-shown-mills-cg-cg-fasg/#respond Mon, 02 Jun 2025 15:33:08 +0000 https://genealogical.com/?p=84280 Since 2007, Evidence Explained: Citing History Sources from Artifacts to Cyberspace has been the “Bible” for history researchers—offering not only citation models but also guidance in the analysis and use of sources. In this current blog series we are offering excerpts from Chapters 1 and 2 of EE’s fourth edition: Fundamentals of Research & Analysis, […]

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Since 2007, Evidence Explained: Citing History Sources from Artifacts to Cyberspace has been the “Bible” for history researchers—offering not only citation models but also guidance in the analysis and use of sources. In this current blog series we are offering excerpts from Chapters 1 and 2 of EE’s fourth edition: Fundamentals of Research & Analysis, and  Fundamentals of Citation & Style. Today’s post is the third of four.


As active researchers and writers, there is often a need—or at least a temptation—to cite ourselves as an authoritative source for a particular point. Whether it is appropriate to do so depends upon the circumstances.

On a personal level, we are a valid source only for events or circumstances that we personally experienced in a cognizant state. We cannot, for example, attest our own birth; although we were physically there, we had not developed cognizance. If we have no other authority, we can only attest that we were taught to celebrate our birth on a particular day of the year.

Evidence Explained

As researchers, citations to our own published work may or may not be justified. For some historical subjects there is a rich body of literature and a wide range of interpretations. In other instances, a subject may be so narrow that no one else has investigated it to the breadth and depth that we have—if at all. 

Five questions can help us determine whether our own prior work can be appropriately cited as one form of “proof ” for our assertions:

  • If we are citing a prior conclusion or proof argument, has that conclusion of ours been vetted and the argument published in a peer-reviewed journal?  Assertions that have never been vetted are generally not considered to be authoritative.
  • If we are citing underlying research reports, are those reports publicly available—at, say, a website where they can be immediately accessed and studied in depth?
  • Are other authorities available? Is the topic a general one on which multiple people have published, including ourselves? Are opinions compatible, although each naturally will have varying nuances? If so, then citing ourselves may strike our readers as self-promotion. 
  • What is the scope and focus of our prior research? Is the topic a highly specialized one that no one else has addressed—say, a quantitative analysis of a community, or an intricately solved identity issue, or a reference work that is not otherwise available? If there is no one else to cite, then a reference to our own work would be entirely appropriate.
  • Are our conclusions unique? Did our findings or conclusions correct or challenge other significant publications on the subject? If so, then citations to both would be appropriate.

In sum: if our own prior publications have gone into considerably more depth than our current piece of writing allows, then it would be reasonable to cite our prior work for a more in-depth discussion. We might also cite others who hold a counter view, to offer a balanced perspective.


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Meet Author Robert Headley https://genealogical.com/2025/05/27/meet-author-robert-headley/ https://genealogical.com/2025/05/27/meet-author-robert-headley/#respond Tue, 27 May 2025 15:49:02 +0000 https://genealogical.com/?p=84249 A number of our authors have had distinguished careers in business, government, academia, and non-profit organizations; and their avocations, besides genealogy, have been wide-ranging. One such individual is Robert K. Headley, the leading authority  on the genealogy of the Northern Neck of Virginia. As we have noted previously, he is the author of the new, […]

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A number of our authors have had distinguished careers in business, government, academia, and non-profit organizations; and their avocations, besides genealogy, have been wide-ranging. One such individual is Robert K. Headley, the leading authority  on the genealogy of the Northern Neck of Virginia. As we have noted previously, he is the author of the new, six-volume Northern Neck of Virginia Pioneers, 1642-1675, as well as three earlier titles on this region.

As you will see from this very abridged bio, Mr. Headley is not someone who does things halfheartedly!

