New Brunswick Research Tips and Strategies: Difference between revisions
No edit summary |
|||
| Line 38: | Line 38: | ||
== New Brunswick Research Tips == | == New Brunswick Research Tips == | ||
==Records in French== | |||
*The area was first settled by the French, who established Port Royal (present-day Annapolis) in 1605. The territory passed back and forth between France and England. It ended in 1763.<ref>''New Brunswick Research Outline.'' Salt Lake City, Utah: Intellectual Reserve, Inc., Family History Department, 1997, 9, 19. (Accessed 2 Mar 2025). '''''Online at:''''' [http://files.lib.byu.edu/family-history-library/research-outlines/US/NewBrunswick.pdf BYU University - Provo]</ref> | |||
from French to English hands many times | |||
==Further New Brunswick Research== | ==Further New Brunswick Research== | ||
*[http://files.lib.byu.edu/family-history-library/research-outlines/Canada/NewBrunswick.pdf New Brunswick Family History Library Research Outline] | *[http://files.lib.byu.edu/family-history-library/research-outlines/Canada/NewBrunswick.pdf New Brunswick Family History Library Research Outline] | ||
Revision as of 13:50, 2 March 2025
| New Brunswick Wiki Topics | |
| Beginning Research | |
| Record Types | |
| New Brunswick Background | |
| Cultural Groups | |
| Local Research Resources | |
|
Purpose of Research Tips and Strategies Wiki Page |
New Brunswick Research Strategies[edit | edit source]
Below are links to different research strategy pages to help you locate your ancestors in New Brunswick:
Finding New Brunswick Birth, Marriage or Death Records[edit | edit source]
Finding New Brunswick Records[edit | edit source]
New Brunswick Provincewide Databases[edit | edit source]
New Brunswick Research Process[edit | edit source]
Canada Research Strategies[edit | edit source]
- Canada Finding Town of Origin
- How to Locate Your Ancestor in Canada
- How to Recognize your Canadian Ancestor
- See Canada Research Tips and Strategies for more resources.
Canada Online Learning[edit | edit source]
New Brunswick Research Tips[edit | edit source]
Records in French[edit | edit source]
- The area was first settled by the French, who established Port Royal (present-day Annapolis) in 1605. The territory passed back and forth between France and England. It ended in 1763.[1]
from French to English hands many times
Further New Brunswick Research[edit | edit source]
- ↑ New Brunswick Research Outline. Salt Lake City, Utah: Intellectual Reserve, Inc., Family History Department, 1997, 9, 19. (Accessed 2 Mar 2025). Online at: BYU University - Provo