Getting Prepared to Follow
Your Family's Migration
Make a list of your migrating families - this should include your
family, neighbors that you suspect came from the same area, families with
kinship ties. If you don't know who they are go through your group
sheets & documents and pull them. Look who is next to them on census.
Use sites like World Connect
http://worldconnect.rootsweb.com/ [use the advanced search]
Family Search
http://www.familysearch.org/ & GenForum
http://genforum.genealogy.com/
to see if anyone has contributed research on those neighbors. Do they
come from the same area your family did? Do they have any kinship ties
to anyone you recognize?
Make an alternative spelling list of your surname. This is
critical - especially in the Middle Colonies which were full of MANY ethnic
groups and dialects. They talked differently and they wrote what they
heard. Computer searching is unforgiving. Remember that even if
THEY were consistent, clerks and document keepers were not. The
SURNAME HELPER
http://surhelp.rootsweb.com/srchall.html is a nice tool for perusing
alternative spellings but some alternatives won't come up by soundex ie when
O'Neal becomes O'Neely or even Nealy or Heden becomes Heady etc.
maps maps maps - the internet has wonderful maps - here are some
examples:
General Map of the Middle British Colonies 1776
http://www.davidrumsey.com/maps6343.html from
the David Rumsey Collection and Map of the Western Parts of Virginia,
Pennsylvania, Maryland and North Carolina
http://www.davidrumsey.com/maps6355.html
American Shores: Maps of the Middle Atlantic Region to 1850
http://www.nypl.org/research/midatlantic/
American Roads and Trails
http://groups.msn.com/AmericanRoadsandTrails/ by Beverly
Whitaker, Kansas City, MO
Perry-Castaneda Library Map Collection [University of Texas]
http://www.lib.utexas.edu/maps/
Historical Maps of Pennsylvania
http://www.mapsofpa.com/ which includes
the Guide to Pennsylvania Classic County Atlases
http://www.mapsofpa.com/atlaslist.htm
Historical Maps of Maryland [from the University of Alabama]
http://alabamamaps.ua.edu/historicalmaps/us_states/maryland/index.html
Maps of Historic Delaware [University of Delaware]
http://fletcher.lib.udel.edu/collections/hmc/browse-subj.htm and
don't miss their
Maps & Guide to the "Hundreds" of Delaware University of
Delaware
http://www2.lib.udel.edu/subj/genealogy/resguide/hund.htm
Historical Maps of New Jersey
http://mapmaker.rutgers.edu/MAPS.html [Rutgers]
Pitfalls / Problems in Middle Colony/State
Research
Boundary Changes:
Pennsylvania Boundary Changes
http://www.mypennsylvaniagenealogy.com/pa_maps.htm
Delaware Boundary Changes
http://www.mydelawaregenealogy.com/de_maps.htm
Maryland Boundary Changes
http://www.mymarylandgenealogy.com/md_maps.htm
Water Mobility - they could really get around - this is not surprising
when you look at a map of the Delaware River Basin http://www.state.nj.us/drbc/maps/drb_map.htm
or the Susquehanna River Basin
http://www.srbc.net/gis/image/maps/140b.pdf
when they couldn't navigate the waters they still walked/rode along the
river banks
Religious movements that changed quickly - being Baptist, Quaker,
Presbyterian, Moravian, Brethren, Lutheran, Congregationalist etc. often
drove migrations in the middle colonies but just when you think you have
them figured out a new revival comes through and they change affiliation.
High rate of indentured servitude - by the American Revolution it has
been estimated that 1 our of 3 living in the Maryland Colony had at one time
been indentured. Court records become very important for this reason.
Links for
Indentured Servants, Convict Servants & Redemptioners
http://www.pricegen.com/immigrantservants/links.htm
don't miss the
Early Settlers of Maryland database
[Maryland State Archives]
http://www.msa.md.gov/msa/speccol/sc4300/sc4341/html/search.html
Most colonial newspapers are not available online. If your ancestor
was a runaway servant he / she may be in their advertisements and that will
include a physical description [example:
http://members.tripod.com/~colonies/runaways/servants.htm]. Most of
these have been abstracted in book form.
Lack of marriage records in
Pennsylvania
Large mix of ethnic groups – many dialects morphed surnames
“Born
In” is often meaningless because the man born in western MD just
before the American Revolution may go through his life saying he is born in
PA, MD & VA because of his migration AND because of boundary changes
Questionable
research has been done in the past - a lot of books and family histories
have been written for this area that are based on SOME source documents but
have been mixed with histories out of people's memory or make claims that
can't be substantiated. If you don't know why you know
something be particularly careful in this time and place and question it.
