This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/AFB.2ACE/1830.2 Message Board Post: In World Tree the have Lydia Pease as her maiden name. In Groton vitals they had William Longley m.may 15, 1672 Lydia, Deliverance Pease I thought it was a seperate name. do you have ancestry you could look it up in Groton vitals.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/AFB.2ACE/1830.1 Message Board Post: I looked every where but could not fine a last name for LYdia. LDS website NEHGS does not have Groton vitals for before 1850 Ancestry has Groton vitals and has her marriage listed but no maiden name. I also checked Gen circles and no one there has her maiden name.......I forgot to try world-tree in Ancestry I will do that............
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/AFB.2ACE/1829.1.1.1 Message Board Post: I could not locate the family in 1900. 1910 census: 2-wd Lowell, Middlesex Co., MA Wilfred StCyr-41-married 19yrs-CD/CD/CD-immigrated 1891-weaver/woolen mill Clorence-wife-40-married 19 yrs-children born 8/6 living-CD/CD/CD-immigrated 1891 Henry-son-18-MA/CD/CD-finisher/shoe shop Evaline-daughter-16-MA/CD/CD-dressmaker-department store? Emery-son-13-MA/CD/CD Almodor-son-9-MA/CD/CD Philfarge?-son-4-MA/CD/CD Leo-son-2-MA/CD/CD 1930 census: Dracut, Middlesex Co., MA (no # given) Methuem Street Clarine StCyr-60-widowed-owns home-value of home $3600-age at marriage 21-immigrated 1891-CD/CD/CD Almanzor-son-27-MA/CD/CD-picker ?/cotton mill Romeo-son-17-MA/CD/CD I could not locate Emery in 1930. There is a listing on Ancestry.com for a WW 1 Draft Reg, for Emory Joseph Stcyr, Middlesex Co., MA, You could request a lookup for it. I do not have access to Ancestry.com SS Death Index Emery StCyr -age 72 - b. April 6, 1897, d. July 1969 Adams, Berkshire, MA All the best, Nina
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/AFB.2ACE/1819.1.3.3.1 Message Board Post: Thank you for the info but it doesn't seem like any of those records are him. This is what I know about him - Frank Maresca born abt 1893, on the 1930 Census he said he immigrated in 1909 - very clear on Census - he is a Naturalized citizen, I assumed he arrived in Boston because I did not hear anything different, on that same Census he says he was 19 when 1st married - so if his birthyear is abt right he would have married in 1912 and I know their first child was born 1913, he did become a mason when here. Someone found my grandmother for me and she came over here with her father and brothers. I hope this helps you. Thank you again
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/AFB.2ACE/1831.1 Message Board Post: I have some great news for you...there is a very informative death record for your Julia (On NEHGS Mass VR 1843-1910; I am going to email it to you. Her maiden name was Bacon. It says she was born in Barre, MA. Wonderful! If I can find her birth, I will let you know. Lisa
Edward Rudolph born about 1878 in Woburn Ma. married Mary Morrison in Lynn Ma Jan 5, 1902. Mary had been born about 1878 as well, in Cape Breton NS. Her parents were Joseph Morriaon and Flora McIsaac. Edwards parents were John Rudolph and Sophie Marshall. Edward and Mary went on to have 4 children. I think they settled in Reading Ma where at least the younger children were born. The children were Charles, Florence, John*, and Mary. John* later married Alice Downs also from the Reading area. They lived in Reading Ma until 1954 when they moved to Wakefield until mid -late 1970's when the moved to Hampton NH. John and Alice also had four children (1 son, and 3 daughter) I would like to learn who Charles, Florence and Mary married, where, when, and who their children may have been. Where and when Charles, Florence and Mary died, aas well as where and when Mary and John's parents died. Thank you for any help. Most likely they would have died in Wakefield or Reading area. Dates I have no idea of but think after 1970 .but before 1990. most likely. Thank you for any help at all with this. Barbara
