The late, mostly unlamented 2016 saw 925 items (1043 the previous year) posted on the blog. Thanks to all who helped and encouraged with comments, questions, provided information, completed polls and surveys, or publicized the blog.
Previously I've identified individuals by name. I continue to thank all who contributed. However, this year I'm remedying an oversight by mentioning the organizations, commercial and not-for-profit, that are major resources for blog information or provided services used for the blog.
Alexa
Ancestry
British Isles Family History Society of Greater Ottawa
British Library
British Newspaper Archive
City of Ottawa Archives
Commonwealth War Graves Commission
Deceased Online
FamilySearch
Family Tree DNA
Findmypast
FreeBMD
Global Genealogy
Google
Guild of One Name Studies
International Society of Genetic Genealogy
Internet Archive
Library and Archives Canada
Living DNA
MyHeritage
Ontario Genealogical Society
Ottawa Public Library
Society of Genealogists
Tableizer
The Genealogist
Wellcome Library
Wikipedia
With apologies to any overlooked.
Thank you all:
Happy New Year.
31 December 2016
Thanks to 2016 Contributors
British Newspaper Archives additions for December
The British Newspaper Archive now has 17,567,270 pages (16,572,215 pages last month) from 709 (701) titles online. This reflects the addition of some long runs of the Globe, Kerry Evening Post, Lloyd's List, Graphic, Sketch and Sphere. The full list of additions this month is:
TITLE | DATE RANGE |
---|---|
Belfast News-Letter | 1905-1906, 1911-1913, 1922-1925, 1949-1950 |
Bradford Observer | 1876 |
Britannia and Eve | 1926, 1928-1929, 1931-1957 |
Carlisle Journal | 1870, 1877-1878, 1881 |
Cricket and Football Field | 1887, 1908 |
Derry Journal | 1916, 1929, 1937 |
Durham Chronicle | 1860-1863 |
Evening Star | 1885-1889, 1905-1909 |
Globe | 1825-1829, 1848-1851, 1863-1868, 1876-1878, 1882, 1887-1892, 1896, 1898-1902, 1904, 1910-1921 |
Homeward Mail from India, China and the East | 1857-1913 |
Illustrated Sporting and Dramatic News | 1874-1970 |
Irish Times | 1890-1891, 1894, 1899-1900 |
Kerry Evening Post | 1829-1917 |
Lloyd's List | 1801-1884 |
Mayo Constitution | 1838-1848 |
Sheffield Daily Telegraph | 1858-1863, 1866-1867, 1905 |
Shields Daily News | 1899-1900 |
Shipley Times and Express | 1882-1884, 1886-1891, 1893-1895 |
The Graphic | 1914-1932 |
The Sketch | 1894-1934, 1937-1958 |
The Sphere | 1909, 1921-1929, 1931-1963 |
Western Mail | 1916 |
30 December 2016
Findmypast adds more Irish Dog Licences and a bit more
Smaller additions are:
A transcript for marriages in Huntingdonshire, 1754-1837, compiled by T P R Layng in 1980 gives the couples’ names, the date of the marriage, and the place of marriage.
A transcript of Roxburghshire, Kelso Dispensary Patient Registers 1777-1781 giving the date and outcome of patients’ treatment (such as cured, relieved of symptoms, or died).
There are also additions to PERSI from 5 titles, mainly of US interest.
Deceased Online adds London's Highgate Cemetery
With 160,000 burials from 1839 to 2010* www.deceasedonline.com has just made the deadline, posting records for London's Highgate Cemetery before the end of 2016.
"A truly stunning example of 19th century cemetery architecture", "a veritable Who's Who" and, “Victorian Valhalla” are just some of the terms used to describe Highgate.
Find information about some of the notable people interred at Highgate on Emma Jolly's blog.
A notable Canadian, born Donald Smith, who became Lord Strathcona and Mount Royal is interred in a red granite vault in the Eastern Cemetery.
Other are Lt. Colonel William Nassau Kennedy who served with the Nile Voyageurs and seven other military burials with a Canada connection.
Thanks to Glenn Wright for the photo of the Strathcona vault.
Vimy minus 100 days
The countdown is on to the 100th anniversary of the Battle of Vimy Ridge, 9-12 April 1917.
The anniversary is the subject of a MOU between Library and Archives Canad and The (UK) National Archives. The institutions will collaborate to develop social media products for the purpose of increasing knowledge of the Battle of Vimy Ridge in both country’s history. LAC and TNA will promote Canadian and British documentary heritage,by highlighting objects in collections.
Specific projects are:
1. A Blog, co-written by specialists and with links to images from both institutions.
2. A Podcast, which will consist of interviews with subject matter experts and highlight content from the TNA and LAC.
Look for these projects on both the TNA’s and LAC’s website in March-April 2017
29 December 2016
FreeBMD December update
The FreeBMD Database was updated on Monday 26 December 2016 to contain 258,828,552 (258,167,836 at the previous update) distinct records.
Years with major updates (more than 5,000 entries) are for births: 1963-4, 1966, 1976-79; for marriages: 1966, 1969, 1971, 1976-81; for deaths 1974, 1976-79.
Additional in 2016 were 1,690,802 for births, 3,397,236 for marriages, and 2,394,058 for deaths.
28 December 2016
Join the OGS Conference 2017 Social Media Team.
