Genealogies in the Library of Congress


Book Description

Vol 1 905p Vol 2 961p.




Four Generations of the Descendants of William Moody of Newbury, Massachusetts in 1635


Book Description

William Moody (d.1673) immigrated in 1634 from England to Ipswich, Massachusetts, moving in 1635 to Newbury, Massachusetts. Descendants and relatives lived chiefly in Massachusetts, with some living in New Hampshire, Maine and elsewhere.










Ancestors and Descendants of Timothy Seymour Lull


Book Description

Timothy Seymour Lull (1817-1894) is a descendant of Thomas Lull and Elizabeth Whitmore of Dedham, Essex, England, who had immigrated to Essex County, Massachusetts by 1672. Timothy was born in Muskingum County, Ohio after his parents moved there from Connecticut. He married Elizabeth Sturman in Coshockton County, Ohio in 1843, then moved to Madison County, Iowa in 1850. Descendants are located throughout the midwestern United States.










Founders of Early American Families


Book Description

Ancestors living in one of the original thirteen colonies prior to 1657 with participation in some form on the side of the colonists.




The History of Belle Meade


Book Description

"Ridley Wills traces the history of Belle Meade from a log cabin alongside a buffalo trail to one of the South's grand plantations and horse nurseries to its demise and eventual development into Nashville's premier residential community. In the process, he provides a fully documented account of the origins and evolution of the plantation, its grand mansion, and its Thoroughbred breeding farm. Along the way, he tells the story of the Harding and Jackson families, who carved Belle Meade from a wilderness and brought it to international fame both for its excellence in horse breeding and for its hospitality in the Southern tradition." "On the small scale of human events, Wills focuses on the details of farming practices, the expansions and renovations of the mansion, the education and personalities of children, and the problems of daily living in the midst of war. On the large scale of nineteenth-century American history, Belle Meade becomes a viewing point for the comings and goings of people and events so easily described as historical - Andrew Jackson and Sam Houston, Generals Johnston and Grant, the Civil War and Reconstruction, the visits and deaths of presidents. Weaving together family and regional history, Wills provides his reader with the most substantial account ever written of the land, people, buildings, and Thoroughbreds that for a century made Belle Meade the "Queen of Tennessee plantations.""--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved