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42 of 42 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This is on my nearest bookshelf!!!, September 9, 1998
In their usual fine tradition, Ancestry Publishing has come up with yet another definitive book to assist serious genealogy researchers with the task at hand! Hot off the press and first distributed at the May 1998 NGS National Genealogical Society Conference, critics are hailing this as a "must have" reference book extraordinaire."Most guidebooks do not discuss published records in detail, but most researchers begin with published records." (p2) This massive collaborative effort includes the following participants: General Reference - Martha L. Henderson Instructional Materials - Sandra Hargreaves Luebking Geographic Tools: Maps, Atlases and Gazetteers - Carol Mehr Schiffman Ethnic Sources - Loretto Dennis Szucs Bibliographies and Catalogs - David T. Thackery Published Indexes - Kip Sperry Vital & Cemetery Records - Karen Clifford Church Sources - Richard W. Dougherty Censuses and Tax Lists - G. David Dilts Published Probate Records - Wendy Elliott Printed Land Records - Wendy B. Elliott and Karen Clifford Court and Legal Records - Benjamin Barnett Spratling, 3rd Military Sources - David T. Thackery Immigration Sources - Kory L. Meyerink Documentary Sources - Kory L. Meyerink Family Histories and Genealogies - Kory L. Meyerink County & Local Histories - Kory L. Meyerink Biographies - Kory L. Meyerink Genealogical Periodicals - Kory L. Meyerink Medieval Genealogy - Glade I. Nelson & John M. Kitzmiller, 2nd Appendixes include: CD-ROMs for family historians, ajor US genealogical libraries, genealogical publishers and booksellers. One uses this 840 page reference work in a variety of ways. I do recommend reading the entire introduction. Mr. Meyerink points out that printed "records must be evaluated in at least seven respects: relevance, origin of information, nature of the record, format of the record, directness of the evidence, consistency and clarity of facts and likelihood of events." See also his discussion of copyright laws, the importance of sound documentation, and the effective use of library services and catalogs. I wouldn't tackle more than one chapter at a time, as the reading is heavy, due to the thorough presentation of each topic. Take notes, photocopy and underline the important pages. Then put what you've learned into practice by visiting your local library to solidify your understanding of the concepts presented. We know there are no quick fixes. It takes time to educate oneself in the area of responsible genealogical research techniques. Even experienced genealogists find great merit in studying the pages of Printed Sources. I've placed this on my nearest bookshelf right next to the equally essential The Source: A Guidebook of American Genealogy and Ancestry's Red Book: American State, County and Town Resources. DearMYRTLE
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