All 330,000 records for Kensal Green Cemetery and West London Crematorium can now be searched on Deceased Online.
See the blog post here for details including well known people found in the records.
- a new technology platformAlong with the announcement there was also a post on the company blog Findmypast product update – Opening a dialogue with news of "a new tool, the findmypast Feedback Forum. The forum will allow you to share your thoughts and ideas about the site with us, as well as with other members of the findmypast community." On the forum you can suggest improvements and vote on those already suggested you'd like to see implemented.
- new family tree builder
- improved search
- new records every month
- new website design
- serious hardship would ensure if the man were called up for Army service, owing to his exceptional financial or business obligations or domestic position.You have to order the original document images through TNA's Discovery system, even though there is no charge - for the next ten years. It takes about a minute to process the order, then you can download the original images in pdf.
- the principal and usual occupation of the man is one of those included in the list of occupations certified by Government Departments for exemption.
"Ontario researchers looking for records of inheritance usually stop once they've found the estate file. True, it is the richest single source, but the court register, minutes, and other documents that track the estate's progress through the court can add valuable family history clues and help tell the whole story. The presentation will review how to find an estate file and how it can lead to other sources both inside and outside the court system."The Kingston Branch of the Ontario Genealogical Society meets in the Wilson Room of Kingston Frontenac Public Library, 130 Johnson St.
"Orland French is a writer and publisher from Belleville who felt he wanted to do the definitive book on what lies under Prince Edward County. This past summer he and his wife Sylvia published a book titled Wind, Water, Barley & Wine that examines the role of geology in the development and settlement of The County. It follows previous similar books on Hastings County and Lennox & Addington County.
Orland is a former journalist and reporter with daily publications such as The Kingston Whig-Standard, The Ottawa Citizen and The Globe and Mail. At the Whig-Standard he was sometimes assigned to stories in the County and he would return to the Kingston newsroom, wondering “what’s really going on down there? Someday I’ll find out.”
He runs a small publishing company called Wallbridge House Publishing that produces history books out of a house which, sure enough, was once owned by the Wallbridge family. He is currently working on a First World War history book based on letters from his Uncle Oscar who was killed at Vimy Ridge. Last fall he and his wife visited northern France and found his uncle’s grave in a military cemetery."
Say you’re in that top 0.01 percent—or even the top 50 percent (in income.) Would you want to admit happenstance as a benefactor? Wouldn’t you rather believe that you earned your wealth, that you truly deserve it? Wouldn’t you like to think that any resources you inherited are rightfully yours, as the descendant of fundamentally exceptional people? Of course you would. New research indicates that in order to justify your lifestyle, you might even adjust your ideas about the power of genes. The lower classes are not merely unfortunate, according to the upper classes; they are genetically inferior.That's an extract from an article Social Darwinism Isn’t Dead: Rich people think they really are different from you and me. By Matthew Hutson published in Slate.
"the few studies on the subject estimate that income, educational attainment, and occupational status are perhaps at least 10 percent genetic (and maybe much more). It makes sense that talent and drive, some portion of which are related to genetic variation, contribute to success. But that’s a far cry from saying “It is possible to determine one’s social class by examining his or her genes.” Such a statement ignores the role of wealth inheritance, the social connections one shares with one’s parents, or the educational opportunities family money can buy—not to mention strokes of good or bad luck (that are not tied to karma)."
"Discover your British ancestors in our 19 million new rate book records.
These wonderful handwritten records are like early censuses – they go as far back as 1598 and hold details of your ancestors’ names, addresses and who owned each property."Perhaps from California, or wherever findmypast.com is located, that's adequate. But wouldn't it be more helpful if they'd told you the geographic scope:
"This archived Web page remains online for reference, research or recordkeeping purposes. This page will not be altered or updated. Web pages that are archived on the Internet are not subject to the Government of Canada Web Standards. As per the Communications Policy of the Government of Canada, you can request alternate formats."Let's hope that by the time of the bicentennial the government will show sufficient respect for the country's founder to celebrate without excuses. Maybe they'll also realize that the "hewers of wood and drawers of water (and tarsands)" policy is an outdated basis for a 21st century economy.
"How does speaker Gail Roger owe her very existence to her great-great-uncle Thomas Lewis who died more than eighty years ago and had no children? How did her very Welsh great-great-uncle and her equally Welsh maternal grandfather wind up on opposite sides of the African continent in two different centuries, one to build churches and the other to control the tsetse fly? Come to her presentation and learn why Uncle Thomas' posthumously-published autobiography about his missionary days in the Cameroons and the Congo both helped and hindered Gail's search for Welsh ancestors in Carmarthenshire and Pembrokeshire."Dave Cross has posted an interview with Gail Roger to the BIFHSGO Podcast page.