The American Census Handbook


Book Description

Offers a guide to census indexes, including federal, state, county, and town records, available in print and online; arranged by year, geographically, and by topic.










American Birdsong Ancestry


Book Description

John Birdsong was born in about 1683, probably in England. He married Elizabeth and they had four known children. They lived in Charles Parish, York County, Virginia. He died in about 1750. Descendants and relatives lived mainly in Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee, South Carolina, Georgia, Mississippi and Missouri.




Early History of Upson County, Georgia


Book Description

Upson County was created in 1824 from Crawford and Pike Counties, GA. and was a major seat of migration of settlers moving across Georgia into the southwest part of Georgia and into that lower part of of Alabama bordering the Chattahoochee River. The book contains the names of approximately 40,000 individuals. The contents of this book are: early history of the county; a listing of fortunate drawers in the Land Lotteries of 1820, and 1821; persons living in Upson County who drew land in the 1827, 1832 Cherokee and 1832 Gold Lotteries of GA.; the 1830 Census of Upson; some Revolutionary War veterans living in the county; first public roads; Marriage records for the years 1825-1850; brief abstracts of Wills, 1825-1865, some early Deed records; Church histories with memberships and cemetery records and numerious Bible records of early pioneer families; the founding of Thomaston in 1825; the 1850 Census of Upson Co. listing not only the head of household, but each family member, age, place of birth, etc.; lists of Civil War regiments and companies; newspapers; industries and civic leaders; history of medical profession and biographical sketches of many of the early doctors. Also, of very special interest to the genealogists, the author has place numerous biographical sketvches within this book of many of the pioneer families of Upson County.




Mize Genealogy in America


Book Description

Henry Mize (ca. 1751-1853) married Kesiah Overby in 1794 in Brunswick County, Virginia, and moved to Union District, South Carolina by 1800. By 1816 the family moved to Franklin County, Georgia. Descen- dants and relatives lived in Virginia, North Carolina, South Caro- lina, Georgia, Alabama, Arkansas, Louisiana, Texas, Kansas, Illinois and elsewhere. Includes other Mize individuals and families. often immigrants in the colonial era, without tracing exact relationships.




Our Pearson Family History


Book Description

Sooner or later we all come to ponder our roots. Who were our ancestors, where did they come from, and what were their lives like? This book is an endeavor to pass along some of the things I have learned about our Pearson family. Many books have been written about the Pearsons, but only a few touched on our line of the family.










Frontier Link with the World


Book Description

A Frontier Link with the World is the history of one small company which operated a track sixteen miles long and served essentially one community. This company shared significant characteristics with its much larger neighbors, and therefore serves as a microcosm depicting the interrelationships between the corporate activities of a Georgia railroad and the economic and social history of the community it served.A Frontier Link with the World balances discussions of government and corporate influences on railroad development with the activity and interest, collective and individual, of investors and customers in the local community. Paterson describes misconceptions about the railroad's purpose and potential which fostered a love-hate relationship between local people and the railroad. From an analysis of the local economy, David Paterson explores how much the railroad benefited the community, and who benefited most. Beyond scheduled freight and passenger services, the author details other railroad services which broadened the social and cultural horizons of the community.The book makes extensive use of manuscript sources, including the recently - available Central of Georgia Railway Collection at the Georgia Historical Society in Savannah. Significant depth is added by: (1) data on population and wealth for the local community compiled from local tax records for the period of the company's existence, illustrating how the railroad was funded, its profitability, and its effect on the growth of the community, and (2) sufficient biographical data on most of the railroad's employees showing who they were, where they were recruited, and how local amateur operators evolved into a careerrailroad workforce.