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/AFB.2ACE/1831 Message Board Post: Julia Getchell died August 8, 1903. I believe that at the time, she was a resident of Arlington, Mass. She lived at this address: 163 Hillside Ave, Arlington, MA. Julia was born about 1825 in Massachusetts. Her first marriage was to Simon Putnam in 1844. They settled in Afton, Washington, MN, where he died. Julia remarried Charles Getchell, who also died in MN. Julia moves in with her only living child (Mary Putnam Hale) and Mary's husband. This is in the 1900 census, and she dies in 1903. Julia was the daughter of Harry or Henry Bacon and Julia A. Whiting. I would be interested in tracing Julia back further. I would also be interested in finding any living relatives. I have been able to trace her daughter Mary Hale to 1930 and being that is the latest census we can access, that is as far as I have gone. Her daughter Mary Hale had the following children: Bertha L. (born about 1883 in MN, marries Herbert A. Sullwold), Florence (born about 1885 in MN), Myron E. (born about 1895 in Mass.), and Marjorie (born about 1899 in Mass.). I am also curious if that address on Hillside Ave. still exists, and if so if anyone would b! e willing to take a picture for me. Thanks!
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/5538/AFB.2ACE/1819.1.3.3 Message Board Post: Hope one of these records are of help to you! I found a Francesco Maresca on a 1928 Boston Passenger List who departed from France at that time. He is listed as a shipping agent. His nearest living relative is listed as Antonna Maresca of Sorrento, Italy. ------------------------------------------- Name: Francesco Maresca Arrival Date: 15 Oct 1928 Age: 31 years Estimated Birth Year: abt 1897 Gender: Male Ethnic Background: Italian Port of Departure: Cherbourg, France Ship Name: Republic Port of Arrival: Boston, Massachusetts Friend's Name: H Woods Last Residence: Italy Microfilm Roll Number: 340 ----------------------------------------------- Also found this Francesco on the NY Passenger List: Name: Francesco Maresca Arrival Date: 27 Aug 1880 Estimated Birth Year: abt 1850 Age: 30 Gender: Male Port of Departure: Sorrento Tyrian Destination: United States of America Place of Origin: Italy Ship Name: Tyrian Port of Arrival: New York Line: 38 Microfilm Serial: M237 Microfilm Roll: 430 List Number: 1111 Port Arrival State: New York Port Arrival Country: United States -------------------------------------------------- And I have attached a copy of the NY Petition for Naturalitaztion: Name: Francesco Maresca Naturalization Date: 19 May 1903 Former Nationality: Italian Birth Date: 16 May 1861 Arrival Port: New York, NY Arrival Date: 04 Apr 1888 Title and Location of Court: U S District Court, New York, NY Volume: 125 Record Number: 399
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/AFB.2ACE/1675.2.1.1.1 Message Board Post: Hi Kathryn! Its been more than 2 months and I wonder if you have learned any more about Ruth Ann(Rae) death. I haven't yet, been able to talk with her parents. Want to do that in person one day, hopefully this Summer. I would still like to learn how she died and exactly where. Are you in touch with her parents at all? Hope all is well. Barbara
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/AFB.2ACE/1829.1.1 Message Board Post: Nina, Thank you so much for this info. Some if it I did get from the census. But not all these details. Were you able to find out if they show up in 1930 anywhere or back to 1910? My Dad was born in North Adams Mass in 1897 Berkshire co.and I don't know when they moved to the Lowell area. If you had any expense's for this info let me know. Thanks again Em
