HAWKEYE HERITAGE - Iowa Pioneer List Project

Transcription

HAWKEYE HERITAGE - Iowa Pioneer List Project
HAWKEYE HERITAGE
A PUBLICATION OF THE IOWA GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY
Volume 47, Issue 2
Summer, 2013
HAWKEYE HERITAGE
SUMMER, 2013
VOLUME 47, NUMBER 2
Hawkeye Heritage
Table of Contents
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Editor
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Editorial Committee
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_______
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Assistant Librarians
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IGS Executive Board - 2013
President, Nicoe Hart
1st Vice President, Vacant
2nd Vice President, Vacant
Secretary, Barb Hammer
Treasurer, LaWanda Nepstad
Hawkeye Heritage is published by
the Iowa Genealogical Society (IGS).
Iowa Counties and Regions .................................................................. 2
Iowa Genealogical Society Chapters ......................................................... 3
Research Assistance .............................................................................. 5
Civil War Envelopes of Iowa .................................................................... 6
State Historical Society of Iowa (SHSI) Publications, past and
present .................................................................................................... 13
Book Review ........................................................................................... 19
How Spreadsheets Can Assist Your Genealogy Research ........... 21
Naturalizations - First Papers .............................................................. 24
Iowa Pioneer, Century & Statehood Certificates.............................. 29
Library Acquisitions ............................................................................... 30
Name Index ............................................................................................ 32
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Copyright © 2013
Iowa Genealogical Society
Hawkeye Heritage
Volume 47, Issue 2
Summer 2013
Iowa Counties and Regions
Region Representatives on Board of Directors
Region 1
Pat Shaw
Region 6
Vacant
Region 11
James Lawton
Region 2
Alan Neve
Region 7
Eileen Johnson
Region 12
Vacant
Region 3
Pat Border
Region 8
Ken & Mary Booth
Region 13
Virgil Karstens
Region 4
Allaire George
Region 9
Vacant
Region 14
Linda Madden
Region 5
Beverly Bray
Region 10
Saundra Leininger
Region 15
Donna Kelly
Region 16
Linda Abercrombie
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Hawkeye Heritage
Volume 47, Issue 2
Summer 2013
Iowa Genealogical Society Chapters
Adair Co. Anquestors
Appanoose Co. Gen Society
Audubon Co Gen Society %B Duvall
Benton Co. Genealogical Society
(Blackhawk) North East Iowa Gen Society
Boone Co. Gen Society
Bremer Co. Gen Society
Buchanan Co. Gen Society
Buena Vista Co. Gen Society
Butler Co. Gen Society
Calhoun Co Genies
Carroll Co Gen Society
Cass Co. Gen Society
Cedar Co. Gen Society
(Cerro Gordo) North Central Gen Society
Cherokee Co. Tree Stompers
Chickasaw Co. Gen Society
Clarke Co. Gen Society
(Clay) Iowa Lakes Gen Society
Clayton Co. Gen Society
Clinton Co Gen Society %Norma A. Lindsey
Clinton Co./Gateway Gene Society
Crawford Co. Gen Society
Dallas Co. Gen Society
Davis Co. Gen Society
Delaware Co. Gen Society
Des Moines Co. Gen Society
Iowa Lakes Gen Society
Dubuque Co. / Key City Gen Society
Emmet Co Gene Society % Pub Library
Fayette Co / Oelwein Area Gen Society
Fayette Co. Gen Society
Franklin Co. Gen Society
Fremont Co Historical Society Gen Dept
Greene Co. Gen Society
Guthrie Co. Gen Society
Hamilton Heritage Hunters Gen Society
Hancock Co. Gen Society
Harrison Co. Gen Society
Howard-Winneshiek Co. Gen Society
Humboldt Co. Gen Society
Ida Co. Genealogical Society
Iowa Co. Gen Society
Jackson Co. Gen Chapter
Jasper Co. Gen Society
Jefferson Co. Gen Society
(Johnson) Iowa City Gen Society
Jones Co. Gen Society
(Keokuk) Keo-Mah Genealogical Society
Kossuth Co. Genealogical Society
% Greenfield Library Box 328
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PO Box 453
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714 Elm St
424 Main St
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PO Box 264
PO Box 94
304 N Franklin St
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21 E 3rd St
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% Hampton Library, 4 S Federal St
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943 1st St
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30 6th St N
1111 S Main St
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% Algona Library, 210 N Phillips St
Greenfield IA 50849-0328
Centerville IA 52544-0684
Audubon IA 50025-1301
Belle Plaine IA 52208-1215
Waterloo IA 50704-2274
Boone IA 50036-0453
Shell Rock IA 50670-9616
Independence IA 50644-0004
Storm Lake IA 50588-2448
Allison IA 50602-9727
Rockwell City IA 50579-1419
Carroll IA 51401-0021
Atlantic IA 50022-1241
Tipton IA 52772-0052
Mason City, IA 50402-0237
Meriden IA 51037-7001
New Hampton IA 50659-0434
Osceola IA 50213-1414
Spencer IA 51301-4131
Elkader IA 52043-0846
Clinton, IA 52732-4244
Clinton, IA 52733-2256
Denison IA 51442-2014
Dallas Center IA 50063-0264
Bloomfield IA 52537-0094
Manchester IA 52057-1520
Burlington IA 52601-0493
Spencer IA 51301-4131
Dubuque IA 52004-0013
Estherville IA 51334-2294
Oelwein IA 50662-0389
West Union IA 52175-1347
Hampton IA 50441-1934
Sidney IA 51652-0671
Jefferson IA 50129-0133
Jamaica IA 50128-0096
Webster City IA 50595-2001
Klemme IA 50449-0081
Omaha NE 68105-2051
Cresco IA 52136-0362
Humboldt IA 50548-1736
Ida Grove IA 51445-1708
North English IA 52316-0207
Maquoketa IA 52060-1065
Newton IA 50208-0163
Fairfield IA 52556-8518
Iowa City IA 52244-0822
Anamosa IA 52205-0174
Oskaloosa IA 52577-2807
Algona IA 50511-1735
3
Hawkeye Heritage
Volume 47, Issue 2
Lee Co. Gen Society Of Iowa
(Lee) Old Fort Genealogical Society
Genealogical Society Of Linn Co.
Louisa Co. Genealogical Committee
Lucas Co. Gen Society % Public Lib
Madison Co. Genealogical Society
(Mahaska Co) Keo-Mah Genealogical Society
Marion Co. Gen Society
Marshall Co. / Central Iowa Gen Society
Mills Co. Gen Society
Monona Co. Gen Society
Monroe Co. Gen Society
Montgomery Co. Gen Society
Muscatine Co. Gen Society
(O'Brien & Osceola) Iowa Lakes Gen Society
Palo Alto Co. Gen Society
(Plymouth Co.) Northwest Iowa Gen Society
Laurens Genies/Pocahontas Co.
Pocahontas Genies
(Polk Co) Ankeny Gen Society
(E. Pottawattamie) Botna Valley Gen Society
Pottawattamie Co. Gene Society
Poweshiek Co. Historical & Gen Society
Sac Co. Gen Society
Scott Co. Gen Society
Greater Sioux Co. Gen Society
Story Co. Gen Society
Tama Co Historical Soc & Genealogical Lib
Taylor Co. Gen Society
Union Co. Gen Society
Van Buren Co. Gen Society
Wapello Co. Gen Society
Warren Co. Gen Society
Washington Co. Gen Society
Wayne Co. Gen Society
Webster Co. Gen Society
Lime Creek/Winnebago Co.
(Winneshiek Co) Decorah Genealogy Assoc.
Woodbury Co. Gen Society
Wright Co. Gen Society
Special Interest Groups
African-American Special Interest Group
English/Welsh Special Interest Group
Fairfax Co Gen Society, Midwestern Group
German Special Interest Group
Irish Special Interest Group
Legacy Users Group
Norwegian Special Interest Group
Pafways Of North Iowa
RootsMagic Users Group
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PO Box 303
PO Box 1
PO Box 175
722 N Chestnut St
803 Braden Ave
PO Box 26
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PO Box 385
PO Box 945
% Glenwood Library, 109 N Vine St
901 12th St
203 Benton Ave E
705 Washington Ave
323 Main St
% Public Library, 21 E 3rd St
% Public Library, 707 N Superior
46 1st St SW
273 N 3rd St
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PO Box 446
% Lecompte Library, 110 S Franklin
PO Box 1584
115 East "L" St
202 Winnebago
PO Box 624
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Keokuk IA 52632-0303
Fort Madison IA 52627-0001
Cedar Rapids IA 52406-0175
Wapello IA 52653-1009
Chariton IA 50049-1742
Winterset IA 50273-0026
Oskaloosa IA 52577-2807
Knoxville IA 50138-0385
Marshalltown IA 50158-0945
Glenwood IA 51534-1516
Onawa IA 51040-1307
Albia IA 52531-2036
Red Oak IA 51566-2439
Muscatine IA 52761-2867
Spencer IA 51301-3235
Emmetsburg IA 50536-1022
Le Mars IA 51031-3696
Laurens IA 50554-1215
Pocahontas IA 50574-1611
Ankeny IA 50023-2320
Oakland IA 51560-0693
Council Bluffs IA 51502-0394
Montezuma IA 50171-0280
Sac City IA 50583-0054
Davenport IA 52808-3132
Sioux Center IA 51250-1536
Ames IA 50010-0692
Toledo IA 52342-1308
Gravity IA 50848-0008
Creston IA 50801-2331
Keosauqua IA 52560-0160
Ottumwa IA 52501-0163
Indianola IA 50125-0151
Washington IA 52353-0446
Corydon IA 50060-1518
Fort Dodge IA 50501-1584
Forest City IA 50436-1499
Decorah IA 52101-1812
Sioux City IA 51102-0624
Clarion IA 50525-0225
628 E Grand Ave
628 E Grand Ave
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628 E Grand Ave
1705 S Coolidge Ave
628 E Grand Ave
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Des Moines IA 50309-1924
Merrifield VA 22116-2290
Des Moines IA 50309-1924
Des Moines IA 50309-1924
Des Moines IA 50309-1924
Des Moines IA 50309-1924
Mason City IA 50401-5514
Des Moines IA 50309-1924
Hawkeye Heritage
Volume 47, Issue 2
Summer 2013
Research Assistance
The Iowa Genealogical Society provides an hourly research service. Please follow the instructions
outlined below or see our website at www.iowagenealogy.org to access this service.
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Hawkeye Heritage
Volume 47, Issue 2
Summer 2013
Civil War Envelopes of Iowa
by James R. Miller
Envelopes sent during the Civil War are vivid evidence of our ancestors' military service. Old envelopes
in postal history collections are a largely untapped source of genealogical information. This paper
presents six envelopes sent to Iowa with basic genealogical data on the senders and recipients. These
envelopes come from philatelic auction catalogs and a book about Civil War postal history from which
Philgen.org has permission to use photographs.1 While home delivery of mail began in large cities in
1863, envelopes in rural areas were addressed to the nearest post office until after 1900. 2 All locations
are in Iowa except as noted. As with any source of genealogical information, envelopes must be
studied in combination with other sources before reaching a conclusion.
Upton Coomes of Oskaloosa received an envelope postmarked in “Ne[w Orlea]ns” on 17 March 1865.
(Figure 1) Upton Coomes, twelve years old, and his apparent older brother Reuben Coomes are in
Oskaloosa in the 1860 U.S. census.3 Reuben Coomes enlisted as a corporal in the 33rd Iowa Infantry
on 8 October 1862, and his regiment fought in Arkansas in 1864. 4 An enclosed letter was written 17
January 1865 at Camp Ford, Texas, a Confederate prisoner of war camp.5 Reuben Coomes was taken
prisoner on 30 April 1864 at the Battle of Jenkins Ferry on the Saline River. 6 “Flag of Truce” is written
on the envelope, and this letter passed through the Union-Confederate exchange point near Red River
Landing, Louisiana.7 Reuben Coomes survived the war and is in Adams with his wife and child in the
1880 U.S. census.8 Henry Coomes, probably a brother, also served in the 33rd Iowa Infantry.9
Figure 1 1865 “Flag of Truce” envelope from Camp Ford, Tyler, Texas to Oskaloosa, Iowa via New Orleans
(Photograph courtesy of Robert A. Siegel Auction Galleries, Sale 988, Lot 234)
Mrs. Hannah P. Staley of Toledo, Tama County, received an envelope postmarked in Lynchburg,
Virginia, on 25 May 1864 (smudged, upper left) and Old Point Comfort, Virginia on 4 June 1864. (Figure
2) Hannah (apparently Mrs. Josiah) Staley is in Toledo in the 1856 Iowa census. 10 Josiah Staley
enlisted as a private with the 123rd Ohio Infantry on 22 August 1862, and was taken prisoner at the
Battle of New Market in Virginia on 15 May 1864 (nine days before the first postmark) and imprisoned
at Lynchburg and Andersonville, Georgia.11 He was paroled on 13 December 1864 at Charleston,
South Carolina, and went to a camp for paroled Union soldiers at Annapolis, Maryland, where he died
on 25 December 1864.12 This “flag of truce” envelope passed through the exchange point near Old
Point Comfort and has both a U.S. and a Confederate States of America (C.S.A.) stamp. 13 Josiah
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Staley's parents are in Tama County in the 1860 U.S. census and both are buried in Toledo.14 Letters
from Josiah Staley have survived.15
Figure 2 1864 “flag of truce” envelope from Lynchburg, Virginia to Toledo, Iowa via Old Point Comfort, Virginia
with C.S.A. and U.S. stamps (Photograph courtesy of Robert A. Siegel Auction Galleries, Sale 988, Lot 141)
Miss Calista S. Trask of “Toolesborou, Lowesa county [Toolesborough, Louisa County]” received a
folded letter postmarked in Nashville, Tennessee on 16 June 1862. (Figure 3) The folded letter is a
single sheet with text on one side that was folded to make an envelope. The letter, written 14 June
1862, begins “Dear Sister” and is signed “Harmon J. Trask.”16 Calista Trask, a fifteen year-old
“domestic,” is in Toolesborough in the 1860 U.S. census, and Harmon J. and Calista S. Trask are in
Jefferson Township, Louisa County in the 1850 U.S. census.17 “Herman” J. Trask of Louisa County
enlisted as a private in the 8th Iowa Infantry on 11 September 1861 and this regiment was in the Battle
of Shiloh on 6-7 April 1862, where Harmon was taken prisoner on 6 April.18 Harmon Trask writes “it has
bin so long since you hab got a leter from me that I expect that yo hab wored a grate deal about me.” 19
He speaks of the “hardest...treatment and the porest grub” while a prisoner and being moved from
Jackson, Mississippi; Tuscaloosa and Montgomery, Alabama; Atlanta, Georgia; to Chattanooga and
Nashville, Tennessee.20 Harmon J. Trask survived the war and married.21
Horatio Warner of Clermont, Fayette County received a folded letter “From Capt[ain] WW Warner,
Prisoner of War, Madison, Geo[rgia]” postmarked in Nashville, Tennessee on 25 July 1862. (Figure 4)
“Horratio” and “Wm” Warner, apparently father and son, are in Pleasant Valley (adjacent to Clermont) in
the 1860 U.S. census.22 William W. Warner enlisted as a private in the 12th Iowa Infantry on 15
September 1861 and was promoted to captain.23 The regiment fought at Shiloh, where William Warner
and most of his regiment were captured.24 William Warner writes in the accompanying letter “our
present prison is the third story of a factory...surrounded by a close fence some twelve feet high.” 25
William Warner was mustered out of service on 22 February 1863 at Memphis, Tennessee, where he
died on 12 December 1863.26 “Examined” is written vertically on the envelope (lower left) with the
signature of the Confederate censor who read the letter's contents. Other letters written by William
Warner when he was a prisoner have been reprinted.27
William B. Remey of Burlington received an envelope postmarked in Port Royal, South Carolina on 3
November 1864. (Figure 5) William B. Remey is in Burlington in the 1860 U.S. census, and he is shown
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as W. B. Remey with an apparent nine year-old son George in Burlington in the 1850 U.S. census.28 G.
C. Remey, a nineteen year-old midshipman from Iowa, is in Annapolis, Maryland, in the 1860 U.S.
census.29 George C. Remey served in the U.S. Navy during the Civil War, and fought at Fort Sumter,
South Carolina, on 8 September 1863, where he was taken prisoner.30 He was exchanged, returned to
service, and served in the U.S. Navy until 1903, rising to the rank of rear admiral and had a destroyer
named for him.31 The envelope was sent without a stamp and has a “Due 3 [cents postage]” handstamp. “Examined” is written on the envelope, which passed through the exchange point between
Pocotaligo and Port Royal, South Carolina.32
Figure 3 1862 folded letter from Nashville, Tennessee to Toolesborough, Iowa (Photograph courtesy of James W.
Milgram, M.D., Federal Civil War Postal History, p. 349)
James H. Reynolds of Fort Madison, Lee County, received an envelope postmarked in Cairo, Illinois,
on 21 February 1862. (Figure 6) “Soldiers Letter, E. W. Rice, Major, 7th Iowa” is written vertically, but
faintly, on the left. An enclosed letter begins “Fort Donaldson Tenn. Feb 17th 1862” and is signed “W.
G. Ray.” 33 James H. Reynolds, penitentiary deputy warden, and W. G. Ray, penitentiary overseer, are
in Fort Madison in the 1860 U.S. census.34 William G. Ray enlisted as a sergeant in the 7th Iowa
Infantry on 12 July 1861, and was promoted to quartermaster sergeant on 1 January 1863. 35 His
regiment fought at Fort Donaldson, Tennessee, in February 1862.36 William Ray writes “We have met
the enemy & they are ours....It was nothing but a deluge of balls & shells zipping by your head &
striking the ground in all directions.” 37 William G. Ray was taken prisoner at Corinth, Mississippi on 30
July 1863, was imprisoned at Andersonville, Georgia, and died 1 June 1864.38 The envelope has an
eagle and shield with “Liberty and Union, Now and Forever!” It was sent postage due, and required the
major's signature. Elliott W. Rice enlisted as a corporal in the 7th Iowa Infantry on 24 July 1861 and
rose to the rank of general.39 E. W. Rice, lawyer, is in Oskaloosa in the 1860 U.S. census, and he
survived the war.40
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Summer 2013
Millions of old envelopes and postcards await discovery by genealogists. This article shows how old
envelopes document our ancestors' Civil War experience. Other envelopes and postcards illustrate
where our ancestors lived before coming to the U.S., where family members lived in the U.S., social
and political interests, work, travel, and everyday life.41 Anyone may add a photograph of an envelope
or postcard (with the owner's permission) to Philgen.org by contacting the author. Photographs and
data posted for each item will be credited to the person and/or their genealogical, historical, or philatelic
association.
