Paul's Family Genealogy Pages

Discovering our American and European Ancestors

Notes


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1401 There were nine children born the James and Elizabeth and by the 1910 Census, only five are living. Hoover, Elizabeth H. (I33)
 
1402 There were several 'requirements' of every couple before they were to be lawfully married. Those requirements included: character witnesses, sufficient assets, vaccination records, Sunday school records, and military discharge record. Records of each of these items were recorded in the 'Zivilstandsregister' or 'Civil Register' in the town in which they lived. See source information. Family F20
 
1403 There were two marriage records for this marriage, each on a different date.

Acte de mariage
Commune/Paroisse : St Marcel
Family F676
 
1404 These 1855 New York State Census are being compiled by volunteers for the Genealogical Group
Housed in the Roswell P. Flower Memorial Library.
229 Washington St. Watertown, NY 13601
Copyright, 2003-2005 ?b??: ?/b?by The Genealogical Group

State of New York
Jefferson County
1855 Census
Records by town:
A-E, reel 0895241
E-P, reel 0895242
P-W, reel 0895243 
Source (S843)
 
1405 These collections consist of indexes and images of schedules enumerating Union veterans and widows of veterans of the Civil War for the states of Kentucky through Wyoming. Fragments of the US census population schedule exist only for the states of Alabama, District of Columbia, Georgia, Illinois, Minnesota, New Jersey, New York, North Carolina, Ohio, South Dakota, and Texas. Some returns include U.S. Naval Vessels and Navy Yards. The schedules are from Record Group 15, Records of the Veterans Administration and is NARA publication M123. Source (S1269)
 
1406 They had 6 children, only 3 surviving as of the 1900 census. Vanbrocklin, Joseph (I456)
 
1407 They moved to St. Lawrence Co.

----

Burial info. here
https://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=26070889&ref=acom

 
Family F65
 
1408 They were married at the Congregational Church parsonage.
(Might this be the First Congregational Church of Deer River
27141 NYS Rt. 26
Deer River, NY 13627 ?)
 
Family F870
 
1409 This book contains birth, marriage and death records of individuals in Ronchamp, France from 1792 to 1902. The images of the records were downloaded from the following web site:
http://www.servancnaute.fr/phpwebgallery/index.php?
While reading through these records, I noticed that they were organized in alphabetical order by surname, so this leads me to believe that they are in fact a transcript of the original records and not the original records themselves. Since the book ends in the year 1902, I think I can safely assume that the book was completed in that year.

------------------------------------------
12/19/2008
The NEW web site for these records is here:
http://www.servancnaute.fr/phpwebgallery/index.php? 
Source (S562)
 
1410 This book is accessible from Google Books at:
http://books.google.com/books?id=3O1owaKOPtMC&oe=UTF-8 
Source (S879)
 
1411 This brother relationship is only a guess, but it seems a good one.
The 1910 Census for Jefferson County, Town of LeRay shows a William Besha
(age 48 ) and a Annette Besha (age 54) (sister) living on Gardner Road

occupied homestead

-------------

1930 Census
https://familysearch.org/ark:/61903/1:1:X7ZG-JH2

----------- 
Besha, William M. (I185)
 
1412 This collection contains 110 newspaper titles, 131,588 issues comprising 1,425,805 pages and 6,887,660 articles.

Since 2005, the History, Philosophy, and Newspaper Library at the University of Illinois has been developing unique digital newspaper content. The works collected here include digital facsimilies of newspapers and trade journals in a variety of fields. Users may search, browse, tag, and correct OCR text to improve searchability and access. 
Source (S1522)
 
1413 This collection is in Beta and undergoing evaluation and testing. As such, these records are being shown for free. You will need to be registered to view the records and you may be asked some questions about your experience. Keep in mind that links and features are subject to change.

