Pages

Showing posts with label land records. Show all posts
Showing posts with label land records. Show all posts

25 March 2019

Sidney Perley's Essex Antiquarian

Born in 1857, Sidney Perley was a well-known lawyer in Essex county, Massachusetts. He also wrote books and articles on history, genealogy, and the law. From 1897 to 1909 he published the Essex Antiquarian. These journals include so much valuable information, I've included the links below. Perley died in 1928. 















For more articles published by Perley, check out my links to the Essex Institute Historical Collections (EIHC). He also wrote pieces for the New England Historic Genealogical Society (AmericanAncestors.org).

19 January 2018

Suffolk deed books: Suffolk county, Massachusetts

Paul Revere house
Early Suffolk Deeds by John T. Hassam

Early recorders and registers of deeds for the county of Suffolk, Massachusetts, 1639-1735 by John T. Hassam

Suffolk Deeds, Liber I, 1629-1653

Suffolk Deeds, Liber II, 1653-1656

Suffolk Deeds, Liber III, 1656-1662

Suffolk Deeds, Liber IV, 1661/2-1665

Suffolk Deeds, Liber V, 1665-1668

Suffolk Deeds, Liber VI, 1668-1672

Suffolk Deeds, Liber VII, 1669/70-1672

Suffolk Deeds, Liber VIII, 1672-1674

Suffolk Deeds, Liber IX, 1674-1676

Suffolk Deeds, Liber X, 1676/77-1678

Suffolk Deeds, Liber XI, 1678-1680

Suffolk Deeds, Liber XII, 1680-1683

Suffolk Deeds, Liber XIII, 1683-1686

Suffolk Deeds, Liber XIV, 1686-1697

Record of the Streets, Alleys, Places, etc., in the City of Boston from settlement of the town to 1910

Also see Suffolk Registry of Deeds site for atlases, assessor maps, old recorded land plans, etc.



07 May 2015

Envisioning ancestors’ neighborhoods: A study of Lexington, Massachusetts, part 3

How can you picture how your ancestors lived and what their home may have looked like, if the original structure and photos do not exist? 

For this study, we’re using the year 1775 in Lexington, Massachusetts, as an example. Part 1 set the scene, with events and historic sites. In part 2, we covered books, maps, and photos. Now let’s add historical property data into the mix. 

The National Register of Historic Places (NR) seeks to “identify, evaluate, and protect America’s historic and archaeological resources.” However, Massachusetts is one of those states that hasn’t had its paperwork digitized yet. Fortunately, there’s the State Historic Preservation Officers (SHPO), and in the Commonwealth, the Massachusetts Cultural Resource Information System (MACRIS), which provides information on Lexington. (Again, not all towns are digitized.)

First, let’s search the MACRIS database by location and time period. Select Lexington, and on the next screen, type <1775 under Construction Year (as in less than 1775). Thirty properties show up in the results, including the Lexington Old Burying Ground (c. 1690) and 1775 Traces of the Battle Road (c. 1636), since we did not select Resource Type (area, building, burial ground, object, structure). Objects include historic markers and monuments while Structures include walls, bridges, streets, wells, cow pens—much more than we want. By selecting Buildings, <1775, the results are 27 properties.

For each property, the onscreen spreadsheet shows the inventory number (Inv. No.), property name, street address, town, approximate year built (circa or range of dates), whether the house is listed on the State Register of Historic Places (SR), whether the National Register nomination has been digitized (NR), and (INV) for the scanned inventory file. For record detail, click on Inv. No.; for the scanned nomination paperwork, click on INV to download the PDF. 

Architectural Styles

MACRIS lets you select from many different kinds of architectural styles, including “altered beyond recognition.” However, the web site does not provide descriptions for these styles online. So let’s go to Historic New England, which divides architectural building styles before the 20th century into the following categories: 
  • First Period (Post-medieval English): 1600-1700
  • Georgian: 1700-1780
  • Federal (Adam): 1780-1820
  • Greek Revival: 1825-1860
  • Gothic Revival: 1840-1880
  • Italianate: 1840-1885
  • Second Empire: 1855-1885
  • Stick: 1860-1890
  • Queen Anne: 1880-1910
  • Shingle: 1880-1900
  • Colonial Revival: 1880-1955
Georgian Style

Let’s say an ancestor built a home in Lexington circa 1750 that no longer exists and we want to look at a home of a similar age and style. Houses dating from 1700 to 1780 were often Georgian in style, with the center entry flanked with an equal number of double-hung sash windows balancing each side. One or two stories high, these clapboard or shingled wood-framed homes had center chimneys (if built before 1750) or double chimneys on each end of the gable roof. The box floor plan was two rooms deep with a central hallway.