- There will be an area on the official OGS Conference 2017 website to share your blog postings.
- A Social Media Team Haven at the conference will facilitate meeting, writing blog entries and posting to social media.
- Team members will be accredited with an official media tag, as well as get the chance to help promote one of the largest genealogy conferences in Canada.
If you are interested please send your name, blog name and URL, Twitter handle, and email address to: blog.conference2017@ogs.on.ca.
Thanks to Mike More, conference chair, for the information.
Yuletide R&R Classic: Four Candles
In tribute to Ronnie Corbett who died 31 March 2016
And the truth
27 December 2016
Progress on OGS Conference 2017
61 OGS members registered and 8 non-members (not including speakers who get a free registration); all have opted for the full weekend package ($135 for OGS members until 31 March).
39 have signed up for excursions with 31 for LAC (which means two of three groups filled).
53 are taking a morning workshop and 55 an afternoon; none of the workshops are approaching their limits.
28 have signed up for Ancestry Day, all as part of a Conference package.
42 have signed up for Pub Night.
10 for the First Timers Gathering.
10 for The Institute’s graduation.
79 of the 225 seats booked for the banquet on Saturday (including Speakers and our Patron).
The Marketplace has twelve vendors/exhibitors, including four OGS Branches and SIGs, signed up so far: https://conference2017.ogs.ca/marketplace/whos-in-the-marketplace/
Information and conference registration is at https://conference2017.ogs.ca/
Thanks to conference chair Mike More for the update.
26 December 2016
25 December 2016
Yuletide R&R: Greetings from Bryan the Bard of BIFHSGO'
A blogger called Reid
keeps us all up to speed
as we build our ancestral trees;
he beats up on LAC,
FamilySearch, Ancestry, and
forecasts weather of past centuries!
With a Haplogroup R,
he’s a Brit right on par
except for bit Ashkenazi
and a hint of Welsh
his brickwall , which he squelched
with statistical improbability;
to heck with proof standards
he’s now working hard
to add Richard Three to his Tree;
but we all love our John
and we hope he blogs long
in avant-guard genealogy.
24 December 2016
Christmas present from Findmypast
The nomination for the Lump of Coal award has been struck out. May Santa find lots of goodies for Findmypast this Christmas instead.
Yuletide R&R Classic: Politically Correct Christmas
This seasonably appropriate short item from the Royal Canadian Air Farce was the most popular last and the previous year.
23 December 2016
Findmypast adds Kent, Gloucester and Scottish records
Baptisms: New records: 14,282, Total Kent records: 581,367
Banns: New records: 1,389, Total Kent records: 27,962
Marriages: New records: 11,782, Total Kent records: 380,956
Burials: New records: 9,415, Total Kent records: 412,575
Scotland Prison Registers Index 1828-1884 has over 17,000 register entries of inmates giving age, birth details, crime, and place of imprisonment.
22 December 2016
Thanks to MyHeritage
A delightful seasonal surprise was this gift of a towel from MyHeritage delivered to my door.
Thank you MyHeritage.
It was also an opportunity explore a new (to me) language in the washing instructions!
Yuletide R&R: Warning
What's humorous for me may not be to your taste, so beware.
Let me take advantage now to wish everyone a Merry Christmas season.
Scotland baby names 2016
Olivia takes the top girls spot, up from third last year, while Jack remains top boy's name.
James overtakes Oliver to take second place for boys. Olivia's top ranking pushes Emily and Sophie down one place each.
Rising stars are Harry for boy (6th place) and Charlotte for girls (10th place).
Boys | Change in Ranking | Girls | Change in Ranking | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Rank | Name | Number | 2015-2016 | Rank | Name | Number | 2015-2016 | |
1 | Jack | 465 | no change | 1 | Olivia | 492 | 2 | |
2 | James | 402 | 1 | 2 | Emily | 490 | -1 | |
3 | Oliver | 368 | -1 | 3 | Sophie | 392 | -1 | |
4 | Lewis | 301 | no change | 4 | Isla | 367 | no change | |
5 | Logan | 288 | 3 | 5 | Ava | 343 | 1 | |
6 | Harry | 284 | 10 | 6 | Amelia | 323 | 1 | |
7 | Noah | 283 | 8 | 7 | Jessica | 294 | -2 | |
8 | Leo | 282 | 5 | 8 | Ella | 268 | no change | |
9 | Charlie | 280 | -3 | 9 | Lucy | 264 | no change | |
10 | Alexander | 279 | -5 | 10 | Charlotte | 250 | 11 | |
11= | Jacob | 265 | no change | 11 | Aria | 239 | 14 | |
11= | Lucas | 265 | -4 | 12= | Ellie | 236 | 2 | |
13 | Harris | 258 | -4 | 12= | Lily | 236 | -2 | |
14 | Mason | 242 | no change | 14 | Freya | 234 | -1 | |
15= | Alfie | 241 | 2 | 15 | Grace | 233 | -4 |
Find details for this and previous years here.
21 December 2016
Stuffed Beaver with All the Trimmings
Consider a gift subscription to Canada's History if you're still wondering what to give the Canadian genealogist.
20 December 2016
Top Ontario baby names 2015
The Ontario Ministry of Government and Consumer Services has released this list of the top baby names for 2015. The top ten names for the previous year are in parentheses. Rising stars are Charlotte and Henry.