I just checked my copy of Hist. of Lynn and dont find here maiden name there either. Neither does Savage. (see below) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Subject: William Longley, Sr. a 1st Proprietor of Groton formerly of Lynn Source: Epitaphs from the Old Burying Ground, Groton, Mass. by Dr. Samuel A. Green, Boston, 1878. p. 244 - Appendix William Longley was among the earliest settlers of Groton and was the owner of a thirty acre right. He was the son of Richard Longley of Lynn, where in the town records the name is sometimes spelled Langley. He had been one of the Selectmen of Lynn and was clerk of the writs there in the year 1655. He removed about the year 1661 to Groton where he was one of the selectmen in the year 1665 and town clerk in 1666. He died Nov. 29, 1680 leaving a Will dated six days before his death. His widow Joanna afterward married Benjamin Crispe whom she survived; she died at Charlestownin the year 1698. The following is a list of his children, though probably not in the order of their birth: 1. John Longley b. abt. 1640, married Hannah____ and had several children. 2. Elizabeth Longley m. Sept. 7, 1669, James Blood & died abt. 1677 leaving two daughters, Mary Blood & Elizabeth Blood who married brothers named Shattuck. 3. Anna Longley (or Hannah) who married June 30, 1666, Thomas Tarbell, Jr. and had several children. 4. Mary Longley who m. Samuel Leaman, prob. of Charlestown. 5. Sarah Longley b. Oct 15, 1660; m. June17, 1679, Thomas Rand of Charlestown. 6. Lydia Longley who m. James Nutting and had six children 7. William Longley Jr. who married May 15, 1673, Lydia _____. Note Torrey, p.472 has he m. his 1st wife Lydia ,May 15, 1672. and he m. (2) Deliverance Crispe He was town clerk in the year 1687 and from 1692 till his death in 1694. William Longley lived on the east side of the Hollis road about a mile from the village. A melancholy interest is connected with the site, as it was here that he and his wife and five children were massacred by the Indians in their assault on the town July 27, 1694. Three more of their children, Lydia, John & Betty were carried off by the savages and taken to Canada. Lydia was sold to the French and placed in the Congregation of Notre Dame, a convent in Montreal where she embraced the Roman Catholic faith and died July 20, 1758 at the advanced age of 84 years. Betty died soon after her capture from hunger and exposure and John Longley, the third child remained with the savages for more than four years when he was ransomed and brought back against his own will. He was known to his captors as John Angary. After he came home his sister Lydia wrote from Canada urging him to abjure the Protestant religionbut he remained true to his early faith. Their grandmother, the widow of Benjamin Crispe, April 13, 1698, made her Will which was admitted to probate on the 28th of the following December, and in it she remembered these absent children as follows: "I give and bequeath unto my three grand-children that are in Captivity - if they return, viz., three books, one of them a Bible, another a Sermon book treating of faith, and the other a Psalme book." John Longley returned about the time that his grandmother died. Transcribed by Janice Farnsworth Subject: William Longley Source: History of Lynn, Mass. by Alonzo Lewis & James R. Newhall, Boston, 1865. p.155 William Longley, clerk of the writs of Lynn, Mass., in 1655, son of Richard Longley of Lynn p.175 At a court held at Ipswich, March 26, 1661, Andrew Mansfield, "aged about thirty- eight yeares" made affadavit that he had been an inhabitant of Lynn "aboute twenty three yeares," and that William Longley came at the time he did and "by himselfe and familye;" had remained an inhabitant, having bought a house and land; that in 1649 this William Longley, at a general town meeting, demanded his portion of land should be laid out, according to the town records; that "the records were vewed and therein was found 40 acres granted to one Richard Longley. But his name being William Longley and not Richard, as also sum asking the said Longley whether hee had paid for the Laying it out; he answering that he had not," the majority voted that it was not his. Mr. Mansfield also testified that Longley had been called by the name Langleyand that he never knew an inhabitant of Lynn called either Longley or Langley, but THIS William Longley and his