You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
This introductory text on psychotherapy emphasizes the details of major treatment models and also the theory and research findings that inform the field of psychotherapy in general. A specific learning sequence is laid out that permits the student to develop beginning competence as a psychotherapist.
Announcements for the following year included in some vols.
Jacob M. Weik married Susannah Moir in 1783 in Rowan County, North Carolina. Descendants and relatives lived mainly in North Carolina, Arkansas, Louisiana and Missouri.
None
None
James Ward was born 25 March 1758 in Fincastle County, Virginia. He married Elizabeth WiIliamson in about 1810. They had eleven children. James served in the American Revolution. He died 15 July 1848 in Lawrence County, Kentucky. Descendants and relatives lived mainly in West Virginia, Kentucky, Ohio and Texas.
In Author Spotlight page (link above), look under "About" to find additional Discount Code. A transcription of all information in the Russell County, Virginia Marriage register for the period. A total of 2,746 marriages including some 19,000 individuals were transcribed beginning in 1923 and ending in 1935. Separate groom and bride indices, sorted by surname, are provided. The register contains the names of the parents, ages, birthplaces, marital condition, and residences of the parties and the groom's occupation. Marriage and Occupational statistics are compiled for each year and summarized in tables and graphs. All entries were checked and rechecked using primary sources. This book will be of interest to those tracing family history in Russell County, Virginia, sociologists, demographers and students of depression era Central Appalachia. Includes photos of some of the couples whose marriages are listed here.
Daniel Ashcraft (1698-1755) was born at Stonington, Connecticut, the son of John Ashcraft (1671-1732) and grandson of John Ashcraft (ca. 1644-1680). He was living at Wrightstown, Bucks County, Pennsylvania, by 1732; in Hunterdon County, New Jersey, by 1738; and was in the Sleepy Creek area of what is not West Virginia, by 1755. He was killed by Indians later that year. He and his wife, Mary Lewis?, had eleven children, ca. 1724-ca. 1743. Descendants lived in West Virginia, Pennsylvania, Kentucky, Ohio, Illinois, Indiana, Missouri, and elsewhere.