Boy's Names | Girl's Names | |
---|---|---|
1 | Liam (Liam) | Olivia (Olivia) |
2 | Benjamin (Ethan) | Emma (Emma) |
3 | Noah (Noah) | Charlotte (Ava) |
4 | Lucas (Benjamin) | Ava (Sophia) |
5 | Ethan (William) | Sophia (Charlotte) |
6 | William (Jacob) | Emily (Emily) |
7 | Nathan (Lucas) | Abigail (Abagail) |
8 | Logan (Mason) | Isabella (Chloe) |
9 | Mason (Logan) | Amelia/Mia (Isabella) |
10 | Jacob (Alexander) | Ella (Avery) |
11 | Jack | Chloe |
12 | Alexander | Avery |
13 | Owen | Evelyn |
14 | James | Lily |
15 | Oliver | Grace |
16 | Daniel/Jackson | Hannah |
17 | Carter | Sofia |
18 | Ryan | Victoria |
19 | Gabriel | Aria |
20 | Hudson | Maya |
21 | Michael | Claire |
22 | Henry/Matthew | Madison |
23 | Samuel | Scarlett |
24 | Adam | Isla |
25 | Joshua | Audrey |
19 December 2016
BIFHSGO conference call for presentation proposals
Many people take time at this season to plan for the year ahead.
A reminder that the British Isles Family History Society if Greater Ottawa is soliciting proposals for presentations at its 23nd Annual Family History Conference to be held in 2017 in Ottawa.
Tentative dates are September 8 - 10 and September 29 - October 1, 2017 - to be confirmed in early January.
Although the conference will focus on two themes:
• England and Wales family history
and
• Methodology,
proposals on any topic likely to be of interest to society members are invited.
Proposals from members and friends from nearby communities (Ontario and Quebec) are especially welcome. Maybe you'd like to propose a panel session together with colleagues.
For more information about proposals, please read the submission details. Deadline is January 31, 2017.
Lump of Coal Award Nominations
1.
2. The Association of Professional Genealogists and Board for Certification of Genealogists for failure to provide standards for the use of terms for confidence in findings used by professionals. Fail.
3. Library and Archives Canada for ignoring newspaper digitization, and practically ignoring newspapers entirely by having no dedicated newspaper librarian. Canada is at or near the bottom of the list of national libraries for this aspect of operations. Continuing neglect.
4. The Ottawa Public Library: for letting the Ottawa Room flounder. For example, the Bytown pamphlet series recently published number 100, but the latest in the Ottawa Room is number 90 with a note attached that 91 and 92 are in cataloguing. There continues to be no meaningful virtual presence. This is the second year of neglect.
5. The General Records Office (England and Wales) for continuing to gouge for birth. marriage and death records, and continuing to do so despite findings that a restrictive policy is unnecessary. Some progress this year, could do better.
6. Canada's Anglo-Celtic Connections: for inability to proof-read, spell and grammar check. This for the second year with no evident improvement.
Your nominations are welcome.
18 December 2016
RootsTech Innovator Showdown 2017 Semi-Finalists
RootsTech has announced the semi-finalists for Innovator Showdown 2017:
Champollion 2.0
The merriest places in Canada
If you're looking for a last minute gift consider a Canadian Geographic subscription.
17 December 2016
Findmypast adds Middlesex War Memorials and British Army 6th Regiment of Foot Discharges 1854-1880
A couple of smaller databases of British-Canadian interest from Findmypast this week.
Middlesex War Memorials have been indexed for the communities of Acton; Ashford; Bedfont; Brentford; Chelsea; Chiswick; Cowley; Cranford; Ealing; Feltham; Fulham; Fulwell; Greenford; Hammersmith; Hampton; Hampton Wick; Hanwell; Hanworth; Harefield; Harlington; Harmondsworth; Hayes; Heston; Hillingdon; Hounslow; Isleworth; Kensington; Knightsbridge; Laleham; Littleton; Northwood; Norwood; Notting Hill; Pinner; Shepherds Bush; Shepperton; Southall; Staines; Stanwell; Sunbury; Teddington; Twickenham; Uxbridge; Whitton.
The database is based on transcripts created by the West Middlesex Family History Society containing 21,736 names.
You may not have thought about a relative killed in one of the World Wars, most of the memorials are for those wars, so it can be surprising to find their name. You'll likely find the surname, with initials, the place where the memorial is found and the war. One of my distant relatives I found on three different memorials in Brentford.
It's a mystery to me why one of those Brentford memorials would mention Sgt Robert Spall VC, born in Ealing, Essex, attested in Winnipeg, parents living in Montreal who served with the Princess Patricia Canadian Light Infantry, killed in action on 13 August 1918.
British Army discharges, 60th Foot 1854-1880 includes 10,966 transcript records with Name; Discharge year; Date; Service number; Rank; Regiment; Battalion; Casualty returns pension; Archive
and Archive reference. The regiment served in Canada during the Fenian raids and the Red River Expedition.
North Irish Roots: Vol 27 No 2
With exceptions the articles are shorter than typical in ACR. I was surprised at the variety, starting with finding a mention of my home town, Great Yarmouth, Norfolk, England, on the first line of the first article about the brig Trusty. NIFHS has many associate members from outside Ireland.Other places mentioned in the Trusty article are Archangel, Belfast, Carrickfergus, Crookhaven, Hayti, Leith, Liverpool, London, Saint John, Richibucto, and Valparaiso.