ffamilye." Subject: William Longley Source: History of Groton by Caleb Butler, 1848. p.278 William Longley Sr., owned a thirty acre right at Groton. He died Nov. 29, 1680. John & William were his sons. William Longley, Jr. was town clerk six years and held that office when he and his family were slain by the Indians in 1694. John Longley, the son of William Longley Jr., who was carried away, a captive, was also town clerk six years, a deacon of the church from 1722 to the time of his death, 1750 and town treasurer and parish treasurer for many years. He represented the town in the General Court three years. He had nine sons and three daughters; five of them by his first wife, Sarah, one of the eight daughters of Capt Jonas Prescott and seven by his his last wife. His son Joseph was a soldier in the French War and died of a wound at Greenbush, New York, 1758. This Josephwas father of Col. Edmund Longley late of Hawleyand grandfather of Gen. Thomas Longley of the same place. Not less than fifteen of the name, in Groton and its vicinity were soldiers in the Revolutionary war. Transcribed by Janice Farnsworth Subject: William Longley, Jr. Source: Various Groton books William Longley, Jr. who died July 17,1694 at Charlestown, Mass. m. (1) Lydia Pease on May 15, 1672 at Groton, Mass. He m. (2) Deliverance Crispe. William Longley Jr. and his 2nd wife, Deliverance Crisp, and five of their children were killed by Indians on July 27, 1694. Lydia Longley and John and Betty Longley were taken prisoners. On the long march, Betty died. John Longley was a prisoner until after the French and Indian War and then released. He never talked of his experience. Lydia Longley was taken to Montreal and sold to the French. She became a nun and never returned to Groton. His first wife, Lydia Pease m. William Longley Jr. May 15, 1672 at Groton. Their Children: 1. Lydia Longley b. April 14, 1674 at Groton; d. July 21, 1758 in Montreal, Canada. 2. William Longley b. Dec 17,1675 at Groton; d.July 27, 1694 at Groton. Deliverance Crispe was born about 1650 at Watertown, Mass. She died July 27, 1694 at Charlestown, Mass. She m. as his 2nd wife, William Longley Jr. Their children: 1. Jemima Longley b. 1680 at Groton; she d. July27,1694 at Charlestown,. Mass. 2. John Longley b.1682/1683; d. May 25, 1750 3. a child Longley b. 1684 d. July 27, 1694 at Groton 4. Joseph Longley b. Jan 6, 1686 at Groton; d. July 27, 1694 at Charlestown, Mass. 5. a child Longley b. 1688 at Groton, d. July 27, 1694 at Groton, Mass. 6. Elizabeth Longley b. 1690 at Groton; she d. July 1694 in Canada ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Savage Dictionary WILLIAM, Groton, s. of the preced. by w. Lydia, wh. he m. 15 Mar 1672, had Lydia, b. 1 Mar. 1674; William, 17 Feb. 1676; and other ch. beside Joseph, 6 Jan. 1687; was town clk. six yrs. and with w. and four or five ch. k. by the Ind. 27 July 1694. His s. John was carr. to Canada, and ransom. aft. five yrs. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ History and Genealogy Freely Shared Janice Farnsworth http://tfeeney.esmartbiz.com/janice.htm Toni Feeney http://www.tfeeney.esmartbiz.com/page7.htm
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/AFB.2ACE/1828.1 Message Board Post: Where would any of us be without some help in this venture (or is it an obsession???) of tracing our family trees? Keep going and best of luck! Lisa
A school in Sudbury is named after him - the Ephraim Curtis Middle School. Peg -------------- Original message ---------------------- From: MAMIDDLE-D-request@rootsweb.com >Does anyone know anything, birth, marriage, death of an Ephraim >Curtis who was married to a Mary Stone and whose daughter Mary >Curtis was born Dec. 29, 1710 in Sudbury.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/rw/AFB.2ACE/1829.1 Message Board Post: 1920 census: Dracut, Middlesex Co., MA Alfred St Cyr-50-home owned free-immigrated 1892-CD/CD/CD-carpenter/head Clareu-wife-49-immigrated 1892-CD/CD/CD Henery-son-27-MA/CD/CD-repairman/car shop Evelyn-daughter-22-MA/CD/CD-dressmaker/? Emery-son-21-MA/CD/CD Almondo-son-19-MA/CD/CD William-son-14-MA/CD/CD Lyle Leo-son-12-MA/CD/CD Roures?-son-7-MA/CD/CD (the last son is listed on a second page and the street is Methuem? street. I cound not make out the street on the first page)
