But they are; I looked up the record myself in Santo Espirito on the website.
It is the second marriage for both. Some of those lines go back to the mid-16th
century.
John
On Sunday, January 4, 2015 11:53 PM, Theresa Entin
ten...@fullchannel.net wrote:
Those do look like Santa
It depends when the naturalization took place and where. If it was before WW II
then It will be in the Mass Archives near the JFK Library . They are accessible
there as that is where I went to get copies of my Grandparents naturalization
paper work. If the naturalization was done in a federal
Random Acts of Kindness is now back online. They are people who have
volunteered to look up records for people have helped me many times in the past
and they are starting up again so maybe you can find someone there to help you.
You may have to pay a small sum for their gas, and copying and
I thought I would mention this FYI - I just received an email from someone
that we had a match we have a DNA match. Did anyone of you family come
from (and he named a state)? His last name does not match any of my
testee's. I have quite a few extended family members and friends that I
oversee.
Thank you Richard. I should have noted that I am looking for
naturalization records and those are not indexed.
On Sunday, January 4, 2015 1:11:29 PM UTC-5, Leonard Silva wrote:
I am looking for someone to do a bit of research at the Mass Archives in
Boston. I have emailed them several
Leonard,
You don't give any dates, but I'm pretty sure that you'll need to go
through the USGIS to get the naturalization records.
Cheri
--
For options, such as changing to List, Digest, Abridged, or No Mail (vacation)
mode, log into your Google account and visit this group at
6 matches
Mail list logo