Another article Greyabbey Roll of Honour has a list of 68 men from that parish who served in the First World War. It includes the following with a Canada connection.
Surname | Forenames | Navy or Army | Service | Remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|
Craig | Joseph | Army | Canadian Force | Killed in Action |
George | Robert | Army | Canadian Force | |
Macdonald | John | Army | Canadian Force | |
Murphy | Alfred | Army | Canadian Force | |
Hill | Arthur | Army | Canadian Force | |
Hamilton | Alfred | Army | Canadian Army Medical Corp. | |
Taggart | Samuel | Army | Canadian Army Medical Corp. | |
Fisher | William | Army | Canadian Force | |
Hamilton | Samuel | Army | Canadian Force | Killed in Action |
The longest article, The Story of George and Eliza McClelland describes their origins in Monaghan, departure in 1864 from Britain, landing in New York and time in Fall River, Massachusetts. They went at a time when steam was supplanting sail, but they chose the latter. Conditions were a lot better than those of the coffin ships just a few years earlier.
16 December 2016
Your ancestor Edward III?
If you have English ancestry you most likely have descent from King Edward III. Also you most likely can't find the records to support it.
Cambridgeshire and Devon Bishops Transcripts at FamiySearch
England, Cambridgeshire Bishop's Transcripts, 1599-1860 contains yearly summaries of baptisms, marriages, and deaths for parishes throughout Cambridge originally filmed at the Cambridge University Library. You can search the 36,260 indexed records and view tlinked images with free sign in or browse 61,909 images after signing in,
England, Devon Bishop's Transcripts, 1558-1887 has 93,511 browse images and 290.306 indexed records with similar requirements regarding signing in as for Cambridgeshire. They are sourced from the Devon Record Office, Exeter.
15 December 2016
CEF Service Files Digitization: December 2016 Update
As of 15 December 2016, 378,229 (361,236 last month) of 640,000 files are available online via the LAC Soldiers of the First World War: 1914–1918 database.
The latest digitized is from Box 6355(6052 last month) and the surname Morello (Mattineau*).
16,993 (14,231) files were digitized in the last month.
At the last month rate of digitization the project would be completed in 15.4 months, by April 2018.
North Irish Family History Conference
The program is already set with keynote speaker Dr William Roulston of the Ulster Historical Foundation.
Read details at
http://colerainefhs.org.uk/?page_id=165716
OPL: the big reveal
Today we learn about the proposed site for a possible new main branch of the Ottawa Public Library.
One thing is certain. Not everyone will be happy, and many will have mixed emotions. There's a vocal downtown lobby that won't be happy unless it's placed almost on top of the existing site. For them anything west of Kent Street would be too far.
Local genealogists would welcome a joint facility with Library and Archives Canada. The arrangement works well in Montreal between the city and the province. But will the feds try playing the Tunney's Pasture wildcard, rejected as a new hospital site, again? That might get support from those looking to replace the Rosemount Branch but would have the downtown folks upset.
And then there's those of us in underserved areas, library deserts. A large expenditure for a main branch pushes ever further back any prospect of equitable service.
See the Citizen opinion piece at http://ottawacitizen.com/opinion/editorials/editorial-big-questions-on-a-big-new-library
An unusual GRO birth registration
Did you know the General Register Office England issues certified copies of entries of birth for dates prior to 1837 and for births in Scotland? Unusually the information given includes the date and place of baptism, but not the mother's maiden name.
Here's an example for a birth in 1835 in Edinburgh.
There's a story behind this certificate, which relates to a footnote in Canadian history, I'll be recounting at the Alberta Genealogical Society conference, 22-23 April 2017 in Edmonton,
14 December 2016
TreeView 2
On Tuesday I an email arrived from Nick Thorne who, as well as running his own genealogy educational business, handles publicity for The Genealogist. It announced the new version of the software, TreeView 2.
Find out more on what it has to offer in the press release on Nick's Nosey Genealogist blog at www.noseygenealogist.com/blog/4599/treeview-2-is-released-by-sn-genealogy-supplies
Ottawa Branch OGS December meeting
The final Ottawa Branch meeting of 2016 is this Saturday, 17 December.
At 10:30 am Mike More will present a Genealogy: Back to Basics talk on "Getting Organized". It's a short lecture with plenty of time for questions, and answers. If you feel you are fully organized this is one you can afford to skip.
Get together at 1 pm for networking and refreshments followed by showing a specially selected Legacy Webinar: "Timelines and Chronologies - Secrets of Success" by Geoff Rasmussen.
That's followed, at about 3 pm by the Computer Special Interest Group.
All events are at the City of Ottawa Archives, 100 Tallwood Drive, Ottawa, ON room 115
13 December 2016
Recognition for Montreal genealogist Stanley Diamond
Dick Eastman is reporting on his blog that Stanley Diamond has been awarded a Meritorious Service Medal of Canada. While I've not been able to confirm it in an official announcement Stanley certainly merits recognition for his continuing contributions to Jewish genealogy.
