- 30 June 1922: Did Everything Blowup? by Eileen M. Ó Dúill
- Are They Really my Ancestors? Using Autosomal DNA to Tests to Confirm (or Deny) Relationships and Ancestors by Linda L. Reid
- Around the Brick Wall: Tracing Back an Irish Family Through Collateral Lines by Linda L. Reid
- Come to Ireland to Find Your Ancestors by Eileen M. Ó Dúill
- Genealogical Cold Cases: A Step-by-Step Process by Lisa Louise Cooke
- Genealogy on the Go with the iPad Tablet by Lisa Louise Cooke
- Irish Civil Records and the Sad Story of Irish Census Losses, Part 1 by Eileen Ó Dúill
- Irish Civil Records, Part 2 by Eileen Ó Dúill
- Irish Genealogy, Where do I Start? by Eileen Ó Dúill
- Progress Report on Irish Genealogy: Are Things Getting Better? by Eileen M. Ó Dúill
- Tap into Your Inner Private Eye: 8 Strategies for Finding Living Relatives by Lisa Louise Cooke
- The Ulster Detective by Sher Leetooze
- Using Family Tree Maker Software to Record and Share Your Family History Workshop by Rick Roberts
- Using Google Earth for Genealogy Workshop by Lisa Louise Cooke
- What You Must Know To Save Your Research from Destruction and Ensure Its Future Survival by Lisa Louise Cooke
30 September 2013
BIFHSGO conference handouts
It couldn't be done
The first was quoted by Rev Bruce North at the British Home Child event last Saturday.
IT COULDN'T BE DONE
by Edgar Albert Guest
Somebody said that it couldn’t be done
But he with a chuckle replied
That “maybe it couldn’t,” but he would be one
Who wouldn’t say so till he’d tried.
So he buckled right in with the trace of a grin
On his face. If he worried he hid it.
He started to sing as he tackled the thing
That couldn’t be done, and he did it!
Somebody scoffed: “Oh, you’ll never do that;
At least no one ever has done it;”
But he took off his coat and he took off his hat
And the first thing we knew he’d begun it.
With a lift of his chin and a bit of a grin,
Without any doubting or quiddit,
He started to sing as he tackled the thing
That couldn’t be done, and he did it.
There are thousands to tell you it cannot be done,
There are thousands to prophesy failure,
There are thousands to point out to you one by one,
The dangers that wait to assail you.
But just buckle in with a bit of a grin,
Just take off your coat and go to it;
Just start in to sing as you tackle the thing
That “cannot be done,” and you’ll do it.
(from http://www.poetryfoundation.org/poem/173579 )
The one I'm more familiar with this:
SOMEBODY SAID THAT IT COULDN'T BE DONE
Anonymous
Somebody said that it couldn't be done--
But he, with a grin, replied,
He'd never be one to say it couldn't be done--
Leastways, not 'til he'd tried.
So he buckled right in, with a trace of a grin,
By golly, he went right to it!
He tackled The Thing That Couldn't Be Done!
And he couldn't do it.
(from a collection at http://littlecalamity.tripod.com/Poetry/Parodies.html )
England, Lancashire, Cheshire, Yorkshire, Parish Registers, 1603-1910
Researchers with ancestry in this area will know that there is an industrialized area mainly in Lancashire which spills into the two adjacent counties. In this case the Cheshire records are for Staleybridge andAshton-under-Lyne. Yorkshire records are for Dobcross, Holy Trinity; Lydgate, St Anne; Saddleworth, St Chad; and Saddleworth, St Thomas.
Cemetery Perambulations
Anne Sterling, BIFHSGO secretary, wanted to look for grave markers for the Acres family; she knew a branch of her tree bearing that name had lived in the area. Under such conditions wandering around the well tended grounds was a delight, with just a few flying insects to mar the enjoyment.
Googling
Even though this isn't a large cemetery by urban standards we only explored part. Another cemetery website, at www.gravemarkers.ca has also photographed the cemetery and includes a map showing seven sections. We were fortunate we only explored section 2 as it contains two-thirds of the Acres monuments.
