Overview
Pension files can contain service claims, affidavits, witnesses, marriage evidence, children, medical notes, death dates, residences, and community testimony. They are often relationship-rich, but each statement still needs source context because applicants, witnesses, clerks, attorneys, doctors, and agencies each shaped the record.
What this helps you learn
- Pension files can name relatives, neighbors, officers, doctors, attorneys, churches, counties, and moves across time.
- Witness testimony can reveal how a community remembered service, marriage, residence, disability, labor, and family structure.
- A pension file can help build a witness map that links people, places, and source types.
Careful claims
- Do not treat a pension file as proof of the whole family tree.
- Do not publish sensitive medical, disability, family-conflict, or living-descendant details without review.
- Do not convert a pension award or denial into identity, legal-status, descent, or membership certification.
Research path
- Make one row for each claimant, witness, location, event, record creator, and claim supported.
- Compare pension testimony with service records, marriage records, census, church records, cemetery records, newspapers, and local court records.
- Mark contradictions as review findings instead of forcing a quick conclusion.
Source trail
- National Archives – Military Records for Genealogy – Official NARA gateway for service and pension research.
- FOBA USCT and Pension File Research – Internal pension and family-clue guide.
Evidence note: This starter entry is educational. Add sources, dates, maps, Community Notes, and Fact Checks as research develops.