“Robert Headley was born in a small town on the Northern Neck of Virginia in 1938. He received his B. A. degree in anthropology from the University of Florida and his M.A. in Anthropology and Ph. D. in Celtic languages from Catholic University in Washington, D.C. Dr. Headley worked as a research linguist for the United States Government from 1959 to 1995 and has published numerous books and articles on Southeast Asian languages as well as the major Cambodian – English dictionary. He became interested in documenting the history of the rapidly disappearing American movie theaters in 1968, and after six years of research published a book, EXIT, on the history of movie theaters in Baltimore.  In September 1999, EXIT was selected by the Enoch Pratt Free Library Staff as one of the Best Books on Maryland of the 20th Century. He was a member of the Theatre Historical Society of America and served as editor for the society’s journal, Marquee, from 1981 to 1987. Dr. Headley has lectured on local theater history at the National Archives and Johns Hopkins University, He has also served as a consultant for several exhibitions and documentary films on movie theaters including “The Movie Palaces” made by the Smithsonian Institution.  This research has culminated in a book, Motion Picture Exhibition in Washington, D.C., which traces the history of motion picture exhibition in Washington and adjacent Maryland and Virginia from the 1890s to the 1990s. Dr. Headley has added numerous anecdotes gleaned from  oral history interviews with over 40 individuals who were associated with the local movie industry between 1906 and 1990. 

His hobbies include going to movies, collecting minerals, and writing on the genealogy and local history of the Northern Neck of Virginia. He has authored three earlier books on Virginia genealogy. He was on the staff of the University of Maryland Archives, College Park, Maryland from 2003 to 2013. He is currently compiling a dictionary of the Rhade language of Vietnam.”

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Using Derivate & Imaged Sources – By Elizabeth Shown Mills, CG, CG, FASG https://genealogical.com/2025/05/19/using-derivate-imaged-sources-by-elizabeth-shown-mills-cg-cg-fasg/ Mon, 19 May 2025 17:06:22 +0000 https://genealogical.com/?p=84176 Since 2007, Evidence Explained: Citing History Sources from Artifacts to Cyberspace has been the “Bible” for history researchers—offering not only citation models but also guidance in the analysis and use of sources. In this new blog series we are offering excerpts from Chapters 1 and 2 of EE’s fourth edition: Fundamentals of Research & Analysis, […]

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Since 2007, Evidence Explained: Citing History Sources from Artifacts to Cyberspace has been the “Bible” for history researchers—offering not only citation models but also guidance in the analysis and use of sources. In this new blog series we are offering excerpts from Chapters 1 and 2 of EE’s fourth edition: Fundamentals of Research & Analysis, and  Fundamentals of Citation & Style. Today’s post is the second of four.


(EE4: 2.12)
Modern genealogists are blessed to have billions of records easily available—in print, in some derivative format, and as images online.  When we examine a published item to identify the elements that need recording, we should bear in mind that published history materials commonly have two formats in need of identification:

Evidence Explained
  • Original work: Most such material originated in manuscript or published format—whether in modern times or antiquity.
  • Modern form: This material is now being published in a new format by a firm or an agency that is not the original creator.

Therefore, our citations should

  • distinguish between image copies and other derivatives such as abstracts, transcripts, and information extracted into databases;
  • credit properly the original creator;
  • credit properly the producer of the images or electronic publication;
  • identify clearly the nature of the material;
  • identify the images or electronic publication completely enough for others to locate it;
  • cite the specific place (webpage, frame, etc.) in the database or on the roll, fiche, etc., at which we found the relevant item; and
  • cite the date on which the images or data set were created, updated, or accessed—as well as the date of the original record or original publication.

Some publishers of databases and record images add a preface informing us that they obtained their data from another firm or individual. To analyze the reliability of their material we also need to record

  • the identity of the entity (individual or agency) that first assembled that data set;
  • the original source(s) from which the data was taken and the year or time frame in which the original was created;
  • whether a database entry represents full or partial extraction from those sources; or
  • whether the record set was generated from materials randomly encountered by the original compiler.

Tracking the provenance (origin) of derivative material can be difficult. A currently marketed database might have been purchased from a firm no longer in existence, which might have bought its information from a book compiler, who might have assembled materials randomly published elsewhere. Such an entity would be of significantly different quality from, say,

  • a new database created by a learned society using skilled copyists to extract every document in a record set; or
  • a collection of images created by a company that contracts with an archive to reproduce an entire record series. 

If our attempts to track the origin of the material are unsuccessful, we should say so and explain the efforts we have made. This will help us and others avoid unnecessary repetition of the work. When we carefully report our steps, we or a user of our work may be able later to fill some of the gaps in our current research methods or findings.