A marker memorializing A Russell Dow, a causality of the Battle of Vimy Ridge, caught my attention. According to the Commonwealth War Graves Commission Alexander Russell Dow is commemorated on the Vimy Memorial. He had moved west to pursue farming near Swift Current, Saskatchewan, enlisting with the 128th Battalion in 1916 and was serving with the 28th when killed. With the forthcoming WW1 event at Nepean Centrepointe on Saturday 26th October I'm especially alert for WW1 memorials.
I wondered about cemeteries in England that might be photographed. My impression is that there are few major websites with English gravestone photographs. http://www.gravestonephotos.com/ has over half a million names with best coverage in Suffolk and Yorkshire. Am I missing an important resource?
To end this perambulation, note deceasedonline.com will be changing the way documents are priced and how you pay for them although prices will not change. That is scheduled to occur on Wednesday 9th October. The company is also promising "tens of thousands of 'lost' burial records in over 200 closed cemeteries and sites across the UK. These records, digitized by us at The National Archives, will be available on the website within the next two weeks."
29 September 2013
Ontario British Home Children Day
The commemoration started at the old Aultsville station with the two national flags piped in and the singing of God Save the Queen.
Beside the two flags and a tree planted on the first British Home Child Day there were brief welcoming speeches by dignitaries, including Jim Brownell, the MPP who championed the bill to proclaim the day through the Ontario Legislature.
A highlight of a session of home child stories was the presentation by Rev Bruce North of a Barnardo Bible.
John Sayers was kept busy throughout the day advising home child descendant on how best to find out the story of their ancestor.
Author Sandra Joyce read from her book "The Street Arab"; Brad Barns from "The Reluctant Canadian" and Beryl Young from "Charlie".
The day ended with a dinner at the Royal Canadian Legion, Morrisburg.
28 September 2013
The Devon Wills Project 1312-1891
An index of more than 132,000 records of probate documents from Devon, and, to a lesser extent Cornwall, is fully searchable FREE online at http://www.origins.net/NationalWills/Search/devon/searchdevonwills.aspx?
27 September 2013
British Home Children Day
The program at Upper Canada Village in Morrisburg starts at 10am
Nova Scotia Census, Assessment and Poll Tax Records, 1767-1827
The newest online resource produced by the Nova Scotia Archives presents six different census, assessment and poll tax lists compiled across a sixty-year period in colonial Nova Scotia, yielding a total of 22,283 named individuals.
Come and take a look -- http://gov.ns.ca/nsarm/virtual/census/.
Chinook, October 2013 issue
The Future of Genealogical Software – James Tanner
Tablet Tips for Mobile Genealogy – Lisa Louise Cooke
The Seduced Genealogist – Randall J. Seaver
15 iPad Tips for Genealogy – Caroline M. Pointer
Ethics in the Information Age: Intellectual Property Issues – Michael Hait
What’s Out There – Linda Murray
Keep Your Digital Records Safe: Strategies for Backing Up Your Data – Dawn Turner
Computer Tricks – Jim Benedict
An Acadian Family: Finding the Meransons in the English Archives – Paul Delaney
26 September 2013
Canada, St. Lawrence Steamboat Company Passenger Lists, 1819-1838
The graph shows year by year the number of entries, each of which may include a whole family or group.
In addition to Montreal and Quebec the ports of Berthier, Sorel, Three Rivers are mentioned.
Sourced from the Rare Books and Special Collections at the McGill University Library.
The Ships List has a free transcription of these records and more detailed contextual information.
Rockstar Genealogists: more on Britain and Ireland
Cork Past and Present
Gillman's Index to the Marriage Licence Bonds of the Diocese of Cork and Ross, an index of marriage licence bonds made in Cork and Ross between the years 1623 and 1750.
Green's Index to Marriage Licence Bonds: Cloyne for marriage licence bonds made in the diocese of Cloyne between the years 1630 and 1800.
Phillimore's Irish Wills - Volume II: Cork & Ross, Cloyne with references to an estimated 6,400 wills from as early as 1548 to 1800.
There's more worth the attention of the Cork interest genealogist.
25 September 2013
6,944,464 becomes 6,945,754 at BNA
Last week they announced that "new pages will begin to appear on the site later this week." It didn't quite happen, but now an additional 1,290 pages have appeared, for the Southern Reporter for 1926.
