Dutch Genealogy - new Legacy QuickGuide by John Boeren now available
March 13, 2017
Legacy QuickGuidesTM have quickly become one of the more popular resources for genealogists. Each guide contains four (sometimes five, sometimes more) pages of valuable information covering a variety of genealogy research topics, dozens of clickable links, and are written by genealogists and family historians who are experts in the subject areas. We've added another new Legacy QuickGuide: Dutch Genealogy by John Boeren. Now choose from 85 Legacy QuickGuides!
The Dutch Genealogy Legacy QuickGuide™ contains valuable research strategy to help you find your Dutch ancestors. This handy 8-page PDF guide can be used on your computer or mobile device for anytime access.
Many have ancestors of Dutch origin; some of them arrived as early settlers in the 17th century, others as immigrants in the 19th and 20th century. Dutch research requires knowledge of the Dutch language, which makes it a challenge for researchers from other countries. The good thing is that Dutch archives are full with documents that survived wars and other calamities. Many archives and collections go back in time more than 400 years. And if you are lucky, you will find traces of your ancestors back to the 13th or 14th century. An ever-growing digital collection of genealogical records makes online research quite easy.
Now choose from 85!
Purchase for just $2.95
United States - State Guides
- Alabama Genealogy
- California Genealogy
- Connecticut Genealogy
- Colorado Genealogy
- Florida Genealogy
- Georgia Genealogy
- Iowa Genealogy
- Kansas Genealogy
- Kentucky Genealogy
- Maine Genealogy
- Massachusetts Genealogy
- Minnesota Genealogy
- Montana Genealogy
- New Mexico Genealogy
- New Hampshire Genealogy
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- New York Genealogy
- North Carolina Genealogy
- North Dakota Genealogy
- Ohio Genealogy
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- Pennsylvania Genealogy
- Rhode Island Genealogy
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- Tennessee Genealogy
- Texas Genealogy
- Vermont Genealogy
- Virginia Genealogy
- Washington Genealogy
- West Virginia Genealogy
- Wisconsin Genealogy
- Wyoming Genealogy
United States - other Guides
- African-American Genealogy
- American Migration Patterns
- Quaker Genealogy
- Researching County Histories
- Researching War of 1812 Ancestors
- Researching Your U.S. Civil War Ancestors
- Understanding US Vital Records
- US City Directories
- U.S. Federal Non-population Census Records
- Using Probate Records
Europe
- Croatian Genealogy
- Czech Genealogy
- Deciphering Germanic Script: Common Words in Church Books
- Dutch Genealogy
- Finnish Genealogy
- Germans from Russia
- Hungarian Genealogy
- Irish Genealogy
- Norwegian Genealogy
- Polish Genealogy
- Slovak Genealogy
- Swedish Genealogy
- Ukrainian Genealogy
Religion
General
- Anatomy of a Birth Record
- Anatomy of a Death Record
- Anatomy of a Marriage Record
- Cemetery Research
- Citing Your Sources
- Ephemera: Genealogy Gold
- Establishing Genealogical Proof
- Finding Your Female Ancestors
- Fraternal Societies
- Genealogy Clues in Quilts, Samplers, and Other Textiles
- It's Not All Online: Researching in Archives
- Lineage Societies and Genealogy
- Obituaries in Genealogy: A Research Tool
- Organizing and Digitizing Family Photos
- Preparing for a Successful Repository Research Trip
- Preserving Family Heirlooms
- Preserving Old Family Letters: Tips from an Archivist
- Researching in Libraries and Archives
- Researching the Family Legend
- Scrapbooks: A Genealogist's Gold Mine
- Starting a Family Archive
- Unraveling Brick Wall Mysteries
- Using Historical Newspapers for Genealogy Research
- Vertical Files: What Are They and How to Use Them
- Writing Your Family History
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