VA-ROOTS Archives

June 2012

VA-ROOTS@LISTLVA.LIB.VA.US

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Subject:
From:
Gale Fuller <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Research and writing about Virginia genealogy and family history." <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Mon, 25 Jun 2012 10:17:02 -0500
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Exciting Tim!! Then you do not have to print at the LVA. You can wait until 
you get home and print on your own computer! That is terrific. Now if I can 
just get a trip planned to Richmond to visit the LVA!!!

-----Original Message----- 
From: Tim Spradling
Sent: Monday, June 25, 2012 10:07 AM
To: [log in to unmask]
Subject: Re: Visiting LVA

Good info Bill. They now have most of the microfilm readers controlled by
computer. You can download anything on the screens to a flash/thumb drive
too  for use on your computers


In a message dated 6/25/2012 10:52:06 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time,
[log in to unmask] writes:

You park  in the basement and then you take the elevator to the first floor
(unless  you are parked somewhere else and you just walk directly into the
first  floor from the sidewalk).  Just go up the big stairs from the first
floor to the second floor and turn left at the top to go to the "genealogy
section."  They usually have a person at the desk in that area who  can
help
you.  There is also another desk where a person will assign  you a
microfilm
reader, if you want to use one (an you almost certainly  will).  The
cabinets
that contain the microfilm reels are also in  that same area, and someone
can
direct you to the county or area of  interest within those cabinets (and
they
are also marked on the front of  each drawer of each cabinet).  They also
have an "archive room" where  many original documents are kept, and you can
go in there and ask for  assistance, as well.  There are also computers in
that same general  area that you can use (and you can access the LOVa
website
on them, it you  want to refresh your memory on what the library has
available....and  where).  There are also books along the outside wall that
contain  censuses.

If you want a Will from Hanover Co., VA, for example, you  just pull the
microfilm reel from the Hanover Co., VA drawer that contains  Wills .  In
some cases, the index for Wills, deeds, etc. may be on  one film reel, and
that will then direct you to another reel on which the  document of
interest
is actually located (while some other reels have the  index at the front,
and
the actual document is simply "deeper" in that  same reel).  Most of the
microfilm readers do not allow you to print  anything, so if you find
something that you want to print, you will have  to take the reel and
reload
it on one of the few readers that do have a  "print function." The staff
will
be glad to show you how to do that.   You can apply for a library card, and
you can then "apply money" (say, for  example $10) to that card (they have
an
"ATM-like" machine that will let  you do that).  You can then insert that
card into the microfilm  printer to pay for any/all copies that you want to
make.

The other  side of that floor of the library (to the right of the top of
the
big  stairs) has a large section of books that are arraigned by county.
You
may find census, marriage, deed, etc., etc. information over there that
you
did not find in the microfilm (as well as county histories and things  like
that).

Bill Davidson

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