It's a modest restart. They announce they will be "gradually increasing to almost double the previous process limits of about 10,000 pages/day."
Also, from BNA partner in the brightsolid stable, findmypast.com, there is now an Irish newspaper collection. The papers and number of pages are: Belfast Morning News (244,591); Belfast News-Letter(450,369); Cork Examiner(421,346); Dublin Evening Mail(226,519); Freeman's Journal(553,667); Sligo Champion(16,652)
England and Wales Census Consultation
None of the alternative sources of information mentioned above match the primary merit of the Census as a “universal snapshot” of almost everyone present in the country at a particular time.
Worth watching.
University of Manitoba Digital Collection
24 September 2013
Wales, Court and Miscellaneous Records, 1542-1911 at FamilySearch
Consistory Court papers
Carmarthenshire 1664-1830
Court records-Crown Books
Carmarthenshire 1614-1666
Flintshire 1564--1637
Court records-gaol files
Breconshire 1660-1727
Cardiganshire 1702 -1730
Denbighshire 1545-1808
Flintshire 1542-1730
Glamorganshire 1660-1724
Merionethshire 1661-1727
Montgomeryshire 1730 only
Pembrokeshire 1727-1730
Radnorshire 1728-1730
Marriage bonds
St Asaph, 1611-1911 (211 volumes)
St David, 1601-1903 (88 volumes)
Appear to be in English and some earlier volumes also in Latin
Memoranda of the Great Sessions
Carmarthenshire 1707-1756
BIFHSGO Conference final afternoon
When those proved inadequate to break down genealogical brick walls an unconventional box shaped brick wall was available for people to post their problems. These will be posted on the BIFHSGO web site in due course for others to peruse, and Research Room host Ken McKinlay will be reviewing some of them on his Family Tree Knots blog.
Even late on the final afternoon of the conference the Archive CD Books and Global Genealogy stands were attracting customers.
BIFHSGO President Glenn Wright and conference Program Chair Jane Down were in frequent consultation over issues throughout the conference.
Doug Hoddinott was always at hand to resolve audiovisual issues, here with Lisa Louise Cooke of the Genealogy Gems podcast. This was just prior to her final lecture in which she mentioned she has a Google alert set up for her name. I wonder if it works?
23 September 2013
The Irish Land Commission’s Dark Secrets
BIFHSGO Conference: One Name Studies Panel
I think she gives me too much credit for having a one name study, what I described in the session was really just a few tentative steps. I
was pleased to learn that Elizabeth found the work she did in preparing for the session helpful in focusing her work.
Genealogy Roadshow starts tonight
Rockstar Genealogists: International compilation
22 September 2013
Genealogies of Valcartier, Quebec
OGS Toronto Branch September monthly meeting
Genealogists like us feel close to our families mainly because we spend so much time researching our ancestors. If you are fortunate enough to have a family that organizes Family Reunions, you are lucky. Family Reunions can be daunting to organize but they are a perfect excuse to gather up all the family members young and old and celebrate being family. This presentation will take your through the ABC’s of planning a reunion, big or small, from start to finish and how to have some fun along the way. Hopefully, you’ll be inspired to get involved with planning your next Fabulous Family Reunion.
21 September 2013
Genealogy Roadshow
The show researches family stories from ordinary Americans, features genealogists Kenyatta Berry and D Joshua Taylor, and is hosted by former news anchor Emmett Miller.
Rockstar Genealogists 2013: USA
1. Elizabeth Shown Mills
2. Thomas W. Jones
3. Judy Russell
4. John Philip Colletta
5. Megan Smolenyak
6. D. Joshua Taylor
7. J. Mark Lowe
8. Thomas MacEntee
9. Dick Eastman
10. Cyndi Howells
20 September 2013
Rob More RIP
http://www.ottawacitizen.com/More+loved+laugh+shock+friends/8934975/story.html
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/ottawa-bus-crash-victims-include-students-public-servants-1.1860438
Mike and Julie's many friends in the genealogical community will join me in grieving this tragic loss and extending our sympathy.
