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Genealogical Document Search and Retrieval Service

Services offered: We offer a variety of services to give you a hand. We can assist you with Specific Record Research of many genealogical record sources.

If you know which record you need, you will find our specific record research appropriate and affordable. Just send us a request for the record. These requests are usually completed within approximately one to two weeks. In most cases you will receive a photocopy of the actual record. However if some can not be copied, in these cases, you will receive an abstract of the information. If you know which record you need, you will find our specific record research appropriate and affordable. Just complete an order form to send us a request for the record. Let our staff of researchers who visit these Archives on a weekly basis look up the information you need.

States covered: Used to be just the Southeastern U.S. hence the name but all States are now covered.

Our Researchers and Archives

Name: Francis Gill
Email Address:

Family History Library in Salt Lake City - His fast and affordable service makes the full resources of the Family History Library in Salt Lake City available to you quickly. The Library Catalog of the Family History Library is now available on line, but the millions of microfilm, microfiche, books, databases, family histories and other resources at the Family History Library can be inconvenient and time-consuming to access. For many of the books and family histories listed in the catalog the only place the information can be accessed is in Salt Lake City.

 

Name: Jill Groce
Email Address:
I am available for family history research from online sources and repositories in the Washington DC area, including the DAR Library, the Library of Congress, the National Archives, and the Maryland State Archives.

The Daughters of the American Revolution (DAR) Library - In the DAR library are more than 15,000 Genealogical Records Committee (GRC) reports compiled by DAR members, including bible records, cemetery transcriptions, vital records, personal family histories and extensive town and church records unavailable anywhere else. These records, along with thousands of typescripts, biographies, reference books, rare antique books, and limited edition genealogies, are shelved in the library’s vast reading room.

The Special Collection, also available to the public, includes unpublished family histories, historic newspaper and magazine articles, ephemera, rare manuscripts, and a vast array of notes and reports donated by professional genealogists. These materials are being indexed and added to the library’s online catalog on a daily basis.

The Library of Congress (LoC) - The LoC has more than 50,000 genealogies and 100,000 local histories, as well as a large collection of material on royalty, nobility, and heraldry. The library’s vertical files include family newsletters, correspondence, pedigrees, family group sheets, little-known genealogy publications, and other donated material. The collection is rich in manuscripts, microfilms, newspapers, photographs, and maps. The Genealogy Reading Room catalog is available online.

The National Archives (NARA) - The Archives’ vast holdings provide access to U.S. government records from colonial times to the present. The Archival Research Catalog online indexes thousands of documents, including applications for enrollment in Native American tribes, fugitive slave cases, military personnel records, and naturalization records.

Also helpful in obtaining information about NARA’s holdings is the Guide to Federal Records, based on the paper edition of 1995, which incorporates descriptive information about federal records. The online Guide is regularly updated to reflect new acquisitions of federal records.

The Maryland State Archives - The Maryland State Archives is the repository for Maryland government records from the founding of the colony in 1634 to the present. Included in the holdings are colonial and state executive, legislative, and judicial records; county probate, land and court records; church records; business records; publications and reports of state, county and municipal governments; and special collections of private papers, maps, photographs, and newspapers. Many original documents from the 18th and 19th centuries are available for copying.

 
 

 
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