Each marriage record includes a transcript. While the details may vary, most transcripts will include the following information:

First name(s)
Last name
Sex
Marital status
Age
Birth year
Father's name
Mother's name
Event
Event year
Spouse's first name(s)
Spouse's last name
Spouse's sex
Spouse's marital status
Spouse's age
Spouse's birth year
Spouse's father's name
Spouse's mother's name
Place
County

This collection spans the 19th and 20th centuries. It was not until 1908, however, that the state of New York required marriages to be recorded.

The counties covered in this collection are as follows:

Allegany
Broome
Cattaraugus
Cayuga
Chautauqua
Chemung
Chenango
Clinton
Columbia
Delaware
Essex
Fulton
Genesee
Greene
Hamilton
Jefferson
Lewis
Livingston
Madison
Monroe
Montgomery
Nassau
Niagara
Oneida
Ontario
Orange
Orleans
Oswego
Otsego
Putnam
Rockland
Saratoga
Schenectady
Schuyler
Seneca
St. Lawrence
Steuben
Sullivan
Tioga
Tompkins
Warren
Washington
Wayne
Westchester
Wyoming
Yates

New York City and its boroughs are not part of this collection. You can find New York City vital records and newspapers in the Useful Links & Resources section. 
Source (S1358)
 
1414 This data was compiled by my father, Francis Jospeh Kelly, Jr. Source (S567)
 
1415 This database details those persons enumerated in the 1830 United States Federal Census, the Fifth Census of the United States. In addition, the names of those listed on the population schedule are linked to the actual images of the 1830 Federal Census. Enumerators of the 1830 census were asked to include the following categories in the census: name of head of household, number of free white males and females, number of other free persons, names of slave owners and number of slaves, number of foreigners, and town or district and county of residence. Source (S519)
 
1416 This database is a compilation of burial records from a variety of sources and cemeteries. These records provide information on the burials of U.S. veterans and their dependents who were buried in the various Veterans Affairs (VA) National Cemeteries, state veterans cemeteries, or other military cemeteries. Because the information regarding the burials is compiled from multiple sources, the amount of information provided for each burial will vary. Some of the information you may find in this database includes: name of deceased, birth date, death date, interment date, burial location/site, cemetery name, cemetery address, relationship to veteran, veteran service dates, military rank, and military branch. Source (S1092)
 
1417 This database is an index to individuals enumerated in the 1891 Census for England. The census contains detailed information on each individual who spent the night in each household including name, relationship to the head of the family, marital status, age at last birthday, gender, occupation, and birthplace. Additional information about the dwelling and property was collected. Each name in this index is linked to actual images of the 1891 England Census. Source (S494)
 
1418 This database is an index to the passenger lists of ships arriving from foreign ports at the port of New York from 1820-1957. In addition, the names found in the index are linked to actual images of the passenger lists. Information contained in the index includes given name, surname, age, gender, arrival date, port of arrival, port of departure and ship name. Source (S1041)
 
1419 This database is an index to the passenger lists of ships arriving from foreign ports at the port of New York from 1851-1891. In addition, the names found in the index are linked to actual images of the passenger lists, copied from the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) microfilm, M237, rolls 95-580.
Passenger lists are are one of many sources used to obtain immigration information. They may also provide information that may help you to continue research in your ancestor's homeland.
Information contained in the index includes given name, surname, age, gender, arrival date, port of arrival, port of departure and ship name. If a place of origin or place of nativity was provided, that information is included in the index as well. Many of these items may be used to search the index in the search template above.
It is important to note that the port of departure listed on these passenger lists is not always the original port of departure for these individuals. A ship could make several voyages throughout the year, making several stops along way. Oft times the port of departure found on these lists is the most recent port the ship was located at prior to arriving at the port of New York. Therefore, if your ancestors emigrated to the U.S. from Germany, they could be found on a passenger list coming from Liverpool, England (if, in this case, the ship left from Bremen, Germany then continued on to Liverpool, England before arriving in New York).
The microcopies of the passenger lists found at NARA are arranged chronologically by arrival date of vessel. If you do not wish to search this database using the search template, the images may be browsed following the chronological arrangement provided by NARA. To browse the images first select the "Year" in which you would like to search, followed by the "Month", and finally the "Ship Name".
To learn about researching in passenger records consult John P. Colletta's book, They Came In Ships (Salt Lake City: Ancestry, 1993). 
Source (S343)
 
