by Judy G. Russell | May 20, 2019 | Resources, Statutes |
Signed into law 157 years ago today He was a Union soldier home on furlough, so the story goes. And he was determined not to lose his chance under a new law due to take effect on the first of January 1863. Due to report back to his unit in St. Louis, he prevailed on...
by Judy G. Russell | May 14, 2019 | Resources, Statutes |
Badger State laws It has a long and rich history. Originally part of the original Northwest Territory, between 1788 and 1800, and then part of Indiana Territory from 1800 to 1809, Illinois Territory from 1809 to 1818, Michigan Territory from 1818 to 1836 before...
by Judy G. Russell | Apr 30, 2019 | Legal definitions, Statutes |
The language of the law. Part Latin, part Greek, part law French, even part Anglo-Saxon. And all confusing. One week from today, the party begins. That great gathering of genealogists from all over called the 2019 Family History Conference of the National Genealogical...
by Judy G. Russell | Apr 25, 2019 | Resources, Statutes |
Happy birthday to the BLM GLO If there’s one thing that’s for certain in The Legal Genealogist’s world, it’s that the statutes of the United States and the states provide unlimited fodder for comment and — very often — a mass of...
by Judy G. Russell | Apr 24, 2019 | Resources, Statutes |
Happy birthday, LOC! It is, to a genealogist, about the happiest provision ever to be encountered in a statute book. It’s in section 5 of a law signed by President John Adams 219 years ago today — and that section read: And be it further enacted, That for...
by Judy G. Russell | Apr 23, 2019 | Resources, Statutes |
And in the latest “it never fails” category… It never fails. Inevitably, The Legal Genealogist will finish a post referencing in passing a resource that wasn’t exactly central to that particular post, and somebody will pop up within minutes to ask about...
by Judy G. Russell | Apr 22, 2019 | Methodology, Statutes |
When the Boomers met the Sooners Two million acres west of the Mississippi. Land that had been promised to Native Americans “…as long as grass grows or water runs…”1 Land that — 130 years ago today — was opened for settlement as part of the public lands of...
by Judy G. Russell | Mar 22, 2019 | Methodology, Statutes |
Yes, read them, really The Legal Genealogist loves it when this happens. A fabulous question just came in minutes ago in a comment to Wednesday’s post about private laws,1 and I absolutely can’t wait to answer it. Reader Sylvia Anne Nash had reviewed that...
by Judy G. Russell | Mar 21, 2019 | Resources, Statutes |
Private laws elsewhere It rarely fails. The Legal Genealogist hardly finishes a blog post without the inevitable inquiry… the question that should have been anticipated. Yesterday’s blog about private laws1 was no exception. Almost immediately, a friend...
by Judy G. Russell | Mar 20, 2019 | Resources, Statutes |
Go ahead… read those laws So… The Legal Genealogist is poking around some late 18th century and early 19th century Massachusetts statutes to try to get an answer to a reader question. The answer is taking more time than expected… and it isn’t...