The bibliographic holdings of family histories at the Library of Congress. Entries are arranged alphabetically of the works of those involved in Genealogy and also items available through the Library of Congress.
History of Ohio County, people and the events. It included business people, lawyers, physicians, and a history of the Taylor family. With "Ohio County marriage records, 1799 to 1840."
The Earp Brothers of Tombstone and the famous fight at the O. K. Corral are well known to American history and even better known to American legend. This composite biography of Wyatt, Morgan, Virgil, James, and Warner Earp is based on the recollections of Mrs. Virgil Earp, dictated to the author in the 1930s, and amplified by documents he unearthed in 1959. In his review of the book for Library Journal, W. S. Wallace stated that he considered The Earp Brothers of Tombstone "the most authoritative account ever to be published on the subject."
John Denman (1621-1691) was born in England. He married about 1640 after coming to America and lived in Salem, Massachusetts and South Hampton, Long Island. Ludwig Friderich Freysinger (later spelled Frisinger) (d. 1792) was probably born in Freising, Germany. He came to America in 1754 and settled in York County, Pennsylvania. He married Elizabeth Plessen before 1766. Samuel Denman (ca. 1847-1892) married Roseltha Frisinger in 1878. Descendants and relatives of these two families lived in New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana and elsewhere.
The most complete military roster for the state, this monumental work contains the names of approximately 36,000 soldiers from North Carolina who served during the Revolution. Service records include such information as rank, company, date of enlistment or commission, period of service, combat experience, and whether captured, wounded, or killed. This is a complete roster of soldiers named in both published and unpublished accounts, the information deriving in the main from such sources as military land warrants and vouchers, comptroller's records, state rosters, pension records, army accounts, pay rolls, muster rolls, and militia returns, and from the published accounts found in Pierce's Register, Heitman's Register, and Katherine Keogh White's King's Mountain Men. The entire work, with its various and sundry lists, is completely indexed.
James Galloway immigrated from Scotland or Ireland to Kentucky before 1779, later to Knox (later Roane) County, Tennessee. Descendants and relatives lived in Kentucky, Tennessee, Missouri, Montana, Washington and elsewhere. Some descendants immigrated to Alberta, and progeny lived in Alberta, British Columbia, Saskatchewan, Ontario and elsewhere.