Read Dick's post at https://blog.eogn.com/2016/12/12/stanley-diamond-has-been-awarded-the-meritorious-service-medal-of-canada/#more-16287
12 December 2016
How to find your Irish ancestors online
Start at www.irishgenealogy.ie/en/2016-family-history/welcome which will lead you to an introduction and seven modules tailored to Irish family history:
SurnamesYou can also download the entire course as a pdf at https://www.irishgenealogy.ie/images/content/family2016/pdf/2016FamilyHistory_Workbook.pdf
Placenames
Census
Civil
Church
Property
Military
via a post at www.johngrenham.com/blog/2016/12/12/new-free-irish-genealogy-education-site/
Help in writing family history
Judging the line-up of most popular "genealogy" books for sale on amazon.ca a lot of people are interested in writing up their family history and memories. Many are based on asking questions for you to respond to in your own words, the literary equivalent of the colouring book. None are newly published; memories are timeless. All are rated as better than four stars out of five.
.
Memories for My Grandchild: A Keepsake To Remember (Grandparent's Memory Book) Hardcover-spiral – Mar 15 2010
by Suzanne Zenkel (Author)
Don't you wish your grandmother had written down her life story? This journal enables you to write down yours!
• Guided questions and prompts will help you tell your grandchildren (and great-grandchildren to come) all about your childhood and teen years; your education, love, and marriage; work, community, religion, military service; parenthood and family life; and, of course, grandparenthood!
Hardcover-spiral
CDN$ 17.95
There's More You Should Know: A Journal of My Life Hardcover – Mar 4 2014
by Jennifer Basye Sander (Author)
Whether their children have asked them to recapture treasured moments, stories, and traditions, or simply to record valuable family information, many seniors are now sitting down to write about their lives. But how does one get started on such a daunting project?
That’s where writing coach Jennifer Basye Sander steps in. In Before I Go, There’s More You Should Know, she has developed one hundred questions to prompt fledgling memoirists and family historians on their way.
Hardcover
CDN$ 17.95
The Story of a Lifetime: A Keepsake of Personal Memoirs Hardcover – Sep 1 2000
by Pamela Pavuk (Author), Stephen Pavuk (Author)
Uniquely personal gift book that expresses to the recipient the elegant sentiment: "Your life is important to me. I value where you've been, what you've done and who you are. Please tell me more." Enables the recipient to write his or her life story and perspective with ease by answering almost 500 thought-provoking questions right in the book. Passes along a legacy of wisdom and knowledge gained from experience. Preserves special memories and instills appreciation for family history. Enhances personal growth and strengthens bonds with loved ones. Deepens understanding and communication in the present. Creates a priceless heirloom for future generations.
Hardcover
CDN$ 58.13
Grandmother Remembers 30th Anniversary Edition Hardcover – Mar 19 2013
by Judith Levy (Author)
Grandmother Remembers is the original, bestselling keepsake book for grandmothers to record important memories, family traditions, favorite recipes, and special stories to pass along to their grandchildren. With more than 1.6 million copies sold, the book continues to appeal to new generations of grandmothers. This special 30th anniversary edition includes specially designed wrapping paper and a notecard with envelope for convenient gift giving.
Family Tree Memory Keeper: Your Workbook for Family History, Stories and Genealogy Paperback – Oct 9 2013
by Allison Dolan (Author), Diane Haddad (Author)
From the editors of Family Tree Magazine, this workbook makes it easy to record and organize your family history.
Family Tree Memory Keeper helps you keep track of basic genealogy information and special family memories, including traditions, heirloom histories, family records, newsworthy moments, family migrations and immigrations, old recipes, important dates, and much more. This book features:
Dozens of fill-in pages to record all your essential family information.
Convenient paperback format for writing and photocopying pages.
Space for mounting photographs.
Maps to mark your family's migration routes.
Tips for researching your family history.
A comprehensive list of additional resources.
Use Family Tree Memory Keeper to log your genealogy research. Bring it to family get-togethers to gather and share information. Create an invaluable record of your ancestry for future generations.
Paperback
CDN$ 20.21
The Book of Myself: A Do-it-Yourself Autobiography in 201 Questions Hardcover – Jan 9 2007
by David Marshall (Author), Carl Marshall (Author)
A keepsake fill-in book contains more than two hundred prompts divided into three life phases--Early, Middle, and Later Years--and separates each phase into five subject categories--Family, Friends, Education, Work/Responsibilities, and The World.
Hardcover
CDN$ 18.06
YouTube: Orders in Council: Meet the Sisters Behind One of Canada's Greatest Family History Resources
It's refreshing to see Ancestry promoting an independent database on the company YouTube channel.
Joanna Crandell and Elinor "Lin" Sullivan are founders of the Orders in Council Database (OCD). The database contains photographs and indexes of names of over Canadian 1,000 Orders in Council to make accessible the information about 57,000 non-British immigrants approved to come to Canada between 1930 and 1960.
There's more. While it isn't Anglo-Celtic the sisters are Ottawa-based. Check out the short video.
11 December 2016
CTRL your computer
From Reader's Digest, a collection of keyboard shortcuts.
CTRL + SHIFT + T : Open the most recently closed tab
CTRL + back arrow: Go back one page in your browsing history
CTRL + D = bookmark a page
CTRL + L: Move the cursor to the URL bar
CTRL + K: Move the cursor to the search box
CTRL + 1: Switch to the first tab
CTRL + Plus sign: Zoom in
CTRL + Minus sign: Zoom out
CTRL+ Enter = .com
CTRL + W: Close current tab
In Facebook: J and K for effortless scrolling down and up
Space bar: Automatically scroll down a page while browsing
What genealogists want from digital libraries and archives
The results are from a survey of British History Online, a digital library of key printed primary and secondary sources for the history of Britain and Ireland, with a principal focus on the period between 1300 and 1800.
