Time Detective Research & Genealogy Services

Time Detective Research & Genealogy Services Full service historic and genealogical research. Nationwide services. Cultural resource management, genealogy, document recovery, collection management.

With over 30 years of experience in the field of historic research, you will find the expert services you require for all your historic research needs with Time Detective Research Services. RESEARCH SERVICES

* Regional and Local History
* Historical Biography
* Genealogy
* Cultural Resource Management Research
and report preparation
* Document Retrieval, reproduction, and
transcription
*

On site photography

On site research is conducted at archives, museums, libraries, records offices of local and regional governments, cemeteries, historical societies, and any other repositories of information that are available to a specific region. OTHER SERVICES

* Professional writing.

* Private and public collection preservation and cataloging services, including historic documents, photographs, family memorabilia, and genealogies.

*Presentations and public speaking on historic and genealogical research methods.

*Genealogical and historic research seminars and classes. RATES

Pricing varies by the type of research project and the difficulty, with discount rates given for large ongoing projects. Pricing ranges from $30.00 - $50.00 per hour. I require a retainer at the onset of a project. Remaining balances on acccounts will be billed as milestone payments.. Project minimum is 4 hours. If you are interested in discussing your project, please email me and I will provide you with a free estimate.

05/19/2017

A librarian in England has stumbled upon a rare, 540-year-old page from the early days of book printing.

Remember Jamestown?  Well, what about Popham?
05/19/2017

Remember Jamestown? Well, what about Popham?

Many of the details of the Popham colony have been lost to history, but in its heyday the tiny settlement in Maine was considered a direct r...

The Hindenburg on Fire...
05/06/2017

The Hindenburg on Fire...

05/06/2017

On this day in 1937, the German airship Hindenburg, the largest dirigible ever built, explodes as it arrives in Lakehurst, New Jersey. Thirty-six people died in the fiery accident that has since become iconic, in part…

04/20/2015

Offering a special on Time Detective Research & Genealogy Services for the rest of April, May, and June, 2015. Discount rates for research projects in Northern California region. Contact me at [email protected] for more information.

04/20/2015

The recent opening of discussions between the U.S. and Cuba brings to mind that it was on this day, April 20, 1980, that Castro announced the Mariel Boatlift, whereby Cubans were free to board boats and emigrate to the U.S. This mass emigration was prompted by a shortage of housing and jobs in the midst of the ailing Cuban economy. Unrest within the poplulation led to five men driving a bus through the fence at the Peruvian embassy to gain political asylum. Gunfire erupted and one of the Cuban guards on the street was killed.

Castro wanted to put the men on trial for the guard's death but the Peruvians would not allow this. On April 6 about 10,000 Cubans sought asylum on the grounds of the Peruvian embassy. Some of these folks were moved to the Costa Rican and Spanish embassies but the onslaught continued.

Castro then agreed that the port of Mariel would be opened for those wishing to leave Cuba with the caveat that they would have someone to meet them when they arrived in the U.S. Many Cubans already in the U.S. hired boats to meet the incoming emigrants.

125,000 people fled Cuba during the boatlift. Of that number, 27 died on the overloaded boats, with 14 being drowned when a boat capsized.

President Jimmy Carter jailed more than 1,700 of the emigrants when they arrived after discovering that a number of the exiles had been released from prisons and mental facilities. These detainees underwent deportation hearings. Another 587 were held in refugee camps until they could find sponsors.

The Mariel boatlift was ended in October, 1980 through an agreement between the U.S. and Cuban governments.

Today in History - January 13, 1929 - Nearly 50 years after the famous gunfight at the O.K. Corral, Wyatt Earp dies quie...
01/13/2015

Today in History - January 13, 1929 - Nearly 50 years after the famous gunfight at the O.K. Corral, Wyatt Earp dies quietly in Los Angeles at the age of 80.