1420 This index contains details of named individuals derived from records created in the administration of the Poor Law in Oxfordshire. The Poor Law was the system for providing a form of social security in operation in England from the 16th century until 1834. Individual parishes were responsible for administering the Poor Law and maintaining paupers and their families. The main types of records created were settlement examinations and certificates, removal orders, bastardy bonds, and apprenticeship indentures. Surviving examples of these records for Oxfordshire parishes are held at Oxfordshire Record Office. For further information on the Poor Law and the types of documents, please see our ?u?Poor Law pages. ?/u?

Items can be inspected at the Oxfordshire Record Office, St. Luke's Church, Cowley, Oxford, OX4 2HT. If you wish to enquire about an item please contact the Record Office quoting the item's reference number.
Tel. 01865 398200
email ?u?archives@oxfordshire.gov.uk ?/u?.

?b?Poor law records
?/b?

The administrative history of the Poor Law can be divided into two periods.
?b?Pre-1834:
?/b?
The poor were the responsibility of individual parishes. From 1572 overseers of the poor could be appointed by each parish vestry on an annual basis. Overseers' accounts list recipients of relief (regular and special cases) and income from rates, with names of the contributors. Churchwardens' accounts and Vestry minutes may also give details of payments to paupers.

Under an Act of 1662 the place of legal settlement of every pauper had to be determined. This led to the creation of Settlement Certificates, showing where a person in need of poor relief had to seek it. Settlement Examinations were often carried out by Justices of the Peace; the resulting documents provide potted biographies of paupers.

Removal Orders could be issued by Justices, forcing people to return from one place to their parish of settlement.

Children of paupers could be dealt with by a system of parish apprenticeship; overseers were empowered to compel parishioners to accept boys and girls to learn a trade or skill. Apprenticeship Indentures were drawn up, stating the exact terms of the agreement.

Where illegitimate children might become a burden on the parish, Bastardy or Harmless Bonds were compiled, requiring the putative father to maintain his offspring at his own expense. Warrants could be issued to arrest anyone refusing to apply. Bastardy cases sometimes reached the county court of Quarter Sessions and generated examination papers, including detailed statements of witnesses.

Many documents about the treatment of the poor will be found among parish collections. Others can be tracked down in the personal name and subject indexes to the Quarter Sessions' papers or the privately deposited records.

?b?Poor Law Amendment Act of 1834:
?/b?
This was passed in an attempt to counteract the overstretched parish system. The union replaced the parish as the poor law district, and consisted of groups of 30 or 40 parishes (not necessarily all in the same county), usually centring on a town, where the workhouse was located. Boards of Guardians were now responsible for the day-to-day management of poor relief at a local level Salaried officials, such as medical and relieving officers decided the fate of applicants for relief.

The main records are the series of Guardians' Minute Books; these give information on payments to and treatment of paupers and the care of children, medical officers' reports, as well as accounts and details of alterations to institution buildings. They are very detailed, so it can be difficult tracking down details of particular cases.

Workhouse records do not survive in any great quantity, though we do hold admission and discharge books, a Master's journal, accounts, dietaries and medical officers' reports to provide some insight on internal management. Other material you may encounter for this period includes rates books, letters from and about individual paupers, and accounts of numbers of births, marriages and deaths. The Local Government Act of 1929 officially abolished the term pauper and Boards of Guardians were discontinued.

A catalogue of Poor Law Union records for Oxfordshire is in a brown file with the basic reference code "PLU". The exception to this is material for Headington Union, details of which are in the index to Oxford City Archives
?b?Contact details

?/b?Oxfordshire Record Office
St Luke's Church
Temple Road
Cowley
Oxford
OX4 2HT

Tel: 01865 398200
Fax: 01865 398201
?u?Email the Oxfordshire Record Office ?/u?

