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Books > History > History of specific subjects > Genealogy, heraldry, names and honours > General
ARRIVING IN AMERICA - DESTINATION THE SOUTH captures Taylor's
twenty-five year journey in unearthing the buried history of her
maternal and paternal family, trekking the paths of her ancestors,
before Emancipation (1863). This journey took her back several
generations, from the North, South, East and West regions of
Africa, to the thirteen colonies of the United States, and the
Southern states of Louisiana and Mississippi. This emotion-filled
journey travels down an intricate paper trail of federal, state,
and local records combined with a collection of oral interviews
that enabled Taylor to methodically place together her family
puzzle, in five informative chapters. Lovers of sweeping
generational epics will find much to rejoice in here. This is a
personal saga, but one played out against the broad canvas of
American History. Taylor chronicles the lives of her relatives who
were once enslaved. She points out the contributions of European
immigrants, with the labor of slaves that made this such a great
nation. Taylor discusses intermarriages and intermixing between
blacks and Indians, the mulatto children of the master, and how her
enslaved family may have obtained their surnames. This book focuses
on many unanswered questions, and leave the reader with a burning
desire to begin their own journey. ARRIVING IN AMERICA -
DESTINATION THE SOUTH is written in a narrative style to inspire,
entice and propel readers into the fascinating world of genealogy
and historical discoveries.
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Dorset Parish Registers
(Hardcover)
W P W (William Phillim Phillimore, E R (Edmund Robert) Nevill, Thomas M (Thomas Matthews) Blagg
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R799
Discovery Miles 7 990
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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This work is an extensive bibliography of the works completed on
the voyage of the Mayflower to the New World in the year 1620,
containing approximately 800 Titles and more than 550 Authors. Also
included in this book is the Mayflower Compact, a list of the
signers, and a list of the passengers, some of which include a
brief biography. Also available in paperback. Hardbound, 2012, 8.5"
x 11," Illus., Alphabetical, 96 pp.
I often imagine what it would have been like to be able to have
served in the Navy during World War II instead of serving when I
did. I have to think that it was a tough time for all but
especially the civilians who had to deal with rationing and
watching every move they made due to security risks. The part that
I would have liked is the music of the era and going to all the
live bands that used to play during that time, like Glenn Miller,
Louis Jordan, and Benny Goodman. The sailors of that time saw ports
of call that are restricted to history books now like Shanghai,
Athens, Malta, and Marseille. I also would have liked to wear my
uniform all the time like they used to; unlike now where civilian
clothes are authorized all the time. It just feels like there was
something special about that time while in the military and maybe
it was because there was a different kind of war on. The war back
then was embraced by all in one way or another; whether you liked
it or not, you still supported it. Have you ever wondered what it
would be like to live in a different period of time? Open the pages
of this book and see if you don't just go back to a different time.
Take a journey as far back as the Dunmore War's of 1774, before
there was a United States, and see if you can put yourself there.
The nice thing about this book is that you have over 230 years to
pick from. Just be careful what period you pick from or who you
think you'd like to be; not everybody returns.
Cheshire and Lancashire Funeral Certificates; A.D. 1600 TO 1678.
Edited by John Paul Rylands. First Published in 1882. Funeral
certificates represent a significant class of records dating from
the late 16th to the early 18th century. These accounts of heraldic
funerals contain, in addition to heraldry, details of death,
burial, marriages, children and so on. This volume, originally
printed for the Record Society in 1882, contains extracts covering
the years 1600 to 1678 from the counties of Cheshire and Lancashire
(mostly Cheshire). This volume is a facsimile copy of the original.
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