Figure 4 1862 folded letter from Madison, Georgia, to Clermont, Iowa, via Nashville, Tennessee (Photograph courtesy
of Spink Shreves Galleries, Sale 121, Lot 892)
Figure 5 1864 envelope from Charleston, South Carolina, to Burlington, Iowa, via Port Royal, South Carolina
(Photograph courtesy of Robert A. Siegel Auction Galleries, Sale 988, Lot 211)
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Summer 2013
Figure 6 1865 “Soldiers Letter” from the 7th Iowa Infantry to Fort Madison, Iowa via Cairo, Illinois with eagle,
shield, and “Liberty and Union, Now and Forever!” (Photograph courtesy of James W. Milgram, M.D., Federal Civil
War Postal History, p. 228)
Notes
1. Figures 1, 2 and 5 are from Robert A. Siegel (http://www.siegelauctions.com/, “Power Search,” enter
a sale and lot number, and then click “Search”); Figures 3 and 6 are from James W. Milgram, M.D.,
Federal Civil War Postal History (Lake Forest, Illinois: Northbrook Publishing Company, 2007): 349,
228; and Figure 4 is from Spink Shreves Galleries Sale 121
(http://stampauctionnetwork.com/f/f121.cfm, scroll to “Confederate States Lots 881-897).”
2. National Postal Museum, “Bringing the World Home”
(http://arago.si.edu/index.asp?con=4&cmd=2&eid=370); David M. Henkin, The Postal Age, The
Emergence of Modern Communications in Nineteenth-century America, (Chicago: The University of
Chicago Press, 2006), 9; James H. and Donald J. Bruns, Reaching Rural America: The Evolution of
Rural Free Delivery, (Washington, D.C.: National Postal Museum, 1998), 21.
3. 1860 U.S. census, Mahaska County, Iowa, population (pop.) schedule, Oskaloosa, p. 167 (penned),
dwelling 1197, family 1206, David Coomes; digital image, Ancestry.com (http://www.ancestry.com);
citing National Archives and Records Administration microfilm publication (NARA) series M653, roll
334.
4. “U.S. Civil War Soldier Records and Profiles (USCWSRP),” database, Ancestry.com, entry for
Reuben Coomes, served Iowa; National Park Service (NPS), Civil War Soldiers and Sailors Database
(CWSSD) (http://www.nps.gov/civilwar/soldiers-and-sailors-database.htm), “Regiments,” 33rd Iowa
Infantry.
5. Robert A. Siegel Auction Galeries, Sale 988, Lot 234; Smith County Historical Society (Texas), “A
Short History of Camp Ford” (http://www.smithcountyhistoricalsociety.org/camp_ford/history.php).
6. “Iowa in the Civil War” (http://iagenweb.org/civilwar/regiment/), “33rd Iowa Infantry,” “Casualties,”
“Company C,” entry for Reuben Coomes; citing Roster and Record of Iowa Soldiers in the War of the
Rebellion, Vol. V, 198-202.
7. Robert A. Siegel Auction Galeries, Sale 988, Lot 234.
8. 1880 U.S. census, Mahaska County, Iowa, pop. schedule, Adams, p. 14B (penned), enumeration
district (ED) 169, dwelling 114, family 120, Reuben Coomes; digital image, Ancestry.com; citing NARA
T9, roll 353.
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9. A Henry Coomes is with the family in the 1860 U.S. Census (see note 3); USCWSRP, entry for
Henry Coomes, served Iowa.
10. 1856 Iowa census, Tama County, Toledo, p. 445 (stamped), dwelling 47, family 47, Josiah Staley;
digital image, Ancestry.com; citing State Historical Society of Iowa, state census collection, 1836-1925,
microfilm roll 66.
11. USCWSRP, Josiah Staley, served Ohio; NPS, CWSSD, “Prisoners,” Prisoner Location:
“Andersonville,” entry for Josiah Staley.
12. NPS, CWSSD, Andersonville, Josiah Staley; USCWSRP, Josiah Staley, served Ohio.
13. Robert A. Siegel Auction Galeries, Sale 988, Lot 141.
14. 1860 U.S. census, Tama County, Iowa, pop. schedule, Otter Creek, p. 29 (penned), dwelling 239,
family 220, J. Staley; digital image, Ancestry.com; citing NARA M653, roll 339; Find A Grave, database
(http://www.findagrave.com/), Jacob Staley, Tama County, Iowa, Memorial # 53769606, and Margaret
Miller Staley, Tama County, Iowa, Memorial # 53769620.
15. Ohio Historical Society, VFM 230: Vertical File Manuscript Coll., Josiah Staley; Nancy K. Stout, The
Blue Soldier: Letters of the Civil War (Brush Prairie, Washington: N. K. Stout, 1998).
16. Milgram, Federal Civil War Postal History, 349-350.
17. 1860 U.S. census, Louisa County, Iowa, pop. schedule, Jefferson township, Toolesborough post
office, p. 7 (penned), dwelling 54, family 47, George W. Hook; digital image, Ancestry.com; citing NARA
M653, roll 331; 1850 U.S. census, Louisa County, Iowa, pop. schedule, Jefferson township, p. 104
(stamped, recto), dwelling 46, family 46, Orson Craig; digital image, Ancestry.com; citing NARA M432,
roll 187.
18. USCWSRP, Herman J. Trask, served Iowa; NPS, CWSSD, Regiments, 8th Iowa Infantry;
“Patterson-Albrecht” family tree, owner: donpatt1, Ancestry.com, sources include digital images of a
two-page Civil War service summary from the War Department, Washington, D.C., 18 December 1886,
# 568283 [invalid pension application number] including his capture at the Battle of Shiloh.
19. Milgram, Federal Civil War Postal History, 349-350.
20. Ibid.
21. USCWSRP, Herman J. Trask, served Iowa; 1880 U.S. census, Harvey County, Kansas, pop.
schedule, Macow, p. 4D (penned), ED 244, dwelling 33, family 33, Harman Trask; digital image,
Ancestry.com; citing NARA T9, roll 382.
22. 1860 U.S. census, Fayette County, Iowa, pop. schedule, Pleasant Valley, p. 87 (penned), dwelling
683, family 597, Horatio Warner; digital image, Ancestry.com; citing NARA M653, roll 322; 1850 U.S.
census, Clayton County, Iowa, pop. schedule, Mendon, p. 173 (stamped, recto), dwelling 607, family
607, Horatio Warner; digital image, Ancestry.com; citing NARA M432, roll 182.
23. USCWSRP, William W. Warner, served Iowa; NPS, CWSSD, Soldiers, entry for William Warner,
served Iowa, 12th Regiment, Iowa Infantry.
24. NPS, CWSSD, Regiments, 12th Iowa Infantry.
25. Spink Shreves Galleries, Sale 121 (Floyd E. Risvold Collection), Lot 892.
26. USCWSRP, William W. Warner, served Iowa; Iowa Gravestone Photo Project
(http://iowagravestones.org), entry for William W. Warner, Gods Acres Cemetery, Fayette County.
27. Ted Genoways and Hugh H. Genoways, editors, A Perfect Picture Of Hell, Eyewitness Accounts by
Civil War Prisoners from the 12th Iowa (Iowa City: University of Iowa Press, 2001).
11
Hawkeye Heritage
Volume 47, Issue 2
Summer 2013
28. 1860 U.S. census, Des Moines County, Iowa, pop. schedule, Burlington, p. 114 (penned), dwelling
889, family 860, Wm. B. Remey; digital image, Ancestry.com; citing NARA M653, roll 319; 1850 U.S.
census, Des Moines County, Iowa, pop. schedule, Burlington, ward 1, p. 472 (stamped, recto), dwelling
1399, family 1441, W. B. Remey; digital image, Ancestry.com; citing NARA M432, roll 183.
29. 1860 U.S. census, Anne Arundel County, Maryland, pop. schedule, Annapolis, p. 93 (penned),
dwelling 734, family 726, A. Copper; digital image, Ancestry.com; citing NARA M653, roll 457.
30. Naval History & Heritage Command (http://www.history.navy.mil/index.html),
“Resources/Research,” “Ships Histories-Index (DANFS),” “R,” “Remey.”
31. Ibid.
32. Robert A. Siegel Auction Galeries, Sale 988, Lot 211.
33. Milgram, Federal Civil War Postal History, 229-232.
34. 1860 U.S. census, Lee County, Iowa, pop. schedule, Fort Madison, p. 67 (penned), dwelling 558,
family 561, James H. Reynold, and p. 68 (penned), dwelling 562, family 565, W. G. Ray; digital images,
Ancestry.com; citing NARA M653, roll 330.
35. “American Civil War Soldiers (ACWS),” database, Ancestry.com, William Ray, served Iowa.
36. NPS, CWSSD, Regiments, 7th Iowa Infantry.
37. Milgram, Federal Civil War Postal History, 230.
38. Find A Grave, database, Sgt William G. Ray, Wake County, North Carolina, Memorial # 3275810;
ACWS, Ancestry.com, William Ray, served Iowa.
39. Iowa Gravestone Photo Project, Elliott W. Rice, Floyd Cemetery, Woodbury County.
40. 1860 U.S. census, Mahaska County, Iowa, population (pop.) schedule, Oskaloosa, p. 94 (penned),
dwelling 638, family 661, Horace E. King; digital image, Ancestry.com; citing NARA M653, roll 334.
41. Other types of genealogical information available from old envelopes and postcards can be seen at
http://philgen.org. In the Main Menu, click on Search Database to search for a surname or city or state,
or click on an article title listed in the Main Menu to see a copy of the article.
Acknowledgments
The author thanks Robert A. Siegel Auction Galleries; James W. Milgram, M.D.;and Spink Shreves
Auction Galleries for the use of photographs; the genealogists who posted family trees at
Ancestry.com; and Elisabeth Birsinger-Miller for database and website support.
Biosketch
James R. (Jim) Miller is a genealogist and the founder of Philgen.org. His earlier articles on Iowa
envelopes and postcards appear in the Spring and Fall 2010, Spring 2011, and Summer 2013 issues of
Hawkeye Heritage. Jim lives in Caroga Lake, New York, and Haguenau (Alsace), France, and can be
contacted at jim@philgen.org.