The Earp brothers had long been competing with the Clanton-McClaury ranching families for political and economic control of Tombstone, Arizona, and the surrounding region. On October 26, 1881, the simmering tensions finally boiled over into violence, and Wyatt, his brothers Virgil and Morgan, and his close friend, Doc Holliday, killed three men from the Clanton and McLaury clans in a 30-second shoot-out on a Tombstone street near the O.K. Corral. A subsequent hearing found that the Earps and Holliday had been acting in their capacity as law officers and deputies, and they were acquitted of any wrongdoing. However, not everyone was satisfied with the verdict, and the Earps found their popularity among the townspeople was on the wane. Worse, far from bringing an end the long-standing feud between the Earps and Clanton-McLaurys, the shoot-out sparked a series of vengeful attacks and counterattacks.

In late December 1881, the Clantons and McLaurys launched their vendetta with a shotgun ambush of Virgil Earp; he survived, but lost the use of his left arm. Three months later, Wyatt and Morgan were playing billiards when two shots were fired from an unknown source. Morgan was fatally wounded.

As a U.S. deputy marshal, Wyatt had a legal right and obligation to bring Morgan's killers to justice, but he quickly proved to be more interested in avenging his brother's death than in enforcing the law. Three days after Morgan's murder, Frank Stillwell, one of the suspects in the murder, was found dead in a Tucson, Arizona, rail yard. Wyatt and his close friend Doc Holliday were accused—accurately, as later accounts revealed—of murdering Stillwell. Wyatt refused to submit to arrest, and instead fled Arizona with Holliday and several other allies, pausing long enough to stop and kill a Mexican named Florentino Cruz, who he believed also had been involved in Morgan's death.

In the years to come, Wyatt wandered throughout the West, speculating in gold mines in Idaho, running a saloon in San Francisco, and raising thoroughbred horses in San Diego. At the turn of the century, the footloose gunslinger joined the Alaskan gold rush, and he ran a saloon in Nome until 1901. After participating in the last of the great gold rushes in Nevada, Wyatt finally settled in Los Angeles, where he tried unsuccessfully to find someone to publicize his many western adventures. Wyatt's famous role in the shootout at the O.K. Corral did attract the admiring attention of the city's thriving new film industry. For several years, Wyatt became an unpaid technical consultant on Hollywood Westerns, drawing on his colorful past to tell flamboyant matinee idols like William Hart and Tom Mix how it had really been. When Wyatt died in 1929, Mix reportedly wept openly at his funeral.

Ironically, the wider fame that eluded Wyatt in life came soon after he died. A young journalist named Stuart Lake published Wyatt Earp: Frontier Marshall, a wildly fanciful biography that portrayed the gunman as a brave and virtuous instrument of frontier justice. Dozens of similarly laudatory books and movies followed, ensuring Wyatt Earp an enduring place in the popular American mythology of the Wild West. [ref: The History Channel]

01/07/2015

Research services provided for the following - Contact me for a free estimate.

*Cultural Resource Management Firms
*Architectural Historians
*Non-Profit Foundations
*Historical Societies
*Individuals
*Authors and Journalists
*Students & Doctoral Candidates
*Attorneys
*Private Investigators
*Veterans and Military Histories
*Government Agencies
*Television, Film, & Documentary Producers

Too late for Atlantis but a great find
01/07/2015

Too late for Atlantis but a great find

Photograph by Franck Goddio / Hilti Foundation / Christoph Gerigk 1,200 years ago the ancient Egyptian city of Heracleion disappeared beneath the Mediterranean. Founded around 8th century BC...

Biographical snapshots
01/06/2015

Biographical snapshots

Willard Asylum for the Insane, located in New York, was built in 1869. Usually the patients stayed there their entire life. Eventually the site was abandoned,…

Have you found a not-so-charming ancestor in your genealogical research?  Head over to my blog to read about one of mine...
01/05/2015

Have you found a not-so-charming ancestor in your genealogical research? Head over to my blog to read about one of mine that was burned to death by Indians. http://thetimedetective.wordpress.com/

Historic Research, Archaeology, Genealogy, and Historic Preservation

Do you have what it takes to solve historic mysteries?  If so, then take your shot at these..
01/04/2015

Do you have what it takes to solve historic mysteries? If so, then take your shot at these..

Although many of life's great mysteries remain unsolved, there are some lesser known ones that also have stumped researchers for centuries.

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