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Table of Contents Records Of The Family History Library Family History Library Catalog Archives And Libraries Bible Records Biography Business Records And Commerce Cemeteries Census Church Records Court Records Directories Emigration And Immigration Gazetteers Genealogy History Land And Property Maps Military Records Native Races Naturalization And Citizenship Newspapers Periodicals Probate Records Taxation Vital Records Voting Records For Further Reading Comments And Suggestions DIRECTORIES The Family History Library has directories of several cities and towns for 1862 to 1881 (FHL films 1377106-9) and a few other directories A helpful directory for early Nevada is:
Kelly, J. Wells, First Directory of Nevada Territory: Containing the Names of Residents in the Principal Towns . . . Local county libraries, the University of Nevada—Reno, the Nevada Historical Society, and the Nevada State Library and Archives collect Nevada directories. The Nevada Historical Society also collects directories of county and municipal officers, dating from the 1860s. A guide to Nevada directories is Joyce C. Lee, Genealogical Prospecting in Nevada: a Guide to Nevada Directories (Carson City: Nevada State Library, 1984. (FHL book 979.3 A1 No. 29.)
By 1826 American fur traders and trappers were in the area. During the 1840s emigrant wagons passed through the Humboldt and Truckee River valleys on the way to California.
In 1849 members of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints In 1859 the Comstock gold and silver deposits were discovered in the Carson Valley. Thousands of Cornish, Irish, and other miners came from California and established the boom town of Virginia City. By 1870 the census records listed over 40 percent of all Nevada residents as having come from Britain, Germany, Ireland, China, and Canada.
After 1880 Italians came in large numbers to Nevada. They were the largest immigrant group reported in the 1910 census, numbering nearly 3,000. German, English, Irish, and Greek immigrants were also major groups within the total 1910 population of just over 80,000. There have also been small numbers of Mexicans and blacks in the state since the days of the early mining camps.
More recent immigrants to Nevada have included Basque sheepherders from the Pyrenees Mountains of Spain and France. Today it is estimated that between 5,000 and 10,000 Nevadans are of Basque descent. Helpful information on Basque settlement in Nevada is in Flavina Maria McCullough, The Basques in the Northwest: A Dissertation, 1945, Reprint (San Francisco: R and E Research Associates, 1974; FHL book 979 A1 No. 3; film 940048 item 4).
Descendants of the original inhabitants— the Paiute, Shoshoni, and Washo Indians— live on small reservations scattered through the state. A few records of American Indians are listed in the FHLC under NEVADA - NATIVE RACES. Others are listed in the subject section of the FHLC under the names of the tribes.
Books on blacks, Chinese, and Yugoslavs in nineteenth-century Nevada are listed in the FHLC subject section under NEVADA - MINORITIES.
There was no single port of entry common to overseas immigrants who settled in Nevada. The Family History Library and the National Archives
The following gazetteers Carlson, Helen S. Nevada Place Names: A Geographical Dictionary. Reno: University of Nevada Press, 1974. (FHL book 979.3 E2c.)
Leigh, Rufus Wood. Nevada Place Names: Their Origin and Significance. Salt Lake City: Deseret News Press, 1964. (FHL book 979.3 E2L.)
Paher, Stanley W. Nevada Ghost Towns and Mining Camps. Las Vegas, Nev.: Nevada Publications, 1970. (FHL book 979.3 H2p; film 1598077 item 2.)
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