Graves & Obits
- Newspaper Archive: Search for obituaries through the years. This is a fee site.
- Springfield Republican Obits: Recent obituaries for the Springfield MA area are available here. The recent ones are free.
- Springfield Republican Archives: Newspaper articles from the Republican from 1988 to present. The beginning of obits can be found here for free but if you want the whole article you have to pay (does not include the recent ones which are from the obit site above).
- Springfield Republican Archives - 1824-1989: This pay site allows you to access a wealth of data from 1824-1946 and other years up to 1989. There are many obituaries and marriage records and an occasional photograph of Springfield locals. This site filled in a lot of blanks for my Springfield clans.
- Find-a-Grave: People from all over find the gravestones that you can't get to and, in turn, you can do the same for others. Very cool.
- Quebec Province Cemeteries: Just what it says. Many cemeteries listed have lists of those buried in the cemetery.
- Cemeteries From The Eastern Towns of Quebec: The site is connected to the Northeast Kingdom site of Vermont and it's not difficult to see why. The people of Southern Canada and Northern Vermont seem to have traveled back and forth and interacted as if no border existed.
- Lancaster Burial Field: A listing for a very old graveyard in Lancaster MA. I believe it is also referred to as the Old Settler Field or Grounds or something like that. Lancaster is relevant to the Poulin's Knowlton family line. Knowlton is the starting point for our old New England branch.
- Connecticut Cemeteries: Just what it says.
- Massachusetts Cemeteries: Just what it says although it seems to concentrate on Northeast Massachusetts. Well, it actually has some from Maine, New Hampshire, and Vermont
- Cape Cod Gravestones: There are some very old stones here but then that makes sense because the Pilgrims landed on Cape Cod when they first arrived in 1620. You see a lot of winged death angels because, well, those old New Englanders just loved to scare themselves.
- Gravestones: The artistry of Massachusetts (generally) stones is celebrated here at Flickr.com. Boy, people gave a lot of thought to dying.
- RI Historical Cemeteries: