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1000 tulosta hakusanalla Wesley Pippenger

Essex County, Virginia Consolidated Index to Wills and Fiduciary Accounts, Etc., 1692-1903
Users may be aware that this compiler has previously published similar data, for a portion of the overall period covered here, in Essex County, Virginia Will Abstracts, 1751-1842 and Estate Records Index, 1751-1799, and Index to Virginia Estates, 1800-1865, Volume 10. Of those years, the difference here is content and format. The original index record replicated here, and used as the initial base of data, is called Index to Wills and Fiduciary Accounts, 1717-1901.In this work, the base index for 1717-1901 has been expanded to include wills and administrations from county formation in 1692 through 1716, to make a complete run of entries from 1692 to 1903. The compiler has also added the name of a spouse if mentioned in a will, the name of person(s) bonded in a bond, the name of the administrator or executor for an account or sale, and has adjusted dates between January and March before 1753 to allow for the calendar change. Entries are arranged alphabetically by surname and include the following five columns of information: Date of Instrument (date the record was created), Date of Recordation (date the record was recorded), Name (full-name with additional information for some entries), Instrument (type of document), and Bk./Pg. (source code).2020, 81/2x11, paper, alphabetical, 232 pp
Essex County, Virginia Land Tax Lists, 1782-1814
This book contains a reproduction of the land tax lists for Essex County for the years 1782 through 1814. It has been created by use of microfilm copies from the Library of Virginia with exception of year 1805 where microfilm copies are incomplete and the original record was consulted. For the years 1783 through 1786 only alterations were made to the 1782 and subsequent lists. A separate listing of yearly alterations in Essex stops after 1791. The earliest list in Essex contains the name of the owners of the land (as the person taxed), the number of acres owned, the rate of value from which taxation was calculated, and the total value of the land. Initially the local sheriff(s) created the list.In October 1786, an Act of Assembly established districts in each county, positions of commissioners of revenue, and for recordkeeping of land taxes to include persons' names owning land, the number of and yearly rent of lots where a town was involved, quantity of land, rate of land per acre, total value of land exclusive of lots, and amount of tax at 11/2 percent of the value.Recordkeepers often made notations to distinguish multiple persons with the same name. Entries for the same owner through the years may shift to including "Estate" or "Est." to indicate a recent death of the owner, and remain on the list until the estate is settled. For genealogical researchers, land tax records may help distinguish between individuals by the same name living in a locality at the same time. Land ownership may be tracked between family members. Some references, notations and estate divisions may be found here when not readily located in deed books. A full-name, place and subject index adds to the value of this work.2020, 81/2x11, paper, index, 506 pp
Stafford County, Virginia Land Tax Lists, 1782-1805
This book contains a reproduction of the land tax lists for Stafford County for the years 1782 through 1805. It has been created by use of online copies at Familysearch.org and microfilm and original copies at the Library of Virginia. Data are presented in sequence as found on the microfilm, including small numbers in pencil at the bottom of each pair of pages. After filming, these small numbers were changed from one continual sequence to pagination per individual list. From 1782, one will find two lists per year, which later typically represent two districts in the county. The earliest list in Stafford contains the name of the proprietors of the land (as the person taxed), the number of acres owned, the rate of value from which taxation was calculated, and the total tax assessed. For the years 1784 through 1786 only alterations were made to the 1783 and subsequent lists. The next list of alterations in Stafford is in 1792. A similar list of changes, called Alienations, is typically found for at least one of the districts up to 1805.Recordkeepers often made notations to distinguish multiple persons with the same name. Entries for the same owner through the years may shift to including "Estate" or "Est." to indicate a recent death of the owner, and remain on the list until the estate is settled. Many entries show the source of acquisition of the land, i.e., "Wm. Wright, for R.W. Carter," doesn't mean that Wright represents Carter, rather, Wright is now taxed in lieu of and acquired of Carter. Think of "for" being used as "from." For genealogical researchers, land tax records may help distinguish between individuals by the same name living in a locality at the same time. Land ownership may be tracked between family members. Some references, notations and estate divisions may be found here when not readily located in deed books.2020, 81/2x11, paper, index, 440 pp
King and Queen County, Virginia Land Tax Lists, 1782-1807
