Date: Fri 04-Sep-1998
Date: Fri 04-Sep-1998
Publication: Bee
Author: JAN
Quick Words:
Booth-Library-Geneaology
Full Text:
Researchers Give The Library's Geneaology Room Rave Reviews
(with cuts)
BY JAN HOWARD
Genealogists are used to roughing it. They are often found hiking into
long-forgotten or neglected cemeteries, scrutinizing mold-scented documents of
another era, or straining their eyes looking through magnifying glasses at
tiny print in books or illegible handwriting included in a microfilm roll.
The genealogy room at the Booth Library in Newtown is the other side of the
coin -- working on your genealogy there is definitely not roughing it. The
room is a far cry from the tiny basement cubby hole that previously housed the
library's genealogical collection.
The new genealogy room is located on the ground floor of the library to the
left as you enter the front entrance. The room is spacious, nicely furnished
with tables and comfortable chairs, and, most importantly, the books and other
materials are within easy reach. A ladder is no longer needed to reach them,
as was the case in the basement room.
Users of the genealogy room are singing its praises.
"That new room is absolutely beautiful. It's gorgeous," said Donald Ferris, a
family genealogist who is a frequent user of the genealogy room. "I'm very
pleased with the room," he said. "There's room to move around."
Those familiar with the basement room know just how small it was. If there
were as few as two or three people there researching, it was almost impossible
to have enough room at the one table or to move around to locate books that
surrounded the room on shelving that reached to the ceiling. It was even more
difficult to move around when use of the ladder was necessary to retrieve a
book. Too many people in the room meant the ladder could not easily be moved
from place to place.
Mr Ferris had a preview of the new room when he was helping to shelve books
prior to the library reopening in January.
Though he spends one or two days researching in the library, he said he hasn't
spent as much time there as he would like. Mr Ferris, who has been researching
family names for 20 years, said genealogy "is a terrific thing to do."
Although he is primarily a family genealogist, Mr Ferris did help out
professionally when the library received genealogical queries in the past. He
hopes to do that again at some time.
He said he has not used a new feature in the genealogy room, a computer
equipped with the genealogy program, Family Tree Maker, which contains CD roms
of United States Census Indices and a Social Security death index. The World
Wide Web with its numerous genealogical sources can also be accessed.
To use the computer you must be 16 years old or older.
Joan Ferris Popovic, a newcomer to genealogy research, never used the small
genealogy room in the basement, but she is impressed with the new room and the
collection of books and reference materials it offers.
"I was very impressed. I had no idea we had all that stuff," Mrs Popovic said.
"There is a lot of information. I found it when my first ancestor went to New
York.
"The books were very interesting," she said. "They have a lot of very good
references. I did get a lot of information. I haven't pieced all of it
together yet."
Mrs Popovic uses the genealogy room about once a week and has started to use
the census data on the computer.
She said she became interested in her Ferris family genealogy following the
death of an aunt.
Mr Ferris and Mrs Popovic are only two of the many people who use the
genealogy room at the library. They come from all over the state and recent
sign-ins indicate users from out of state. Researchers were from as nearby as
Brookfield and Southbury or as far away as California and Florida.
The library has an extensive genealogy collection that was left to the library
in 1932 by Julia Clark Brush of Danbury, a noted genealogist in the early
1900s.
"There is lots here for Connecticut and New York," professional genealogist
Harlan Jessup said recently. Mr Jessup often volunteers his services at the
library, as was the case recently when Glenn Blackman of Brookfield came to
the library looking for information on an ancestor.
The genealogy library includes a collection of information on early families
from the Danbury and Newtown area, Mr Jessup said, but there is not much on
20th century families.
The 1,000-book genealogical collection includes books on Connecticut
communities as well as New York, Ohio and other northeastern states.
"They are adding more and more to it. New books are being added," Mr Ferris
said, such as the three-volume The Great Migration Begins, Immigrants to New
England 1620-1633 .
"There were a lot of things that were stored in the vault that are now coming
out," Mr Ferris said. He said he would like to see certain books added to the
genealogy collection, such as Torrey's Marriages Prior to 1790 .
The genealogy room also offers a microfilm reader, which along with the
computer, is a welcome addition to the room that gives genealogists more
access to records.
Microfilm collections, which are stored on the third floor in the Reference
Department, include all census data from 1790-1920 for Fairfield County (The
1800 census includes Hartford County and the 1820 census includes Litchfield
County); copies of The Newtown Bee and the New York Times ; abstracts of
Fairfield and Stamford and Fairfield County by the Connecticut Ancestry
Society; and the town-by-town records of the Barbour Collection of Vital
Records for Connecticut up to 1850.
Census records can be ordered through the library.
Hard-bound copies of The Newtown Bee are also available. There is also an
index of The Newtown Bee , including vital statistics, that was completed
chronologically by Hilda Ferris. Town historian Dan Cruson has entered the
vital statistics onto a computer but they are currently not available for use
by the public.
The genealogy room collection includes how-to books to help fledgling
genealogists get started on their family tree; American Ancestry books;
Lineage Books of the DAR (Daughters of the American Revolution); a three
volume Passengers and Immigration Lists Index ; American Genealogist ; town
histories; family genealogies; New York Genealogical & Biographical Record ;
New England Historical & Genealogical Register ; Genealogical Dictionary of
the First Settlers of New England by Savage; Mayflower Descendant ; and vital
records from some municipalities in Connecticut and some other states;
While the room may lack more recent information, there is a wealth of
resources for genealogists seeking information about their ancestors and the
eras in which they lived.
The genealogy room is open to the public on a self-serve basis during regular
library hours, Monday through Thursday, 10 am to 8 pm; Fridays, noon-5 pm;
Saturdays, 10 am-5 pm; and Sundays 1-5 pm (except in July and August when the
library is closed Sundays).