BIFHSGO conference starts today
Tables were being set up, Gerry Glavin was moving in boxes of materials for the marketplace, Patty McGregor was laying out books for sale in a prominent corner of the lobby.
Doug Hoddinott was hard at it wrestling the A/V system into shape ready for the first pre-conference seminar on Friday morning. If there was a BIFHSGO Superstar Volunteer it would have to be Doug, and there would be many others to fill up the BIFHSGO Rockstar Volunteer list.
FMP adds royal household records
Rockstar Genealogists 2013: UK and Ireland
19 September 2013
2.4 million Birmingham records added to Ancestry
OGS Kingston Branch September meeting
Rockstar Genealogists 2013: Canada
18 September 2013
Friends of Library and Archives Canada Booksale
Rockstar Genealogists 2013: Australia and New Zealand
OGS Quinte Branch September meeting
Her talk is titled "British Home Children"
The time at place are as usual, 1pm at the Quinte West City Hall Library, 7 Creswell Drive, Trenton.
17 September 2013
Irish Roots: economic benefit of digitized records
Rockstar Genealogists: "Gold Medalists"
Join me in congratulating those receiving the most votes by those living in the specified countries/areas, the "gold medallists."
A former television producer and director on BBC history programmes, Chris is a Scottish-based genealogist, writer, lecturer and educator. He is perhaps best known in Canada for his British GENES blog, and having lectured at conferences in Ottawa, Toronto (also in Australia). Chris is an instructor with Pharos Teaching and |Tutoring
16 September 2013
Rockstar Genealogists: "Silver and Bronze Medalists
Douglas Ivan Hepburn
4. Simpson HEPBURN (Peter1) was born on September 19, 1830 in , , Aberdeenshire, Scotland,4 died on September 7, 1922 in Eastnor Twp, Bruce Co, Ontario, Canada4 aged 91, and was buried in 1922 in Colpoy's Bay, Bruce Co, Ontario, Canada.
For the purposes of establishing a Scottish ancestry with reasonable confidence, but without confirming details, most would consider this adequate.
15 September 2013
Benefits of eighth cousin hood
Rockstar Genealogists: announcement to come
Some just wanted to see who was nominated, which is fine. Nobody received fewer than 3 votes, and the vast majority were in double figures, which I interpret as meaning those nominated were credible candidates.
Thanks especially to the 784 who took the time to vote, 61% from the USA, 13% from England/Wales, 11% from Canada, 5% from Australia/New Zealand. Those who responded from Scotland and Ireland will be reported as part of a UK/Ireland category.
About three-quarters of those responding were women.
I think you'll find the results interesting, and likely helpful to those planning events and those looking for guidance on who to follow.
Here's the planned release schedule:
Monday 16 September, "silver and bronze medallists" in various categories
Tuesday 17 September, "gold medallists" in various categories
Wednesday 18 September, Australia/New Zealand top ten
Thursday 19 September, Canada top ten
Friday 20 September, UK/Ireland top ten
Saturday 21 September, USA top ten
Sunday 22 September, on the seventh day he rested
Monday 23 September, International compilation.
Revisit RootsTech 2013
14 September 2013
GenealogyInTime Magazine
Four years later the weekly newsletter is a regular on my reading list.
• An additional 532 million free genealogy records from around the world are now searchable. In total, the Genealogy Search Engine indexes 2.7 billion records from over 1,000 websites.• In a first for a genealogy website, the entire Google Newspaper Archive can now be searched by the Genealogy Search Engine. This extremely valuable archive covers over 2,000 historic newspapers going back as far as the 1700s.
• The massive Australian Trove archive can now be completely searched with the Genealogy Search Engine.
Ancestry updates border crossing collection
There's a full listing of the sources at http://search.ancestry.com/search/dbextra.aspx?dbid=1075
FYI: those white cotton gloves
13 September 2013
A new family history blog: Family Tree Knots
Thomas MacEntee webinar on "You Use WHAT for Genealogy? Wonderful Uses for Unusual Tools"
One given on Wednesday by the irrepressible Thomas MacEntee, You Use WHAT for Genealogy? Wonderful Uses for Unusual Tools, caught my attention. Apparently over 1,000 people watched live online. I made a 60 minutes space in my schedule the next day to watch the recording, and I'm glad I did.
