Unlike England with its College of Arms, the United States has no governmental agency to maintain pedigrees of our nation’s families. Since we do not, we have to rely upon the nation’s hereditary societies for doing so.
It was in 1895 that a group of gentlemen met to organize the Colonial Society of Pennsylvania. The criterion for membership was a descent from a colonist, male or female, who settled in any British colony which became part of the United States of America prior to 1700. One of its goals was to collect, preserve, and publish records and documents relating to the early history of Pennsylvania. Just nine years after its founding, the society published Records of the Court of New Castle on Delaware 1676-1681. Six more volumes of court records followed.
The seventh volume of court records of Pennsylvania and Delaware has recently been released, and it completes the century-long commitment of the society.
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