This book contains a reproduction of the land tax lists for King and Queen County, Virginia for the years 1782 through 1807. It has been created from online copies at FamilySearch.org. For the years 1783 through 1786 only alterations were made to the 1782 and subsequent lists. The earliest list in King and Queen contains the name of the owners of the land (as the person taxed), the number of acres owned, the rate of value from which taxation was calculated, and the total value of the land. Initially the local sheriff(s) created the list.In October 1786, an Act of Assembly established districts in each Virginia county, positions for Commissioners of Revenue, and for recordkeeping of land taxes to include persons' names owning land, the number and yearly rent of lots where a town was involved, quantity of land, rate of land per acre, total value of land exclusive of lots, and amount of tax at 11/2 percent of the value. Recordkeepers often made notations to distinguish multiple persons with the same name. Entries for the same owner through the years may shift to including "Estate" or "Est." to indicate a recent death of the owner, and may remain on the list until the estate is settledFor genealogical researchers, land tax records may help distinguish between individuals by the same name living in a locality at the same time. Land ownership may be tracked between family members. Some references, notations and estate divisions may be found here when not readily located in any of the few court records that have survived multiple fires at the King and Queen County courthouse. A full-name, place and subject index adds to the value of this work.2021, 81/2x11, paper, index, 440 pp
King and Queen County, Virginia Marriage Records Index, 1853-1975
The base source for these data is a typewritten index for the period 1866-1980, which provides the date a marriage license was issued, names of the parties, and the location of the record in an original record (book, page, entry/line number). When possible, the license issue date has been replaced with the date of marriage. An asterisk (*) indicates data that differ between sources. Preference is given to the license information because it was created before the register.The compiler has added to these index entries: (1) data from marriage licenses or certificates, 1853-1903, and various marriage registers for the period 1871-1975; (2) the surname of a widowed bride's father in parenthesis, if given; (3) and place of birth and/or place of marriage if not in King and Queen County. If the marriage date is not found, the date given is when the marriage license was issued, and is followed by "L". Entries are arranged alphabetically by the groom's surname and include: Name of Groom, Name of Bride, Marriage or License (L) Date, and Source or Bk.-Pg.: No. An index of bride's names completes this work.2021, 81/2x11, paper, alphabetical, index, 182 pp
King and Queen County, Virginia Personal Property Tax Lists, 1782-1803
This book contains a reproduction of the personal property tax lists for King and Queen County, Virginia for the years 1782 through 1803. For the most part, it has been created using digital copies at FamilySearch.org, except a few original pages missing from microfilm. The earliest list in King and Queen contains the name of the Proprietor (person paying the tax) and taxable Negroes, the number of: white tithes, Negroes, horses, cattle, wheels, ordinary licenses, and (after a few years), billiard tables and store licenses. Before 1787, the local sheriff created the list. The multiple 1785 lists account for white males over age twenty-one only, while the 1783 lists are a composite of "white souls" and white tithes over age twenty-one. Most of the 1783 lists detail the name of each tithable, including whites above age twenty-one and slaves.The year 1786 was a big deal for tax and financial reform in Virginia. Provisions were refined for land and personal property, and reflected arrearages, delinquents, claims by military officers and their widows and orphans, court and clerk's fees, and tax on houses and town lots, merchant licenses, spirits and wines, imported goods, etc. The nitty gritty got all the way to the number of wheels on carriages.There are six different lists for 1782-1784, and seven for 1785 and 1786, which are by hundred (district) or parish, and generally go from north to south in the county; with the first hundred being the top of the county, and the sixth hundred being the lower part of the county. In and after 1787 there are two lists, one for the upper part of the county and one for the lower part of the county. The dividing line between the two districts is seemingly mid-county, as the upper district includes all of Drysdale Parish and part of St. Stephens Parish - causing the record-keeper to append duplicate names with notes like De. (Drysdale) or S.S. (St. Stephens). Other notations behind the name of the taxable person may (but not always) indicate their profession or occupation, like (C) for constable, (T) for tailor, or (B) for blacksmith.For genealogical researchers, tax records may help distinguish between individuals by the same name living in a locality at the same time. Some references, notations and evidence of estate divisions may be found here when not readily located in any of the few court records that have survived multiple fires at the King and Queen County courthouse. Plus, the tax record for 1790 and 1800 serves as a replacement for lost Federal census records. An index to full-names, places and subjects adds value to this work.2021, 81/2x11, paper, index, 502 pp.
