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from
Central Connecticut State University
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CCSU instructor’s new genealogical source book
helps families find Eastern European records
NEW
BRITAIN -- (December 31, 2007) --
Polish-Americans have a new source to help them
trace family roots in Europe, thanks to Central
Connecticut State University modern language
instructor Jonathan Shea.
An accredited genealogist, Shea is the author of
“Going Home: A Guide to Polish-American Family
History Research,” which has just been published
by Language and Lineage Press in Danbury.
The 400-page comprehensive reference source is
the result of Shea’s three decades of
genealogical research experience and his
knowledge of several foreign languages. Shea
uses a step-by-step analysis of archival and
document sources that will help researchers
trace their roots through the time their
families spent in the United States, and back to
their places of origin in Eastern Europe.
“In most cases, research begins in the home and
then progresses through a series of document
sources generated locally and by the federal
government,” Shea said.
Shea discusses available local and federal
records that researchers will need to collect
factual information about their families such as
birth, marriage and death records, church
records, newspaper sources, voting records,
probate court records and other documents
available at a local city hall or county
courthouse. He also notes information-laden
records created by the U.S. government such as
ship passenger lists that enable “roots” seekers
to find their ancestors’ names on manifests of
vessels that docked at Ellis Island and other
American ports of entry. He also offers
instructions on how to effective use the
decennial Federal Censuses, as well as
information on the availability and content of
naturalization and citizenship records.
Shea devoted a chapter of the book to maps,
cartographic sources and gazetteers (lists of
place names in a given country) that enable the
researcher to pinpoint site in Europe where
family homesteads were located. He points out:
“Because place names repeat in many nations and
national borders changed all too frequently
during the course of the many wars fought on
European soil, special attention is given to the
numerous territorial and administrative changes
which took place in Poland over the last few
centuries.”
Once
the researcher has located the family’s place of
origin, the book presents a wide array of
documents that can be found in the archives of
Poland and neighboring nations such as vital
records, tax lists, church censuses and notary
records. The book not only shows what these
documents look like but provides instructions to
understand and translate them. Word lists in
Polish, German, Russian and Latin aid in this
regard.
Shea
notes: "People should not be deterred from doing
family history research because they do not know
a second language. To do effective research one
needs only to know a small sliver of the
language required to translate these types of
documents. Many of the documents are formulaic,
meaning that their contents are in a set order,
thus only specific vocabulary needs to be
learned as well as a generalized, broad
knowledge of how the language functions and its
basic structure. Its sounds intimidating, but it
is really not difficult at all”
Barbara Proko, a Polish genealogist and editor
for “Choice,” the American Library Association’s
monthly magazine of academic book reviews,
wrote: “Shea’s ‘Going Home’ is destined to
become an instant classic and the standard by
which all other books on Polish genealogy will
be judged. There is simply no one else who has
Jonathan Shea’s range of research experience,
degree of insight, or depth of knowledge about
this very complex subject. He brings to this
book a unique combination of skills -- an
extensive background in genealogy itself, as
well as academic expertise in the key area of
Slavic languages. Shea’s passion for Polish
genealogy is evident on every page. His candor
about his own family research lends his writing
warmth, humor and personality seldom seen in
genealogy manuals. ‘Going Home’ is the
perfect blend of erudition and enthusiasm, sure
to satisfy beginning researchers and longtime
genealogists alike.”
Further information may be obtained by
contacting
pgsctne@yahoo.com
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