In which Silver Book is Lt. Joseph Rogers, Son of Thomas rogers found?

+1 vote
124 views
There are 3 Rogers Silver books. Which one will show Lt. Joseph Rogers and his son James?
in The Tree House by Frederick Rogers G2G6 Mach 1 (11.4k points)

2 Answers

+5 votes

If it's this James Rogers, son of this Joseph, that you mean, you'll find this citation on his profile:
 

Mayflower Families Through Five Generations, Volume Nineteen: Thomas Rogers, Ann T. Reeves, Volume: 19, Alice W.A. Westgate (General Society of Mayflower Descendants, 2000) p. 6, 12-13.

I expect that it would be the same with the revised edition, which would be Vol. 19, part 1, since he's only the second generation. Here's a link on the GSMD site:

https://themayflowersociety.org/shop/books-and-media/mayflower-families-silver-books/volume-19-thomas-rogers-2013-sec-ed/

All 3 parts can be seen here:
https://themayflowersociety.org/?s=rogers

by Bobbie Hall G2G6 Pilot (349k points)
Frederick - Are these profiles the correct ones that you are asking about?  If so, would you like copies of their entries, or just the page numbers on which their bios occur?
+2 votes
Following up on the previous answer, Joseph is found on pages 3-7, and son James is found on pages 16-17 of volume 19, second edition. James’ three children James, Mary, and Abigail are on pages 63-68.

Part 2 has some of the descendants of pilgrim Thomas Rogers’ grandchildren Thomas and Elizabeth (they are two of the children of pilgrim Thomas Rogers’ son Joseph) and Part 3 has descendants of John and Mary (two more of Joseph’s children). Since you are interested in James’ descendants these two books probably won’t be useful to you. The Silver Book project is Currently working on additional parts to vol 19.
by Andrew Payzant G2G6 Mach 1 (12.1k points)
So I should purchase Volume 19 second ed.? I have vol 19 Part 2.
...or get copies of the relevant pages.

Inter-library Loan. My local library within Greater Portland OR is part of consortium with ALL the colleges/universities. I've been getting really obscure items without a hitch. Getting a Silver Book should be a breeze. Also, if you have a local or larger regional gnealogical society or library, check them.  If a member of AA/NEHGS, simple copy requests are, sometimes, free.

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