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Lecture
Records and Research

Using Bank Records in Family History Research

Historical bank records are an overlooked resource for family historians. When they survive, these records can provide information about an ancestor’s residence, occupation, family relationships, and even immigrant origins. And don’t assume that your ancestor was too poor to have had a bank account! Savings banks were established with those very individuals in mind. In this webinar, we will present a brief history of savings banks in the United States, how to locate these records, and what information is provided. We will focus on examples from the Emigrant Savings Bank, Freedman’s Savings and Trust, and Provident Institution for Savings.

Lecture
Immigration

Finding Your Ancestral Homestead

Every family historian wants to visit their ancestral homestead. Changing street names, landscapes, and boundaries can make this task difficult. This online lecture will discuss resources for identifying an ancestor’s address and provide practical skills for finding its current-day location using land deeds, maps, surveys, directories, and other records.

Lecture
US - New England
17th Century
Records and Research

Verifying Descent from Salem’s Accused Witches

There are hundreds, if not thousands, of court cases and accusations of witchcraft across colonial America, yet the most famous series of prosecutions from this period are the Salem witch trials between 1692 and 1693. In that short period, more than two hundred were accused, thirty found guilty, and 20 executed. In this online lecture, we will discuss how to verify your lineage from someone accused of witchcraft in Salem during the Hysteria. We will point you to key records, resources, and references for proving your line of descent.

Lecture
Basics of Genealogy
Records and Research

Using Cemetery Transcripts in Your Family History Research

Cemetery transcriptions are a valuable resource for all family historians, especially when you’re unable to visit a cemetery or when the stones have worn away and are no longer legible. In this presentation, we will discuss the importance of cemetery transcripts and point you toward online and published collections at AmericanAncestors.org, the Digital Library and Archives at AmericanAncestors.org, FamilySearch.org, local historical societies, and more.

Lecture
Records and Research

The ABCs of Using School Records in Family History Research

Go back to school with American Ancestors! School records offer family historians insight into an ancestor's daily life, help fill in a timeline, and can be a useful tool in cluster research. This presentation will discuss how to find yearbooks, registers, teacher lists, and other school records—in manuscript, published, and digitized format—from elementary school through college.

Lecture
19th Century
Immigration
Records and Research

Researching War of 1812 Veteran Ancestors

By the end of the War of 1812, nearly 35,000 American Regulars and 458,000 militia had served on land and sea. In this webinar, we will discuss the key records and resources to learn more about your veteran ancestor. We will review compiled service and pension records, muster rolls, correspondence from officers, town histories, and a new database from AmericanAncestors.org.

Lecture
Basics of Genealogy

Raising the Dead: Finding Clues to Ancestors from Headstones, Family Plots, and Burial Records

Cemetery records can offer important clues to understanding the lives of those who came before us. Learn how headstones, family plots, and burial documents can shed new light on your ancestor’s life.