This page was last updated on: 28 July 2005 
Source (S512)
 
1421 This index is an electronic index for the years 1558 to 1898.

It is not necessarily intended to index any specific set of records. This index is not complete for any particular place or region. This collection may include information previously published in the International Genealogical Index or Vital Records Index collections. 
Source (S1278)
 
1422 This index is an electronic index for the years 1650 to 1995.
It is not necessarily intended to index any specific set of records. This index is not complete for any particular place or region. This collection may include information previously published in the International Genealogical Index or Vital Records Index collections.
Index based upon data collected by the Genealogical Society of Utah, Salt Lake City.
https://familysearch.org/learn/wiki/en/Maryland_Births_and_Christenings_(FamilySearch_Historical_Records) 
Source (S945)
 
1423 This is a collection of the Kansas state census taken in 1875. The census enumerates all household members.

Kansas became a state in 1861 and later passed a law requiring a state census every ten years to number the population of the various counties in order to determine apportionment of the state legislature. The first state census was taken in 1865 and continued until 1925, as the law was repealed in 1933. 
Source (S1612)
 
1424 This is a reproduction of a library book that was digitized
by Google as part of an ongoing effort to preserve the
information in books and make it universally accessible. 
Source (S1591)
 
1425 This is an historical index of events (births & deaths), held online, which contains a sub-set of information from the full record such as name/surname/district of event etc. which can be used to help customers identify an entry and order a birth or death certificate. The new index has been created from the records digitised at GRO. Currently that includes births from 1837 to 1915 and deaths from 1837 to 1957, but not marriages, which have not yet been digitised. Source (S1476)
 
1426 This is park's third marriage. Family F10432
 
1427 This is weird. The birth date makes no sense.

Acte de naissance/bapt 
Poivey, Jean Claude (I1907)
 
1428 This paper writes of Robert Sixbury, "Temperance lecturers are indebted to Jefferson County, New York, for the latest awful example, which his name, Robert Sixbury. He used to be an indian fighter, but he chewed, and smoked, and drank till even his constitution gave way under it." Sixbury, Robert (I131)
 
1429 This property abutts against property which Robert Sixbury "contracted for" at one time.
"....all that piece of land situated in the town of Le Ray County of Jefferson State of New York in Lot number two hundred and thirty eight of great Lot number four of Macomb's purchase Beginning at the most southerly corner of said Lot No. 238 at an Elm tree cornd & marked 238..239..532..533 thence north 54 degrees west twenty two chains 36/100 to a stake the most southy corner of said land contracted for by R. Sixbury thence north thirty six degrees East twenty two chains 36 lks to a stake thence south fifty four degrees East twenty two chains 36 lks to a maple sapling thence south thirty six degrees west twenty two chains 36 lks to the place of beginning containing fifty acres as surveyed by Musgrove Evans the 18th of August 1810..."
 
Huber, Peter (I360)
 
1430 This record set was previously published in printed format in British Record Society (BRS) Volumes 109, 93, & 94, which excluded the Wantage peculiar court; the latter records have now been added.

The bishop of Oxford's probate jurisdiction was extended to Berkshire in 1836, when that archdeaconry was transferred from Salisbury to Oxford diocese, and similarly to Buckinghamshire in 1845, when that archdeaconry was transferred from Lincoln diocese. Most residents in those areas continued to prove their wills in their respective archdeaconry courts, but this index includes among the Oxford consistory records listed here just a few Berkshire wills and grants of administration from 1836 onwards and a very few for Buckinghamshire from 1845.

