You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.
Vol 1 905p Vol 2 961p.
Lists 5,000 family associations across the United States in alphabetical order with addresses, telephone numbers, and contact persons.
Wolfert Gerritse Van Kouwenhoven immigrated from The Netherlands to Manhattan, New York in 1625. Descendants (chiefly using the surname Crownover by the early 1700s) lived in New York, New Jersey, Pennsyl- vania, Maryland, Missouri, Kentucky, Mississippi, Texas, California and elsewhere.
None
(From the Preface) “The author has attempted to show how the original five counties in 1812 were divided and sub-divided until, by 1862, 114 counties had emerged. Reynolds County at one time, at least in part, has been a portion of seven counties; Ste. Genevieve, Cape Girardeau, Washington, Wayne, Madison, Ripley, and Shannon.”
A highly visual guide to designing for print media, from project inception to final production Packed with hundreds of informative, illustrated examples, Designing for Print demonstrates methods and techniques for creating top-quality print media projects. Carefully chosen real-world design exercises and problem-solving projects offer hands-on practice to help readers achieve strong designs. This easy-to-use guide presents software tricks and tips, along with discussions on scanning, output, and other issues related to digital design for print and electronic media. Up-to-date coverage includes useful skills for getting the most out of the latest technologies. Dozens of sidebars and step-by-step descriptions walk readers through the design process in the same order actual projects are implemented: Planning design Designing with type Designing with photographs Advanced typography Preparing images Illustrating effectively Putting it all together Designing for Print gives a peerless introduction to designing all types of print projects.
Since its inception in 1870, "The New York Genealogical and Biographical Record" has been at the forefront in publishing articles on Long Island families, many of them lengthy, definitive studies spread out over several issues. In a number of these articles the English or Dutch origin of families is established. No better purpose could be served than to gather these articles together and reprint them in their entirety, thus making available a mass of information on Long Island families that has previously been difficult to locate. With the articles appropriately consolidated and arranged, and additions and corrections from "The Record" properly appended, this two-volume compilation becomes the single greatest repository of Long Island genealogies in existence. In addition, it is fully indexed and is published with an introduction by Henry B. Hoff, former editor of "The Record."