From the Junior Miss Department
If you have researched families in 17th and 18th century New England, you have probably learned that the label “junior,” […]
If you have researched families in 17th and 18th century New England, you have probably learned that the label “junior,” […]
I came across the following while researching a line for a client. Although this particular document did not prove relevant
This month is the 250th birthday of John Quincy Adams, as Danielle Cournoyer reminds us on the Vita Brevis blog.
Decoration Day, the original name for Memorial Day, started in 1868, to remember those who fell in the Civil War,
If you flip through the pages of an old town book in Vermont, you might find, tucked away between tax
If I give you the title of the book I could just stop there. It pretty much is self-describing: The
You shall see rude and sturdy, experienced and wise men, keeping their castles, or teaming up their summer’s wood, or
St. Charles Borromeo Church in Dover, New Hampshire is coming down, making room for “workforce housing.” The above photograph, which
The famed Boston Tea Party was December 16th, 1773. This protest sparked debates throughout New England as towns decided whether,