POSTER FOR THE EVENT Preserve Massachusetts Barns "Barn Talk Gathering" Old Barns: A Gathering on Preserving & Adapting Barns for the 21st Century. Program Outline: . The importance of good roof repair Robert Adam, Dept. Head of Preservation Carpentry North Bennett Street School .Barn Maintenance for long-term Preservation. Aaron Sturgis, owner of Preservation Timber Framing Inc. .Barn Exop: presenting local craftspeople & their services in an informal setting. Free Admission - made possible by a grant from the Groton Trust Funds Lecture Fund. The program is free and open to the public. Lunch: available for purchase. Saturday, April 22, 2006 10 a.m. to 2 p.m Location: The Williams Barn 160 Chicopee Row Groton, Mass. 01450 For complete information visit _www.preservationmass.org_ (http://www.preservationmass.org) Co-sponsored by William Barn Committee, Town of Groton, Mass. 978-448-1192 Preservation Massachusetts Barn Task Force 617-723-3383 _www.preservationmass.org_ (http://www.preservationmass.org)
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Classification: Query Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/AFB.2ACE/1830 Message Board Post: Hi , I'm looking for anyone who could do a look up or already knows what the maiden name is for a Lydia Longley. She was born 1651 in Groton, Middlesex, MA. d. ? in Groton, MA she married William Longley 12 may 1672 in Groton, MA He was born in 1640 in Groton, MA. d. 27 July 1694 in an indian massacre, along with his 2nd wife, the Widow, Deliverance (Pease) Crispe, and 5 of his eight children. (Lydia was their mother, but died of natural causes). If anyone knows of Lydias' maiden name, please let me know. Thankyou Vanessa
Marilyn Green Day, Westford, Mass. aka _margreenda@aol.com_ (mailto:margreenda@aol.com) , just emailed asking me topost this item to MAMiddle for her. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Historic Old Barns of Groton, Mass. Hello all I thought that you or someone you know may be interesting in our “Barn Talk” Gathering next Saturday the 22nd in Groton. I can assure you that the two primary speakers are two of the best in the business and a not to be missed opportunity to learn how to save and restore historic barns and other out buildings. Thanks for any effort to help spread the word! Charlie Charles H. Mc Colough 781.275.9102 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
From The Concord Enterprise, 27 May 1914 - Acton Center: George Tucker is putting in a hot water heater and electric lights; Otis H. Forbush will auction the real estate and household goods of the late Lucy J. Stone of Hudson, and personal property in South Framingham, Mass., for Mrs. S. Helen Gould; the Congregational church will show stereopticon pictures of the Civil War accompanied by music on the Victrola. West Acton: Miss Vivian Reed is assisting with the work at the postoffice; the West Acton Tennis club held a social and dance in G.A.R. hall; Arthur H. Wetherbee received his new Oakland touring car from Arthur Nelson; D. H. Hall and sons, D. B. Hall and A. Stanley Hall, enjoyed an automobile trip to New York; George McDonald of Concord, father of Mrs. Herman Chaplain, deceased; Isaac Davis Post G.A.R. was presented with a new flag. South Acton: vsitors include Mr. and Mrs. Charles Caldwell of Somerville, and Dr. R. C. Wiggin and wife and daughter of Cambridge; Mr. and Mrs. William Rawitzer had a baby girl; Florence Clifford had the mumps; R. L. Reed removed the old stone step from the cement sitting in front of the Congregational church last Monday, to his home where he will have it suitably inscribed. See http://www.rootsweb.com/~mamidnws/1914/MAY.html#27 for details of these and other stories. The complete run of The Concord Enterprise is available on microfilm at the Acton Memorial Library. See http://actonmemoriallibrary.org - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Dennis Ahern | Middlesex County Massachusetts Newspaper Abstracts Acton, Massachusetts | http://www.rootsweb.com/~mamidnws/index.html - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