The Oxfordshire Wills Index includes all the surviving Oxfordshire wills proved and administrations granted in local courts up to 1857, except those for most resident members of Oxford University and other 'privileged persons' employed by or otherwise connected with the University. These persons were, like the residents of the peculiars, exempt from the bishop's jurisdiction and proved their wills in the court of the Chancellor of the University. An index of most of these University probate records was published by John Griffiths in 1862. Now, therefore, online or printed means of reference are available for all the surviving probate records of all the Oxfordshire local ecclesiastical courts.

The original records were transferred to Oxfordshire Record Office from the Bodleian Library in March 1984, with all the other non-probate records of Oxford diocese and archdeaconry and of Oxfordshire peculiars, which had been accumulated in the Bodleian since 1878. Almost all of these probate records had originally been housed in the diocesan and archidiaconal registries in Oxford, until they were moved to the Principal Probate Registry at Somerset House in 1858 in accordance with the Courts of Probate Act of 1857. They were transferred to the Bodleian from the Principal Probate Registry to be re-united with the other local ecclesiastical records, the Oxford consistory and archdeaconry series in 1955 and those of the peculiars in 1957. The latest filed wills and administration bonds of all these courts, that is those of the period 1801 to 1857, were held in the Oxford District Probate Registry, not at Somerset House, and they had similarly been transferred to the Bodleian in 1955 and 1957 from that District Registry. 
Source (S1307)
 
1431 This source exists in two repositories:
Northern New York Agricultural Musem at Stone Mills, NY <>
and
Lyme Heritage Center <>



A web page describing further details of this source is here:
http://www.rootsweb.com/~nyjeffer/1918exp.htm

The information in this Directory is arranged as follows:
1st, Last name of individual followed by first name and second name initial (if there is a second initial.
2nd, Wife's name (if married) in parentheses.
3d, The number of children living at home.
4th, Name of individual's farm, if it has a name.
5th, The individual's business or occupation.
6th, The chief crop or specialty. (Example, grain, pouoltry, apples or potatoes, means that these are the specialties of the individuals to whom they refer.)
7th, The crop or specialty the individual has for sale. (Example, s fruit means has fruit to sell.)
8th refers to the property on which individual has residence, O (figure a) designates number of acres in farm owned. O H&L means owns house and lot. R (figure a) designates number of acres in farm for which money rent is paid. R H&L means rents house and lot. WOS (figure a) designates number of acres worked on shares.
9th, is the number of the rural delivery route or street address and postoffice from which mail is received.
10th, is the name of the township in which individual lives.
11th Is telephone indicated by the letter T.
12th H figures designates the highway on which individual has residence (see map).


ABBREVIATIONS
A=Acres
ch=children
Gen Del=general delivery (mail)
s=Has to sell
H=Highway
&L=House & Lot
O=Owns
T or R=Rents
rd=Rural Delivery (mail)
T=Telephone
tn=township
veg=vegetables
Wid=Widow
OWS=Works on Shares 
Source (S106)
 
1432 This source information was taken from this web page:
http://www.rootsweb.com/~nyjeffer/business.htm
The lists of businesses were seperated by town:
ADAMS
ALEXANDRIA BAY--TWP Alexandria
ANTWERP
BELLVILLE--TWP Ellisburgh
BROWNVILLE
CAPE VINCENT
CARTHAGE--TWP Wilna
CLAYTON
DEXTER--TWP Brownville
EVANS MILLS--TWP Leray
LIMERICK--TWP Brownville
LYME
MANNSVILLE--TWP Ellisburgh
PHILADELPHIA
REDWOOD--TWP Alexandria
SACKETTS HARBOR--TWP Hounsfield
SANFORDS CORNERS--TWP Leray
THREE MILE BAY--TWP Lyme
THERESA
WATERTOWN 
Source (S32)
 
1433 This was Harry's second marriage. Family F204
 
1434 This web site is an international "ebay" of sorts. People post anything for sale, including old photos, postcards, memorabilia, toys, clothing, etc. Source (S1369)
 
1435 Thomas Rout lived in the Hager household in 1860. Haeger, Christophe (I10393)
 
1436 Through the generosity of A.E. Rogers, who recorded the inscriptions, his
daughter Ellen Bartlett, who researched them, and Ellen's husband John,
who did the rest, we are very proud to present the Bartlett Cemetery
Inscriptions. This began as a labor of love on the part of Mr. Rogers,
who started out to record one cemetery in the Town of Clayton, and ended
up spending his summers on his hands and knees in cemetery after
cemetery, recording names, resurrecting fallen stones, and unearthing
forgotten cemeteries all over Jefferson County. For many of us,
researching Jefferson County family history, the Bartlett books of
epitaph inscription have been the first book to reach for. This is still
a work in progress.

