As a result in many cases we have only the name of a person, and one or two details of their family and community histories. For other people, we have their Hebrew names, parents, spouse, date of marriage, and some of their children. And for other people we have information on a person's community involvement, occupation, places where they lived, and other biographical information.
Given the diversity of sources , there will be duplicate records for some people in the database, particularly for women who appear in one list with their given names and in other lists as the wife of their spouse. As we have only started to review information sources, the omission of a name does not imply that the person does not have Maine roots. As one of the principal sources of data has been death-related records, we have departed from traditional geneological convention in not using birth names as the last name.
When searching for a persons do check variations in the spelling of names. To assist this process, you can use "*" as a wildcard character in any part of a name. If when you have found a person record that is incomplete or inaccurate, please use the "edit" button to update the information or forward the DOPJ at mindspring project the corrected information. Last Updated : Jan 10, 2010Page Displayed : Monday September 06, 2010