If your family is in MD, PA or DE before 1750 you need to be checking out
ALL of those colonies [and should be aware that they may be ducking into
NJ and VA] Look for them with all spelling variants and look for their
allied families
Online Resources:
There is excellent help from FamilySearch Research Guides for all of
these places
http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Search/RG/frameset_rhelps.asp
example: choose the letter "D" for Delaware and scroll down to the Delaware
guides
DELAWARE
Delaware Tax Transcription Project [Delaware
Genealogical Society
http://delgensoc.org/detax.htm [early originals look like
this]
Delaware Digital Archives [State of Delaware]
http://archives.delaware.gov/exhibits/exhibits-toc.shtml has good
history resources
E-Books relating to early Dealware
[from Digital Book Index]
http://digitalbookindex.com/_search/search010hstregionaldelawarea.asp
Delaware GenWeb
http://www.degenweb.org/ & Delaware GenWeb Archives
http://www.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb/de/
New Castle County History Pages
http://xtinahs.org/
MARYLAND
Archives of Maryland Online
http://aomol.net/html/search.html
is a goldmine. It can be easy to miss
things and you need to really explore what they have but there are early
court records here, early road crews, military, tax, land and many other
kinds of records and they seem to be adding new things constantly so check
back often
Maryland State
Archives: Land Records page
http://mdlandrec.net/msa/stagser/s1700/s1741/cfm/index.cfm which
includes links to:
Maryland
Land Records.Net
http://mdlandrec.net/msa/stagser/s1700/s1741/cfm/index.cfm
it
is "currently free" and in a pilot/testing program as they build the
resources. You can apply for a password to be one of the testers and
you will find scanned indexes to deeds and a number of deed books.
Maryland Patent Index Online
[if you get an error
message keep trying]
http://guide.mdsa.net/description.cfm?series=S1426&action=stagser
Mid Maryland Roots
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.com/~midmdroots/ don't miss
their maps page if your ancestors were in early western or central MD
Military Records
[Archives of Maryland
Online]
http://www.msa.md.gov/megafile/msa/speccol/sc2900/sc2908/html/military.html
E-Books relating to early Maryland
[from Digital Book Index]
http://digitalbookindex.com/_search/search010hstregionalmarylandcoloniala.asp
Maryland
Genweb
http://www.mdgenweb.org/ & Maryland GenWeb Archives
http://www.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb/md/mdfiles.htm
for
more
Maryland resources see the WVC Maryland page
http://www.wvc.edu/library/Research/gen/States/RBStMD.html
New Jersey
New Jersey
History
http://www.rootsweb.com/roots-l/usa/nj/history.html
E-Books relating to early New Jersey
[from Digital Book Index]
http://digitalbookindex.com/_search/search010hstregionalnewjerseya.asp
Origin of New Jersey Place Names [New Jersey State Library]
http://www.njstatelib.org/NJ_Information/Digital_Collections/Digidox7.php
New Jersey Archives
http://www.state.nj.us/state/darm/links/databases.html
includes marriage databases 1666-1799, 1848-1867 and every name indexes of
anyone who showed up in state supreme court cases [the court search takes
time but it indexes MANY early residents]
Researching Your Family's History [from the New Jersey Digital
Highway]
http://www.njdigitalhighway.org/genealogy_ever.php
New Jersey GenWeb
http://www.njgenweb.org/ & New Jersey GenWeb Archives
http://www.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb/nj/njfiles.htm
Pennsylvania
E-Books relating to Colonial Pennsylvania
[from Digital Book Index]
http://digitalbookindex.com/_search/search010hstregionalpenncoloniala.asp
Pennsylvania Archives Series Online
[Footnote]
http://www.footnote.com/page/88 scanned images of the
original multi-volume sets
Pennsylvania Land Records
[from the Pennsylvania
State Archives]
http://www.phmc.state.pa.us/BAH/DAM/landrec.htm includes scanned
images of the warrant registers. Look carefully - they have just added
the actual surveys [get the survey volume and page from the warrant register
and then follow the links to get to the actual survey]
[example:
http://www.phmc.state.pa.us/BAH/DAM/rg/di/r17-114CopiedSurveyBooks/Book%20%20A1-A89/Book%20A-04/Book%20A-04%20pg%2052.pdf
Pennsylvania
Digital Archives [Pennsylvania State Archives]
http://www.digitalarchives.state.pa.us/ has PA
militia list index
1775-1800
Patent maps may be purchased from the PA State Archives.
http://www.phmc.state.pa.us/bah/dam/WarranteeTwpMapPrices.htm and make
sure that you check your GenWeb county page because some counties have these
scanned online [example: Washington Co. PA GenWeb Page
http://www.chartiers.com/pages-new/maps.html - but
remember that patents meant the land was paid for and many early warrants
were filed but they moved on again before the patent was issued.
Historic Pittsburg Digital Collection
http://digital.library.pitt.edu/p/pitttext/ if your family was one
of the many that migrate towards SW PA be sure and have a look at this
Pennsylvania GenWeb Archives
http://www.rootsweb.com/~usgenweb/pa/pafiles.htm
- the early counties have a wealth of abstracts of wills, deeds, marriages,
cemetery records etc. The Pennsylvania GenWeb
http://www.rootsweb.com/~pagenweb/ county pages usually have wonderful
maps and history
for more
Pennsylvania resources see the WVC Pennsylvania page at
http://www.wvc.edu/library/Research/gen/States/RBStPA.html
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