Thomas covers a series of online tools including EasyBib, Evernote, Dropbox, several useful Google tools, and others. Recommended, and free online until September 19th.
Also, watch the webinar and Geoff will tell you how you can get free access to a series of his Legacy webinars until September 16th.
http://www.familytreewebinars.com/download.php?webinar_id=153
Rockstar Genealogist voting ends soon
OGS Ottawa Branch September Meeting
In this presentation, Shirley-Ann will detail the features of the FamilySearch website, explain how to use the tools and information resources available in order to create and leave a legacy for future generations. Shirley-Ann Pyefinch has served since 2005 as the Director for the Ottawa Ontario Stake family history centre of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. She has lectured at various societies and conferences. Shirley-Ann also teaches family history classes, preservation workshops and hosts annual family history conferences at the centre.
12 September 2013
BIFHSGO receives a copy of the Morpeth Roll
When Lord Morpeth ended his term as Chief Secretary for Ireland in 1841 about 150,000 signatures were placed on the roll of thanks. With a population of 8 million plus the Morpeth Roll is a significant list of names of some 3-4% of Ireland's population in 1841 although often without any other information but name. Good luck determining which of 86 John Smiths is yours!
The roll is available indexed on Ancestry.
QFHS September Meeting
On Saturday, September 14, 2013 the Quebec Family History Society will host a presentation by teacher and writer Patricia Burns.
The topic is the subject of her recent book "Life on the Home Front: 1939-1945" and covers the Montreal “scene”, night life, war industries, political strife, family life and how Montreal was changed by the war.
The meeting starts at 10:30 a.m. In the Briarwood Presbyterian Church Hall, 70 Beaconsfield Blvd. Beaconsfield, Quebec. Free Admission. All welcome. Information: 514-695-1502 or www.qfhs.ca.
11 September 2013
Phil Donnelly in conversation
This year the lecturer is Phil Donnelly who was born in Ireland in the 1930s and came to Canada at age 22. Hear my interview with Phil, and interviews with each of the other conference speakers, from the News section, front and centre at www.bifhsgo.ca.
Family History Activity Survey: outside North America
100% subscribed to Ancestry, 60% to FindMyPast, 40% to The Genealogist. I was surprised only 20% subscribed to Genes Reunited.
Family Tree Maker showed as the leading genealogy software, as in North America. Second was Family Historian, ahead of Roots Magic and Legacy.
Just under half the respondents have no genealogy magazine subscription although several indicated they occasionally purchased one of read them at a library. Australian responses showed Inside History magazine to be popular.
60% of respondents reported no volunteer activity.
40% of respondents were in their 50s, the same percent in their 60s. This is a younger sample than the North American. Consistent with the age, and perhaps accounting for a lower level of volunteering, only 50% were retired. Again, as in North America, lack of time was the most cited obstacle to progress in family history studies.
10 September 2013
FreeBMD September update
Major updates, more than 5,000 records, are: for births 1940, 1943, 1958, 1960, 1962, 1964-70; for marriages 1952, 1962-69; for deaths 1967-70.
Canada in the First World War
09 September 2013
Irish Lives Remembered
Rockstar Genealogist(s) voting underway
If you haven't voted count yourself in at http://goo.gl/hQs3GK
If your favorite isn't on the list, sorry. Nominations were open on the blog for a week. You can write them in using the comments section at the end of the survey.
If you are denied access to vote it could be someone has already used that computer to vote.
Voting will close on Sunday.
FamilySearch now has England, Derbyshire, Church of England, Church Records
The Juggler’s Children
08 September 2013
Lesley Anderson returns to Ottawa Catholic School Board Continuing Education
07 September 2013
Rockstar Genealogist(s): voting now open
Vote from here
Champlain colloquium
That Ancestry/FamilySearch agreement
"an agreement that is expected to make approximately 1 billion global historical records available online and more easily accessible to the public for the first time. With this long-term strategic agreement, the two services will work together with the archive community over the next five years to digitize, index and publish these records from the FamilySearch vault."You'll perhaps recall that in indexing the US 1940 census Ancestry.com was in competition with a consortium including FamilySearch and Findmypast. FMP has had an agreement with FamilySearch for some years which has made limited index information available on FamilySearch with a link to FMP for the full record. In the cooperation game Ancestry is playing catch-up.
