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Historic Pelham Blog Archive
June 20, 2005
350TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION
BOOK: "THOMAS PELL
AND THE LEGEND OF THE PELL TREATY OAK" -- $11.95 (PROCEEDS AFTER
PRINTING COSTS WILL GO TO
BARTOW-PELL MANSION MUSEUM).
CLICK HERE TO BROWSE BEFORE YOU BUY!
LEARN MORE.
Monday, June 20, 2005
Using Cornell University Library's "Making of America" Digital Library
of Primary Sources to Perform Research Regarding Pelham
The Cornell University Library has developed a digital library of primary
sources in American social history from the antebellum period through
reconstruction. The collection includes a large number of important works
regarding American history. According to Cornell University, the site
"provides access to 267 monograph volumes and over 100,000 journal
articles with 19th century imprints." The collection is entitled "Making
of America" and is available at
http://cdl.library.cornell.edu/moa/.
As of June 19, 2005, the collection reportedly holds 907,750 pages of
material including 267 monograph volumes and 955 serial volumes. There are
few such free resources of important historical data available online
today.
Visitors may view images of the actual pages of the original publications.
Because all of the scanned material has been "OCRed" (i.e., processed for
so-called "Optical Character Recognition"), the collection can be
searched. The site's search function allows for fairly sophisticated
searches of the full text of the materials in the collection.
The "Advanced Search" page located at
http://cdl.library.cornell.edu/moa/moa_adv.html is a good place
to start. There a visitor must choose from six basic types of search: (1)
Simple Search (allows visitors to search for a word or phrase wherever it
appears in the collection); (2) Boolean Search (uses basic Boolean search
terms such as AND, OR) to find simple combinations of two or three words
on a page or in a text; (3) Proximity Search (finds phrases as well as
words near one another); (4) Frequency Search (finds texts that contain a
term appearing at least a specified number of times); (5) Bibliographic
Search (finds texts by author or title); and (6) Index Search (permits
visitors to browse through alphabetized lists of texts organized by
authors, names, titles or subject headings). Although you should use the
search that best suits your particular needs, I have found the Proximity
Search to be the most helpful for my own purposes. That said, if you are
searching for a simple phrase (such as "Thomas Pell") the Simple Search is
the quickest and easiest way to search the collection.
To try the search, go to the Simple Search page located at
http://cdl.library.cornell.edu/moa/moa_search.html. Try
searching for Thomas Pell. I have noticed that the system seems to ignore
quotation marks, so the search results are the same whether you search for
the phrase with or without quotation marks. The screen shot below shows
the Simple Search screen.

If you type Thomas Pell into the "Word or phrase" box and then click on
the gray button marked "Submit Query" your search should retrieve: (1) 8
matches in 3 books; and (2) 2 matches in 1 journal article. Clicking on
the search results links, you can review search results in the following
resources:
1. Bunker, Mary Powell, Long Island Genealogies: Families of Albertson,
Andrews, Bedell (1 match in 1 of 354 pages).
2. Nadal, E. S., The New Parks Of The City Of New York (2 matches in 1 of
17 pages).
3. Pelletreau, William S., et al., Early Wills of Westchester County, New
York, from 1664 to 1784; Also the Genealogy of "The Havilands" of
Westchester County, and Descendants of Hon. James Graham (Watkinson and
Ackerley Families) With Genealogical and Historical Notes (6 matches in 4
of 506 pages).
4. Tuckerman, Bayard, Peter Stuyvesant, Director-General for the West
India Company in New Netherland (1 match in 1 of 204 pages).
All of the hits seem promising. As an example, select the third choice:
William S. Pelletreau's work. You first will see bibliographic information
for the work and will observe that it was published in 1898 by F. P.
Harper. You have the option to search within the entire work. You can
click on links that will take you to the pages (pp. 73, 298, 318 and 423)
of the text containing the phrase "Thomas Pell". You also can click on
links that will take you to the first page, the table of contents, the
title page, and the volume index. Click on each of the links to pages
where the phrase "Thomas Pell" appears.
Alas, in each instance the "Thomas Pell" referenced is a descendant of
John Pell, 2nd Lord of the Manor of Pelham -- not Thomas Pell, 1st Lord of
the Manor. In each instance, there is a summary of an 18th century will
involving or witnessed by Thomas Pell.
Such a search provides a simple example of the power that such a
collection holds for online research. The "Making of America" collection
is an incredible resource that simply cannot be ignored no matter what
aspect of Pelham history you are researching. Happy hunting!
Please Visit the
Historic Pelham
Web Site
Located at
http://www.historicpelham.com/
posted by Blake A. Bell @
5:32 AM
Comment
Click Here To View the Actual Blog Posting for
June 20, 2005.
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