reclaimtherecords.org
Records Request #2: Index to all New York City marriage records, 1930-1995 | Reclaim the Records
https://www.reclaimtherecords.org/records-request/2
Public data for public use. Our “To-Do” List. Records Request #1 (Pilot Project). Index to New York City Marriage Applications, Affidavits, and Licenses, 1908-1929. Index to all New York City marriage records, 1930-1995. Index to New York State Deaths (Outside of New York City), 1880-1956. New York City Birth Certificates, 1910-1915. New Jersey Birth, Marriage, and Death Indices, 1901-1903 and 1901-1914. Missouri birth index, 1910-2015. Missouri death index, 1965-2015. December 14, 2015:. We even provide...
blog.rootssearch.io
RootsSearch Blog: September 2015
http://blog.rootssearch.io/2015_09_01_archive.html
Friday, September 25, 2015. The Past, Present, and Future of RootsSearch. RootsSearch began in July 2012 as a small set of enhancements to the FamilySearch Family Tree. I was doing a lot of genealogy research and was frustrated by the need to constantly copy and paste information for record searches. It quickly grew into a dedicated search utility and was named RootsSearch with the help of friends from RootsDev. The RootsSearch popup with information from a 1920 US Census record on Ancestry. And updated ...
cs.virginia.edu
Luther A. Tychonievich
http://www.cs.virginia.edu/~lat7h
Luther A. Tychonievich. I'm a full-time lecturer in the Computer Science Department. At the University of Virginia. I earned a Ph.D. degree in computer science from the University of Virginia, M.S. and B.S. degrees in computer science from Brigham Young University. And AA. and A.S. degrees from Lakeland Community College.
blog.rootssearch.io
RootsSearch Blog: The Past, Present, and Future of RootsSearch
http://blog.rootssearch.io/2015/09/the-past-present-and-future-of.html
Friday, September 25, 2015. The Past, Present, and Future of RootsSearch. RootsSearch began in July 2012 as a small set of enhancements to the FamilySearch Family Tree. I was doing a lot of genealogy research and was frustrated by the need to constantly copy and paste information for record searches. It quickly grew into a dedicated search utility and was named RootsSearch with the help of friends from RootsDev. The RootsSearch popup with information from a 1920 US Census record on Ancestry. And updated ...
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