Who responded to the survey? 737 (51%) classified themselves as genealogists; 354 (25%) as academics or students; and 348 (24%) were in a catch-all, casual user, category. Academics reported more frequent use of the site than genealogists.
Genealogical users were typically older than the academics. The majority were between 55 and 74, but the largest group was older than 65, and there was a large group older than 75 years. Very few users were under 45. The split between male and female respondents was equal, unlike amongst academics.
63% of genealogist users responding were from the UK and Ireland, 18% from North America and 13% from Oceania.
Simple keyword searching was the most popular approach to using the site's resources with genealogists having slightly more use than academics. Advanced keyword searching was also popular but slightly more so for academics than genealogists. This could be because genealogists were found to focus most on name and place searches.
A majority of users liked to have access to fuzzy and proximity searches, more so the academics.
If you decide to read the full article don't be put off by the momentary lapse to 23rd grade Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level academic obfuscation,:
It would be easy to be deterred reading the sentence above in the recent article Digital library search preferences amongst historians and genealogists: British History Online user survey.The project is also an important part of the technical revisionist reactions in the form of discrete re-curated datasets that eschew searchable databases entirely and instead focus on a mutable interpretation of a set of records as the new unit of dissemination.Digital library search preferences amongst historians and genealogists: British History Online user survey is by Adam Crymble of the University of Hertfordshire and published in Volume 10 Number 4 of Digital Humanities Quarterly.
10 December 2016
New and updated English county records
Also from findmypast, a new collection of 49,300 Buckinghamshire Marriages from 26 parishes. These are transcripts, typically from the start of record to 1812. The transcripts cover First name(s),
Last name, Role, Year, Marriage date, Spouse's first name(s), Spouse's last name, Parish, County, Country,
Ancestry lists an update to the collection Cornwall, England, Parish Registers, 1538-2010, now with339,301 records. When I checked it there was no search capability, only browse. FamilySearch, the source for Ancestry, have a searchable collection, with images, at https://familysearch.org/search/collection/1769414?collectionNameFilter=false
Clarington Digital Newspaper Collection
Merchant And General Advertiser (Bowmanville, ON) is available from 1871 - 1876.
Orono Weekly Times is available from 1937 to 2012
Canadian Statesman was published Bowmanville and is available from 1868 to 2006.
Try this combined search
The Clarington Digital Newspaper Collection is a collaborative project between the Clarington Public Library and the Clarington Museums and Archives.
Why is it that Clarington, with a population of 85,000 can do this while much larger communities, ten times the size, lag?
09 December 2016
Commonwealth War Graves Commission seeks relatives
Ontario Seniors Community Grant Program
Attention leaders of not-for-profit genealogy and family history and heritage organizations in Ontario.
The Ontario Seniors Community Grant Program is "designed to give seniors more opportunities to participate in their communities by providing funding to not-for-profit community groups for projects that encourage greater social inclusion, volunteerism and community engagement for seniors."
The Brant County Branch - Ontario Genealogical Society received $2,950 in 2015.
No other genealogy group has received funding in the three years of the program. Funding for heritage projects has been granted.
Why not genealogy in 2017?
The deadline for applications is 3 March 2017.
Grants range from $1,000 to $8,000 for a program total of $2 million.
Read more at www.seniors.gov.on.ca/en/srsorgs/scgp.php
BIFHSGO Conference 2017 call for presentation proposals
The conference themes are:
• England and Wales family history
• Methodology, e.g., evidence analysis, genealogical proof standard, FAN (friends, associates and neighbours), and appraising the credibility of documents.
Proposals are solicited for presentations and workshops on these themes, and also on other topics likely to be of interest to society members.
For more information read please the submission details.
Deadline for presentation proposals is 31 January, 2017.
08 December 2016
RootsMagic to miss Ancestry sync deadline
A year ago, when Ancestry announced it was discontinuing support for Family Tree Maker as of the end of 2016 RootsMagic jumped into the gap with an offer to get people to switch. It came with a promise that Ancestry sync would be implemented in RootsMagic by the end of 2016. Several people I know purchased RM on the basis of that promise.
Now the company is out with news that deadline will not be met. No apology!
The new promise is that it will be implemented and "we aren't talking about a 6 month delay or anything like that."
In the meantime ... mind the gap.
07 December 2016
Child Migrant Ancestors from Britain
Phil Ellis, founding chair of the Ontario Genealogical Society Special Interest Group on British Home Children, is author of Finding your Child Migrant Ancestors from Britain. Published in May this year by Heritage Publications it covers the history of child migration from Britain with details of the records available in receiving countries, and in Britain, and of the sending agencies.
The book is an update, desperately needed, of my own book Researching Canada's Home Children. The same basic structure is retained with minor reorganization and an additional chapter on Australia, New Zealand and Southern Rhodesia Research. There's a new section on the Children's Oversea's Reception Board (CORB) which evacuated children from June to September 1940 for the duration of the war. Although not migrants many did eventually settle in the host country.
