Certified Genealogist

FREQUENTLY USED U.S. RESEARCH LINKS

U.S. Research Links

RICHMOND CO., VA.
Richmond County Va. - FamilySearch Catalog
Account Books
Wills and Inventories 1699-1879; general index to wills, 1699-1950
Order Books 1692-1871
General index to deeds, 1692-1915; deeds, 1692-1869
Deed Book 1714-1720
Personal Property Tax Lists
Register of births, 1853-1895, 1912-1914; register of marriages, 1853-1906
Death register, 1853-1895, 1912-1917
Wills of Richmond County Virginia 1699-1800 - Headley, Ancestry.com
North Farnham Parish Register 1663 - 1814 and Lunenburg Parish 1783-1800 - MyHeritage.com
North Farnham Parish Register 1663-1814 and Lunenburg Parish 1783-1800 - FS Digital Images

KING GEORGE CO., VA.
King George County, Va. - FamilySearch Catalog
Deeds, 1721-1868, inventories, 1745-1784, Index to deeds 1721-1892
Will books, 1721-1901 ; general index to wills, 1752-1948
Order books, 1721-1901
Bond books, 1739-1904 - probate

LANCASTER CO., VA.
Lancaster County, Va. - FamilySearch Catalog
Deed and will books, 1652-1900 ; general indexes, 1652-1900
Tithables, 1745-1798
Order books, 1656-1866
Guardian bonds, 1720-1799
Lancaster Co. Wills 1653-1800 Abstracts - Ida J. Lee, HathiTrust

ENGLAND
FreeReg | FreeBMD | GRO General Records Office
England 1851 Map | England Map Modern
Vision of Britain Gazetteer | Imperial Gazetteer (Ancestry) | UK County Abbreviations
Topographical Dictionary of England
England Census Overview - wiki.familysearch.org | England Missing Censuses FindMyPast
1939 Register - FindMyPast
England Occupations wiki.familysearch.org | Obscure Old English Occupations | English Occupations RootsWeb | Oxford English Dictionary (free at FHL)

Levels of Confidence (Mills, Evidence Explained, p. 23-24)
Certainly:
the author has no reasonable doubt about the assertion, based upon sound research and good evidence.
Probably:
the author feels the assertion is more likely than not, based upon sound research and good evidence.
Likely:
the author feels some evidence supports the assertion, but the assertion is far from proved
Possibly:
the author feels the odds weigh at least slightly in favor of the assertion.
Apparently:
the author has formed an impression or presumption, typically based on common experience, but has not tested the matter. (A presumption is not a blank check, however. IN law, for example, Federal Rule 301* holds that the author of a presumption is still expected to produce evidence to meet or rebut the presumption.)
Perhaps:
the author suggests that an idea is plausible, although it remains to be tested.
*Federal Civil Judicial Procedure and Rules (St. Paul, Minnesota: West Group, published annually).