Wado Jimbo, I'm such a novice at all this. Do I just click on the "address" you sent? I sure need a tutorial as to HOW to search EFFECTIVELY. I never even HEARD of people suing for Cherokee citizenship. Why did they do that, I thought in the 1800's you didn't have to PROVE you were Cherokee. Are we talking the blood-quantum thing? Or what? Thank you. You people are all a great help. Do you all know each other ? Each other's genealogy? You know, I forgot to list the little casual chatline about the greenbeans and such. It is ndnchat@onelist.com Coz dmx7@earthlink.net ----- Original Message ----- From: Jim T Musgrave <jimbo591@juno.com> To: <YOUNGBLOOD-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Saturday, July 24, 1999 7:56 AM Subject: [YOUNGBLOOD-L] Cherokee > I found 1Youngblood listed in the surname index of a rare old Cherokee > genealogy book at http://members.aol.com/rarebk > > At the site, they have the surname index of this rare old Cherokee > genealogy book called "Old Cherokee Families and Their Genealogy," with > lots of English names, they have posted the 1835 Cherokee census, and a > Cherokee genealogy tutorial that shows you how to conduct effective > Cherokee genealogy research. Also, they have posted the full index of a > book that shows people who sued in the 1800's for Cherokee citizenship. > > Once at the site, go to BOOKLISTS, then scroll down till you see the > books. For the tutorial, it will be about halfway down the page, and > then you can invoke it. The 1835 Cherokee census is posted within the > tutorial. > > Jimbo > > ___________________________________________________________________ > Get the Internet just the way you want it. > Free software, free e-mail, and free Internet access for a month! > Try Juno Web: http://dl.www.juno.com/dynoget/tagj. > >