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With special emphasis on the Essex County Witch-Hunt of 1692.
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Web site of the New England Historic Genealogical Society, Boston, Massachusetts.
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Members can search hundreds of unique searchable online collections, offering information on hundreds of millions of people.
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American Ancestors: New England, New York, and Beyond. Magazine published four times a year.
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The New England Historical and Genealogical Register
Published quarterly since 1847, The New England Historical and Genealogical Register is the flagship journal of American genealogy and the oldest in the field, focusing on authoritative compiled genealogies. Typical articles also solve genealogical problems, identify immigrant origins, or present treatments of multiple generations. The Register is available free to members.
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FamilySearch - Location Research - New England FREE
FamilySearch brought together tools to help you with your research in this state: indexed historical records, image-only historical records, and links to the FHL catalog and the FamilySearch Wiki.
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A general not personal genealogy blog about research finds and tips, writing and publishing your genealogy, New England witch hunts, etc.
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Naming Children in Early New England on JSTOR
Scholarly work on the naming patterns used by early Puritans.
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Companion Site for New-England-History-L Mailing List. This site contains information, submitted by members, pertaining to the history of the New England States of Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island and Vermont. Related submissions are welcome from anyone who wishes to contribute material to the site.
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Genealogy and history of Nutfield, New Hampshire, founded by Ulster Scots in 1719 and now the towns of Londonderry, Derry, and Windham, New Hampshire. Also a personal blog with my family genealogy, which covers most of Northern New England.
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The goal of the Great Migration Study Project is to create comprehensive biographical and genealogical accounts of all immigrants to New England from 1620 to 1643, from the arrival of the Mayflower to the decline of immigration resulting from the beginning of the Civil War in England. The project was conceived by Robert Charles Anderson who now serves as Director of the Great Migration Study Project.
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The Plymouth Colony Pages - Resources for New England Research
A variety of information of interest to those involved in genealogical research in New England, with an emphasis is on tools and resources, on and off the internet.