12
Hawkeye Heritage
Volume 47, Issue 2
Summer 2013
State Historical Society of Iowa (SHSI) Publications, past and
present
by Marieta Grissom
The author expresses a special thank you to Shari Stelling, State
Historical Society of Iowa, Des Moines, and Ginalie Swaim, State
Historical Society of Iowa, Iowa City, for reviewing the material
presented here.
Genealogical researchers with Iowa ancestors can check some special publications for additional
information.
The State Historical Society of Iowa has a long record of publishing historical information regarding the
people, their occupations, the natural resources, transportation, industrial development, economics, and
many other facets of the lives of the state’s residents. While the publications were created by historians,
genealogists should not overlook their value. All of these publications include many names and provide
considerable historical, educational, and social contextual material for ancestors. Since genealogy is so
much more than names and dates, this information helps to place ancestors in their time and place.
The overall questions are:
1) What publications are available?
2) For people researching Iowa ancestors, how can or why should they use these publications?
To answer these questions, researchers need answers to more questions:
1) What is or was the purpose of each publication?
2) What is the accessibility of the publications? Are any of them available online?
3) Are indexes easily available?
ALL of the following publications, including all of the indexes named, are available at both State Historical
Society of Iowa locations, Des Moines and Iowa City. Researchers should check www.WorldCat.org for
availability of these publications in other libraries and other areas. Many are available at college and
university libraries as well as some of the larger public libraries. Publications available at IGS are
identified.
By most counts, these publications are underutilized! Most likely this is due to lack of awareness of their
valuable content and the lack of easy-to-use indexes. Many indexes exist, but that in itself creates a
problem: researchers must consult many of them to find desired information. SHSI is aware, but lacks
resources to resolve the situation at this time. For the researcher who perseveres, the results can be very
enlightening.
13
Hawkeye Heritage
Volume 47, Issue 2
Summer 2013
Publication
Purpose
Index availability
Online availability1
Annals of Iowa
“thoughtprovoking
history journal
to satisfy even
the most
serious
explorer of
Iowa’s past…”2
No index in each issue, but the
following comprehensive index
was compiled:
www.books.google.com
“more than a
rehashing of
historical
anecdotes…”3
No index in each issue and no
comprehensive index has
been compiled.
www.books.google.com
“examines the
deeds,
misdeeds, and
accomplishme
nts of our
predecessors
and shows you
how those
actions fit into
the larger
mosaic of
Iowa’s past.”4
The following indexes are
available:
Some issues prior to 1923
are available online at
www.books.google.com
First Series, 18631874, 12 volumes
Annals of Iowa
Second series,
1882-1884, 3
volumes
Annals of Iowa
Third Series, 1893
to current
Van der Zee, Jacob. Index to
The Annals of Iowa, 1st
Series, Vol. 1-12 1863-1874,
©1910, typed manuscript.
[Copyrighted and hardbound
by SHSI, Iowa City, 1975.]
Aldrich, Charles, Editor.
Annals of Iowa, Third
Series, Index, Vol. 1-VIII [8],
April 1893 – January 1909.
Des Moines: Historical
Department of Iowa, 1912.
Harlan, Edgar R., Editor.
Annals of Iowa, Third
Series, Second Index, Vol.
IX [9] – XVI [16], April 1909
– April 1929. Des Moines:
Historical Department of
Iowa, 1931.
English, Emory H., Editor.
Annals of Iowa, Third Index,
Vol. XVII [17] – XXVIII [28],
July 1929 – April 1947. Des
Moines: Iowa State
Department of History and
Archives, 1947.
14
Google “Annals of Iowa”
then click on “More editions”
(it’s “hit/miss”, not every
edition is there, but some
are) and are also available
on http://archive.org
(1882 is there, but I’m not
sure about others) and also
on http://archive.org
(same search instructions
as for the 1st series) and
also on http://archive.org
Hawkeye Heritage
Volume 47, Issue 2
Publication
Purpose
Index availability
Summer 2013
Online availability1
Bergman, Marvin, Editor.
The Annals of Iowa,
Cumulative Index, Fourth
Index, Vol. 29-50, 1947 –
1991. Iowa City: State
Historical Society of Iowa,
1993.]
_____. The Annals of Iowa,
Cumulative Index, Fifth
Index, Vol. 51-60, Summer
1991 – Fall 2001. [State
Historical Society of Iowa,
no date.]
No cumulative index since
2001; however, each annual
volume contains an index.
Children’s Iowa
history
magazine
intended for
ages 8-13.
Each issue
focused on a
theme.
The following index is
available:
The Iowa
Historian,
February 1987 to
current
Provides
current news.
Not indexed.
All current and past
newsletters beginning with
the April 1, 2005 issue can
be found at
http://www.iowahistory.org/p
ublications/iowahistorian/index.html)
Iowa Historical
Record, 1885 –
1902, 18 volumes
Considered “a
treasure trove
of information
on a
tremendous
The following index was
compiled:
Some volumes are available
at www.books.google.com
The Goldfinch
Hixon, Charlene. The
Goldfinch Index 19751993[n.p.]
Full text downloads are
available through
http://ir.uiowa.edu/goldfinch/
An index for 1994-2000 is in
the works and will be available
at some point. In the meantime
each online issue is keyword
searchable.
Swisher, Jacob A, compiler.
Index to the Iowa Historical
or all appear to be available
at http://archive.org
15
Hawkeye Heritage
Volume 47, Issue 2
Publication
Purpose
range of topics
in the state’s
history.” 5
Index availability
Summer 2013
Online availability1
Record, Vol. 1-18, 18851902, compiled 1925.
[copyrighted and hardbound
by State Historical Society
of Iowa, Iowa City, 1975].
The Iowa Journal
of History and
Politics, Vol. 1
(1903) thru Vol.
46 (1948)
[Available at IGS]
Scholarly
journal that
was published
quarterly.
Iowa Journal of
History, Vol, 47
(January 1949) –
Vol. 59 (April
1961). [Available
at IGS]
Replaced the
Iowa Journal of
History and
Politics.
Each annual volume includes
an index, but no cumulative
index has been created.
Not online.
The Palimpsest
Presents
“history the
way it
happened-with
life, action, and
color. Filled
with fascinating
stories and
rare historical
photographs.”6
Cumulative indexes include:
Not online.
Published monthly
1920-1972;
bimonthly 19731986; quarterly
1987-1995.
Each annual volume has an
index and a cumulative index
was compiled for issues
through 1942:
Gallaher, Ruth A., Editor,
Iowa Journal of History and
Politics, Cumulative Index,
Vol. 1-40, 1903-1942. Iowa
City: State Historical Society
of Iowa, [no date].
[Available at IGS]
Renamed in
1996 to Iowa
Heritage
Illustrated.
Briggs, John Ely, editor.
Cumulative Index to The
Palimpsest, Vol. I-X, 19201929, Iowa City: State
Historical Society of Iowa,
1941.
Gallaher, Ruth A., editor.
Cumulative Index to The
Palimpsest, Vol. XI-XX,
1930-1939, Iowa City: State
Historical Society of Iowa,
1942.
Rogers, Susan and Rolene
16
Issues from 1903 to 1923
are available online at
archive.org:
http://archive.org/search.ph
p?query=iowa%20journal%
20of%20history%20and%20
politics%20AND%20mediat
ype%3Atexts
Hawkeye Heritage
Volume 47, Issue 2
Publication
Purpose
Index availability
Summer 2013
Online availability1
Britson, The Palimpsest
Subject Index, Vol. 21-57,
1940-1976, Division of State
Historical Society of Iowa.
_____. Cumulative Index to
The Palimpsest 1973 –
1995, Vol. 54-76, Iowa City:
State Historical Society of
Iowa, 2005.
Each annual volume also
includes an index.
Iowa Heritage
Illustrated, 1996
to current
“each
engaging issue
of this popular
history
magazine
captivates
everyone
interested in
Iowa’s rich
heritage.”7
The following cumulative index
has been compiled:
Not online.
_____. Cumulative Index to
Iowa Heritage Illustrated
1996-2006, vol. 77-87, Iowa
City: State Historical Society
of Iowa, no date [2007].
Each annual volume also
includes an index.
In addition, several topical bibliographies have been compiled that act as finding aids to assist researchers
to uncover relevant materials. (Note: the items listed below include more publications than just the SHSI
publications listed above.)
Clark, Dan Elbert. One Hundred Topics in Iowa History. Iowa City: State Historical Society of Iowa,
1914.
Clark, Dan Elbert. One Hundred Topics in Iowa History. Iowa City: State Historical Society of Iowa,
1915. [This is available online through Heritage Quest.]
Dawson, Patricia and David Hudson. Iowa History and Culture – A Bibliography of Materials
Published between 1952 and 1986, Ames, Iowa: State Historical Society of Iowa in association
with ISU Press, 1989. [Available at IGS]
Dawson, Patricia N., compiler. Iowa History and Culture – A Bibliography of Materials Published
between 1987 and 1991, [n.p.].
17
Hawkeye Heritage
Volume 47, Issue 2
Summer 2013
Hudson, David, compiler. Iowa in the Past – A Bibliography of Materials Published before 1952.
Parkersburg, Iowa: Mid-Prairie Books, 1999.
Petersen, William J., compiler. Two Hundred Topics in Iowa History. Iowa City: State Historical
Society of Iowa, 1932. [This is available online through Heritage Quest.]
Petersen, William J., compiler. A Reference Guide to Iowa History. Iowa City: State Historical
Society of Iowa, 1942. [This is available at IGS and online through Heritage Quest.]