Henry Harrington - Dr. Joseph Fiske house (LEX.710)
In MACRIS, we search Lexington, Georgian and find 21 matches, including the Henry Harrington - Dr. Joseph Fiske house (LEX.710) at 70 East Street. Besides its architectural significance, it has an interesting history, being commonly known as the Lexington Pest House, and a long association with the Fiske family. The Lexington Historical Commission nominated the single-family dwelling as historically important in March 1998. The paperwork, downloadable as a PDF, includes a photo, a map showing location and footprint, an architectural description, a historical narrative, and—what every genealogist likes to see—a bibliography and/or references. 

Considered “one of the best-preserved of the 21 Georgian houses still standing in Lexington, the original house was rectangular with an integral lean-to, 2-1/2 stories, five-by-one bays, and side-gabled with a large center chimney and an exterior chimney at the west end of lean-to.... The original house has a center entrance with a surround composed of a projecting molded cornice and fluted pilasters; the 6/9 windows in this house have molded window heads on the first floor and are framed into the cornice on the second.” Major alterations include a “shed attached to house, rear addition, attached garage (1979).” 

House Genealogy


Although this file does not include a floor plan, it has genealogical and architectural value. Cary Library in Lexington includes notes from Fiske descendant, Mary Abbie Fiske, suggesting the house was built in 1745 by Henry Harrington (1712-1791) and three of his sons were born there. However, the house nomination paperwork questions the date since sons John was born in 1739 and Jonathan in 1744. By 1790, Dr. Joseph Fiske (1752-1837) acquired the house from Henry Harrington’s son John. Probably during an epidemic in 1792, Dr. Fiske was treating 32 smallpox patients at 70 East Street—hence the name pest house. In 1809, Dr. Fiske moved to the old Fiske house (LEX.735) at 63 Hancock Street after his father’s death, though several generations of the doctor’s family continued to live at the Harrington-Fiske house until the 1940s.

By studying the Georgian homes in the Lexington area, you can gain insight into how your ancestors lived at the beginning of the Revolutionary War.





18 June 2012

Boston's connection to the War of 1812

USS Constitution
Docked at the former Charlestown Navy Shipyard, the USS Constitution is Boston’s most iconic symbol of the War of 1812. Built at Edmund Hartt’s shipyard in Boston, the three-masted heavy frigate was launched in 1797 to provide U.S. Navy protection for American merchant ships. Although made with a wooden hull, the Constitution earned its nickname as Old Ironsides during the War of 1812. During the three-year war, the frigate defeated five British warships—HMS Guerriere, Java, Pictou, Cyane, and Levant—and captured numerous merchant ships.

In 1881, the ship was retired from active service. In 1907, the Constitution was designated a museum ship and restored in 1931. Today, it is a fully commissioned ship, with 60 Navy officers and sailors offering tours and providing historic insight into the Navy’s role during wartime and peace.

USS Constitution Museum

Opened in 1976, the USS Constitution Museum literally allowed Old Ironsides to clear its decks of display cases so visitors could experience the ship as a sailing vessel. Housed in Building 22 (the old pump house for Dry Dock #1) and two adjacent buildings, the museum offers hands-on exhibits, stories of the 1812 crew, workshops, online exhibits, and a research library. 

Although the web site states its library and manuscript materials have “limited genealogical information,” if you have a connection to the USS Constitution, the War of 1812, and/or the U.S. Navy, you may find something of value. The museum contains almost 1,700 artifacts and more than 7,000 rare books, manuscripts, and archival materials. Of special interest are ship logs and personal journals, correspondence, broadsides and posters, impressments and pay certificates, photographs, scrapbooks, pamphlets, rare books (instructional manuals, Bibles, biographies), printed media, and even poetry. 

War of 1812 Genealogy Records

If you're looking for genealogical records for your ancestor who served in the War of 1812, start by reading articles on the National Archives site. Then check out the National Archives in Boston branch (located in Waltham), which holds the following collections: Index to War of 1812 pension files (M313); Index to Remarried Widows Pension Applications, 1815-1861 (M1784); Old War Pension Index (1784-1861) (T316); Index to compiled service records (M602); War of 1812 bounty land warrants (M848); Index to War of 1812 Prisoner of War (M747); and Records relating to War of 1812 Prisoners of War (M2019).  

Fold3 provides free and paid access to U.S. military records, often not available on other web sites. For the War of 1812, the collection includes War of 1812 Service Records; Pension Files; Prize Cases, Southern District Court, NY; and Letters Received by the Adjutant General 1805-1821.

FamilySearch offers free access to the index to the War of 1812 to Pension Application Files 1812-1910 and an index to the War of 1812 Service Records 1812-1815. Also check if records have been added or updated in the historical record collections since volunteers around the world are indexing records all the time.

You can help make more War of 1812 records free of charge. Preserve the Pensions is a $3.7 million project between the Federation of Genealogical Societies, the National Archives, and the genealogical community to digitize the War of 1812 pension files and make them available for free. A $25 donation will digitize 50 images.


13 November 2010

Early Boston record books (also known as the Boston Record Commissioner Books) online


Libraries with New England genealogy collections often contain a well-known series of Boston record books published from 1876 to 1909. Over the years, the multi-volume set changed its title (from First [Second, Third, etc.] Report of the Record Commissioners of the City of Boston to Records Relating to the Early History of Boston), making it difficult to find the series online.

Luckily, you can view and search each volume at Archive.org. The site offers several different methods of viewing the books, such as flipping pages online, full text, and downloadable PDFs. To help you find these valuable books at the site, I’ve compiled the series list with direct links to each book online.
Remember to check each volume’s index to browse through the names for variants spellings.
  1. Boston Tax Lists 1674 and 1676
  2. Boston Town Records 1634-1660
  3. Charlestown Land Records 1638-1802
  4. Dorchester Land Records
  5. “Gleaner” articles from the Boston Daily Transcript by Nathaniel Ingersoll Bowditch (1855)
  6. Roxbury Land and Church Records
  7. Boston Town Records 1660-1701
  8. Boston Town Records 1700-1728
  9. Boston Births, Baptisms, Marriages, and Deaths 1630-1699
  10. Miscellaneous Papers
  11. Boston Selectmen's Records 1701-1715
  12. Boston Town Records 1729-1742
  13. Boston Selectmen's Records 1716-1736
  14. Boston Town Records 1742-1757
  15. Boston Selectmen's Records 1736-1742
  16. Boston Town Records 1758-1769
  17. Boston Selectmen's Records 1742/3-1753
  18. Boston Town Records 1770-1777
  19. Boston Selectmen's Records 1754-1763
  20. Boston Selectmen's Records 1764-1768
  21. Dorchester Births, Marriages, and Deaths to end of 1825
  22. United States Census 1790, Tax Statistics 1798
  23. Boston Selectmen's Records 1769 to April 1775
  24. Boston Births 1700-1800
  25. Boston Selectmen's Records 1776-1786
  26. Boston Town Records 1778-1783
  27. Boston Selectmen's Records 1787-1798
  28. Boston Marriages 1700-1751
  29. Miscellaneous Papers
  30. Boston Marriages 1752-1809
  31. Boston Town Records 1784-1796
  32. Aspinwall Notarial Records 1644-1651
  33. Boston Selectmen's Records 1799-1810
  34. The Town of Roxbury: Memorable Persons and Places by Francis S. Drake
  35. Boston Town Records 1796-1813
  36. Dorchester Births, Marriages, and Deaths 1826-1849
  37. Boston Town Records 1814-1822
  38. Boston Selectmen's Records 1811-August 1818
  39. Boston Selectmen's Records September 1818-April 1822

05 May 2010

If you have early Boston ancestors, here's the Thwing

While writing her book, The Crooked and Narrow Streets of Boston 1630-1822, Annie Haven Thwing (1851-1940) created a card index containing information on 60,000 individuals and 30 organizations. The original card indexcontaining 125,000 catalog cards occupying 74 library drawersis at the Massachusetts Historical Society (MHS). In 1993, MHS converted the cards into a searchable computer database. It took five years to complete the project.