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Our Research Conclusions: Are they Hypotheses? Theories? Or Proof? – By Elizabeth Shown Mills, CG, CG, FASG https://genealogical.com/2025/05/12/our-research-conclusions-are-they-hypotheses-theories-or-proof-by-elizabeth-shown-mills-cg-cg-fasg/ Mon, 12 May 2025 16:51:32 +0000 https://genealogical.com/?p=83942 Since 2007, Evidence Explained: Citing History Sources from Artifacts to Cyberspace has been the “Bible” for history researchers—offering not only citation models but also guidance in the analysis and use of sources. Over the next several blog posts, we present excerpts from Chapters 1 and 2 of EE’s new fourth edition: Fundamentals of Research & […]

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Since 2007, Evidence Explained: Citing History Sources from Artifacts to Cyberspace has been the “Bible” for history researchers—offering not only citation models but also guidance in the analysis and use of sources. Over the next several blog posts, we present excerpts from Chapters 1 and 2 of EE’s new fourth edition: Fundamentals of Research & Analysis, and  Fundamentals of Citation & Style. 

(EE4: 1.3)
Each assertion we make as history researchers must be supported by proof. However, proof is not synonymous with a source. The most reliable proof is a composite of information drawn from multiple sources that meet three criteria:

  • They represent quality materials;
  • They are independently created; and 
  • They accurately report the original circumstances.
Evidence Explained

For history researchers, there is no such thing as proof that can never be rebutted. We were not there when history happened, and the eyewitness accounts of those who were — if and when those accounts exist — may not be reliable. Every conclusion we reach about circumstances, events, identities, or kinships is simply a decision we base upon the weight of the evidence we have assembled. Our challenge is to accumulate the best information possible and to train ourselves to skillfully analyze and interpret what it has to say.

In this process, we typically reach conclusions of three types, each of which carries a different weight:

  • Hypotheses are propositions based upon an analysis of evidence at hand. They are used to define a focus for additional research. In testing any hypothesis, we must labor to disprove it as diligently as we labor to prove it. Our role is not just that of judge and jury, but also devil’s advocate.
  • Theories are tentative conclusions reached after a hypothesis has been extensively researched but the evidence still seems short of proof. A theory should never be presented as a fact. Any theory we propose should carry qualifiers. Perhaps, possibly, likely, and similar terms can express our degree of confidence in a theory, but we are still obliged to explain our reasoning.
  • Proof is a conclusion based upon the sum of the evidence that supports a valid assertion or deduction. It’s a conclusion drawn from many sources — quality sources, all independently created. Proof must be backed by thorough research and documentation, by reliable information that is correctly interpreted and carefully correlated, and by a well-reasoned and written analysis of the problem and the evidence.

A conclusion cannot always be reached. When the accumulated materials are well appraised, the evidence may not support any decision at all. If it does not, then the question must remain open — the fact of the situation remains unknown — until sufficient evidence is developed. 

If extenuating circumstances pressure for a decision (as with impending court testimony in a dispute over, say, historical property or heirship), then the researcher must present all relevant evidence, interpret it accurately, and appropriately qualify whatever hypothesis seems justified. This is commonly done using terms that denote levels of confidence, as discussed in this chapter at §1.6).

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Book Explains and Celebrates 250th Anniversary of Quest for Independence https://genealogical.com/2025/05/12/book-explains-and-celebrates-250th-anniversary-of-quest-for-independence/ Mon, 12 May 2025 15:00:01 +0000 https://genealogical.com/?p=83938 If you have been following the news of late, you know that we just marked the 250th anniversary of the beginning of the American Revolution. The famous “shot heard round the world” refers to the un-named British soldier or Massachusetts militiaman who first opened fire at the Battle of Lexington on April 19, 1775. Although […]

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If you have been following the news of late, you know that we just marked the 250th anniversary of the beginning of the American Revolution. The famous “shot heard round the world” refers to the un-named British soldier or Massachusetts militiaman who first opened fire at the Battle of Lexington on April 19, 1775. Although we will never know whose musket started the American Revolution, author Jack Crowder has gathered much of the surviving first-hand information about what happened on Lexington Green and between Lexington and Concord, Massachusetts, during the first day of the Revolutionary War. 

