First Nations in Canada and DNA Testin

‘DNA for Native American Genealogy’ Still Garnering Great Reviews

We’ve spent much of the last twelve months promoting Roberta Estes’ book, The Complete Guide to Family TreeDNA, and the response from genealogists here and abroad has been terrific. Given that emphasis, we may have unintentionally hidden her 2021 publication, DNA for Native American Genealogy under a bushel. Fortunately, reviews of the latter continue to[…]Read more

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Scottish Baronial Families

Scottish Baronial Families, 1250-1750 | by Dr. David Dobson (Sample)

As Dr. David Dobson has noted in the Introduction to his new book, Scottish Baronial Families, 1250-1750, medieval Scottish kings established administrative units overseen by barons to assure that the King’s laws were enforced, taxes were collected, and, when necessary, knights and other warriors were available to defend the kingdom. By the late seventeenth century[…]Read more

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Scottish Soldiers in Colonial America

New Consolidated Edition: Scottish Soldiers in Colonial America (Including Introduction Sample)

Between 1997 and 2024, Genealogical.com published the nine-volume series, Scottish Soldiers in Colonial America, by Dr. David Dobson. We are delighted to present those books in a new, fully indexed, consolidated edition.  This consolidation edition of Dr. Dobson’s nine-part series identifies over 10,000 Scottish soldiers who served in the Americas. The new comprehensive index of names[…]Read more

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Northern Neck of Virginia Pioneers

Announcing: Northern Neck of Virginia Pioneers, 1642-1675. In Six Volumes. By Robert K. Headley, Jr.

Virginia’s Northern Neck is comprised of the present-day counties of Lancaster, Northumberland, Richmond, and Westmoreland. (The oldest records for Richmond County date from its origin as part of Old Rappahannock County.) The foremost authority on Northern Neck genealogy is Robert K. Headley, Jr.  Mr. Headley, who has immersed himself in its records for most of[…]Read more

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Books on Virginia's Founders

Pre-Eminent Works on Virginia’s Founders

Starting in 2004, Genealogical Publishing Company undertook several projects leading to the publication of definitive titles pertaining to the genealogy of Virginia’s founding families. We completed these projects just in time for the May 11-13, 2007, celebration of the settlement at Jamestown, America’s first permanent English-speaking colony. The titles to which we refer are the[…]Read more

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O’Sullivan. The Earliest Irish Royal Family

O’Sullivan. The Earliest Irish Royal Family: Three Selected Bloodlines

William Randolph McCreight’s extraordinary family history traces the O’Sullivan sept a full 31 generations from the author’s Carolina origins to the family’s Irish roots in 170 AD. Based on examinations of archaeological, linguistic, and DNA evidence, Mr. McCreight shows that the O’Sullivans may be the oldest documented Irish royal family on record. At their height[…]Read more

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Map Guide to the Federal Censuses—Still the Best Source for Boundary Changes

Map Guide to the Federal Censuses—Still the Best Source for Boundary Changes

The award-winning Map Guide to the U.S. Federal Censuses, 1790-1920, by William Thorndale and William Dollarhide, published in 1987, is the preeminent tool for assuring researchers that they are searching the census in the correct county.  The maps in the Map Guide show both contemporary boundaries and decennial federal census boundaries on the same map.[…]Read more

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Hispanic Family Histories & Colonial Censuses

Hispanic Family Histories & Colonial Censuses

Family Histories Most genealogists know—or learn belatedly—that they should be on the lookout for existing accounts of their ancestors, whether published in a printed book or online. While the information in older books about any family must be examined for possible errors and their findings compared with original sources, published family histories frequently save the[…]Read more

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New York Researchers’ New Resource for Genealogists

‘New York in 1698’, by Kory Meyerink Earns High Praise

Linda Stufflebean is one of the busiest genealogy bloggers on the Internet. She writes the blog, Empty Branches on the Family Tree, where not a week goes by without a significant new posting. In addition, she publishes, “Friday’s Family History Finds,” on her blog after combing  cyberspace for important articles about genealogy methodology, website updates,[…]Read more

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