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À 86 ans, Agnès livre ses mémoires pour partager avec le public les nombreux souvenirs, événements, coutumes et traditions qui ont marqué sa vie et les membres de sa famille. Au-delà du récit de son enfance et de sa jeunesse, elle y brosse le tableau de l’époque et nous fait connaître, dans un style vivant, une galerie de personnages attachants qui ont travaillé dur dans la vie pour réaliser leurs rêves et faire vivre les leurs. Ce faisant, l’auteure ouvre devant nous un véritable coffre au trésor. À vous de le découvrir !
Covering trends, issues and case studies, this collection presents 34 new essays by library professionals actively engaged in helping patrons with genealogy research across the United States. Topics include strategies for finding military and court records, mapping family migration and settlement, creating and accessing local digital services, and developing materials and instruction for patrons. Forewordist D. Joshua Taylor, host of Genealogy Roadshow and president of the New York Genealogical and Biographical Society, notes: "The increasing popularity of the topic requires that any librarian who encounters genealogical customers remain on the forefront of new developments in the field."
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This information was taken from the published City of Nashua, New Hampshire Annual Reports. There were many births at home during this period that were not registered in the year of birth but were later reported to the city clerk. These late recordings were never recorded in subsequent annual reports. (To find out about these births one would have to make a request to the Nashua city clerk.) The births are recorded as follows: last name, first name, date of birth, gender, birth number of child in family, father's name and place of birth, mother's name and place of birth. Finally, colored or stillborn children are so designated at the end of the entry. The information is presented in an easy-to-use alphabetical format.
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Covers primarily the province of Quebec with some additional entries from other provinces in Canada. Includes entries from the United States, particularly from the north and northeastern states, and Louisiana.