Is further cooperation a trend? In Canada we now have, apparently, an agreement between LAC and Canadiana.ca which would see collection images from LAC freely available from Canadiana with indexes developed available on a subscription basis. But where will Canadiana get the indexes? Without indexing finding what you want is very labourous, as shown by the Upper Canada Sundries. Canadiana don't have deep pockets, and no volunteer indexers.
Maybe one of the big players, and Ancestry is the biggest, or FindMyPast which is gently targetting the Canadian market, could strike a deal which would give Canadiana affordable access to indexing services. Or maybe Canadiana could strike a deal with FamilySearch.
06 September 2013
Queen’s Own Rifles of Canada Regimental Museum online collection
Nominal Rolls: 1866 to 1882 (pdf – 95.5 MB)
Queen's Own Rifles of Canada Book of Remembrance 1866-1918
Book of Remembrance 1866 to 1918 (pdf – 18.7 MB)
Regimental Orders 1868 to 1874 (pdf – 75.3 MB)
Regimental Orders 1875 to 1880 (pdf – 87.2 MB)
Regimental Orders 1886 to 1892 (pdf – 108 MB)
Regimental Orders 1892 to 1897 (pdf – 121 MB)
1885 Lt Cassels NW Field Force Diary
Rfn Forin’s 1885 NW Rebellion Diary
00223 - QOR RSOs March 31st 1880 - Capt Lawrence Buchan (pdf 1.8 MB)
00224 - QOR RSOs March 28th 1894 - Capt M. S. Mercer (pdf 1.2 MB)
00222 - QOR RSOs May 22nd 1925 - Col Reginald Pellatt (pdf 3.2 MB)
3rd Bn CEF Nominal Roll (pdf 7.8 MB)
95th Bn CEF Nominal Roll (1.86 MB)
166th Bn CEF Nominal Roll (5.23 MB)
198th Bn CEF Nominal Roll (4.97 MB)
255th Bn CEF Nominal Roll (1.72 MB)
Official Nominal Roll of “B” Company QOR just prior to D-Day (pdf 1.2 MB)
Access through http://qormuseum.org/archives/
Thanks to Glenn Wright and Jane MacNamara for this information.
For those in the Toronto area, a reminder that Jane is offering a course Basic Genealogy and Family History designed for those just beginning to research or looking to upgrade basic research skills.
The 8-week course starts at 1:30 pm on Wednesday, October 2. See http://goo.gl/NznTq9 for more details.
Anglo-Celtic Roots: Fall 2013
Pride of place has to go to what may be the longest article to have ever appeared in ACR, 16 pages. That includes three pages of reference notes, enough to bring joy to the heart of the genealogical professional, or pedant. In The Cowley Family Saga Christine Jackson recounts a connection to the Champlain astrolabe in this the 400th anniversary of Champlain's voyage on the Ottawa River, tracing a path from a child immigrant orphaned shortly after arriving in Montreal to the NHL, with lots of twists in-between. And it's only the first part of the story; the second will trace the family well back in England, although not likely to Charlemagne as in a recent WDYTYA episode!
The Benedictines come in an article by Bryan Cook, a follow-on to a previous ACR article. He lets us in on an obscure source for information on several congregations of Benedictine monks and more than 5,500 pupils of the schools of the congregations giving surname, Christian name, origin in the UK by county and town, dates of entry and departure.
If you've given up on researching a name that seems too common, although less so than Smith, Gillian Leitch's story of her odyssey, and the reward in pursuing the origins of her ancestor John Cutler may prove encouraging.
The regular columns and information on society activities round out the issue.
Anglo-Celtic Roots is a benefit of membership in the British Isles Family History Society of Greater Ottawa.
From the UK to Valleyfield, Quebec
Cotton manufacturing thrived under the entrepreneurial guidance of Ireland-born Andrew Frederick Gault from the 1870s, with the assistance of tariffs imposed by Sir John A Macdonald's National Policy.