The First 24 Hours of the American Revolution

Mr. Crowder’s book The First 24 Hours of the American Revolution: An Hour-by-Hour Accounts of the Battle of Lexington, Concord, and the British Retreat on Battle Road, is nothing less than a documentary history of the people, places, times, and events that forever changed the course of our history–based on the writings of the participants and eyewitnesses. While no such story could omit the names of Paul Revere, John Hancock, Lord Percy and other notables, most of this story is told in the words of the common men and women of Massachusetts. Most of our militiamen, for example, were farmers and shopkeepers possessing virtually no military experience. Most were under thirty-five, and some were teenagers. Some, like Benjamin Balch and Samuel Payson, were clergymen. Prudence Wright from Pepperell, organized a group of women to guard the road that passed through the town, ultimately capturing two of the enemy.

Interspersing the sworn testimony of people who survived Lexington and Concord with his own narrative, Jack Crowder keeps us on the edge of our seat as we read about:

  • The narrow escape of patriots John Hancock and Samuel Adams at 2:30 AM
  • The regional alarms calling upon militiamen to advance upon Lexington
  • The names of persons killed or wounded in Lexington, Concord, and in between.
  • The Patriot defense of Concord bridge that protected the American arsenal
  • Extraordinary acts of heroism on both sides, including by septuagenarians 

The author rounds out this meticulous account with numerous illustrations based on period paintings, photographs, and line drawings. There is also a town-by-town appendix of militiamen who were mortally wounded in the encounters.  A bibliography and a name index to all persons mentioned in the book concludes the work.

The U.S. will mark the important events of the War for Independence over the next eight years (2025-2033), commencing with hostilities at Lexington, Concord, and along Battle Road. There is no better time to reacquaint yourself with how it all started or to teach your children and grandchildren why freedom means so much to our countrymen and women. It’s all there in Jack Darrell Crowder’s The First 24 Hours of the American Revolution.  

Click here to view other Revolutionary War books by Jack Darrell Crowder

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Pedigree Charts and Family Group Sheets https://genealogical.com/2025/05/05/pedigree-charts-and-family-group-sheets/ Mon, 05 May 2025 16:15:15 +0000 https://genealogical.com/?p=83900 Chapter Two of Drew Smith’s wonderful guidebook, Generation by Generation: A Modern Approach to the Basics of Genealogy, is about relationships: Father and Mother, Siblings, Aunts and Uncles, Cousins, Greats and Grands, Double Cousins, the Removes, and more. Smith discusses the origins of the terms we use to express relationships, and then he goes on […]

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Generation by Generation by Drew Smith

Chapter Two of Drew Smith’s wonderful guidebook, Generation by Generation: A Modern Approach to the Basics of Genealogy, is about relationships: Father and Mother, Siblings, Aunts and Uncles, Cousins, Greats and Grands, Double Cousins, the Removes, and more. Smith discusses the origins of the terms we use to express relationships, and then he goes on to explain how genealogists have come to visualize and arrange them for organizational purposes. The relationship formats that have stood the test of time are the pedigree chart and the family group sheet. Each one has its own benefits. If one or both is new to you, you can have a looksee below at the samples Drew Smith has incorporated into Generation by Generation.

Pedigree Charts and Family Group Sheet Sample


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‘DNA for Native American Genealogy’ Still Garnering Great Reviews https://genealogical.com/2025/04/21/dna-for-native-american-genealogy-still-garnering-great-reviews/ Mon, 21 Apr 2025 17:02:22 +0000 https://genealogical.com/?p=83822 We’ve spent much of the last twelve months promoting Roberta Estes’ book, The Complete Guide to Family TreeDNA, and the response from genealogists here and abroad has been terrific. Given that emphasis, we may have unintentionally hidden her 2021 publication, DNA for Native American Genealogy under a bushel. Fortunately, reviews of the latter continue to […]

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We’ve spent much of the last twelve months promoting Roberta Estes’ book, The Complete Guide to Family TreeDNA, and the response from genealogists here and abroad has been terrific. Given that emphasis, we may have unintentionally hidden her 2021 publication, DNA for Native American Genealogy under a bushel. Fortunately, reviews of the latter continue to come in. 

