Mayflower Descendant, Volume 65, No. 1: Winter 2017
In this issue:
Families: Chipman, Churchill, Collins, Drew, James, Keen, Simmons, Winslow
Sources: Stoughton [Mass.] Marriages, 1727-1851
In this issue:
Families: Chipman, Churchill, Collins, Drew, James, Keen, Simmons, Winslow
Sources: Stoughton [Mass.] Marriages, 1727-1851
In this issue:
Families: Fisher, Gardner, Hall, Turner, Young
Sources: Wellfleet Vital Records
In this issue:
Families: Orcutt, Shippey, Alger, Carrier
Sources: Easton Vital Records
Town Study: Scituate
This book recreates the lost world of 17th-century Charlestown and the lives and work of the first three generations of its townspeople. By using a variety of surviving records, Thompson presents a colorful history of the town’s settlement and governance, its relationship with the land and sea, the church, local crime and violence, the role of women, and ultimately its involvement in the Glorious Revolution.
This compilation presents the first fifty sketches written for the Early New England Families Study Project. The project, under the direction of Alicia Crane Williams, was created to fill the need for accurate and concise published summaries on seventeenth-century New Englanders.
Cambridge Cameos contains forty-four sketches from the period 1651 to 1686 that combine good stories, intriguing personalities, and incidents involving mostly ordinary Cambridge people. They are based on thousands of original documents; virtually all primary sources with any bearing on the early history of Cambridge. Drawing on his vast knowledge of Middlesex County families and on his equally vast experience in the town and court records of that county, Roger Thompson has composed a number of delightful vignettes of early residents of the town of Cambridge.
This volume of full-color period images of the 18th and 19th centuries reveals sweeping vistas, lively street scenes, and elegant edifices that show Boston as a youthful and vibrant town. Selected from public and private collections and ranging from fine art to folk art, these works capture the multifaceted character of a sometimes quaint place that has given way to a modern metropolis.
By D. Brenton Simons
Published: 2008
An indispensable resource illuminating the world of decorative arts and its relationship to family history, this book features fifteen chapters by leading authorities, including Abbott Lowell Cummings, Wendell Garrett, Maureen Taylor, Laurel Thatcher Ulrich, and others. The book contains more than 200 black and white illustrations and 16 color plates.
By D. Brenton Simons and Peter Benes
Published: 2002
8½ x 10½ hardcover, 350 pages, illustrated