American Ancestors

American Ancestors American Ancestors is a National Center for Family History, Heritage & Culture.

American Ancestors provides expert family history services through our staff, original scholarship, data-rich website, educational opportunities, and research center to help family historians of all levels explore their past and understand their families’ unique place in history. We are a member-based nonprofit corporation dedicated to advancing the study of family history in America and beyond, b

y educating, inspiring, and connecting people through our scholarship, collections, and expertise. We offer the most comprehensive resources in the country for researching family history:

An Expert Staff: Our professional genealogists are among the most respected and advanced in the profession. With research specialties including early American, New England, New York, Irish, English, Italian, Scottish, Atlantic and French Canadian, African American, Native American, Chinese, and Jewish genealogy, our expert staff can assist family historians by providing research advice in-person, over the phone, or in writing. Our expert staff can also conduct research on behalf of family historians, providing authoritative, documented research reports and family tree charts. Original Scholarship: To support the research of family historians around the world, we produce the most significant original research and important publications in genealogy, including, since 1847, the longest continually published academic journal in the field, The Register. In addition to the quarterly journal, we publish a quarterly magazine, ten to twenty books per year, and a weekly electronic newsletter. As the leader in genealogical scholarship, we also produce important study projects such as The Great Migration Study Project, covering those who arrived in New England between 1620 and 1640; The Early New England Study Project, 1641–1700; Families of Western Massachusetts in 1790, capturing families heading west at the time of the 1790 census, and the newEarly Vermont Settlers to 1784 which covers families that settled Vermont, the last frontier of New England. Website: AmericanAncestors.org is the most-used genealogical society website in the world. It provides family historians access to more than 1 billion records spanning the U.S. and beyond, including one of the most extensive online collections of early American records, and the largest searchable collection of published genealogical research journals and magazines. Special strengths in our content include English, New England (Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, and Vermont), New York, Pennsylvania, and Virginia materials. Education: Designed to benefit family history researchers of all levels, we provide exclusive, in-depth learning opportunities through lectures, seminars, intensive research programs, tours to libraries and archives, online courses and webinars, and special events . Research Center: Named by USA Today as a top 10 world destination for family history, the public, members and visitors are invited to visit our eight-story library and archive where we offer the largest collection of original family history research materials in the country. Our collection, which continues to grow through acquisition and preservation activities, dates from the fourteenth century to the present and spans North America, Europe, and beyond. It includes more than 28 million diaries, letters, photographs, and other manuscripts, and more than 200,000 books and microforms.

Calling all Massachusetts educators! We are hosting a free, three-day workshop with lessons and strategies to incorporat...
06/01/2026

Calling all Massachusetts educators! We are hosting a free, three-day workshop with lessons and strategies to incorporate family history into your curriculum! Genealogy is a powerful lens for teaching history, culture, and geography. Go beyond family trees to help students develop research and historical thinking skills as they explore their roots and make personal connections to history. Learn more: https://hubs.ly/Q04jDh-60

Seven Times Salt marks the 250th anniversary of the nation with a live concert! This performance will trace a musical li...
06/01/2026

Seven Times Salt marks the 250th anniversary of the nation with a live concert! This performance will trace a musical lineage from the settlement at Plimoth, to the eve of the Revolution, and victory at Yorktown. English catches and early shape note hymns lead to songs of liberty, rants against taxation and tyranny, wartime laments, and even some of George Washington's favorite dance tunes. The program includes works by Thomas Arne and William Billings, selections from the Ainsworth Psalter and the Bay Psalm Book, and a pleasing variety of dance tunes from eighteenth-century American manuscripts. https://hubs.ly/Q04hx4Xt0

The Brim-DeForest Library at American Ancestors serves as a center for research, learning, and discovery, where history ...
05/30/2026

The Brim-DeForest Library at American Ancestors serves as a center for research, learning, and discovery, where history comes to life through archival collections and expert guidance. Learn more about the collections, services, and other library offerings during a brief tour. https://hubs.ly/Q04hxwYP0

