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Ancestors and descendants of Elvin Van Hoose (1911- ) and Mae Gullett (1915- ) who lived in Kentucky and later moved to Ohio.
This ten-year supplement lists 10,000 titles acquired by the Library of Congress since 1976--this extraordinary number reflecting the phenomenal growth of interest in genealogy since the publication of Roots. An index of secondary names contains about 8,500 entries, and a geographical index lists family locations when mentioned.
Previous editions titled: Genealogical books in print
Zachariah Sallyer (ca. 1730-ca. 1789) lived in Tryon County, North Carolina. Descendants lived in North Carolina, Virginia, West Virginia, Kentucky, Missouri, Indiana, Illinois and elsewhere. This is an indepth research on the Salyer family and those related to them.
The definitive guide to the 5,000 most common surnames in the United States. With origins, variations, rankings, prominent bearers and published genealogies.
Around 1785, a woman was taken from her home in Senegambia and sent to Saint-Domingue in the Caribbean. Those who enslaved her there named her Rosalie. Her later efforts to escape slavery were the beginning of a family's quest, across five generations and three continents, for lives of dignity and equality. Freedom Papers sets the saga of Rosalie and her descendants against the background of three great antiracist struggles of the nineteenth century: the Haitian Revolution, the French Revolution of 1848, and the Civil War and Reconstruction in the United States. Freed during the Haitian Revolution, Rosalie and her daughter Elisabeth fled to Cuba in 1803. A few years later, Elisabeth departed...
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