There have been many changes in the decade since the previous publication which have been incorporated in the new book. There are new websites and changes of address. Inevitably other new resources, such as those from Ireland and the newly available GRO birth indexes including mother's maiden name, have appeared since publication. While some resources are missing, such as the Canadian census which now includes 1921, Canadian voter's lists and clues from the ever increasing availability of compiled family trees online, the strength of the book remains in the coverage of home child specific resources.
Find the book at http://genealogystore.com/after you select the shipping destination, under
Heritage Books, in the English Series
By Country/Groups: Canada: General: Books
By country/Groups: England: Books.
Art at LAC
Detachment honours the lives lost during the First World War and reinforces the enduring importance of collective memory on its 100th anniversary through art created from brass fasteners that once held together the military records of the Canadian Expeditionary Force. Find out more and see the short video explaining the project at https://librarianship.ca/news/detachment/.
Eric Chan a.k.a. eepmon, a Digital Artisan intersecting computer code and drawing spoke about his involvement with the Open Books exhibit at Library and Archives Canada; also his involvement with a limited edition parka for Canada Goose.
Derek Kwan, who described himself as actor, creator and food eater, showed a short video, Taste of Identity, he made using resources from the Vancouver Public Library.
BIFHSGO December Meeting
Following the President's announcements starting at 10am four members will share their Great Moments.
Duncan Monkhouse will speak on Mary Ann Flannery — From Ireland You Say
Susan Davis reports on her finding about The Drowning of Charles Dougherty
Glenn Wright tells about the benefits of having a newspaperman in the family in Extra! Extra! Read All about It! Cousin Lyman and Power of the Press
Suzanne Eakin recounts The Tender Tale of a First World War British War Baby with Canadian Roots, Discovered Almost a Century Later.
Find out more at www.bifhsgo.ca/eventListings.php?nm=127
Prior to the main event, at 9 am, Marnie McCall will give a Before BIFHSGO Education Talk on Copyright for Family History.
In between Global Genealogy will be on hand with a selection of their wares to purchase. As always if you find something on their website at globalgenealogy.com of interest contact them and ask them to bring it for your inspection. Purchase and you'll save the shipping cost.
As usual, the location is The Chamber, Ben Franklin Place, 101 Centrepointe Drive, Ottawa, Ontario
Leeds Burials
The Leeds General Cemetery was opened in 1835 as a public burial ground in Leeds, Yorkshire operating until the 1960s.
Recently placed online the Leeds General Cemetery Burial Registers Index contains over 96,000 transcribed entries from the burial registers. The index information from a search can be more detailed than one typically sees, a model for others. For example:
Name: Wright, George
Gender: Male
Occupation: Gardener
Date of death: 18/07/1878
Age at death: 73 Years
Cause of death: Gen Decay
Mother: Wright, Ann
Father: Wright, John
Occupation of parent(s): Gardener
plus burial date and plot identification.
On the associated image is the place or residence and where born as well as the name of the officiating minister.
The best place to start is https://blog.library.leeds.ac.uk/blog/special-collections/post/484 which gives an overview of the collection and a link to the search page.
via a tweet from Judy Webster.
06 December 2016
FamilySearch adds Ireland, Valuation Office Books, 1831-1856
This database comprises an indexed compilation of "General Valuation of Rateable Property in Ireland, 1847-1864" and "Griffith's Valuation" made available to FamilySearch from Findmypast.
A search provides transcripts containing name, event type, event date, event year, event place, event place (original), affiliation record type, townland, county, parish and, barony.
Each search result also provides a link to the associated image available when at a Family History Centre, to "signed-in members of supporting organizations" or to Findmypast subscribers through the Griffith’s Valuation landing page.
05 December 2016
Canadian Stained Glass
Something a bit different precipitated by a conversation on the periphery of a meeting at Library and Archives Canada.
The Institute for Stained Glass in Canada at http://glassincanada.org presents more than 6000 photos, mostly from Western Canada, documenting 160 years of glass in Canadian public buildings. An enormous range of styles and techniques reveal Canada's most widespread public art.
More RootsTech Innovator Showdown Contestants
Louis Kessler, one of the entrants in the Rootstech Innovator Showdown, and a Canadian, contacted me to correct a link and let me know about additional contestants.
Find his list at www.beholdgenealogy.com/blog/?p=1831
Thanks and best of luck to Louis.
Rootstech Innovator Showcase Promos
As described on the Rootstech webpage (slightly edited)
The Innovator Showdown was created to help innovators capitalize on the technological shift in the industry and provide the opportunity for innovators to use their talents and bright ideas to help propel them forward in new and exciting ways.Part of the entry requirement is to produce a short video explaining the innovation. Here are some of them. If I missed any please let me know and I add, or feature in a separate blog post.
GenQuizitive
Little Family Tree
Double Match Triangulator
The Family Nexus
Old News USA
O Ancestor Where Art Thou
LongLostRelatives
genealogyDOTcoach
Kindex
RootsFinder
CSI: Crowd Sourced Indexing
Lifey
GenealogyWallCharts
Bravo OGS
On top of the half price membership for a new member and a member partner which ends at the end of the month there is a new initiative with Findmypast.
Here's how vice-President Steve Fulton described it in an email.
Every member of The Ontario Genealogical Society in 2017 will receive a Starter Package subscription to Findmypast. The value of this benefit is $34.95 US$, and it is free for all 2017 OGS members.
