New Haven Museum Whitney Research Library

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To Do: Complete this page especially Collection Description and Alternate Repositories sections.


United States go to Connecticut go to New Haven Gotoarrow.png Archives and Libraries go to New Haven Museum Whitney Research Library

New Haven Museum Whitney Research Library
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Contact Information

E-mail:[1]  library@newhavenmuseum.org

Address:[1]

114 Whitney Avenue
New Haven CT 06510

Telephone:[1]  203-562-4183 x15
Fax: 203-562-2002

Hours and holidays:[2]  Tuesday–Friday: 10 a.m.–5 p.m.; Saturday: 12–5 p.m.; Free 1st Sundays: 1-4 p.m.

Map, directions, and public transportation:

  • Map:  Google map: New Haven Museum
  • Directions:[2]
    • From Interstate 95 Exit onto Interstate 91 North and follow directions below.
    • From 91 North or South
      • Take Exit 3 – Trumbull Street
      • At end of ramp stay in center lane
      • Proceed straight through first traffic light
      • At next traffic light turn right
      • NHM will be immediately on your left.
        • There is free parking in the rear of the building.
  • Public transportation:

Internet sites and databases:

Collection Description

This is the best collection of the earliest southern Connecticut town records.[3] They also have passenger arrival lists, Federal censuses, and a complete set of New Haven city directories since 1840.[4] Formerly known as the New Haven Colony Historical Society.

Tips

{Optional}

Guides

{Optional: Internet or guide books describing this collection for genealogists. }

Alternate Repositories

If you cannot visit or find a source at the New Haven Museum Whitney Research Library, a similar source may be available at one of the following.

Overlapping Collections

  • National Archives at Boston (that is Waltham), federal censuses, Ancestry.com, military, pensions, bounty land, photos, naturalizations, passenger arrival records for Boston and New England, and Canadian border crossings, Chinese immigration, Navy and maritime records.[5]
  • Connecticut State Library, Hartford, has the Barbour Collection, Bibles, census, church, Hale Collection newspaper marriages and deaths, manuscripts, books, cemeteries, probates, vital records, directories, land, local histories, maps, military, naturalization, passenger arrivals, and e-mail questions.[6] [7]

Similar Collections

Neighboring Collections

Sources

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 The Whitney Library in New Haven Museum (accessed 21 September 2015).
  2. 2.0 2.1 Admissions, Hours, and Directions in New Haven Museum (accessed 21 September 2015).
  3. William Dollarhide and Ronald A. Bremer. America's Best Genealogy Resource Centers (Bountiful, Utah: Heritage Quest, 1998), 25. WorldCat 39493985. FHL Ref Book 973 J54d.
  4. New Haven Museum and Historical Society in Wikipedia: the Free Encyclopedia (accessed 18 September 2015).
  5. Dollarhide and Bremer, 124.
  6. History and Genealogy Home in CT State Library (accessed 21 September 2015).
  7. Dollarhide and Bremer, 25.
  8. 8.0 8.1 8.2 8.3 8.4 8.5 8.6 8.7 Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named DB25
  9. CSG Library Holdings in Connecticut Society of Genealogists (accessed 21 September 2015).
  10. Manuscripts in Mystic Seaport: the Museum of America and the Sea (accessed 20 September 2015).
  11. Dollarhide and Bremer, 59.
  12. "New England Historic Genealogical Society" in Wikipedia: The Free Encyclopedia at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_England_Historic_Genealogical_Society (accessed 30 August 2010).
  13. Using the NEHGS Library in American Ancestors" (accessed 21 September 2015).
  14. Dollarhide and Bremer, 5, 57, and 59.
  15. Irma and Paul Milstein Division of United States History, Local History and Genealogy in New York Public Library (accessed 21 September 2015).
  16. Dollarhide and Bremer, 89.