Tonight I attended a presentation by Dennis Piccirillo about online newspaper sites. The lecture was held at the Morris County Library through the Morris Area Genealogical Society.
My current research is primarily based in New Jersey and New York. I have had good success with GenealogyBank, which is a pay site, though many major New Jersey and New York papers are not in its collection. Old Fulton Post Cards is another great site for New York newspapers and is free. I have had better success with Fulton ever since I thoroughly read and practiced the site's instructions for searching.
Newspapers can supply you not only with facts and life events of your ancestors, but also tell you stories behind the events. Official records were not routinely kept for all of our ancestors' milestones; those that were kept may have been destroyed, lost, or simply not available. Newspapers help bridge these gaps as you jump from birth to marriage and then death.
Mr. Piccirillo recommended initially subscribing to a pay site for only a month instead of a year because the site may send you incentives or coupons for extending your subscription.
Growing family trees from leaves and branches. Finding lost relatives. Solving family mysteries. Concentrating in New Jersey and New York.
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- DURYEA New York State Death Index 1881-1950
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Tuesday, March 6, 2012
Monday, March 5, 2012
Morris County Cemeteries: Cook
Last week I visited a few cemeteries in Morris County with Dave Peck. He has documented many cemeteries in the area and was kind enough to show me the final resting places of some of my ancestors.
We visited the Cook Family Cemetery, which is now located on the golf course of the Rockaway River Country Club in Denville, Morris County, New Jersey. The cemetery was not always part of a golf course. The burial grounds were part of the Methodist Episcopal Church of Rockaway Valley, on land donated by John P. Cook. The church relocated but the cemetery continued burials until around 1907. The main surnames on the stones are Peer, Spear, Husk, and Cook.
We next visited two cemeteries on private property in Boonton/Powerville. The land originally belonged to the Cook and Scott families. A small portion was set aside for burial grounds. The Cook stones are worn and there is no fencing.
Thank you to Dave Peck for an informative tour!
We visited the Cook Family Cemetery, which is now located on the golf course of the Rockaway River Country Club in Denville, Morris County, New Jersey. The cemetery was not always part of a golf course. The burial grounds were part of the Methodist Episcopal Church of Rockaway Valley, on land donated by John P. Cook. The church relocated but the cemetery continued burials until around 1907. The main surnames on the stones are Peer, Spear, Husk, and Cook.
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Cook Cemetery in Denville, Morris County, New Jersey. About 30 stones remain. |
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My great great great great grandparents, Stephen Cook and Elizabeth Vandroof. Steven and John P. Cook were first cousins, once removed. Picture by Dave Peck. |
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The rotting tree was taken care of . . . |
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. . . but blackened a nearby stone in the process. |
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Cook Family Cemetery in Boonton, next to the Scott Family Cemetery. The taller stone is likely for Michael Cook, who died in 1803 and was an owner of the land. |
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The neighboring Scott Family Cemetery is surrounded by beautiful stones. |
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I think this was the first time I have seen such raised markers. Dave explained that they are common in the Philadelphia area. |
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Although on private property, this cemetery is not immune to vandalism. |
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Dave explained that these small stones with only a first name are believed to mark the final resting place of slaves of the Scott Family. |
Thursday, March 1, 2012
New York Public Library, Map Division
On Tuesday I visited the New York Public Library with the New York Genealogical and Biographical Society. We were tutored on use of the Library's website and we toured the Lionel Pincus and Princess Firyal Map Division.
The map division a huge collection of maps, with a concentration on the New York City area. You can view several maps online, but maps that are too large, delicate, or recent are not online. You will want to view farm maps for the area in which your ancestors lived. Individual properties are labeled with names of the owners, thus enabling you to locate your family of interest and their neighbors. You can also find local churches and cemeteries that may not exist today.
You can search holdings online. From the home page, click the "Research" tab and explore some of the options. For a genealogy angle, search "Classic Catalog" and then do a keyword search for a surname followed by "family." Searching for "Duryea Family" resulted in eight hits.
Duryea family miscellany is the listing for the file folder from the New York Genealogical and Biographical Society.
The Library has its own family files that can be located under the classic catalog call number search of APT-F.
If you locate a family file of interest, you need to visit the library to view the contents. As I previously wrote, checking a family file can yield little or a lot, including pictures and research notes from long ago.
The map division a huge collection of maps, with a concentration on the New York City area. You can view several maps online, but maps that are too large, delicate, or recent are not online. You will want to view farm maps for the area in which your ancestors lived. Individual properties are labeled with names of the owners, thus enabling you to locate your family of interest and their neighbors. You can also find local churches and cemeteries that may not exist today.
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NYPL.org |
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NYPL.org |
Family files from the New York Genealogical and Biographical Society now housed at the New York Public Library. |
Manuscript found in the Duryea family folder. Note the delicate paper. |
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NYPL.org results for family file holdings. |
Picture found in the Cook family folder at the New York Public Library. |
1813-1814 New York City city directory by Longworth. Rebound. |
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