Essex County, Virginia General Index to Deeds No. 2, 1867-1904, Deed Books 52 to 61
The purpose of this work is to present a single alphabetical index based on the General Index to Deeds No. 2, 1867-1904, that was created in the style known as a Campbell Index. The purpose here is to resequence and validate the index. What typically results from a Campbell Index is a jumble that requires users to flip back and forth between groups of pages throughout the entire index to seek out where various groups are continued elsewhere.This present index is largely made up of entries to deeds, being either: bargain and sales, bills of sale, or trust deeds. Of additional interest may be: bonds for officials (including ministers), marriage contracts, estate divisions, plats, or even Homestead deeds. No bonds are recorded in the deed books after 1892 (Deed Book 56). The index also reflects entries in a book titled Deeds of Release No. 1, which contains only thirty-nine pages of written information.Some deficiencies in the original index have been addressed here. As a result, hundreds of additional index entries were added by the compiler over the original courthouse index. References to plats that did not appear in the original index have been added.2022, 81/2x11, paper, alphabetical, 252 pp.
Richmond County, Virginia Deed Abstracts, 1726-1774 Account Book 1 Extracts and Deed Books 9-13
The bulk of what is presented here are abstracts of items found in Richmond County Deed Books 9 (1734-1741) through 13 (1768-1774). This main run of abstracts continues where previous publication of deed transcripts, by Ruth and Sam Sparacio, ended with Deed Book 8, which concluded with a court term in March 1734. Deed Books 9 and 10, for 1734-1750, were abstracted by T.L.C. Genealogy, but are chiefly found only in libraries and are no longer available for purchase; that period is replicated in this series. In addition, included here are abstracts of a group of deeds and indentures, for 1726-1749, recorded in Account Book 1, 1724-1783, which do not appear in any deed book.The period covered here is early enough that many of the placenames have now morphed into different spellings or names entirely. These records reveal changes in parish and county names and boundaries.Many records detail a chain of title, some for more than fifty years, that links to a patent or grant. Other items refer to papers of the General Court (see Index entry), but the records of Virginia's colonial government have, for the most part, been destroyed.Several deeds refer to Last Will and Testaments, recorded previous to 1699, that are now lost from the records of Richmond County, and in some instances may be referred to in an early Order Book. Also of interest is Deed Book 13 where may be found a description of roads (from point A to point B) and a list of persons appointed to keep each road in repair. For all intents and purposes, these lists show who lived along each of the roads described. From this one might be better equipped to build a neighborhood Numerous maps and an index to full-names, places, and subjects add to the value of this work.2021, 81/2x11, paper, index, 320 pp
Alexandria City and Arlington County, Virginia, Records Index
This index will assist researchers in locating records of individuals within the masses of paperwork created by the various courts of the City of Alexandria and Arlington County, Virginia. Individual records themselves are not always indexed, rather this index identifies separate records within larger groups. This first volume includes over 25,000 entries.People who created records were often poorly educated, or simply did not have very good handwriting. Spelling in some records is very bad or far from how we now know it. Although we may know different based on other sources, the record's spelling is preserved here as it is interpreted by the compiler.Included in this volume are entries from land taxes 1787, 1790 and 1795; land and personal property taxes 1796; personal property taxes 1795, 1796, 1798, 1799 and 1800; special census 1795, 1796, 1799, 1800 1808 and 1810; estate accounts, 1810-1850; ordinary bonds and licenses, 1802-1811, 1820-1839 and 1841-1850; Admiralty Court records, 1801-1830; the Complete Records series, 1786-1822; records of insolvent debtors, 1803-1819 and 1826-1846; land suits, 1834-1843; Orphans Court minutes, 1801-1805, 1811-1817, 1822-1830 and 1842-1847; Court of Oyer and Terminer, 1794-1800; reports of aliens, 1801-1832; and other bonds, estate records, petitions, plats, pleas, wills etc.Each entry shows subject, year of recording, and precise location of the original entry.(2001, 2012), 2020, 51/2x81/2, paper, alphabetical, 466 pp
Essex County, Virginia Index to Court Orders, 1702-1715
