function DbInfoTitle() { document.write('U.S. National Homes for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, 1866-1938') }
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function DbInfoMiniDescription() { document.write('This database contains records from twelve U.S. National Homes for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers. The majority of the records consist of historical registers, but other records included in this database are indexes to the historical registers, applications, admissions, deaths, burials, and hospital records. Information available in these records includes: name of solider, name of home or branch, date of admission, birthplace, rank, company and regiment, dates and places of enlistement and discharge, physical description, occupation, marital status, and religion.'); }
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function DbInfoDescription() { document.write('<p>The National Homes for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers was instituted following the Civil War. The purpose of these homes was to provide a place for disabled American soldiers and sailors to live. Admission to a home was voluntary and soldiers could request which home they wanted to live in. Since admission was voluntary, soldiers could also choose when they wanted to leave, both temporarily and permanently. </p><p>This database contains records from twelve National Homes. The majority of the records consist of historical registers, but other records included in this database are indexes to the historical registers, applications, admissions, deaths, burials, and hospital records. </p><p>The following is a list of the names of the twelve National Homes covered in this database as well as which records and years there are included for each:</p><ul><li><b>Bath Branch, Bath, New York</b> – Historical Registers and Indexes to Historical Registers, 1876-1934; Register of Deaths and Index to Register of Deaths, 1879-1929</li><br><li><b>Battle Mountain Sanitarium, Hot Springs, South Dakota</b> – Historical Registers and Indexes to Historical Registers, 1907-1934</li><br><li><b>Central Branch, Dayton, Ohio</b> – Historical Registers and Indexes to Historical Registers, 1867-1935</li><br><li><b>Danville Branch, Danville, Illinois</b> – Historical Registers and Indexes to Historical Registers, 1898-1934</li><br><li><b>Eastern Branch, Togus, Maine</b>  – Historical Registers and Indexes to Historical Registers, 1866-1934; Hospital Index, A-Z; Burials Records, 1892-1932; Death Records, 1893-1899</li><br><li><b>Marion Branch, Marion, Indiana</b>  – Historical Registers and Indexes to Historical Registers, 1890-1931</li><br><li><b>Mountain Branch, Johnson City, Tennessee</b>  – Historical Registers and Indexes to Historical Registers, 1903-1932</li><br><li><b>Northwestern Branch, Milwaukee, Wisconsin</b>  – Historical Registers and Indexes to Historical Registers, 1867-1934</li><br><li><b>Pacific Branch, Los Angeles, California</b>  – Historical Registers and Indexes to Historical Registers, 1888-1933</li><br><li><b>Roseburg Branch, Roseburg, Oregon</b>  – Applicants, 1894-1918; Admissions 1908-1932; Deaths, 1894-1937</li><br><li><b>Southern Branch, Hampton, Virginia</b>  – Historical Registers and Indexes to Historical Registers, 1871-1933</li><br><li><b>Western Branch, Leavenworth, Kansas</b>  – Historical Registers and Indexes to Historical Registers, 1885-1934</li><br></ul><p><b>About the Records:</b></p><p>The Historical Registers generally consist of four sections – Military History, Domestic History, Home History, and General Remarks. Some of the information recorded in these sections includes:</p><ul><li>Name of soldier</li><br><li>Name of home or branch</li><br><li>Date of admission</li><br><li>Birthplace</li><br><li>Rank</li><br><li>Company and regiment</li><br><li>Date and place of enlistment</li><br><li>Date and place of discharge</li><br><li>Physical description (height, complexion, eye and hair color) </li><br><li>Occupation</li><br><li>Marital status</li><br><li>Religion</li><br></ul><p>Names and a few other pieces of information have been keyed only from the historical registers. Therefore, these are the only records that are searchable using the search template above. Images of all of the records (historical registers, indexes to the historical registers, applications, admissions, deaths, burials, and hospital records) can be viewed by using the browse table below. <p><p>To learn more about National Homes, read the article <i>Genealogy Notes: The National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers</i> by Trevor K. Plante, published in <i>Prologue: Quarterly of the National Archives and Records Administration</i>, Spring 2004, Vol. 36, No. 1 (available online at: http://www.archives.gov/publications/prologue/2004/spring/soldiers-home.html).</p>'); }
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function DbInfoSourceInfo() { document.write('<DIV class="p_sourceTxtDiv">Ancestry.com. <i>U.S. National Homes for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, 1866-1938</i> [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations Inc, 2007. Original data: Historical Register of National Homes for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers, 1866-1938; (National Archives Microfilm Publication M1749, 282 rolls); Records of the Department of Veterans Affairs, Record Group 15; National Archives, Washington, D.C.</DIV>'); }
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