Petersen, William J., compiler. Iowa History Reference Guide. Iowa City: State Historical Society of
Iowa, 1952. [Available at IGS]
The search may not be easy, but the rewards could be amazing.
1
Please note: all URL references were checked on 24 September 2013, but since starting this article, the author has noticed
that some publications have moved from one URL to another, and could always be subject to change.
1
State Historical Society of Iowa website at http://www.iowahistory.org/publications/the-annals-of-iowa/index.html
1
Ibid.
1
Ibid.
1
State Historical Society of Iowa website at http://www.iowahistory.org/publications/index.html
1
State Historical Society of Iowa website at http://www.iowahistory.org/publications/iowa-heritage-illustrated/index.html
1
Ibid.
18
Hawkeye Heritage
Volume 47, Issue 2
Summer 2013
Book Review
by Carl Nollen, nollenca@hotmail.com
Strangers and Pilgrims, Travellers and Sojourners
Leiden and the Foundations of Plymouth Plantation
By Jeremy Dupertuis Banks
General Society of Mayflower Descendants, Plymouth Massachusetts, 2009, hardcover, 893 pages.
The landing of the Pilgrims at Plymouth Rock in 1620 is one of the best known events of American
history. It was formerly regarded as the beginning of European settlement of this country, a success
compared to Jamestown, Virginia. We know these Pilgrims came from England, but few of us know of
their stay in Holland for a decade before they came here.
The author founded the Leiden American Pilgrim Museum in Leiden, Holland, in 1997, and has a
Ph.D. from the University of Leiden in 1976. He has devoted a lifetime of research to the Pilgrims in
Holland. “This book starts over.” It is a 2 ½” thick tome; an exhaustive study by one who knows more
about the Pilgrims than anyone else.
The men in black clothes and buckled hats (and their families) left England because of religious
persecution. Leiden is where the character of the colony took place. However, the clergy played no
role in the Pilgrims’ establishment of government in the Plymouth Colony--a clear separation of church
and state. The Mayflower Compact was drawn up on ship on the sea to America. It was a forerunner
of ideas in the U. S. Constitution.
The book is divided into seven parts and 15 chapters. Part I covers the beginnings in England. Part
II and its three chapters cover the beginnings in Holland. Extensive geography and history of Leiden is
written in Chapter 3. Part III concerns the foreign presence in Leiden of other English people, English
soldiers, and the thousands of French-speaking Protestant Huguenots or Walloons. Plymouth Colony’s
famous military leader, Myles Standish, is given Chapter 6. The author questions the assertion in the
popular book, Saints and Strangers, that he was never a member of either the Leiden church or the
church at Plymouth. He was one of the “Strangers.” (The Pilgrims called themselves “Saints” and the
others who came over on the Mayflower they called, “Strangers.”) The author of this book questions
this oversimplification.
Part V, “Living in Leiden: Congregation, Housing, Family, and Work,” may be the most interesting
part of this book. The four chapters in this part give us much detail on the Pilgrim homes in Leiden,
family life, and occupations. Leiden was already densely crowded, in part because a third of the
population was refugees. The one-room house was the norm. The hearth was the heart of the home.
Census records, tax lists, and paintings help us know life then. Quite a few intimate details are given
on marital life among husbands and wives of those times. Many of the men, accustomed to farming life
in England, had to adjust to occupations in the Dutch city. The occupations of 130 men have been
identified, of which over 40 worked in various trades in cloth, such as weavers, drapers, and cloth
finisher. There were 15 men involved with selling tobacco or making pipes. The Pilgrims were also
printers and publishers, and covers of two books are illustrated.
19
Hawkeye Heritage
Volume 47, Issue 2
Summer 2013
Part VI covers the conflict in Holland, Dutch separatism, England’s interference, and the Pilgrims’
need to leave. There were several reasons they wanted to leave Holland. Their young people were
adopting Dutch language and Dutch ways, which the Pilgrims considered frivolous. Life in Holland was
hard and did not attract converts. The Sabbath was not properly observed. “The beating of drums and
preparing for war” made the Netherlands no longer safe for them. The proposal to emigrate was feared
by some, of course--beginning life in an unknown world.
Part VII and the last chapter deal with the influence of the Leiden experience on Plymouth
Plantation.
The 107 page bibliography is outstanding. In the appendix is a map of Leiden showing where the
Pilgrims lived, a Leiden membership list, a list of Pilgrims buried at Leiden, and the names of the
servants, for each family who had them, who were passengers on the Mayflower. The index includes
names, places, and drawings. That so many of these old pictures have survived seems extraordinary.
My only quibble with them is that some of them are slightly blurred or out of focus from apparently
having been transmitted over the Internet.
This reviewer may not be qualified to review such a dense, learned writing as this. Being of Dutch
ancestry, however, I found this history very interesting. For the many thousands of Americans who can
trace their ancestry back to the Mayflower, this book will tell you something of the Pilgrims life for ten
years before they came to America.
Title: The departure of the
pilgrim fathers, for America,
A.D. 1620
Call Number: PGA - Burnet,
John--Departure of the Pilgrim...
(D size) [P&P]
Repository: Library of Congress
Prints and Photographs Division
Washington, D.C. 20540 USA
20
Hawkeye Heritage
Volume 47, Issue 2
Summer 2013
How Spreadsheets Can Assist Your Genealogy Research
By Sue Claman
While pedigree charts and family group sheets, whether generated with pencil and paper or from your
favorite genealogy program, are essential tools to seeing the structure of your family, genealogy
research creates a great deal of data that you need keep to organized. What resources have you
looked at? What resources do you need to check? How do I analyze all these disparate sources?
One piece of advice given to new genealogists is to track all relatives through every census possible.
Census records are primary evidence of where your ancestors lived which can narrow your search for
other records. For those of us with Iowa ancestors we are lucky to have several state census
enumerations in addition to the decennial federal census. Regardless of the word used (‘facts’,
‘events’, ‘tags’, etc.) most genealogy programs allow you to add pieces of data about a person with a
date and location. However even if you print out an available report it can sometimes be difficult to see
what is missing. Laying out the data in a spreadsheet can help you see the gaps.
For census analysis I have one surname per worksheet. I rename the tab to the surname of interest.
(To rename a tab, right-click on ‘Sheet1’ and select ‘rename’ from the pop-up menu.) This is a sample
from one of my lines.
Census
Track
Family:
Deahl
B
1792
1792
1815
1817
1826
1829
M
D
1864
1875
1884
1835
1902
1856
1903
1856
1875
1832
1835
1905
1879
1826 1856
1840 1856
1903
1879
1857 1880 <1943
1860 1882 <1903
1863 1876
1934
1865
1943
1868 1885 <1943
1870 1899 >1943
1871
1943
1872 1897
1962
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
Name
1850 1856 1860 1870 1880
GEORGE
1
1
1 X
X
ELIZABETH
1
1
1
X
SAMUEL G
2
2
2
SARAH
3
3
3
3
EMMANUEL
1
1
4
4
4
DANIEL C
1
5 X
X
RACHEL
JANE
1
6
SILAS
1
1
1
7 X
4 EMMANUEL
MARY ANN
ELIZABETH
13 J
14 RACHEL A
MARY
15 ELIZA
16 WILLIAM S
17 LUELLA
ULYSUS
18 GRANT
19 PLUMA
JOHN
20 HENRY
1885
X
X
X
3
4
X
1895 1900
X
X
X
X
X
X
3
4
16
X
X
X
X
X
4
X
4
X
16
X
13
13
16
15
16
1
1
4
4
4 4
4 X
X
X
X
X
4
4
4 13
4 4
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
X
4 15
4 4
4 4
X
X
X
X
X
X
4 4
X 4
4
X
X
X
X 4
4
15
4
4
18
4
20
21
Hawkeye Heritage
Volume 47, Issue 2
1874 1897
1875
ALBERT
1965 21 COOKE
EMANUEL,
1963 22 JR
Summer 2013
X
X
X
X 4
4
X
X
X
X 4
4
4
21
22
I use the first three columns for the year of birth, marriage and death so it is easy to tell when a person
should start to show up in the census, when the person may move to a separate household and when it
is no longer necessary to find that individual. You can italicize if all you have is a circa date. I use less
than and greater than symbols for before and after. Fourth column is a number starting with 1 for the
head of household in 1850 for a particular family line. I only number spouses that remarry or children
that live to maturity and move to a separate household. Next column is the name of the ancestor
followed by one column for each census year. Since the Deahl’s came to Iowa early, I have columns
for all Iowa census. If your family did not come to Iowa but there is an available state census available,
add column(s) for whatever years are available. I have highlighted my direct line in yellow. There are
columns for the census years after 1900 and of course as each census is released, you just add the
header. I use ‘X’s to block off the census years before and after each person’s birth and death.
After George’s family I have a blank line, then Samuel with his wife and children. The top rows with the
header data can be frozen on the screen so no matter how far down you scroll your header data is
visible. To freeze the header rows put the cursor in the cell immediately below the B (birth). In Excel
2007 and later, go to the view ribbon, find the icon ‘Freeze Panes’ and click the down arrow.
Select ‘Freeze panes’ from the drop down options. If you
have the cursor in the wrong cell, just select the drop down arrow again and ‘Unfreeze panes’ will be an
option. After Samuel’s family I add another blank line do the same thing with Sarah’s family. Since it’s
a spreadsheet, it’s easy to insert blank lines to add children/spouses as they come into the picture. If
you want to see who you are missing for a particular census year, there are other formatting tricks you
can employ. First of all instead of having families separated by blank lines, you need to fill the empty
rows with data instead. I used ‘X’ for this example but you can use whatever you want. You can also
change the font color or weight to help you visually separate the families. The important thing is to not
have completely empty rows and to have a name for each column of data. With the cursor in a single
cell in the data section, go to the Data ribbon. Select ‘Filter’ from the Sort & Filter section
(approximately in the middle of the ribbon). The results should be something like this:
You can of course widen the columns so you can see the column labels more easily. For this example
we want to see who we are missing in 1856. Select the drop down arrow for 1856 and you should see
22
Hawkeye Heritage
Volume 47, Issue 2
Summer 2013
Click ‘(Select All)’ to deselect all the choices. Then select ‘(Blanks)’
and hit the ‘OK’ button. A blank value in the 1856 column would mean you haven’t found that
individual. Immediately the view changes to just the rows with a blank in the 1856 column. Note the
row numbers on the left-hand side.
