This article originally appeared in "Business, Institution, and Organization Records" by Kay Haviland Freilich, CG, CGL, and Ann Carter Fleming, CG, CGL in "The Source: A Guidebook to American Genealogy."
The records of Bethlehem Steel, formerly Lackawanna Steel, are in the Hagley Museum, Wilmington, DE. They are vast and are not digitized or online. An in-person visit is required to access them.
Grownups and kids alike have had a certain fascination with the railroads, and genealogists have a similar desire to know if any of their ancestors played a role in the development of the American railways. Tracking down employment records from the railroad companies can be a serious challenge.
Today on the blog we’re tackling one of our most frequently asked questions: "Why don’t you digitize everything?" and its related runner-up, “When will you be putting all your records on the web?”
City of Buffalo Public Art Collection Online (2007)
Public art in or owned by the City of Buffalo: monuments, sculpture, decorative objects, paintings, photographs. Has a web page for every object. This capture is from 2007 and may no longer be current.
This database consists of records of employees of the Brooklyn and Buffalo offices of the Internal Revenue Service. The records list for each employee name, title, address, compensation, appointment date, reason for termination of service, place and year of birth, prior civilian or military service, and names of relatives employed by the Federal government.
New York, Births and Christenings, 1640-1962 at FamilySearch.org
Name index to birth, baptism and christening records from the state of New York. Microfilm copies of these records are available at the Family History Library and FamilySearch Centers. Due to privacy laws, recent records may not be displayed. The year range represents most of the records. A few records may be earlier or later.