Note: For those who wish a hard copy, you may contact the authors. For
e-mail access to them click here.
instone@aol.com

Mrs. Bartlett took the names her father found, and added information from
obituaries and other sources. Families have been assembled through her
efforts, and the combined work has proven invaluable to Jefferson County
researchers. From the time this GenWeb went on the internet, Gus, Ellen
and John have acted as lookups from their huge data base, fielding up to
30 queries a week over the years. They are now ready to have you look up
your own names on this site.

The cemeteries will be added as we receive and process them. They will
also be available from the town page. Those underlined are now available.

For alternate names for some of the cemeteries, click here.
http://www.rootsweb.com/~nyjeffer/cemdex.htm

ALEXANDRIA
ANTWERP
BROWNVILLE
CAPE VINCENT
CLAYTON
HENDERSON
HOUNSFIELD
LERAY
LYME
ORLEANS
PAMELIA (including North Watertown Cemetery)
PHILADELPHIA
RODMAN
RUTLAND
THERESA
WILNA 
Source (S34)
 
1437 Tithe Apportionments (IR 29 )
In most cases, the principal record of the commutation of tithes in a parish under the Tithe Act 1836 is the Tithe Apportionment . Strictly speaking, the tithe apportionment and the tithe map (see Tithe Maps below) together constitute a single document, but they have been separated to facilitate use and storage.

Readers normally consult microfilm copies of the tithe apportionments, for preservation reasons. To find the document reference using the Catalogue (www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/catalogue), go to the search screen, type the place-name in the first box, and IR 29 in the third box, leaving the second box empty.

Most apportionments follow the general pattern set out in the instructions which were issued at the time. The standard form of apportionment contains columns for the name(s) of the landowner(s) and occupier(s) (because until the passing of the Tithe Act 1891 the payment of tithe rentcharge was the owner's liability); the number, acreage, name or description, and state of cultivation of each tithe area; the amount of rentcharge payable, and the name(s) of the tithe-owner(s). The apportionment opens with a preamble reciting the names of the tithe-owners, the circumstances in which they owned the tithes, and whether the amount of rentcharge to be apportioned was the subject of an agreement between the landowners and the tithe-owners or of a compulsory award made by the Tithe Commissioners. The preamble usually contains, too, statistics as to the area and state of cultivation of the lands in the tithe district; the extent of the land subject to tithes and of lands, if any, exempt on various grounds from payment of tithes; and the area covered by commons, roads etc. It concludes with a statement showing the respective numbers of bushels of wheat, barley and oats which would have been obtained if one-third of the aggregate amount of rentcharge had been invested in the purchase of each of those commodities (Tithe Act 1836, s.57) at the prices prescribed by the Tithe Act 1837, s.7. The detailed apportionment of the aggregate tithe rentcharge then follows. A rentcharge is set out against each unit of charge, termed a tithe area. The amount of the charge is the par value, not the amount actually paid, which varied from year to year. The annual value of tithe rentcharge was ascertained and published yearly (Tithe Act 1836, s.56), and tables were issued from 1837 onwards which enabled the precise payment due to be calculated for the par value of any amount of rentcharge.

By the Tithe Act 1839, ss.2 and 4, the Tithe Commissioners could confirm Special Apportionments (IR 97 ) of certain charges attaching to lands subject to tithes, such as liability for chancel repairs (see Section 14).

Source:
http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/catalogue/RdLeaflet.asp?sLeafletID=100 
Source (S606)
 
1438 Tithe Maps (IR 30 )
The Tithe Maps are by no means as uniform as the apportionments (see Section 6), varying greatly in scale, accuracy and size. At the outset, the Tithe Commissioners had attempted to secure a uniform and high standard. However in most casesthere was no suitable map already in existence, and while there were many skilled land surveyors available, the expense of any new survey had to be met by the landowners. Insistence upon a fixed standard would have retarded the progress of commutation, so concessions therefore had to be made. When the 1836 Act was amended in the following year, a provision was inserted to the effect that, whilst every tithe map should be signed by the Commissioners, a map or plan should not be deemed evidence of the quantity of the land, or treated as accurate, unless it was sealed as well as signed by the Commissioners (Tithe Act 1837, s.1). Approximately 1,900 only of the tithe maps - about one-sixth of the whole - were sealed by the Tithe Commissioners, and it is these alone - called first-class maps - which can be accepted as accurate. The unsealed (or second-class) maps constitute a very mixed collection - indeed, some are little more than topographical sketches.

In many cases, discrepancies between apportionment and map subsequently created difficulties in the administration of payments and redemptions. At the time of the survey, when all the landowners concerned were well acquainted with the ground, the exact area of a piece of land or its precise delineation on a map might have appeared of little significance. The matter assumed more importance as time went on, particularly when readily-identifiable tithe areas vanished as a result of later developments. It is unnecessary to discuss in detail the problems of interpreting a tithe map; but it is well to bear in mind that reliance cannot be placed upon the area of individual tithe areas stated in an apportionment or computed from the tithe map, unless the map is sealed.

The numbers of the tithe areas on the map correspond to those in the schedules to the apportionment. These numbers are not consecutive. In order to facilitate reference, most tithe apportionments of any size had a numerical key added, showing the page of the apportionment upon which each tithe area appears (these are purely for convenience of reference and form no part of the original documents). Even so, there are traps for the unwary. The same series of tithe area numbers may be duplicated upon a tithe map, due, in most cases, to the fact that more than one township is included in the same tithe district. There are some anomalies and duplications that are not easily explained. Again, different series of numbers may be differentiated by letters or some other sign, either in the original apportionment or in subsequent altered apportionments, as, for example, 22, 22a, 22Aa, A22. Confusion may easily result if care is not taken to observe the absolute correspondence of the number in the apportionment with the number on the map.

A number of tithe maps were so heavily used that they fell into a state of disrepair. Some of these maps were copied by the Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries, and in such cases it is these copies rather than the original maps which are now in IR 30 . The original maps, together with a few drafts and earlier versions of tithe maps are preserved as Tithe Maps Supplementary (IR 77 ). Although the maps in the two series are not always identical, many of those in the supplementary series are in poor condition and should not be consulted unless the maps in IR 30 fail to provide the required information. Some are unfit for production.

The tithe maps have been partially copied to microfiche (English counties alphabetically up to and including Middlesex) and readers requiring maps for these counties normally consult the microfiche copies, for preservation reasons. To find the document reference using the Catalogue (www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/catalogue), go to the search screen, type the place-name in the first box, and IR 30 in the third box, leaving the second box empty.

Ordnance Survey maps used by the tithe authorities to record the boundaries of tithe districts and other information relating to tithe rentcharge etc. are to be found in IR 93 and IR 105 .