You can also filter on two or more columns at once. To clear the filter from a column, select the down
arrow again and ‘Clear filter from ‘column name’’ will be enabled. Select it and immediately all the rows
are visible again. While the view is filtered, you can add, edit or delete cell values. If you print while a
filter is applied, only the filtered rows will be printed.
Setting up the spreadsheet and maintaining it may seem like extra work but can save you effort in the
long run.
23
Hawkeye Heritage
Volume 47, Issue 2
Summer 2013
Naturalizations - First Papers
The Iowa Genealogical Society recived a number of naturalization documents from the district court
files in Polk Co.. Volunteer members scanned the documents and, when the ink was faded, transcribed
the information. Great care was taken to assure each name was correct with the coordinating scan. The
documents were then indexed for easy use.
The images on this page are available to IGS members for $5.00 or to non-members for $7.50
per sheet plus $2.50 postage and handling by writing to IGS (see page 1 for the address) with
the requested names. The front side, back side and transcription for an individual all are included in
the mailing.
The indexing of the naturalization images used the following guidelines.

If there was more than one date on a document, the earliest date was used in the name. The
dating system of "year-month-day" was used.

If the immigrant's signature was legible, his spelling was used for the name.

If the name was difficult to decipher, other volunteers were consulted. Census indexes, city
directories and Ancestry.com were also used to determine the name.

In the rare instance of not being able to decipher a given name, the symbol ^^^ is used with the
first initial of the name.

There are a few documents in which the immigrant wrote his first name and the clerk wrote a
different/similar name; i.e. Johannes vs. Jonathan or Charles vs. Carl. In these cases, the
immigrant's signature was used as the name with the clerk's interpatation in parentheses.

If the document originated in another Co., the document was filed in Polk Co. Iowa.

Even though the document was larger than 8x11 inches, the information on the back side may
not have been that large. So the back side was usually scanned at the 8x11 size. No
information was omitted to do this.

Depending on the original paper size, the document was bi-folded or tri-folded to about 3x8 inch
size. The name was written by the court clerk across one end for filing. This resulted in the
"back side" of the document.

There were some documents where the name on the back side did not agree with the name on
the actual document. (Sometimes this is the name of the court clerk, which is the first name
appearing on the document).
Index of Naturalization Papers
Index of A and B are in November, 2008, Volume 42, Issue 2
Index of C is in Spring, 2010, Volume 44, Issue 1
Index of D is in Summer, 2010, Volume 44, Issue 2
Index of E, F, & G is in Fall, 2010, Volume 44, Issue 3
Index of H & I is in Winter, 2010, Volume 44, Issue 4
Index of J & K is in Spring, 2011, Volume 45, Issue 1
Index of L is in Fall/Winter,2011 Volume 46, Issue 3 & 4.
Index of M is in Spring, 2012, Volume 47, Issue 1.
Index of N & O is in Summer, 2012, Volume 46, Issue 2.
Index of P, Q and R is in Fall, 2012, Volume 46, Issue 3.
Index of S is in Winter, 2012, Volume 46, Issue 4.
Index of T & U is in Spring 2013, Volume 47, Issue 1.
24
Hawkeye Heritage
Volume 47, Issue 2
Summer 2013
Waddy, Michael 1852-04-14 [Cork, Ireland] Monroe Co. NY (back side)
Waddy, Michael 1852-04-14 [Cork, Ireland] Monroe Co. NY (front side)
Wagner, Richard E. 1884-10-22 [Germany] Polk Co. IA (back side)
Wagner, Richard E. 1884-10-22 [Germany] Polk Co. IA (front side)
Waldron, John 1853-02-18 [Ireland] Preble Co. OHIO (back side)
Waldron, John 1853-02-18 [Ireland] Preble Co. OHIO (front side)
Wallner, Frank A. 1882-12-14 [Sweden] Boone-Webster Co. IA (back side)
Wallner, Frank A. 1882-12-14 [Sweden] Boone-Webster Co. IA (front side)
Walsh, Patrick 1852-04-06 [Great Britain] Polk Co. IA (front side)
Walsh, Patrick 1852-05-06 [Great Britain] Polk Co. IA (back side)
Walstrom, Charles John 1857-02-20 [Sweden] Polk Co. IA (back side)
Walstrom, Charles John 1857-02-20 [Sweden] Polk Co. IA (front side)
Warburton, Peter 1854-06-24 [England] Polk Co. IA (front side)
Warburton, Peter 1854-07-24 [England] Polk Co. IA (back side)
Warren, Landon G. 1873-03-06 [Norway] Polk Co. IA (front side)
Warren, Landon G. 1873-03-07 [Norway] Polk Co. IA (back side)
Warrick, John 1885-09-26 [England] Boone Co. IA (back side)
Warrick, John 1885-09-26 [England] Boone Co. IA (front side)
Watters, Joseph H. 1873-10-08 [Canada] Polk Co. IA (back side)
Watters, Joseph H. 1873-10-08 [Canada] Polk Co. IA (front side)
Watters, Thomas 1884-11-03 [Canada] Polk Co. IA (back side)
Watters, Thomas 1884-11-03 [Canada] Polk Co. IA (front side)
Weber, Fred 1884-10-28 [Switzerland] Polk Co. IA (back side)
Weber, Fred 1884-10-28 [Switzerland] Polk Co. IA (front side)
Weizbrod, Conrad 1857-06-08 [Germany] Polk Co. IA (1st papers-back side)
Weizbrod, Conrad 1857-06-08 [Germany] Polk Co. IA (1st papers-front side)
Weizbrod, Conrad 1857-06-08 [Germany] Polk Co. IA (oath-back side)
Weizbrod, Conrad 1857-06-08 [Germany] Polk Co. IA (oath-front side)
Welch, David 1866-09-17 [Ireland] Polk Co. IA (back side)
Welch, David 1866-09-17 [Ireland] Polk Co. IA (front side)
West, John 1876-09-08 [Sweden] Polk Co. IA (back side)
West, John 1876-09-08 [Sweden] Polk Co. IA (front side)
Westerburg, Hans Gustaf 1871-09-22 [Sweden] Polk Co. IA (back side)
Westerburg, Hans Gustaf 1871-09-22 [Sweden] Polk Co. IA (front side)
Westrom, John 1871-06-19 [Sweden] Polk Co. IA (back side)
Westrom, John 1871-06-19 [Sweden] Polk Co. IA (front side)
Westrom, Olaf 1871-06-17 [Sweden] Polk Co. IA (back side)
Westrom, Olaf 1871-06-17 [Sweden] Polk Co. IA (front side)
Whitaker, George 1862-05-27 [Canada] Polk Co. IA (back side)
Whitaker, George 1862-05-27 [Canada] Polk Co. IA (front side)
White, John 1857-10-07 [Ireland] Polk Co. IA (back side)
25
Hawkeye Heritage
Volume 47, Issue 2
White, John 1857-10-07 [Ireland] Polk Co. IA (front side)
Whitehouse, Edmund I. 1884-01-09 [England] Polk Co. IA (back side)
Whitehouse, Edmund I. 1884-01-09 [England] Polk Co. IA (front side)
Whitehouse, Francis 1884-01-09 [England] Polk Co. IA (back side)
Whitehouse, Francis 1884-01-09 [England] Polk Co. IA (front side)
Wicklund, A. J. 1871-07-22 [Sweden] Polk Co. IA (back side)
Wicklund, A. J. 1871-07-22 [Sweden] Polk Co. IA (front side)
Wilkes, Thomas B. 1871-05-02 [Great Britain] Lancaster Co. NE (one side only)
Wilson, John 1870-10-31 [Sweden] Polk Co. IA (back side)
Wilson, John 1870-10-31 [Sweden] Polk Co. IA (front side)
Wilson, William D. 1881-03-01 [Ireland] Jasper Co. IA (back side)
Wilson, William D. 1881-03-01 [Ireland] Jasper Co. IA (front side)
Wingvest, John 1873-07-07 [Sweden] Polk Co. IA (back side)
Wingvest, John 1873-07-07 [Sweden] Polk Co. IA (front side)
Wisgerhof, Teunis 1882-11-04 [Netherlands] Marion Co. IA (back side)
Wisgerhof, Teunis 1882-11-04 [Netherlands] Marion Co. IA (front side)
Wistburg, Charles 1871-05-11 [Sweden] Rock Island Co. ILL (one side only)
Wolffinger, George 1860-10-10 [Germany] Polk Co. IA (back side)
Wolffinger, George 1860-10-10 [Germany] Polk Co. IA (front side)
Wollbigge (Wollbrigge), Frederick 1878-02-21 [Germany] Johnson Co. IA (one side
only)
Wollinsky, D. S. 1881-08-29 [Russia] Wapello Co. IA (back side)
Wollinsky, D. S. 1881-08-29 [Russia] Wapello Co. IA (front side)
Wumerburg, F. O. 1876-01-27 [Sweden-Norway] Cook Co. ILL (back side)
Wumerburg, F. O. 1876-01-27 [Sweden-Norway] Cook Co. ILL (front side)
Wunderleif, John Nicol 1857-09-13 [Bavaria] Polk Co. IA (back side)
Wunderleif, John Nicol 1857-09-13 [Bavaria] Polk Co. IA (front side)
Wynn, Robert 1882-02-14 [Canada] Polk Co. IA (back side)
