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|  (tsunami) |  (, insects, rodents, mold, neglect,) | ||
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| ''Purpose:'' This page lists strategies for making research progress on families who lived in a place where most of the records are lost. <br>   | ''Purpose:'' This page lists strategies for making research progress on families who lived in a place where most of the records are lost. <br>   | ||
| <gallery  | <gallery widths="114px" perrow="4"> | ||
| File:Fire.png|<center>Fires</center> | File:Fire.png|<center>Fires</center> | ||
| File:War.jpg|<center>Wars</center> | File:War.jpg|<center>Wars</center> | ||
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| The phrase "burned counties" was first used for research in Virginia where many county records were destroyed in courthouse fires, or during the Civil War.<ref>An example of relatively early use of the phrase “burned counties” is found in a regularly featured periodical article which first appeared as “Records from Burned Counties,” ''Virginia Genealogical Society Bulletin'', 4, issue 3 (July 1966) ({{FHL|41739|item|disp=FHL Book 975.5 B2vs v. 4}}) ([http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/61483708 WorldCat entry]).</ref> The strategies for researching places where a local courthouse or repository was wiped out by fire, tornado, war, flood, hurricane, earthquake, theft, tsunami, or cleaning-streak clerks are useful in similar situations all around the United States, Canada, and throughout the world.   | The phrase "burned counties" was first used for research in Virginia where many county records were destroyed in courthouse fires, or during the Civil War.<ref>An example of relatively early use of the phrase “burned counties” is found in a regularly featured periodical article which first appeared as “Records from Burned Counties,” ''Virginia Genealogical Society Bulletin'', 4, issue 3 (July 1966) ({{FHL|41739|item|disp=FHL Book 975.5 B2vs v. 4}}) ([http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/61483708 WorldCat entry]).</ref> The strategies for researching places where a local courthouse or repository was wiped out by fire, tornado, war, flood, hurricane, earthquake, insects, rodents, mold, neglect, foxing, theft, tsunami, or cleaning-streak clerks are useful in similar situations all around the United States, Canada, and throughout the world.   | ||
| {| border="0" align="center" cellspacing="1" cellpadding="3" summary="1. Internet Links to My[State]Genealogy.com | {| border="0" align="center" cellspacing="1" cellpadding="3" style="width: 571px; height: 253px" class="FCK__ShowTableBorders" summary="1. Internet Links to My[State]Genealogy.com" | ||
| |+ '''Burned Counties: A Partial List for Selected States'''<br>(as listed on the Internet at genealogyinc.com)<br>   | |+ '''Burned Counties: A Partial List for Selected States'''<br>(as listed on the Internet at genealogyinc.com)<br>   | ||
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