Genealogy Resources

Independence Day Closing

Friday, July 4 - The library will be closed in observance of Independence Day. Your online Library is available every day, 24 hours a day, through the library catalog and Online Resources.

Resource Type

Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War

Preserving the history and legacy of the heroes who fought to save the Union during the Civil War

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Start Your Genealogy Research

The records in NARA Resource holdings are most commonly used by genealogists include, Census, Military, Immigration (Ship Passenger Lists), Naturalization, and Land records.

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Tri-State Genealogy Society

The Tri-State Genealogical Society

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U.S. Army Medal of Honor Recipients

To accurately collect, preserve, interpret, and express the Army's history and material culture to more broadly educate and develop our force, the military profession, and the nation.

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U.S. Vital Records

The most comprehensive resource for locating vital records.

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UK & Ireland Genealogy

GENUKI provides a virtual reference library of genealogical information of particular relevance to the UK and Ireland. It is a non-commercial service, maintained by a charitable trust and a group of volunteers.

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United Daughters of the Confederacy

As early as 1866, ladies across the South began to decorate the graves of soldiers with flowers. What they called “Decoration Day” eventually became our Memorial Day, a day to remember the men who fought for their states, homes and families.

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USGenWeb

The USGenWeb® Project was established in 1996 by a group of genealogists who shared a desire to create free online resources for genealogical research. Originally beginning with online directories of text-based resources, their vision has grown into a network of over 3000 linked websites, all individually created and maintained by a community of volunteers. Today you may find a variety of unique county and state resources including photos, maps, transcriptions, historical documents, helpful links, and much more.

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Vanderburgh County Census - 1840

Census Online was founded in 1996 by Mark Reed, then a 19 year old Electrical Engineering junior at the University of Michigan.   The foundation of the site was Mark's 402-page transcription of the 1850 census for Greene County, Tennessee.  In October 1996, Mark published a list of links to the other 25 similar census transcriptions that existed online.  Prior to that time, no centralized directory existed for locating these records as they appeared on various personal web sites scattered across all corners of the internet.  Over the

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Vanderburgh County GenWeb Page

Part of the InGenWeb & USGenWeb Projects

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Warrick County GenWeb Page

Warrick County Indiana was established from Knox County in 1813. At that time including what is today Posey County (1814), Vanderburgh County (1818), Warrick, Spencer County (1818) and Perry County (1818) and a bit of Gibson. The county seat of Warrick is the city of Boonville with a population of about 4,000. Important among the history of Boonville is the town motto. Where Lincoln learned the law. I hope you enjoy your visit to the Warrick page and come back as often as you like.

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Willard Library, Evansville, Indiana

Visit the Willard Public Library website.

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WorldGenWeb Project

The WorldGenWeb Project is a non-profit, volunteer-based organization dedicated to providing genealogical and historical records and resources for world-wide access!

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