
“It wasn’t very good, but I was happy to have it,” he says. When he was a kid, Rich Hopkins was gifted a cheap record player from his parents. Rebecca Sasnett / Arizona Daily Star Hurricane Records Jonathan Fletcher looks at a record while flip through a section of records at Hurricane Records, 636 N. Sullivan hopes to bring those back - when it feels right. “I would hope that (customers) leave with an idea of something new to listen to that maybe they didn’t know before, or maybe they finally are able to find a record they had been looking for a while,” Sullivan says.Īnd before the pandemic shook the world, Wooden Tooth used to host live music, album release parties, book signings and other events. “The most important aspect of how we stock the store is just making sure it’s something Kellen and I can talk about passionately to people who come in,” Sullivan says.Ībout half of the records at Wooden Tooth are new records ordered from distributors and the other half are used records from trades or sales that Sullivan and Fortier hunt for at places like estate sales or on Facebook Marketplace. Owned by Jake Sullivan and Kellen Fortier, Wooden Tooth Records carries a bit of every genre. Jake Sullivan and Kellen Fortier opened Wooden Tooth Records in 2015. Here are five Tucson spots to find your favorite music on vinyl: You feel like you have a more personal connection with it.” “But even for those who don’t really care about all that, the physical product is an attraction too, with the art and the liner notes. “You get a deeper, truer sound when an analog recording has been pressed to vinyl,” Lana Rebel, co-owner of Old Paint Records, said in an email.

Then there’s also the argument that music sounds better on vinyl. People are longing for that experience and want another level from their music,” Hankinson says. “This medium is still important to people.

“The bottom line is: You’re experiencing something beyond the click of a button.” “People have been reminded that it’s actually fun to play around with physical goods sometimes,” he says. Rebecca Sasnett / Arizona Daily Starįor Zia Records CEO Jarrett Hankinson, vinyl is about the experience. Online indexes and images of some of the above records can be found by using the links on this site.Sarah Harris checks out a record while shopping at Wooden Tooth Records, 426 E.The Montgomery County Register of Deeds has land records starting in 1870.The Montgomery County Clerk District Court has divorce and court records starting in 1870.

The Montgomery County Probate Court has marriage and probate records starting in 1870.The Montgomery County Clerk has birth and death records from 1886 to 1911.Birth records from 1911, marriage records from 1913, and death records from 1911 can be obtained from the Kansas Office of Vital Statistics.Montgomery County was created in 1867 from Wilson County.There were territorial censuses in 1855, 1857, and 1859. The first federal census available for Kansas is 1860. United States Federal Census, 1790-1950 Family Search Kansas State Census Collection, 1855-1925 Ancestry 1950 United States Federal Census MyHeritageġ950 United States Federal Census AncestryĬounty Census for Montgomery County 1919 (included in Kansas City and County Census Records) AncestryĬounty Census for Montgomery County 1937 (included in Kansas City and County Census Records) AncestryĬounty Census for Montgomery County 1938 (included in Kansas City and County Census Records) AncestryĬounty Census for Montgomery County 1939 (included in Kansas City and County Census Records) AncestryĬounty Census for Montgomery County 1940 (included in Kansas City and County Census Records) AncestryĬounty Census for Montgomery County 1941 (included in Kansas City and County Census Records) AncestryĬounty Census for Montgomery County 1942 (included in Kansas City and County Census Records) Ancestryįederal Census of 1940, Fawn Creek, Kansas LDS Genealogyįederal Census of 1940, Rutland, Kansas LDS Genealogyįederal Population Census of the U.S.