The Findmypast Starter Package allows access to over 3.6 million records, including:
Canadian and US social histories
Canadian census (pending release)
Ontario Birth Index, 1860-1920 (pending release)
UK/Ireland Census Records
Findmypast Family Tree
Irish Parish Catholic Registers
Exclusive land records and Irish Prison Registers
Exclusive Court records and Petty Sessions Order Books
The complete U.S. Census, 1790–1940
Birth, marriage, and death records from across the U.S.
(excluding premium marriage dataset)
US immigration and travel records, including U.S. Passenger Lists, 1820s–1950s
US Newspapers
If you're tempted to join, or rejoin as I did earlier, go to www.ogs.on.ca/.
04 December 2016
Joshua Taylor on How Genealogists Research
Presented in an interview format with host Liz Covart it covers what would be good to know when starting out researching your family history and, as always, acts as a refresher for the more experienced.
- New-York Genealogical and Biographical Society
- Overview of professional genealogy
- Where genealogists start their research projects
- How far back you can expect to trace your family tree
- Differences in access to records between the United States and European countries
- The role questions play in genealogical research
- Genealogists’ research process
- Where genealogists look for information
- Digital resources for genealogical research
- Types of historical sources genealogists use
- How genealogists research people who left little-to-no written record
- How genealogists use the work of other genealogists
- How to know if the family tree constructed by another genealogist is accurate
- The role of DNA in genealogical research
- Objectivity in genealogical research
- The final products of genealogical research
- Strategies for becoming “unstuck” in your genealogical research
- The role historical context plays in genealogical research
- Researching in U.S. census records
- Tips and tricks for conducting genealogical research
- Local genealogical societies
Although Josh and Liz do come at the topic from a US, and New York orientation the advice is more generally applicable.
Skip past the first five minutes of the episode to the interview which lasts about 40 minutes.
Toward the end of the episode it's revealed that the next series of Genealogy Roadshow has not (yet) been commissioned.
www.benfranklinsworld.com/episode-110-joshua-taylor-genealogists-research-history/
Crème de la crème: nourishing, not fattening
Every week I'm impressed by some of the things included. Gail is well tuned in to social media, as those who've heard her speak at BIFHSGO or OGS meetings already know, meaning that while there's some overlap with this blog Gail's scope is broader.
Check out her latest Crème de la crème post here where you can subscribe to ensure you don't miss any of Gail's posts.
Change for The Canadian Gravemarker Gallery
News arrived on Saturday that the Webmaster of The Canadian Gravemarker Gallery, Murray Pletsch, has decided to retire.
Thanks to Murray for the many years of volunteer service and all the best for the future.
Over the coming months photos from The Canadian Gravemarker Gallery website will be incorporated into CanadaGenWeb at http://rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cancemet/
their website. It will take some while to re-index the 1,600 cemeteries from The Canadian Gravemarker Gallery.
02 December 2016
Irish Soldiers' Records
The 16 soldiers listed below were members of five units of the British Army which were disbanded following the establishment of the independent Irish Free State in 1922. They each had a Canadian connection; born, address of next of kin, or address on discharge.
FIRST NAME
|
LAST NAME
|
ROLE
|
DATE
|
PLACE
|
REGISTRATION TYPE
| |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
John | Hill | soldier | 06/03/1919 | Maymyo | Enlistment | Scans linked to deed |
Cyril Joseph | Lee | soldier | 28/07/1919 | Cork | Enlistment | Scans linked to deed |
Thomas | Shearer | soldier | 27/01/1903 | Galway | Enlistment | Scans linked to deed |
Patrick | Dolan | soldier | 12/08/1915 | Dublin | Enlistment | Scans linked to deed |
Ernest | Day | soldier | 10/03/1910 | Stratford E. | Enlistment | Scans linked to deed |
John | Cody | soldier | 29/04/1915 | Wexford | Enlistment | Scans linked to deed |
William Samuel | Collins | soldier | 25/10/1919 | Whitehall S.W. | Enlistment | Scans linked to deed |
John Basil Trelawney | Button | soldier | 21/06/1921 | Plymouth | Enlistment | Scans linked to deed |
Albert | Mulholland | soldier | 04/04/1919 | Rugeley Camp | Enlistment | Scans linked to deed |
Frank | O'Sullivan | soldier | 03/10/1921 | Cork | Enlistment | Scans linked to deed |
John | Muldoon | soldier | 15/12/1919 | Dublin | Enlistment | Scans linked to deed |
Francis | O'Flynn | soldier | 05/02/1920 | Cork | Enlistment | Scans linked to deed |
John Joseph Patrick | Cashin | soldier | 02/11/1910 | Kilkenny | Enlistment | Scans linked to deed |
James | Rodger | soldier | 11/03/1919 | Maymyo | Enlistment | Scans linked to deed |
Henry | Harrison | soldier | 26/07/1909 | Dublin | Enlistment | Scans linked to deed |
Alfred George | Watling | soldier | 14/07/1920 | London | Enlistment |
Listed with links to images of original records, this information is from a database of 11,981 recordsfrom the National Army Museum at www.nam.ac.uk/soldiers-records/persons.
Some of these list address or discharge with the notation "Comm. Of Emigration". I'm curious about that organization. Any information to share?