Source:
http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/catalogue/RdLeaflet.asp?sLeafletID=100 
Source (S607)
 
1439 Title:
Lewis County Democrat. : (Lowville, N.Y.) 1865-1910
Alternative Titles:
Democrat
Place of publication:
Lowville, N.Y.
Geographic coverage:
Lowville, Lewis, New York
View more titles from this: City County
Publisher:
De Witt C. Finch
Dates of publication:
1865-1910
Description:
Began with Jan. 1, 1865 issue.
Ceased in Aug. 1910. Cf. Gregory, W. Amer. newspapers.
Frequency:
Weekly
Language:
English
Subjects:
Lewis County (N.Y.)--Newspapers.
Lowville (N.Y.)--Newspapers.
Notes:
"Democratic."
Description based on: Vol. 9, no. 21 (Jan. 4, 1865).
Published by Manville & Phelps, <1873>.
LCCN:
sn 83031645
OCLC:
9936848
Preceding Titles:
The Lewis County banner. (Lowville, N.Y.) 1856-1864
Succeeding Titles:
The Lowville herald and Lewis County Democrat. (Lowville, N.Y.) 1910-19?? 
Source (S1585)
 
1440 Title:
The County review. : (Riverhead, N.Y.) 1903-1950
Place of publication:
Riverhead, N.Y.
Geographic coverage:
Riverhead, Suffolk, New York
View more titles from this: City County
Publisher:
Hagen & Lee
Dates of publication:
1903-1950
Description:
Vol. 1, no. 1 (Sept. 11, 1903-v. 47, no. 49 (July 20, 1950).
Frequency:
Weekly
Language:
English
Subjects:
Riverhead (N.Y.)--Newspapers.
Suffolk County (N.Y.)--Newspapers.
Notes:
"Democratic," <1950>.
"Official newspaper for the County of Suffolk," <1949>.
Description based on: Vol. 2, no. 2 (Sept. 16, 1904).
Editor: Arthur N. Penny, <1936-1942>; Evelyn Rowley, <1945>; Harold Forbes, <1949-1950>.
Publishers: Hagen & Lee, <1904-1920>; Harry Lee Pub. Co., <1936-1949>.
LCCN:
sn 84035791
OCLC:
11315428 
Source (S1419)
 
1441 Title: Daily national intelligencer. : (Washington City [D.C.]) 1813-1869
Alternative Titles:
National intelligencer
Sunday national intelligencer
Place of publication: Washington City [D.C.]
Geographic coverage: Washington, District of Columbia | View more titles from this: City State
Publisher: Gales & Seaton
Dates of publication: 1813-1869
Description: Ceased in 1869. Vol. 1, no. 1 (Jan. 1, 1813)-
Frequency: Daily (except Sunday) Feb. 6, 1865- 
Source (S1110)
 
1442 Tract 97 Jenkins, Lewis Cornelius (I35)
 
1443 Twin of Alexander Sixbury Sixbury, Annie (I164)
 
1444 Twin of Annie Sixbury, Alexander (I166)
 
1445 twin of John Hoover, Jacob (I783)
 
1446 twin of Sidney Waldradt, Seymore (I213)
 
1447 University of Illionois At Urbana-Champaign description:
http://www.library.illinois.edu/hpnl/newspapers/results_full.php?bib_id=19525

Title: Reading Mercury (Reading, England : 1723)
Alternate Title: Oxford Gazette and Reading Mercury; Reading Mercury and Oxford Gazette; Reading Mercury, Oxford Gazette and Berkshire County Paper; Reading Mercury, Oxford Gazette, Newbury Herald and Berks County Paper
City: Reading, Country: England
Frequency: Weekly
Language: English
Notes: As: Reading Mercury (1723-1753)
Oxford Gazette and Reading Mercury (1753-1767)
Reading Mercury and Oxford Gazette (1767-1831)
Reading Mercury, Oxford Gazette and Berkshire County Paper (1831-1839)
Reading Mercury, Oxford Gazette, Newbury Herald and Berks County Paper (1839-????). 
Source (S1309)
 
1448 unmarried Besha, Annette J. (I186)
 
1449 unmarried Sixbury, Louis (I251)
 
1450 Volume 1923
Publisher DC Public Library, Special Collections
Year 1923
Pages 51
Language English
Digitizing sponsor LYRASIS Members and Sloan Foundation
Book contributor DC Public Library
Collection dcpubliclibrary; americana 
Source (S1488)
 

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