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After setting up Family Tree Magazine’s booth for last week’s Federation
of Genealogical Societies conference in Birmingham, Ala., I headed down the street
a few blocks to the Birmingham Public Library to
check out the Linn-Henley Research Library. It’s in a lovely 1927 building (renovated
in 1984) and holds the library’s collections on Southern and local history and genealogy,
maps and the city archives.
Local records here include municipal and county records; church, civic organization
and business records; personal papers of local business and community leaders; and
more. You’ll also find plenty of microfilm here, including censuses and military records.
I’ve blogged
a bit about the library and its
digital collections, but here are some visuals to whet your genealogy research
appetite:
The main Linn-Henley library entrance.
The main reading room, decorated with murals by Ezra
Winter. Someone commented on Family
Tree Magazine‘s Facebook page that the room “smells just like a library should,”
and that’s exactly right. I love the smell of old books!
The print city and suburban directories start in 1883 and go into the 1990s.
Here’s a small part of the family histories collection.
Many libraries have surname files like this one, full of assorted records and papers
organized by family name. (There was nothing for Haddad or my other surnames—I wasn’t
expecting anything but you can bet I checked.) That envelope peeking out at the top
of the photo was attached to 1990s letters relatives sent each other about their family
history.

Visit the Birmingham Public
Library’s genealogy resources web pages here.