In 2001, as part of a joint effort between MHS and the New England Historic Genealogical Society (NEHGS), Thwing’s book and the database were published as Inhabitants and Estates of the Town of Boston, 1630-1822 (Thwing Collection) on a CD-ROM available from Picton Press. Known as the Thwing Collection, the database is available to society members on the NEHGS web site.

Like any good genealogist, Thwing used probates, deeds, vital records, church records, gravestone inscriptions, and diaries to create her book and card index. It’s an amazing resource, especially for researching property holders during this time period.

The database is searchable by any word and by advanced queries. Profiles for people within the index section may include the following fields: name; birth; baptism; parents; spouse; children; home; occupation; business; event; office; deed; church; died; will; probate; burial; text; reference; abutters; miscellaneous; and a unique numeric record identifier (to link a person to someone else’s profile).

I use Thwing a lot in my research. It helps me to understand familial connections and neighborhoods, information that would take me years to uncoverif I even knew to look for them. In mid-17th century Boston, the population was smallsay 1,000 peopleso people often knew each other. For example, a miller on Prince street may have attended the same church, same businesses, and same public events as a merchant’s daughter who lived four blocks away. It’s possible that their paths crossed, relationships were formed, and marriage ensued. Add to that all their parents, siblings, cousins, other relativesand their in-lawsand you’ve got a fuller picture of your family.

I must warn you, however, that using the Thwing Collection is addictive. For example, if I do a search on Raynsford (73 search hits) and Rainsford (197 hits), I could spend hours reviewing the records, adding new people to my database, and then researching back-up information (such as finding the vital records, cemetery inscriptions, and whatever as proof).

You will find that Thwing did not make all the connections, that one person may have more than one profile and numeric record identifier. But piecing together the tidbits and creating a fuller vision of your family is part of the joy of working with Thwing’s research.

You also can read The Crooked and Narrow Streets of Boston, 1630-1822 online through Google Books, though it does not include the MHS database. With Google Books, though, you can do searches as well.

14 January 2010

Newspaper ads offer genealogy clues

Newspaper display and classified advertisements not only offer insight into an era, but they give us valuable clues for additional genealogy research. They also add character and local flavor to people and places.  

For instance, in advertisements you’ll find people selling goods, services, and property; searching for an escaped slave or servant; administering an estate and requesting debtors and creditors to come forward—and much more.

Sometimes the ads surprise our 21st-century sensibilities, like this one from the 28 April 1746 issue of the Boston Evening-Post:

“Any white person that has occasion to put out a child to nurse, to a careful motherly woman, with a good breast of milk, may hear of such an one in one of Deacon Gibson's tenements, close by his dwelling house.”

Look closely at the details:
  • Deacon Gibson is well known enough not to use his first name or his address.
  • His title suggests he is a deacon at one of the Boston churches.
  • He owns two or more tenements in addition to his own residence, and he assumes people know where.
  • He garners income from rentals, therefore he may be advertising for a wet nurse because he is owed rent.
  • The woman is white, “careful,” “motherly,” and healthy.
  • She probably lost a baby recently.
  • Her services as a wet nurse suggest she needs a source of income, possibly because she owes rent to her landlord.
  • People who live in and near the tenement are familiar with the identity of this motherly figure.
The ad also implies that Deacon Gibson is a respectable man who is trying to help this poor but respectable woman find one of the few income-making positions open to her.

This ad leads to new research possibilities. Look in Boston newspapers for tenement rental ads, news stories, church news, society pages, real estate transactions, death notices, probate proceedings, etc., that refer to Deacon Gibson. Also look for church membership records, deeds for the house and tenements, probate, and other records.

Boston Evening-Post is available through Early American Newspapers 1690-1876, a database from NewsBank Inc. Members of New England Historic Genealogical Society have free access to Early America Newspapers 1690-1876 and 19th Century U.S. Newspapers (Infotrac). These databases may be available through your local library as well.