31 October 2006
The Last Post
The Legion promises to gradually add entries from earlier editions.
Find the search page here.
As I wrote this I realized it would be appropriate if I were ending the blog. I hope you're not disappointed.
30 October 2006
Rootsweb Archives Search Engine
Here's a handy resource to save searching year by year and list by list. The heading reads Test Concept so presumably its not fully support, but seems to do a pretty good job. Just enter a search term and Rootsweb will do the searching for you. This is a case where it really pays to spend a bit of time learning and applying more advanced search techniques to reduce the number and increase the quality of hits. From the site search tips file:
- Search for a phrase by putting quotes around a group of words, like "john jones"
- Perform a single character wildcard search using "?". For example, j?nes will find jones and janes
- Perform a multiple wildcard search using "*". This will look for zero or more characters, so jon* will find jon, jones, and jonson
- Use "AND" to require the search to find all words or phrases. "john AND jones" will only return results with both words
- Use "NOT" to exclude words or phrases. For example "john NOT jones" will return all results with the word john but not jones.
27 October 2006
Early Canadiana Online
Subscriptions at $400 are hardly affordable for the individual genealogist, but some may be able to benefit from access at a local university or public library where the annual cost is $70 per 11,000 residents served. Ask your library system to subscribe if they don't already.
Much of the content in the free section is of limited interest for family history. There are sections on Canadian Women's History, Colonial Government Journals, The Early Governors General of Canada, English Canadian Literature, History of French Canada, Hudson's Bay, Jesuit Relations, Native Studies, Reconstituted Debates.
26 October 2006
Ancestors in the Attic - week 2
- a man could not be a descendant of Pocahontas as her male descendant line died out. They speculated there might be a link to an earlier generation of her British husband.
- a man's ancestor was shown to be a projectionist in Toronto based on City directories and a record found at the local archives.
- a woman was related to a home child by marriage (genealogy but not genetics).
While nobody wants a TV program showing the hours of mostly tedious research that typically go into solving genealogical mysteries I do wonder whether the host's frenetic style, and quick cut editing, will be successful in broadening the series audience appeal. The BBC's Who Do You Think You Are? and PBS's History Detectives take a more relaxed approach and WDYTYA certainly gets good ratings.
25 October 2006
Canada 1851 Census Indexed on Ancestry
The 1851 census, actually taken in January 1852, is sometimes considered the first complete one of Canada. There were prior censuses that covered smaller areas where usually only the heads of household were named.
Not all the census returns now exists, if they ever did. There were likely no go zones. In previous attempts some of the residents of Lower Canada (Quebec) were so suspicious that the results would be used for tax purposes that enumerators feared for their lives in approaching a community with a book and pencil in hand -- this from the Toronto Globe in its 10 January 1852 edition.
24 October 2006
Problems with browser upgrade
If you use SOGCAT, the Society of Genealogists online library catalogue, expect to run into problems using the upgraded Internet Explorer browser (IE7) released last week. SOG are aware of the problem and have posted a warning note on the site. I found the search still worked, but two warnings were issued at various stages before the search terms could be entered and results read. The new Firefox (2.0) browser has no such problems.
UPDATE: As of November 17 this problem is reported fixed for the SOG catalogue.
23 October 2006
Google Alerts
20 October 2006
Major New Genealogy Databases
One of the services may well be the new British database, Ancestorsonboard, announced by 1837online, featuring BT27 Outward Passenger Lists for long-distance voyages leaving the British Isles from 1960 right back to 1890. According to their announcement "With Ancestorsonboard, you can search for records of individuals or groups of people leaving for destinations including Australia, Canada, India, New Zealand, South Africa and USA featuring ports such as Boston, Philadelphia and New York. Passengers include not only immigrants and emigrants, but also businessmen, diplomats and tourists. Images of the passenger lists will be available to download, view, save and print."
In Canada we are in a little different situation from the US. Library and Archives Canada has an aggressive program to make original records, mostly unindexed, freely available online. I expect to see three new databases appearing on their web site in the next few days. During his welcoming remarks at the BIFHSGO conference in September Librarian and Archivist of Canada, Ian Wilson, announced that "digitized passenger lists for the ports of Quebec and Halifax"
UPDATE: NOW AVAILABLE HERE
Also "an index to Lower Canada land petitions, some 93,00 entries," and "the Ward Chipman database of United Empire Loyalists." These are great additions to their already strong free offerings.