Wynn, Robert 1882-02-14 [Canada] Polk Co. IA (front side)
York, William 1882-03-03 [Prussia] Polk Co. IA (back side)
York, William 1882-03-03 [Prussia] Polk Co. IA (front side)
Young, Andrew 1877-12-22 [Sweden] Guthrie Co. IA (one side only)
Young, August 1855-05-01 [Germany] Tippecanoe IND (back side)
Young, August 1855-05-01 [Germany] Tippecanoe IND (front side)
Young, August 1855-05-01 [Germany] Tippecanoe IND (transcription)
Young, David C. 1872-02-19 [Canada] Polk Co. IA (back side)
Young, David C. 1872-02-19 [Canada] Polk Co. IA (front side)
Young, Henry 1855-10-09 [Prussia] Tippecanoe IND (back side)
Young, Henry 1855-10-09 [Prussia] Tippecanoe IND (front side)
Young, Henry 1855-10-09 [Prussia] Tippecanoe IND (transcription)
Young, Thomas 1872-10-08 [Scotland] Polk Co. IA (1st papers-back side)
Young, Thomas 1872-10-08 [Scotland] Polk Co. IA (1st papers-front side)
Young, Thomas 1872-10-08 [Scotland] Polk Co. IA (declaration-back side)
26
Summer 2013
Hawkeye Heritage
Volume 47, Issue 2
Summer 2013
Young, Thomas 1872-10-08 [Scotland] Polk Co. IA (declaration-front side)
Youngberg, A. 1878-10-04 [Sweden] Polk Co. IA (back side)
Youngberg, A. 1878-10-04 [Sweden] Polk Co. IA (front side)
Youngberg, Aleck 1879-09-16 [Sweden] Polk Co. IA (back side)
Youngberg, Aleck 1879-09-16 [Sweden] Polk Co. IA (front side)
Youngberg, John 1878-02-26 [Sweden] Polk Co. IA (1st papers-back side)
Youngberg, John 1878-02-26 [Sweden] Polk Co. IA (1st papers-front side)
Youngberg, John 1878-02-26 [Sweden] Polk Co. IA (declaration-back side)
Youngberg, John 1878-02-26 [Sweden] Polk Co. IA (declaration-front side)
Youngberg, Peter 1878-02-28 [Sweden] Polk Co. IA (back side)
Youngberg, Peter 1878-02-28 [Sweden] Polk Co. IA (front side)
Youngman, Conrad 1856-09-13 [Hesse-Cassel] Lorain Co. OHIO (back side)
Youngman, Conrad 1856-09-13 [Hesse-Cassel] Lorain Co. OHIO (front side)
Youngquist, Charles J. (or F.) 1870-09-22 [Sweden] Polk Co. IA (1st papers-back
side)
Youngquist, Charles J. (or F.) 1870-09-22 [Sweden] Polk Co. IA (1st papers-front
side)
Youngquist, Charles J. (or F.) 1870-09-22 [Sweden] Polk Co. IA (declaration-back
side)
Youngquist, Charles J. (or F.) 1870-09-22 [Sweden] Polk Co. IA (declaration-front
side)
Younker, Barney 1884-03-03 [Russia] Polk Co. IA (back side)
Younker, Barney 1884-03-03 [Russia] Polk Co. IA (front side)
Younker, H. 1882-06-02 [Russia-Poland] Polk Co. IA (back side)
Younker, H. 1882-06-02 [Russia-Poland] Polk Co. IA (front side)
Yuill, Andrew 1874-06-20 [Scotland] Jasper Co. IA (back side)
Yuill, Andrew 1874-06-20 [Scotland] Jasper Co. IA (front side)
Zaelle, Burkhardt 1848-10-07 [Germany] Philadelphia Co. PA (back side)
Zaelle, Burkhardt 1848-10-07 [Germany] Philadelphia Co. PA (front side)
Zeh, Jacob 1871-11-23 [Wurttemberg] Cole Co. MO (back side)
Zeh, Jacob 1871-11-23 [Wurttemberg] Cole Co. MO (front side)
Zei, Charles 1874-11-09 [Switzerland] Polk Co. IA (1st papers-back side)
Zei, Charles 1874-11-09 [Switzerland] Polk Co. IA (1st papers-front side)
Zei, Charles 1874-11-09 [Switzerland] Polk Co. IA (declaration-back side)
Zei, Charles 1874-11-09 [Switzerland] Polk Co. IA (declaration-front side)
Zeininger, Charles 1868-09-21 [Wurttemberg] Polk Co. IA (back side)
Zeininger, Charles 1868-09-21 [Wurttemberg] Polk Co. IA (front side)
Zelcer, Jacob 1884-10-20 [Russia] Polk Co. IA (back side)
Zelcer, Jacob 1884-10-20 [Russia] Polk Co. IA (front side)
Zepter, Gerhard Joh 1877-06-15 [Germany] Milwaukee Co. WIS (one side only)
Ziemann, Fredrick 1866-12-20 [Prussia] Polk Co. IA (back side)
Ziemann, Fredrick 1866-12-20 [Prussia] Polk Co. IA (front side)
Ziemann, Fredrick 1870-10-04 [Prussia] Polk Co. IA (back side)
Ziemann, Fredrick 1870-10-04 [Prussia] Polk Co. IA (front side)
27
Hawkeye Heritage
Volume 47, Issue 2
Summer 2013
Zigler, Jacob 1883-10-04 [Holland] Polk Co. IA (back side)
Zigler, Jacob 1883-10-04 [Holland] Polk Co. IA (front side)
Zimmerman, Jacob 1876-02-09 [Prussia] Polk Co. IA (1st papers-front side)
Zimmerman, Jacob 1876-02-09 [Prussia] Polk Co. IA (back side)
Zimmerman, Jacob 1876-02-09 [Prussia] Polk Co. IA (declaration-back side)
Zimmerman, Jacob 1876-02-09 [Prussia] Polk Co. IA (declaration-front side)
New citizens signing naturalization papers in judge's chambers
Creator(s): Bain News Service, publisher
Date Created/Published: 2/8/10 (date created or published later by Bain)
Call Number: LC-B2- 951-4 [P&P] LOT 7175 (Corresponding print)
Repository: Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division Washington, D.C. 20540 USA
http://hdl.loc.gov/loc.pnp/pp.print
28
Hawkeye Heritage
Volume 47, Issue 2
Summer 2013
Iowa Pioneer, Century & Statehood Certificates
The IOWA CERTIFICATE project is available for anyone whose ancestor was in Iowa during specific
time periods. Sources of proof can be census, county history, Bible record, land record, etc. The
completed application and copies of proof are filed at the library for the patrons’ use.
Application for Certificates
The Iowa Genealogical Society issues certificates to persons who are directly descended from
Iowa Pioneers. Applications must prove direct descent and prove that the ancestor settled in Iowa

By 1846, to receive a Statehood Certificate;

By 1856, to receive a Pioneer Certificate;

More than 100 years prior to the date of application, for a Century Certificate.
Applicants may apply for certificates to be issued to themselves or to other persons. The person to
whom the certificate is issued need not currently live in Iowa.
The purpose of the Certificate Program is to recognize families with Iowa roots, encourage people
to undertake genealogical research, and to provide genealogical resources for researches in our
library.
The information and application are available at the library or by sending a self-addressed stamped
envelope to IGS. You may also find the information and application on our website
http://www.iowagenealogy.org/library/research/ . The cost is $10.00 per certificate for members of
IGS and $10.00 for non-members. The certificate is suitable for framing.
Following are the certificates issued August 2010 through December 2010.
Century Certificates
Direct ancestor has been in Iowa for the last 100 or more years.
Pioneer Certificates
Direct ancestor was in Iowa in 1856 or before.
Rochford, Michael; born 1829 at West Meath, Ireland; died 27 Jan 1893 in Chickasaw Co., IA. Spouse
was Catherine O'Connor.
Walsh, Michael James; born 1829 at County Cork, Ireland; died 358 in Pocahontas Co., IA. Spouse
was Margaret Tully.
Yowell, William; born 16 June 1794 at Virginia; died 07 Nov 1861 in Marion Co., IA. Spouse was
Semphronia Hawkins.
Clatterbuck, John Wesley; born 9 Sept 1813 at Culpeper Co., VA; died 5210 in Pottawattamie. Spouse
was Nancy Ellen Yowell.
Statehood Certificates
Direct ancestor was in Iowa by 1846.
29
Hawkeye Heritage
Volume 47, Issue 2
Summer 2013
Library Acquisitions
The following acquisitions were added to our shelves in January to March 2013. Please refer to the
card catalog at the library or on our website for a complete listing. Research services are available
from the library; refer to page 3 for information.
911/SWI
Swift, Michael
Historical Maps of North America
929.1/CHR
Christensen, Penelope Dr.
Planning a Genealogy Research Trip (3rd edition)
929.1/JAC
Jacobson, Judy
History for Genealogists, Using Chronological Time Lines to Find
and Understand Your Ancestors
929.1/McC
McClure, Rhonda
The Complete Idiot's Guide to Online Genealogy
929.2/CAR
Peckham, Charles W., Sr.
The Carmack Genealogy (Second edition)
929.2/CHO
Chong, Peggy
My Story-Telling of Our Family
929.2/DIC
no author
The Ancestors and Descendants of Jonas M. Dice and
Fanny Brechbill Dice
929.2/GLE
Glenn, George David
46 Glenn Family Civil War Ancestors
929.2/GUT
no author
Knut Guttormsen Tolpinrud og Birgit Olsdatter Syversrudplass
929.2/HUT
Colket, Meredith B. Jr.