Hello, I'd like to repost my interest in learning more about the arrival in the USA of my gr-gr-grandparents, William and Eliza HANNAH. The couple and their 2 baby daughters reportedly arrived in MA, or in the U.S. in August 1857.* In 1857, William was ~28 and Eliza was ~20. This week I posted a query on the Lanark List, and received some responses. With a few more details than I had the last time I posted (last year?), I'd like to summarize the family as of knowledge (or lack thereof) now: In 1854 (Dec.) William HANNAH and Eliza RITCHIE married in Glasgow, Scotland.** In 1856, they had a daughter, Mary Anna, and in 1857, they had a daughter, Elizabeth, both in Glasgow. In 1857, they migrated to the U.S. (Elizabeth told everyone she arrived at Age 3 mos., which makes the arrival, Aug. 1857.) In 1860 Census, William and Eliza HANNAH lived in Billerica, MA, and their children are Elizabeth, 3, and William, 10 months ! (Mary Anna, I'm told, died as a young child. But, I was told this morning her death was not recorded in MA. **) In 1870 Census, William and Eliza lived in Malden, and the children were William, 10, John, 9, and Isabella, 8. In 1880 Census, William and Eliza lived in Everett, and the children were John, 19, Isabella, 18, and George, 9. William and Eliza died in Everett in 1890 and 1895, and thus wouldn't have appeared in the 1900 Census. Of the children, from memory, besides Mary Anna, b1856, dying as a young child, Isabella "Bella," b~1862, died between Age 19-21 (d~1882), and I'm not recalling what happened to John HANNAH, b~1861. William HANNAH, b1859, married and moved to Harvard, MA, and remained there with his family. George HANNAH, b~1871, never married; and lived in Medford and Somerville. Thank you for your time. Enjoy your Holiday weekend ! Betty (near Lowell, MA) * My great-grandmother, Mrs. William KERR, nee' Elizabeth HANNAH, always told everyone that she arrived in this country when she was 3 months old "in a handbasket." ** William HANNAH was born in Donegal, Ireland, in 1828, but his parents were born in Scotland. Eliza RITCHIE was born in Donegal, Ireland, in 1837, but her parents were born in Scotland. I am told that the families were probably poor, and moved around a lot looking for work ! More notes: When I rechecked the 1860 Census, I found two other HANNAH's living in Billerica. Richard HANNAH, Age 30, and his wife, and Mary A. HANNAH, 22, living as servant in someone's home. Both had been born in Ireland. There is no way of knowing whether they were William's siblings, but it is possible. (I have not been able to find information on the siblings of William and Eliza.) I have no way of knowing which port William and Eliza and their babies arrived in. I'm told they might have come to PA and traveled north, or they could have arrived in NS / CAN and traveled south. Would a trip to NARA in Waltham be the easiest way for me to find out which ship they came on and which port they arrived at? If William and Eliza had a 2-year-old daughter when they left Scotland in 1857, but they did not have a 5-year-old daughter in the 1860 census, it has just occurred to me ... that she might not have survived the trip ! Someone just told me that her death is not mentioned in MA records, so another thought is that she died in whichever port they arrived at !
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Message Board URL: http://boards.ancestry.com/mbexec/msg/an/AFB.2ACE/1824.0 Message Board Post: If you live near Boston you can go into the Boston Public Library which has newspapers from all over the state,and the US. Actually they have newspapers from all over the world. I would imagine any major city library would have the same. Its free to look. Cheryl