The Library of The Staten Island Historical Society
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by B-Ann Moorhouse,
C.G., F.G.B.S.
Originally published in The
NYG&B Newsletter, Winter 1995
In Historic Richmond
Town, an outdoor museum village comprised of 28 historic Staten Island houses
and early (and working) workshops and buildings, is the old red-brick school
building that now serves as the home of the Library of The
Staten Island Historical Society. Its holdings often contain the only
information to be found concerning an 18th, 19th or 20th century family or
institution of Richmond County; and often a trip to the Library will save
the researcher unnecessary searches of some of the earlier records of the
County.
In the Search
Room are vertical files and 3x5 card collections that make up most of the
materials. The cards were prepared in the early 1940s as part of The Historical
Records Survey of the Work Projects Administration (WPA); and since that
time the librarians and archivists have added more information to them.
Generally the
first card collection checked by the researcher is that of Vital Records
of Staten Island Families, which takes up 47 drawers. It is alphabetized
by the surname of the Staten Islander mentioned in the County's early wills,
administrations, guardianships, deeds, mortgages and releases; in newspaper
death notices and articles; in the early records of Staten Island churches
and on tombstones; in family Bibles and other private family papers; and
in certain New York City published works (earlier issues of the NYG&B
Record among them). Thus, this collection of 3x5 cards might be considered
a sort of run-down of early records in which the Staten Islander's name may
be found. The WPA at the same time also prepared several offshoots of this
collection; e.g., Occupations, Place-names and Afro-Americans,
all alphabetized and taken from the same sources.
The major group
of vertical files is expanding constantly, inasmuch as it consists chiefly
of 20th century items, such as newspaper and magazine articles and clippings,
pamphlets, bulletins, brochures, booklets, correspondence, etc., covering
a wide variety of subjects chiefly concerning Staten Island (art, bridges,
businessmen, cemeteries, churches, Italians on Staten Island, ferries, forts,
hotels, inns, taverns, schools, Sailors Snug Harbor, American Indians on
Staten Island, prominent citizens, institutions and organizations, and separate
folders for each Richmond County town to name only a few of the topics).
All files are alphabetized by topic and are in legal-size folders in five
cabinets with a total of 20 drawers. There is much here for the genealogist
seeking background data; for the historian; and certainly for the researchers
of the future. 
Biographies-Genealogies,
a smaller vertical file, tends more to families, as its title indicates,
but not limited to those of Staten Island. It contains photographs, news
clippings, correspondence from inquirers, family records, copies of genealogies
from published Staten Island books, and notes on genealogies prepared by
a few earlier Staten Island genealogists and family historians.
Finding
Aids - Family Papers MS1-MS44 (in a large 3-ring binder) contains analyses
of the Manuscript Collections. Each Collection has been assigned a control
sheet, encapsulating its contents, indicating its emphasis and, among other
entries, including the span of years covered by the genealogical and/or historical
data it contains. A few examples of the Manuscript Collections are those
of Austen (1766-1976), Cutting (1820-1910), Frech (1810-1916, contains some
items in German), Holder (1854-1957), Golder (1769-1946), Decker/ Prall/Hillyer
(1784-early 1950s) and Cropsey (1800-1978, includes mention of the famed
artist Jasper Cropsey). Other Collections are noted in the hand-out of The
Society, Research Facilities and Resources. In back of the binder
is an index to all the names found in the Manuscript Collections.
In the hall directly
outside of the Search Room are additional 3x5 cards prepared by the WPA,
e.g., Road Records, alphabetized by the name of the road and
related surnames found in 18th and early 19th century deeds of Richmond County;
and Minutes of School Districts. Two interesting double-drawers
of cards contain Vaults at the Richmond County Clerk's; Bureau
of Inventory and Statistics; and The Museum (now the Staten
Island Institute of Arts and Sciences), listing in alphabetical order the
items found in these three repositories in the 1940s.
It should be mentioned
here that the Library holds none of the original documents listed as sources
for the information found on any of the 3x5 cards. That applies as well to
another collection of 3x5 cards, Bible Transcripts, which are
just that: transcriptions from private family Bibles, all of which were returned
to their original owners. There is an index to the 375 to 400 entries on
these cards, which also is found in the same hall area.
The collection
Geographic-Photographs contains pictures of houses of well-known
Staten Islanders and houses marked on Beers' 1874 Atlas of Staten
Island. Clear photocopies can be made by the Staff. The collection is indexed
by the name of the Staten Island town and the name of the owner of the house.
The 3x5 card collection
Afro-Americans, mentioned above, when combined with the contents
of the Jackson carton, form the Afro-American Collection. The
contents of the carton include news clippings, magazine articles, photographs
of persons and school children, records of marriages and baptisms of Afro-Americans
recorded by early Staten Island churches, mentions of slaves in early Richmond
County wills, etc. Much of these materials served as sources for Ronald David
Jackson and Evelyn E. Jackson when preparing their Raw Notes published
by The Society in 1995.
The stacks housing
the books, periodicals, typescript collections, etc., of the Library are
not open to search. Instead, the visitor must fill out call-slips (there
is a card catalogue by author and title in the Search Room). Inasmuch as
comparatively little has been published solely on Staten Island, it is understandable
that although this is a good-size collection, many of the published works
on its shelves concern other areas or are works concerning today's New York
City as a whole. There are also published genealogies of Staten Island families
and many of the compilations of New York City records now in print. Representative
typescripts are Herbert Magruder's Daniel D. Tompkins (1969),
Hon. James Ridgeway's Monograph of the Ridgeway Family . . .
(1906); and the Family Group Sheets of Jonathan Bush (1801-1850) and
his wife Elizabeth Lee (1806-1872), a Pennsylvania couple who migrated
to Illinois, that carries their descendants down to recent times. Several
typescripts are devoted solely to the records of Staten Island; e.g., those
prepared in 1941 by the Junior Group of the Staten Island chapter of the
DAR, Abstracts of Wills of Richmond County (1787-1863), Abstracts
of Letters of Administration (1787-1865) and of Guardianship Papers (1802-1865)
with the index volume (by first letter of the surname only), Will Index
and Letters Index. In addition there are the Abstracts of the
17th and 18th Centuries Deeds of Richmond County, and Staten
Island Newspapers 1726-1890, a typescript of articles mentioning Staten
Islanders and various topics.
Also in the Search
Room are microfilms of directories, newspapers, and Federal Censuses covering
Staten Island, together with large maps and atlases for Census-search purposes.
Unfortunately, due to extreme budget cuts by the City, there is no working
microprinter (it has seen its day) and the film reader is on its last legs.
There is no computer setup, but visitors are welcome to bring laptops. Photographing
of materials is not permitted, and photocopying is done only by the staff.
The Library has a research service and those interested should write for
the requirements (soon subject to change).
The Library is
open from 10 A.M. to 4 P.M. on Mondays and Tuesdays only. Visitors must make
appointments in advance by contacting the staff member able to assist the
researcher, Mrs. Carlotta DeFillo, Curatorial Assistant, The Staten Island
Historical Society, 441 Clarke Avenue, Staten Island, NY 10306, telephone
(718) 351-1611. [Note: this information may be out of date. Please
visit The
Staten Island Historical Society website for current information.]
The first-time
visitor coming from Manhattan will appreciate the ferry ride across
the harbor, and all will enjoy examining the restored houses and shopping
at the workshops and store (when open during the warmer weather), all
of which share with the Library the park-like surroundings where one
is able to absorb the quiet and relaxing pre-20th Century atmosphere
of Historic Richmond Town. 
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