The September 10, 2009, meeting of the Madison County Genealogical Society was held at the Edwardsville Public Library in Edwardsville, Illinois.
President, Robert Ridenour, called the meeting to order.
Reports:
In the absence of our
Treasurer LaVerne Bloemker, Secretary Barbara Hitch presented
the financial report for the month of August 2009.
On September 10, 2009,
Diane Walsh presented a program titled An Introduction to the
National Archives and Its Treasures.
Her presentation covered what a researcher should know and have
ready before making the trip to Washington, D. C. Most of the
preparations that she discussed can be done from home online.
She gave several websites that are available to help the researcher
prepare for their trip to the National Archives.
The topics covered included:
Ready for Archival Research? http://archives.gov/research/start/
Information for Researchers http://archives.gov/research/start/introduction.html#can-do-here
Researcher Card http://archives.gov/research/start/researcher-card.html
Paraphernalia Allowed http://archives.gov/research/start/whats-allowed.html
For information about an individual to be found in the National
archives, that individual must have some connection with the federal
government. The first step a researcher must take is to determine
their subject's connection to the federal government, i.e., presidential,
military, immigration, land, census. It will help to determine
which agencies, offices, or individuals are involved, i.e., Bureau
of Land Management, etc.
The researcher needs to determine the record type and location
using the finding aids available:
Research tools http://archives.gov/research/tools/index.html
Guide to Federal Records http://archives.gov/research/guide-fed-records/
Microfilm http://archives.gov/publications/microfilm-catalogs.html
Descriptive pamphlets for microfilm
publications can be found at the microfilm webpage plus 32 are
available in
co-operation
with the St. Louis County Library-Lindbergh http://www.slcl.org/branches/hq/sc/dps/dplist.htm
A List of Publications of the National
Archives and Records Administration can be ordered free of charge
http://www.archives.gov/publications/lists/list-inventories.html
Records with genealogy emphasis are segregated into separate groups/lists:
http://archives.gov/genealogy
http://www.archives.gov/genealogy/topics/
Diane also discussed the Archives' record arrangement and "lingo."
Record Arrangement: Record Group - Series - File Unit - Items
(Documents)
All district court records held by the National Archives are in
the same record group
Records of District Courts of the
United States (Record Group 21)
Within that record group are series of records
Admiralty Case Files, 1790 -1966
Civil Case Files, 1938 - 1967
Criminal Case Files, 1791 - 1970
Within the Series are file units (each court case is a separate
unit)
United States versus Henry Sims,
#68 August Session 1851
United States versus Samuel Williams
etal., #159 August Session 1851
Within the file units are individual items (documents). The Archives
calls them Items; Ms. Walsh refers to them as Documents.
Indictment of Samuel Williams
Lists of Witnesses and the Jury
This presentation was well received and prompted several questions,
as several of those in attendance were planning research trips
to the National Archives.
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