Most recently, Debbie Jeske has reviewed the Native American guidebook for the Winter 2024-2025 issue of the St. Louis Genealogical Society Quarterly. Ms. Jeske opens her review with, “DNA for Native American Genealogy by Roberta Estes is a must-have for anyone attempting to identify their Native American genealogy.” Further on, the review states, “Part 6, ‘Your Roadmap and Checklist,’ is an excellent resource of step-by-step directions for individuals. Specifics for various testing companies, third-party tools, and resources for further learning are included.” In her conclusion, Ms. Jeske also observes that “the explanations provided on autosomal, mitochondria, Y-DNA ethnicity estimates and testing companies make this a useful reference addition to any researcher’s bookshelf. (Emphasis “Genealogy Pointers”)

In view of the detail found in the St. Louis Genealogical Society review, we have chosen to reprint it in its entirety here. (View DNA for Native American Genealogy)

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Announcing: Northern Neck of Virginia Pioneers, 1642-1675. In Six Volumes. By Robert K. Headley, Jr. https://genealogical.com/2025/04/07/announcing-northern-neck-of-virginia-pioneers-1642-1675-in-six-volumes-by-robert-k-headley-jr/ Mon, 07 Apr 2025 16:10:25 +0000 https://genealogical.com/?p=83752 Virginia’s Northern Neck is comprised of the present-day counties of Lancaster, Northumberland, Richmond, and Westmoreland. (The oldest records for Richmond County date from its origin as part of Old Rappahannock County.) The foremost authority on Northern Neck genealogy is Robert K. Headley, Jr.  Mr. Headley, who has immersed himself in its records for most of […]

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Virginia’s Northern Neck is comprised of the present-day counties of Lancaster, Northumberland, Richmond, and Westmoreland. (The oldest records for Richmond County date from its origin as part of Old Rappahannock County.) The foremost authority on Northern Neck genealogy is Robert K. Headley, Jr.  Mr. Headley, who has immersed himself in its records for most of his adult life, is also the author of three earlier books on this region:

Now Mr. Headley brings us his magnum opus, Northern Neck of Virginia Pioneers, 1642-1675. In Six Volumes. In a word, Headley has presented us with a genealogical dictionary of the earliest settlers of the Northern Neck derived from a staggering database of 74,893 records. (In some cases, he has included records beyond 1675 especially when he was able to determine when an individual had died.) And what are those records?  Records of debts, orders to pay debts, confessions to debts owed, sale of land or livestock, land disputes, powers of attorney, deeds of gift, wills, inventories, petitions for commission of administration, notices of going abroad, depositions in criminal or chancery cases, coroners inquests, judgment of age of servants, punishment of runaway servants, servants who had illegitimate children or who had injured their masters, verdicts of juries (including names of jurors), certificates to employ Indians, births of children, marriages and prenuptial agreements, mortgages, recordings of marks for livestock, and divisions of land.

In all, Northern Neck of Virginia Pioneers contains hundreds of genealogical sketches. They are arranged alphabetically, and each fact cited therein includes the source of the information. While a minority of the entries are only a few lines long, they, nonetheless, place a pioneer in time and space. Most of the sketches, however, are paragraphs in length, and many are much longer. Here’s a sample entry:

DODMAN, John 2 – WC (1661-63); son of Jn. DODMAN 1 and Elizabeth DEATH (see Jn. DODMAN 1); wit., Jas. CUDWORTH of Newport in [Rhode] Island in the province of Providence, atty. of Wm. BENTON of Roade Island, merch., per virtue of attornyship dtd. 12 Sep 1661, discharge of Dan. HUTT of WC from all transactions, 11 Oct 1661 (WC Deeds Etc 1661-62:55 (53)); on jury that tried case of BUTLER vs. LETTSUM, 29 Apr 1663 (WCOB 1662-54:12) [Named as a son of Jn. & Eliz. (DEATH) DODMAN in the will of Rich. DEATH, Isle of Wight co., 3 Mar 1647 (Isle of Wight Will Book A:17)]

As Mr. Headley writes in the Introduction to his opus, there are “Stories of great heroism and horrible cruelty, of financial disasters, of great successes, of vicious feuds, of husbands deserting wives and wives deserting husbands, of marriages, births, and funerals, of doctors, blacksmiths, carpenters, ministers, merchants, rogues, scoundrels, and above all planters. . . Sometimes we see a slice of a person’s life—a few years and then nothing—and occasionally we can follow a person’s entire life from birth to death.  . . . At the very least, this work can provide a guide to locate records about an individual.”

