Elizabeth French Bartlett (27 January 1877-24 October 1961)[1] was an American genealogist.
In 1908, Bartlett joined the New England Historic Genealogical Society's Committee on English Research.[2] In 1920, Bartlett was elected as a member of the Cambridge Historical Society.[3] In her lifetime, she was also a member of the Historical Society of Pennsylvania and the British Record Society.[4] In her research, she specialized on American immigrants from England; the New England Historic Genealogical Society wrote that she amassed a valuable collection of research "regarding English Homes of American Settlers (hitherto unknown), including Brackett, Cheney, Child, Eggleston, Frost, Gridley, Grover, Kingsbury, Mellowes, Newcomb, Patten, Potter, Rouse, Sikes, Vinal..."[4] She contributed the English-background research for Eleanor D. Crosby's genealogical volume Simon Crosby The Emigrant: His English Ancestry and Some of His American Descendants, for which more contemporary researcher Eugene Aubrey Stratton called her "highly respected."[5]
Bartlett was married to fellow American genealogist J. Gardner Bartlett around 1917. They had no children.[2]