Skilled British immigrants to Valleyfield were important to the development including as part of the pre-WW1 immigration boom. An article in The Times of 11 October 1907 "Recruiting Skilled Labour for Canada" refers to the largest need for skilled labour being for spinners and weavers for the cotton mills of Montreal and Valleyfield, with 135 workers having recently come from Lancashire.
The workforce in the Valleyfield cotton mills grew to about 45% anglophone, 55% francophone. Now only 1% of the town's population is anglophone.
There was a largely anglophone sector of town with company built homes for workers, an English language school (Gault Institute, still in operation), cemetery, recreational facility and three Protestant churches, Anglican, Methodist and Presbyterian, all within a stones throw. Somewhat confusingly, with the formation of the United Church of Canada the Presbyterian church became the United Church, and now houses a museum; the Methodist church was taken over
by those Presbyterians who declined to join the United Church, and is now a restaurant. The Anglican Church, St Marks, was the victim of fire and a smaller Anglican Church now stands on the same site.
Today, just as the churches have been converted the remains of one of the cotton mills is now a hotel, conference centre and seniors residence. Most of the mill buildings are long gone, as is even the Zellers that subsequently stood on the same ground.
The Muso, which occupies the former United Church, is planning an exhibition for next year on the former cotton industry.
Thanks to Mathieu Tremblay of the Muso for information and Anne Sterling for the motivation for the visit.
05 September 2013
Last chance to nominate Rockstar Genealogists
TNA podcast: There and back again: going away doesn't mean staying away
"It is easy to think of emigration as a one-way process, but not everyone who went to live in another country stayed there permanently. As more and more records are indexed online, you may find family members in unexpected places, and as a result discover that your ‘stay at home’ ancestors were more well-travelled than you thought."
BIFHSGO September monthly meeting
9:00 - 9:30 am Before BIFHSGO
Exploring the Find My Past Website By Judy Thamas
9:30 - 10:00 am Discovery Tables
Discover Scotland with Hugh Reekie
10:00 - 11:30 am Meeting Speaker
Little by Little from Co. Mayo to Fitzroy and Beyond By Brenda Krauter
In a quest to learn how the Little family came to Canada from Ireland during the Potato Famine, the story of a long ago family feud and a surprising discovery in an 1851 census record took Brenda on a search to find a signature to see if it would match a Grosse Ile record which would verify which Famine ship brought the family to Canada. This search led to finding unexpected information which also knocked down the brick wall created by the 1851 census record.
Get a taste of Brenda's presentation in this interview by Brooke Broadbent,
The meeting is at the usual location: Library and Archives Canada, 395 Wellington Street, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
Family History Activity Survey: US results
30% of respondents were not a member of a genealogical or family history society of some type. Membership across the various types of society was fairly evenly distributed with a many being members of more than one type.
Ancestry was the most frequent response to the query "I have a personal paid subscription to the following online databases". At 79% that was well ahead of Find My Past at 37%. Newspaper databases attracted 26% and My Heritage 16%,
As regards genealogy software, 55% use Family Tree Maker which is also the most used software as in Canada.
47% were subscribers to Family Tree Magazine (US), while the same number reported not subscribing to any commercial magazine. This is the one area where Canadian results are quite different, there Internet Genealogy magazine was the most popular.
Voluntary contributions were much as in Canada with 65 % of respondents mentioned doing some sort of volunteer activity.
80% of respondents were retired; 45% were in the 61-70 age category, 30% 71-80 years of age. That makes the average age of respondents slightly greater than Canadians.
04 September 2013
First World War Memories
Family History Activity Survey: Canadian results II
In response to the prompt "The genealogy/family history resources I most value are" there were 89 responses. The Wordle below shows the words most frequently mentioned in a larger size.
Ancestry, got the most mentions with 34 ahead of "and" (32) and "family" (27). The most common two word phrase was "Family Search". The biggest surprise was that there were only three mentions of Google.
83 people responded to the prompt "My genealogy/family history activity would be most improved by:"
Unsurprisingly time was an issue with "more time" and "time to" two of the top three most frequently mentioned two-word phrases. "More time to" was the most frequently used three word phrase. "On line" and "access to" were also highly ranked in connection with records. Money was less frequently mentioned than I expected.