Census Records for Latin America and the Hispanic United States by Lyman D. Platt Hispanic Confederates by John O’Donnell-Rosales, M.A. Colonists from Scotland Emigration to North America by Ian Charles Cargill Graham Scots in the Mid Atlantic States 1783-1883 by David Dobson Ships from Scotland to North America 1830 – 1860 by David Dobson Nineteenth Century Germans to America: A Consolidation of 6 Pamphlets Identifying Emigrants from Baden-Wuertemburg, Hamburg, Bremen, Nordrhein-Westfalen, Rheinland-Pfalz, & Schleswig-Holstein by Clifford Neal Smith German-American Genealogical Research from Bremen to America 14 Rare Emigrant Ship Lists by Clifford Neal Smith German American Genealogical Research Monograph #6 Emigration from the Principality of Hessen-Hanau, Germany 1741-1767 by Clifford Neal Smith Morton Alan Directory of Euroopean Passenger Steamship Arrivals (from 1890 – 1930 Port of NY) & 1904-1926 Ports of NY, Philadelphia, Boston & Baltimore Professional Genealogy Ed. Elizabeth Shown Mills Heritage Society Blue Book Tranatlantic Voyages 1600 – 1699 by David Dobson New in the Microfilm Room: We have two new microfilm reader printers that print 8.5 x 11 paper copies, OR will copy to a CD or your Thumb/USB/Jump drive. This can be used with census, newspaper or other microfilmed materials. Copies are only ten cents, and images can often be cleaned up beautifully. You will need your library card number (or reciprocal card number or guest card) to use them. Stop by and visit the library when the rush of the holidays is over for you. We've got over 1/2 the US censuses, many Omaha area historic newspapers, over 8,000 other books (and not just from Nebraska, by any means). The Greater Omaha Genealogy Society exchanges newsletters with many societies across the country--and they're at the library in the book room too. There's a small collection of Revolutionary War Pension & Bounty Land microfilms, native American tribal rolls (Dawes rolls, and Omaha area tribes), Germans to America (and many other _____ to America volumes as well.) Ancestry.com is provided free with your Omaha library card (or reciprocal library card--Lincoln, and Council Bluffs to name 2) or you can get a guest card for $2 a day if your local library isn't reciprocal with Omaha Public Library. PS: Stop by the G.O.G.S. website at _www.GOGSmembers.wordpress.com_ (http://www.GOGSmembers.wordpress.com) or the obit index site: _www.Omahaobits.wordpress.com_ (http://www.Omahaobits.wordpress.com) when you have a chance. The obit site will have almost 2,000 new names going up with the next update...most of which are pre-1978 (since after that, Omaha World Herald obits have been clipped & filed in the genealogy book room. Unfortunately some obit cards have been stolen by some who think that "it's my family, so I'm entitled to take the copy instead of making a copy.") The index is a LONG way from being complete, and is being done by volunteers...want to help? Classes sponsored by G.O.G.S. and the library will start again in January. There will be flyers at the Omaha libraries, and other places. They are free, but pre-registration is required so we can have enough handouts. Third Saturday mornings (except May) through June, 9 to about noon at the Mormon Trail Center in Omaha. Why the Trail Center? Because we have had classes over 100 at times, and the largest class room at the library only holds 50. At the Trail Center, we'll have enough room for everybody (unless we get 500 people--then we might have a problem) **************************************See AOL's top rated recipes (http://food.aol.com/top-rated-recipes?NCID=aoltop00030000000004)