Early American Research Books

Curt DiCamillo

A British Country House Alphabet: A Historical & Pictorial Journey, Volume 1

A new series of three high-quality hardback volumes that will enchant seasoned country house visitors—and amaze people new to art and architecture—as they read about surprising snippets of history that occurred at, or because of, a country house in England, Scotland, or Wales.

Ian Watson

The Great Migration: Immigrants to New England, 1636-1638 Volume 1, A-Be

This first volume in the third series of the Great Migration Study Project contains new research to uncover the details of 129 immigrants with surnames beginning with A to Be who came to New England between 1636 and 1638 and appear in the Great Migration Directory.

J. Michael Phelps

Biographies of Original Members and Qualifying Officers – Society of the Cincinnati in the State of Connecticut

This book contains 715 fully cited genealogical and biographical sketches of all qualified propositi of the Connecticut Society. It includes all Original Members and all who qualify under some other basis of the original or amended Institution.

Rhonda R. McClure

Genealogist’s Handbook for New England Research, 6th Edition

This new full-color edition is an an indispensable resource for those researching in Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont. Research basics, unique resources, repository locations, and county and town information are now uniformly presented for each state.

Alicia Crane Williams

Early New England Families 1641–1700, Volume 2

Addressing the lack of compiled information on individuals who immigrated to New England after the Great Migration, the Early New England Families Study Project provides accurate and concise published summaries of seventeenth-century New Englanders.

Robert Charles Anderson

The Mayflower Migration: Immigrants to Plymouth, 1620

This sixteenth book in the Great Migration Study Project opens with an essay on what led up to the sailing of the Mayflower and continues through its departure from Plymouth, England, describing the groups who made up the passenger list and how they were reshuffled when the Speedwell was abandoned

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