Helpful Links & more

Enfield History Resources

Do you have Enfield history questions?

While the Enfield Historical Society welcomes your Enfield history questions, we have limited staff and it may take some time for us to reply. There are other online resources where you may more quickly find your answers. In many cases, we use these same resources to answer your questions. You will find links to them below.

We have a large collection of documents, photographs, ephemera, and artifacts pertaining to our town’s history, which are available to researchers and anyone with Enfield history questions. Again, since we have limited staff, we ask that you search our finding aids below to determine if we have materials that are of interest to you before contacting us. As we are still preparing finding aids, please contact us about subjects not yet covered.

Looking for a Different Enfield?

There are many Enfields around the world. You may be looking for information about one these others:

The second Enfield, Massachusetts is under the Quabbin Reservior and is one of the towns featured in the Swift River Historical Society’s museum: https://swiftrivermuseum.org/ or https://www.facebook.com/swiftrivermuseum/.

Enfield, New Hampshire is home to the Enfield Shaker Museum https://shakermuseum.org/.
For general information about that Enfield’s history contact their town historian https://www.enfield.nh.us/town-historian.

Enfield, England is a suburb of London. Its history is documented in the Enfield Local Studies and Archive
https://www.enfield.gov.uk/services/libraries/enfield-local-studies-and-archive.
More information and books on Enfield, England history are available through the Enfield Society https://enfieldsociety.org.uk/.

Enfield, Australia Please contact us if you have any information about Enfield in Australia. Thank you!

Looking for or have information about yet another Enfield? Please let us know and we will add the information here.

Need Help?

If you are not able to find your answer(s) using the resources above, you can e-mail us. Please use a subject line that clearly identifies your intent. Do not use a subject like “Hi” or “Hello” and do not leave the subject line blank, or our spam filters may reject your email. Our volunteers will respond on a first-come first-served basis. It may take several days or more, depending on volunteer availability and the volume of requests received.