Drawing upon the rich history of artistic collaboration that shaped American modernism, Cape Ann Museum Director Oliver ...
05/29/2026

Drawing upon the rich history of artistic collaboration that shaped American modernism, Cape Ann Museum Director Oliver Barker and guest curator Eliza Rathbone will lead an insightful discussion on the upcoming groundbreaking exhibition, Avery, Gottlieb & Rothko: By the Sea. This presentation will delve into the profound impact of Gloucester’s coastal landscape on the development of three titans of 20th-century art: Milton Avery, Adolph Gottlieb, and Mark Rothko. https://hubs.ly/Q04jd1H80

05/29/2026

Who was the last living link to the American Revolution? Chief genealogist David Lambert shares the story of Daniel Frederick Bakeman, the final Revolutionary War soldier to receive pension benefits - and one of the few captured in a surviving photograph.

Learn more on our new website revolutionaryroots.americanancestors.org

For generations, land has meant opportunity, independence, and even survival in America. It is what drove many of our an...
05/28/2026

For generations, land has meant opportunity, independence, and even survival in America. It is what drove many of our ancestors to immigrate and what motivated some to migrate across the country. While land records are essential to our family history research, they are often overlooked or misunderstood. Hidden in the legalese and metes and bounds, there can be critical clues to extended family members and family relationships, the location of ancestral homelands, and why our ancestors move from point A to point B. From colonial land grants and charters to proprietorship records and federal land programs, this 5-week online seminar will give you the historical context of land records in America, the tools to find and decipher deeds, and strategies for leveraging land records in your family history research. https://hubs.ly/Q04dzSbj0

Land records are one of the most important sources for family historians. Not only can land records help trace the migra...
05/27/2026

Land records are one of the most important sources for family historians. Not only can land records help trace the migrations of our ancestors, but they can also provide biographical information, serve as vital record replacements, and reveal relationships between individuals. Download our free getting started guide today! https://hubs.ly/Q04hxrfV0

Join us the week before the Juneteenth to hear from Edda L. Fields-Black about COMBEE, the first detailed account of one...
05/26/2026

Join us the week before the Juneteenth to hear from Edda L. Fields-Black about COMBEE, the first detailed account of one of the most dramatic episodes of the Civil War: the June 1863 Combahee River Raid in South Carolina. There, Harriet Tubman and 150 African American Union soldiers rescued and emancipated more than 700 slaves. Dr. Fields-Black’s account is based on original documentation and written by a descendant of the enslaved men and women who fought in the raid; and, in the process, liberated themselves. https://hubs.ly/Q04hxj750

Join us for a voyage into the great Age of Sail as author Eric Jay Dolin, heralded an “expert literary steersman,” by Th...
05/26/2026

Join us for a voyage into the great Age of Sail as author Eric Jay Dolin, heralded an “expert literary steersman,” by The Washington Post, shares the tragic tale of the American whaleship Mentor and its brave crew, shipwrecked, then captive, in an unknown land. https://hubs.ly/Q04hx6C70

On this Memorial Day, we’re sharing a story that reminds us how deep the roots of American sacrifice can run.In a new Vi...
05/25/2026

On this Memorial Day, we’re sharing a story that reminds us how deep the roots of American sacrifice can run.

In a new Vita Brevis post, American Ancestors traces the story of brothers Edward and Paul J. Revere, grandsons of the famous patriot, both officers in the 20th Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry. Edward was killed at Antietam on September 17, 1862, the deadliest single day in American history. Paul survived to command the regiment, only to fall mortally wounded at Gettysburg the following year. They now rest side by side at Mt. Auburn Cemetery in Cambridge.

The post retraces their steps across both battlefields and uncovers a remarkable coincidence: William Dawes, who rode alongside Paul Revere in 1775, also had a descendant who fought at both battles.

Read the full story on Vita Brevis

Explore the poignant stories of the Revere brothers in the Civil War, their battles at Antietam and Gettysburg, and the lasting connections to history.

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