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Genealogy
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Dictionary
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S
- SASE
- Self-Addressed, Stamped Envelope. An envelope that has been
fully addressed to you with adequate postage. A SASE is included
in queries to ensure the person responding to a query does not
have to spend money on providing the reply.
- Scots-Irish
- Descendants of Presbyterian Scots who came to North America
by way of Northern Ireland. Their ancestors had been moved or
were enticed to move to Northern Ireland early in the 17th century.
The purpose was to settle Ireland with a more loyal (e.g., not
Catholic) subjects. Those who already occupied the land were dispossessed.
Later, many came to the North American colonies and settled first
in Pennsylvania then moved south and west.
- secondary evidence
- Evidence that is inferior to primary evidence. It is usually
evidence that was created after the event, possibly several months
or years after the event occurred.
- senior
- See Junior for a complete explanation.
- service records
- Military records about individual soldiers including enlistment,
muster rolls, discharge, re-enlistment, etc. See NATF 80.
- sexton
- A person -- either a church officer or employee -- who takes
care of the church property, sometimes the person responsible
for ringing the bells, and may also dig graves. In some areas
this term has come to describe the person or organization responsible
for the care of a cemetery. The sexton may have the cemetery records.
- sibling
- A brother or sister. People with the same parents.
- sic
- A Latin term indicating the text reads exactly as shown. A good
way to remember the meaning of this term is the phrase spelling
in context... meaning that the words and phrasing are exactly
as intended or as copied from the original document.
- sister
- See Brother for an explanation.
- Slave Schedule
- A part of the U.S. Federal census in 1850 and 1860 completed
to count slaves.
- smallpox
- A highly contagious viral disease characterized by fever and
weakness and skin eruption with pustules that form scabs that
slough off leaving scars.
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- smoothbore musket
- A musket with a smooth barrel. These weapons shot a round ball
of lead that usually broke the skin and fractured the bone if
struck. The ball rarely had enough energy to enter and exit the
body so most wounds caused by these balls could easily get infected
from dirt and other things that might cling to a metal ball.
- soc.
- Abbreviation for Society.
- Social Security Death Index (SSDI)
- The SSDI is an index of those individuals who died with an active
Social Security claim in the U.S. The index is an excellent resource
for finding death date and (possibly) location for a person. Though
computerized record keeping didn't begin until the 1960s, these
records generally include some deaths in the 1950s. Efforts are
underway to expand this index to be more inclusive of all Social
Security death records. Related Topic: Social Security.
- Social Security Number
- The account number for each participant in the U.S. Social Security
System. Related Topic: Social Security.
- Social Security System
- A government sponsored and run old age pension system in the
U.S. first established in 1937 during the Great Depression. Related
Topic: Social Security.
- Society of Friends
- One of the religious groups to form in England during the 17th
century. Their strict beliefs and refusal to accept the Established
Church in England led to religious persecution. Many immigrated
to North America and settled along the eastern seaboard, especially
in the north. William Penn, founder of the Pennsylvania colony
was a Quaker and welcomed his brethren as well as other groups
that were persecuted at home. Quakers would not use words based
on pagan cultures so their records, grave stones, etc. reference
"the second month" instead of February since the name
was derived from a Roman **********
- soundex
- A way of indexing information based on how the word sounds rather
than how it is spelled. A phonetic indexing system.
- source
- The record that provides information supporting a fact, claim,
or assertion. Some sources provide definitive proof -- these are
usually called primary evidence -- while others provide support
of the claim through a preponderance of evidence. Sources should
be listed in a bibliography at the end of the report or document.
spinster In many records this could refer to any unmarried woman
over the age of 18.
spouse A husband or wife.
- SSDI
- See Social Security Death Index.
- SSN
- Abbreviation for Social Security Number. See Social Security
Death Index.
- St.
- Abbreviation for Saint or street (as in an address).
- state
- The government of a nation. In the U.S. and many other countries
this term also applies to a geo-political subdivision of the nation
(i.e., the State of New Jersey). See Also: Province.
- State Archives
- Each state in the United States maintains an Archive library
containing information specific, but not limited, to that state.
State Archives can be critical when researching a Confederate
soldier but don't limit your search to just that.
statute A law.
- step
- Used to indicate degree of kinship.
- stepbrother
- The son of one's stepparent by a former marriage.
- stepchild
- A child of one spouse by a former marriage who has not been
adopted by the other spouse of the current marriage.
- stepfather
- The husband of a child's natural or birth mother by a later
marriage.
- stepmother
- The wife of a child's natural father by a later marriage.
- stepparent
- Either a stepfather or stepmother.
- stepsister
- The daughter of one's stepparent by a former marriage.
- sutler
- A person who follows troops in the field or in garrison to sell
food, drink, and other supplies not provided by the army.
- surg.
- Surgeon.
- surname
- The name of the family to which a person belongs. In the so-called
Western Civilization the surname appears last; in Asian cultures
the surname usually appears first.
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