The English Ancestry of Anne Marbury Hutchinson and
Katherine Marbury Scott
929.2/JEN
Brien, Pat
The David Jenkins Family in Pennsylvania and California
929.2/McG
White, Barnetta McGhee
In Search of Kith and Kin; The History of a Southern Black Family
929.2/MEY
Green, Diane Meier
Meyer Family of Jackson County, Iowa and Ida County, Iowa
929.2/NEI
Green, Diane Meier
Family History Update for Neitzke Cousins' Renunion
929.2/SCH
Bauer, Stan
Update to Family History of Schmidt and Kistenmacher
Families of Scott County, Iowa
929.2/VAI
Vaillant, Dennis P.
Family History of Helen Graney Vaillant of Perry, Iowa
929.4/MAC
Macdonald, Donald
The Diaries of Donald Macdonald, 1824-1826
941.815/CON
Connell, Gretta
A Guide to Tracing Your Westmeath Ancestors
941.95/McC
McCarthy, Tony
A Guide to Tracing Your Cork Ancestors
942.38/BYR
Byrchmore, Rev. Joseph
Collections of a Parochial History of Tickenham [England]
948.1/SCH
Schack, Ole Ulrick
Devegge ei Skekt fra nes I Hallingdal [Genealogies of some
families from Hallingdal, Norway]
949.73/GOB
Gobetz, Edward
Slovenian Heritage, Volume I
970.1/HIG
Hightower-Langston, Donna
The Native American World
970.1/TER
Terrell, John Upton
American Indian Almanac
970.1/WRI
Wright, J. Leitch Jr.
Creeks and Seminoles, The Destruction and Regeneration of
the Muscogulge People
973.7/CIV
no author
The Civil War Book of Lists
973/BOL
Bold, Christine
The WPA Guides, Mapping America
973/MIG
no author
Migration Trails Map [map cabinet]
973/THO
Thomas, R. D.
Hanes Cymry America (1872): A History of the Welsh in America
974.762/GRI
Griffiths, T. Solomon
A History of the Calvinistic Methodists in Utica, New York
974.821/SMI
Smith, C. Arthur
Bucks County Intelligencer, Marriage Notices, Volume 2,
1835-1860, A to Law
974.821/WAI
Waite, Frances Wise
Bucks County [Pennsylvania] Tombstone Inscriptions, Bedminster
and Haycock Townships
975.294/BRE
Brewer, John M.
Westward of Fort Cumberland, Military Lots Set Off for
Maryland's Revolutionary Soldiers
977/MAP
no author
Map of the States of Indiana and Ohio with Part of
Michigan Territory, 1831 [Map Cabinet]
977.185/ROB
Roberts, Evan O.
History of the Welsh Church in Jackson County, Ohio with
Travels, Fishing and Farewells
30
Hawkeye Heritage
Volume 47, Issue 2
Summer 2013
977.252/HOL
Holliday, John Hampden
Indianapolis and the Civil War
977.253/COM
no author
Complete Index of The History of Hendricks County [Indiana], 1914-1976
977.253/HIS
no author
The History of Henricks County [Indiana], 1914-1976
977.361/LIV
no author
Livingston County [Illinois] Farmers and Breeders [Directory], 1917
977.361/LIV
no author
Livingston County, Illinois, Rural Resident Directory, 1977
977.361/LIV
no author
Livingston County, Illinois, Rural Resident Directory, 1980
977.361/LIV
no author
Livingston County, Illinois, Rural Resident Directory, 1983
977.361/LIV
no author
Livingston County, Illinois, Farm and Home Directory, 1987
977.7/BUENA VISTA
no author
Minister's Book for Nain [Danish] Lutheran Church, Newell,
Buena Vista County, Iowa, 1888
977.7/BUENA VISTA
no author
Swedish Evangelical Lutheran Ljunghed Church, Albert City, Iowa
977.7/CLAYTON/22
Clayton Co. Gen. Society
History of Clayton County, Iowa Schools [Sperry Township & Volga]
977.7/DALLAS/25
Knight, Watson
The History of The Valley
977.7/HARRISON/43
Allen, C. R.
Illustrated Atlas of Harrison County, Iowa, 1884
977.7/JASPER/50
no author
Lynnville [Iowa] 1875-2000, Building on the Past, Looking to the Future
977.7/JASPER/50
no author
Killduff [Iowa] Centennial, 1883-1983
977.7/LYON/60
Lawrence, Galen, etal
Doon, Iowa, 1868-1992, Bonnie Doon, Our Town
977.7/MARION/63
Bennett, Larry
Marriage Records of Marion County, Iowa, 1845-1944, Groom Index
977.7/MARION/63
Bennett, Larry
Marriage Records of Marion County, Iowa, 1845-1944, Bride Index
977.7/O'BRIEN/71
O'Brien Co. [Iowa] Hist. Society
History of O'Brien County, Iowa, 1979
977.7/O'BRIEN/71
no author
Hartley, Iowa, 100 Year History, 1879-1979
977.7/O'BRIEN/71
Borchard, Howard
Hartley, Iowa, 125 Year History, 1879-2004
977.7/OSCEOLA/72
Ocando, Marilynne D.
Index for Osceola County History, Iowa Writer's Program, W.P.A. comp. (1942)
977.7/POLK/77
Andreast, A. T.
Polk County, Iowa, Atlas Page, 1875 [map cabinet]
977.7/POLK/77
Brown, Joyce E.
Caldwell Funeral Home, Des Moines, Polk County, Iowa, 1957-1959
977.7/POLK/77
no author
Polk County, Iowa, [Original] Land Entries
977.7/POLK/77
no author
Underground Coal Mines of Des Moines, Iowa and Vicinity [Map Cabinet]
977.7/POLK/77
no author
Plan of Fort Des Moines and Its Environs, Polk County,
Iowa, 1854 [Map Cabinet]
977.7/POLK/77
Payne, Russell, etal
History of the Farrar [Iowa] United Methodist Church, 1889-1989
977.7/WARREN/91
no author
Warren County, Iowa, Obituaries, 1945-2001, in 13 volumes
977.7/WARREN/91
no author
Warren County, Iowa, Obituaries, 1921-1979
977.7/WARREN/91
no author
Warren County, Iowa, Obituaries, 2001-2008
977.8312/SCO
no author
Scotland County, Missouri, County Directory, 1973
977.853/MOR
no author
Morgan County, Missouri, 1991 Plat Book
977.853/STO
no author
Stover, Missouri, Seventy-Fifth Anniversary, 1903-1978
977.853/STO
no author
Stover, Missouri, 1903-2003
978.2/NIM
Nimmo, Sylvia
Maps Showing County Boundaries of Nebraska, 1854-1925
978.623/COU
no author
Courage Enough, Mon-Dak Family Histories, Richland County, Montana
978.624/OUR
no author
Our Times, Our Lives, Dawson County [Montana] Family Stories
978.862/KAM
Kamphausen, Dana Dunbar
The Central City [Colorado] Story
31
Hawkeye Heritage
Volume 47, Issue 2
Summer 2013
Name Index
Clatterbuck, John Wesley, 26
Coomes, Henry, 6
Coomes, Reuben, 6
Coomes, Upton, 6
Hawkins, Semphronia, 26
O'Connor, Catherine, 26
Ray, William G., 8
Remey, George C., 8
Remey, William B., 8
Reynolds, James H., 8
Rice, Elliott W., 8
Rochford, Michael, 26
Staley, Hannah P., 6
Staley, Josiah, 6
Standish, Myles, 19
Trask, Calista S., 7
Trask, Harmon J., 7
Tully, Margaret, 26
Waddy, Michael, 22
Wagner, Richard E, 22
Waldron, John, 22
Wallner, Frank A., 22
Walsh, Michael James, 26
Walsh, Patrick, 22
Walstrom, Charles John, 22
Warburton, Peter, 22
Warner, Horatio, 7
Warner, William W., 7
Warren, Landon G, 22
Warrick, John, 22
Watters, Joseph H, 22
Watters, Thomas, 22
Weber, Fred, 22
Weizbrod, Conrad, 22
Welch, David, 22
West, John, 22
Westerburg, Hans Gustaf, 22
Westrom, John, 23
Westrom, Olaf, 23
Whitaker, George, 23
White, John, 23
32
Whitehouse, Edmund I., 23
Whitehouse, Francis, 23
Wicklund, A. J., 23
Wilkes, Thomas B, 23
Wilson, John, 23
Wilson, William D, 23
Wingvest, John, 23
Wisgerhof, Teunis, 23
Wistburg, Charles, 23
Wolffinger, George, 23
Wollbigge (Wollbrigge), Frederick, 23
Wollinsky, D. S., 23
Wumerburg, F. O., 23
Wunderleif, John Nicol, 23
Wynn, Robert, 24
York, William, 24
Young, Andrew, 24
Young, August, 24
Young, David C., 24
Young, Henry, 24
Young, Thomas, 24
Youngberg, A, 24
Youngberg, Aleck, 24
Youngberg, John, 24
Youngberg, Peter, 24
Youngman, Conrad, 24
Youngquist, Charles J., 24
Younker, Barney, 25
Younker, H., 25
Yowell, Nancy Ellen, 26
Yowell, William, 26
Yuill, Andrew, 25
Zaelle, Burkhardt, 25
Zeh, Jacob, 25
Zei, Charles, 25
Zeininger, Charles, 25
Zelcer, Jacob, 25
Zepter, Gerhard Joh, 25
Ziemann, Fredrick, 25
Zigler, Jacob, 25
Zimmerman, Jacob, 25