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Family historian Barbara Moorhouse’s most thrilling moment was opening an oversize book of old maps at the Allen County Public Library in Fort Wayne, Ind.

Like many modern, tech-savvy amateur genealogists, Moorhouse has been able to do most of her research online. But finding and “actually holding” a book of old county plats, one marked with a family name, was special in a way that cannot be duplicated by computer, she says.

“I have yet to visit a county courthouse,” the Bloomfield Hills, Mich., resident admits of a once-necessary stop.

The book is part of the library’s Genealogy Center, the nation’s largest public genealogy collection.

One of the nation’s most complete and important family history research sites, the facility draws visitors from across the country. It is open seven days a week from September through May, closed Sundays from Memorial Day to Labor Day.

Its location makes it easy for Midwesterners to fill in a branch on the family tree as part of an affordable getaway weekend.

The collection has 1 million textual items and access to millions more, all free to visitors. It includes census records, military records dating to the 1700s, National Archives passenger lists and indexes covering 163 ports of entry on microfilm. It has one of the largest collections of city directories in the country and the largest English-language genealogy and local history periodical collection in the world, with more than 10,000 titles. In addition, the center has access to important national and international genealogy databases.

Curt Witcher, manager of the Genealogy Center and Special Collections, says that 30 years ago, tracing the family tree usually meant a trip to the local library. Today, would-be family historians more likely begin by logging on to the home computer and Ancestry.com.

Hunting down old records once was arduous, but today’s easy access brings a new set of problems.

“What is the data I should be gathering?” is one of the most common questions staff members hear from visitors “either overwhelmed or frustrated” by all that is available, Witcher says. His staff is trained to help visitors cut the hit-or-miss factor that is a big part of family research. And he boasts that his “staff’s expertise and access to databases” mean “there is no question we can’t answer.”

Visiting the Genealogy Center, however, is most rewarding to those who have already done some basic spadework, he says.

“You’d be surprised how many people come here a week before they are going to Ireland and want to find out something about family history,” he says.

To help people get started, the Genealogy Center has a rich and easy-to-navigate website, geneal

ogycenter.org. The site has tips on how to begin a family history, a genealogy blog, a monthly e-zine, and an orientation video of the center for those contemplating a visit.

The Genealogy Center is on the second floor of the library in downtown Fort Wayne.

The 7-year-old library is equipped with free Wi-Fi, and there are plenty of tables with outlets for laptops and enough room to spread out books and papers.

The center has a number of computers with access to databases from Ancestry.com to the Mormon holdings in Salt Lake City. In addition, printers and microtext readers for printing or downloading information are scattered throughout.

“I wouldn’t go there if you haven’t started on the family tree,” advises Moorhouse, echoing Witcher. “There is so much there it is almost overwhelming.”

But those with a focus will find “you can access all this stuff yourself,” she says.

She was able to trace a great-grandfather as he relocated from one Ohio city to another and as he moved his Columbus, Ohio, business from address to address.

Members of the Afro-American Genealogical and Historical Society of Chicago also have found the city directory collection useful. The Chicago group is one of several from major Midwestern cities that regularly visit the Indiana center.

“Of course, the Newberry Library is our local major research center,” says trip coordinator Nettie Nesbary, referring to Chicago’s well-known private library. But each research site has special strengths, she notes, citing the Allen County library’s directories for cities in Alabama and Mississippi.

“We want people to be successful here, however they define successful,” Witcher says. “And we want them to have fun.”

If you go

After spending some time in the stacks at the Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center, plan to visit some of the history just outside the library’s doors:

Fort Wayne is Indiana’s second-largest city after Indianapolis. Thanks to its location as part of a 10-mile portage between waterways connecting the Great Lakes and the Wabash River, it has been a commercial center since the mid-1600s.

The city got its name when Revolutionary War Gen. Anthony Wayne built a fort after defeating the Miami Indians in 1794. You can wander through a re-creation of an 1815-16 fort, the last of three constructed after Wayne’s victory. Check oldfortwayne.org for a schedule; free.

Fort Wayne’s nickname, “Summit City,” comes from its position as the highest point along the 500-mile Wabash and Erie Canal, the longest built in North America. The city flourished with the construction of the canal in the 1830s and 1840s, attracting newcomers including American folk legend John Chapman, aka Johnny Appleseed, who planted apple seedling nurseries in the area. The itinerant nurseryman and Swedborgian missionary is buried on a knoll overlooking the St. Joseph River a couple of miles north of the fort. The surrounding park is adjacent to the massive parking lot of the Allen County War Memorial Coliseum, the region’s biggest sports and exhibition arena. The park is the site of the free two-day Johnny Appleseed Festival on the third weekend of September. johnnyappleseedfest.com

The History Center in the turreted 1893 former City Hall has artifacts, pictures and drawings that provide an overview of the area’s history from the sword said to have been presented to Miami war chief Little Turtle by George Washington to the invention of the garbage disposal. The museum is open 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday, noon to 5 p.m. Saturday and the first Sunday of the month. Admission is charged; fwhistorycenter.com

Not to be missed is a vestige of more recent history: Cindy’s Diner is an authentic 1950s, 15-stool, counter-seating establishment where the owner/cook behind the counter will serve breakfast cooked to order at any time, the daily special — beef and noodles on one recent visit — and a bottomless cup of coffee (each cup is different). Open 6 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday through Saturday, and 7 a.m. to 2 p.m. Sunday.