Over the next few weeks, we will feature articles about a number of Virginia repositories across the state as well as some of the more well known repositories in nearby Washington, DC. The articles will be presented by region, so if you are considering a research trip in Virginia before or after the NGS 2014 Family History Conference, you can plan your research trip in advance. The regions will include Central Virginia, Eastern Shore, Northern Neck, Northern Virginia, Piedmont, Shenandoah Valley, Southwest Virginia, Tidewater, and Washington, D.C.
The articles have been compiled by Kate Parker, Conference Publicity Chair, for the Virginia Genealogical Society, the host society for the NGS 2014 Family History Conference. The articles have been written by each repository, so questions about the hours or specific collections should be addressed to the repository. If you miss a post, you can find all the entries to date under Research on the conference blog.
Shenandoah Valley
Stewart Bell Jr. ArchivesHandley Regional Library
100 W. Piccadilly St.
P.O. Box 58 (22604)
Winchester, VA 22601
http://www.handleyregional.org/, go to “Our Services” then “Family & Local History”
archives@handleyregional.org,
540-662-9041 ext. 17
Hours: Monday & Tuesday, 1:00 p.m.–5:00 p.m.; Wednesday, 1:00 p.m.–8:00 p.m.; Thursday, 10:00 a.m.‒1:00 p.m.; and Friday and Saturday, 10:00 a.m.–5:00 p.m. Library system is closed 2–3 May 2014 for Winchester’s Apple Blossom Festival
Winchester, Virginia, located in the lower Shenandoah Valley, is home to the Stewart Bell Jr. Archives. The Archives are located at the Handley Library in historic downtown Winchester. For over thirty years, this has been a haven for genealogists looking for clues about their ancestors who lived in and migrated through the northern Shenandoah Valley.
In 2013 Archivist Rebecca A. Ebert received the Virginia Genealogical Society Commonwealth Award for Stewart Bell Jr. Archives. This award recognizes societies or organizations within the state for performing outstanding service in the promotion of genealogical study.
Be Prepared
You may locate holdings ahead of your visit on the library’s online catalog at Handley Regional Library. Digital cameras, laptops, and external USB drives are permitted; the copier and two microfilm readers have USB ports. You can purchase books and maps with a check or cash. Photocopies cost 15 cents per any size copy. Bring single dollar bills, if possible.General Holdings
Onsite finding aids help researchers locate the Archives’ holdings, which include material on most counties in the northern Shenandoah Valley. The amount and depth varies from county to county. Frederick County sources are predominantly pre-twentieth century and include family genealogies, county histories, atlases, maps, selected business records, Winchester city directories, microfilmed copies of court order and minute books, census schedules, deed indexes, church records, cemetery inscriptions, obituary transcriptions, Bible records, newspapers, and birth, death, marriage, deed, and will records from 1743. Before 1743, records can be found in Orange County for which there are record compilations in the Stewart Bell Jr. Archives.Manuscripts

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