19 October 2006
Found on the IGI
After trying various paper records the panel resorted to the International Genealogical Index (IGI) and found a name. The source was stated to be oral history.
The IGI is blessed with creativity and good intention which may not necessarily align with the truth. The panelists would surely not fall for accepting such flimsy evidence without other justification. Unfortunately the way the item was edited did give that impression.
18 October 2006
Skillbuilders - City Directories
Kathleen W Hinkley has an article on Analysing City Directories. She shows an example of different people with the same last name being found at an address in different years indicating family connections that would not have been apparent from a single directory. If you are have access to runs of city directories for a location of interest take the time to go systematically through the directories. Where did people live? Did they change the way the name was spelt, or the forename presented? How did the description of the occupation change?
Ancestors in the Attic
17 October 2006
Brits Who Built Bytown - Vernon March
Vernon March was born in 1891 in Kingston Upon Hull, England, the youngest son of a large farming family. His 1925 statue of Samuel de Champlain in Orillia, Ontario, likely helped him win the commission, after an open competition, for the National War Memorial which was conceived and built in a garden in Farnborough, Kent, England. Vernon died in 1930 and his remaining six brothers, Dudley, Harry, Percival, Sidney, Walter, Edward and a sister, Elsie, shown on this extract from the 1891 census, finish his work. In 1932 the memorial was shown in London’s Hyde Park to wide acclaim. The Canadian government took delivery in June of 1937 and it was officially inaugurated by King George VI and Queen Elizabeth in 1939.
16 October 2006
Advice for Genealogy Searches
Many of the cases Terry mentioned had been researched before the records became available in digitized form on Ancestry.com or elsewhere. Now that they are the search can often be completed in a tiny fraction of the time it originally took, if you know how to use the search engine effectively. On ancestry.com, available at some local libraries and Family History Centres, be sure to check out the search tips located at the top right of the search box.
13 October 2006
Leave No Stone Unturned
"Most family historians run into roadblocks when researching their ancestors. Some unwittingly seize misleading or incorrect information and charge off in the wrong direction. Using case studies, Terry will recount how he got around some roadblocks in his family history research and how he avoided going down some wrong paths. Among his detective techniques, he will talk about getting the most out of online research, particularly Ancestry.com. Whether you are just starting your family history or if you have been at it for a long time, you will find something of interest in this presentation."
12 October 2006
Library and Archives Canada Renovation
I haven't been in to see the reorganized floors, but understand from a regular user that a lot of material is no longer where it was. There is a lot to relearn. Not all the equipment is operational, and there is still considerable work to do over the next months until the physical facilities are complete. Returning visitors should plan on spending extra time to learn the new layout. If your visit is not essential you may want to defer it until things are more settled.
11 October 2006
Ottawa's Active Anglican Archives
The Archives, at Christ Church Cathedral, is an important resource for area genealogists. Find basic information on its holdings, when and how to access them here. As the newsletter makes it clear, the Archives is more than genealogy. This summer Felan Parker, working during during a break from studies at Carleton University, produced a video Misfiled: an archival murder mystery, while co-chair of the recent BIFHSGO fall conference, Brian Glenn, is part way into a project to photograph and catalogue all the stained glass in the churches of the Diocese. Brian will speak on the project at the AGM of the Friends on November 19 at 2pm in Cathedral Hall.
09 October 2006
Smart Family History - Mini Book Review
I've now had a chance to read it. I was a bit surprised at the samll format, easily graspable in one hand. Your Family Tree reviewed it as ... "a useful, concise and informative book to keep at your side."
It is arranged by the stages of life, and the records to be expected for each of them. The writing is not overly technical, but neither is it particularly inspired. The publisher obviously made the choice not to include examples, which would have improved the reader friendliness, but at the expense of making it longer. For me that's a misjudgement and I am hard pressed to recommend Smart Family History over one of the more comprehensive treatments, such as Mark Heber's landmark Ancestral Trails.
06 October 2006
Blood of the Isles: Book Review
With his previous international best seller, The Seven Daughters of Eve, Bryan Sykes gained a considerable reputation for popularization of genetics applied to human history. Blood of the Isles follows in the mould. The scope is the area geographically called the
04 October 2006
Pros and Cons of DNA Testing for Genealogy
02 October 2006
Genealogy and the Royal Society
For the first time, the Royal Society is making the complete archive of its journals, the earliest of which goes back to the 17th century, available online. Access will be free for two months. The list of journals is here.
Notice of this availability was found in the GENBRIT-L Rootsweb newsgroup.