Almost all early records of Essex County have been abstracted or transcribed, either by John Frederick Dorman, or by Ruth and Sam Sparacio. Excepted from publication to date have been the Court Orders for the period from October 10, 1702 to March 19, 1716/7. Several issues impact this: (1) no orders survive for July 1709 to April 1710, April 12 to July 1711, and Spring 1715 to Spring 1717, and (2) Book 4 is in such bad condition that it is rarely used.Presented here is an index to orders in Deeds & Wills Book 10, pp. 133-149 (October 10, 1702 to March 11, 1702/3), and items in Order Book 3 (August 11, 1703 to March 11, 1707/8), and Order Book 4 (April 10, 1708 to March 15, 1714/5). For Order Book 4, the following pages are missing: 77-81, 173-246, and 323-370.At first glance the original typewritten index may be deemed a godsend, as it certainly fills a void to allow us a glimpse into the content of Order Books 3 and 4. That glance soon turns into a train wreck after careful examination of the index's content. Once the author sorted his extracted entries by page number, he found the following issues with the original typewritten index when compared to the original order books: (1) the indexers left some complete and many partial pages unindexed; (2) did not index entire lists of county payments, imported persons or jury members; (3) omitted all criminal matters, details of court cases, ages of orphans or slaves when stated, and the difference between Jr. and Sr.; and (4) did not cross-index all actions, petitions or suits. In addition, the compilers of the original typewritten index were inconsistent in preserving the actual date based on the calendar. In other words, it was often unclear whether January 1705 is 1705/6 or 1704/5. The bulk of these issues has been adjusted in Pippenger's Essex County, Virginia Index to Court Orders, 1702-1715, which presents approximately 3,335 new entries, and thus increases the quantity of entries extracted from the original typewritten index by about twenty-four percent.2020, 81/2x11, paper, alphabetical, 296 pp
Essex County, Virginia Marriage Records, 1884-1921
This work presents marriage records for Essex County, Virginia for the period 1884 to 1921. It continues publication of marriage records after those by this compiler and Suzanne P. Derieux for the period 1850-1883. The major difference here is that the format is condensed to include only the pertinent data rather than reproducing the printed form of either the marriage register, marriage license, or related record pieces.The critical notice to users is that Marriage Register 1, that is titled and runs 1804-1921, contains for the subject period the data for when the marriage was planned. That said, the procedure was that when the groom and bride applied for a marriage license, the court clerk recorded the planned information in the register. This included statistics about the parties: their marital status, age, race, place of birth, place of residence, and the names of their parents. At that time the couple was issued a license that was to be completed by an officiating minister with the actual date of marriage, place of marriage, and signed by the officiating minister. This actual information was not updated in the previously-created register. Because of this, there is routinely a difference between the register information and the license information.Data are presented in a standard sequence that is similar to what is found in the register: name of parties, groom to bride; notation as to race when non-white, i.e. (C) for colored or (F) for free, etc.; date of marriage (planned if no marriage license survives, else updated from license); place of marriage; page and line of Marriage Register 1 in which the data are found; ages of the groom and bride; marital status of the groom and bride; place of birth of the groom and bride; place of residence of the groom and bride; parents of the groom and bride; occupation of the groom; minister officiating the marriage; and remarks, if any, including notation of parental or guardian consent.Several facsimile reprints of original marriage documents and an index to full-names, places and occupations add to the value of this work.2021, 81/2x11, paper, index, 252 pp
Essex County, Virginia General Index to Deeds No. 1, 1797-1867, Deed Books 35 to 51
The purpose of this work is to present a single alphabetical index based on the General Index to Deeds No. 1, 1797-1867, that was created in the style known as a Campbell Index. In other words, the purpose here is not to validate the index but to resequence it. What typically results from a Campbell Index is a jumble that requires users to flip back and forth between groups of pages throughout the entire index to seek out where various groups are continued elsewhere.This present index is largely made up of entries to over 7,000 deeds, being either: bargain and sales, bills of sale, or trust deeds. Of additional interest may be: thirty-eight polls for the election of various officials; twenty-two apprenticeships; a bastard bond; thirty-six emancipation or manumission deeds; forty-one insolvents; forty-six marriage contracts or settlements; sixteen bonds for ministers to solemnize the rites of matrimony; bonds for sheriff, constable, tobacco inspector, or Commissioner of the Revenue; references to military service; or other non-routine items.Some deficiencies in the original index have been addressed here. As a result, over 1,500 additional index entries were added by the compiler over the original courthouse index. References to plats that did not appear in the original index have been added.2022, 81/2x11, paper, alphabetical, 354 pp.