Mr. Headley explains the approach he took in compiling his database, as well as how he addressed the problems associated with 17th-century spelling and name variants, in the Methodology section at the front of each book. Readers will also want to study the extensive appendices found at the back every volume covering the project’s sources, bibliography, list of abbreviations, name variants, and placenames. Each volume is fully indexed, for the user’s convenience, and may be purchased as a complete set or volume by volume according to the following alphabetical sequence of Northern Neck pioneers.

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Map Guide to the Federal Censuses—Still the Best Source for Boundary Changes https://genealogical.com/2025/03/24/map-guide-to-the-federal-censuses-still-the-best-source-for-boundary-changes/ Mon, 24 Mar 2025 16:43:26 +0000 https://genealogical.com/?p=83608 The award-winning Map Guide to the U.S. Federal Censuses, 1790-1920, by William Thorndale and William Dollarhide, published in 1987, is the preeminent tool for assuring researchers that they are searching the census in the correct county.  The maps in the Map Guide show both contemporary boundaries and decennial federal census boundaries on the same map. […]

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The award-winning Map Guide to the U.S. Federal Censuses, 1790-1920, by William Thorndale and William Dollarhide, published in 1987, is the preeminent tool for assuring researchers that they are searching the census in the correct county.  The maps in the Map Guide show both contemporary boundaries and decennial federal census boundaries on the same map. According to co-author William Dollarhide, “That concept was clearly designed to aid genealogists, not just historians, or demographers. Genealogists are interested in what county their people lived in so they can find the right county courthouse. As you know, the most important part of the three elements in doing genealogical research (Name, Date, Place) is the PLACE where the records are stored today. The Map Guide maps provide that service, by showing both the modern boundaries and the contemporary boundaries on the same map. One can quickly see the counties THEN and the counties NOW.  It is graphic, it is easy, and it is consistent for every state . . . As a testament to [William] Thorndale’s research, there has never been one question about the accuracy of the Map Guide maps . . . .”. 

The principal feature of The Map Guide consists of a county-by-county map for each U.S. state (including territorial maps) for each census of the state/territory’s existence. Each such map displays contemporary boundaries overlaying the boundaries of a particular census year. Users of the volume will also discover a detailed introduction containing an historical essay about the census, an appendix describing the mapping process, and a discussion of state session laws that mandated the thousands of boundary changes.

According to esteemed genealogist Elizabeth Shown Mills:

“Ancestors who lived to a ripe old age on the frontiers of America may have spent their entire lives in one community and yet lived in a dozen different counties.  My first step with any new project is to create a genealogy of the area in which the ancestor lived—charting its parent counties and its offspring—and I begin that effort with Dollarhide and Thorndale’s Map Guide to the U.S. Federal Census, 1790-1920.”

To further illustrate, here are two maps from the Thorndale/Dollarhide volume: (1) A guide for using the book, and (2) the 1890 map for the Montana Territory.

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Scottish Baronial Families, 1250-1750 | by Dr. David Dobson (Sample) https://genealogical.com/2025/03/17/scottish-baronial-families-1250-1750-by-dr-david-dobson-sample/ Mon, 17 Mar 2025 15:55:17 +0000 https://genealogical.com/?p=83569 As Dr. David Dobson has noted in the Introduction to his new book, Scottish Baronial Families, 1250-1750, medieval Scottish kings established administrative units overseen by barons to assure that the King’s laws were enforced, taxes were collected, and, when necessary, knights and other warriors were available to defend the kingdom. By the late seventeenth century […]

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As Dr. David Dobson has noted in the Introduction to his new book, Scottish Baronial Families, 1250-1750, medieval Scottish kings established administrative units overseen by barons to assure that the King’s laws were enforced, taxes were collected, and, when necessary, knights and other warriors were available to defend the kingdom.

By the late seventeenth century there were hundreds of baronies in Scotland; however, in the aftermath of the Jacobite rising of 1745-1746, the British Government enacted the Heritable Jurisdiction Act of 1747, which reduced the powers of barons and the nobility in general.

Working mostly from primary sources written in Latin—especially the Register of the Great Seal of Scotland from about 1320–Dobson has traced the origin and line of descent of nearly 1,000 Scottish baronies and baronetcies, including some whose progeny eventually moved to the Americas. Representative of the contents of Scottish Baronial Families, are the following two pages describing the barons Graham/Grahame/Graeme/Grayme .

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