With almost 350 years of content the Royal Society journal collection: science in the making is now free to access until 24th January.
You can search over 740,000 pages, 9 separate journals and over 45,000 articles dating from 1665 to 1996.
OCR of full colour scans was used to produce the fully searchable text. That has errors so the basic digital metadata, like author and title, were produced by human indexers.
Search names, especially the less common ones, and places. "Ottawa" finds 788 hits dating from as early as 1846. Search from http://royalsocietypublishing.org/search/
30 November 2017
Correct mistranscribed or misspelled names in MyHeritage SuperSearch™
If you've done any transcription you understand why errors occur. Sometimes words are poorly written, the copy you have to work with is of poor quality, perhaps out of focus or lacking contrast. But if you know what you're looking for, given the context, the "right" transcription jumps out at you.
Then you have to decide if you're going to share your "correction", or perhaps for properly "interpretation".
Most organizations these days allow you to add your transcription to the record so others searching will have the benefit of your knowledge. Now MyHeritage has added that capability for their SuperSearch™ results.
Interested to know more? Then read the MyHeritage blog post, New Feature: Do-it-Yourself Historical Record Fixes.
Then you have to decide if you're going to share your "correction", or perhaps for properly "interpretation".
Most organizations these days allow you to add your transcription to the record so others searching will have the benefit of your knowledge. Now MyHeritage has added that capability for their SuperSearch™ results.
Interested to know more? Then read the MyHeritage blog post, New Feature: Do-it-Yourself Historical Record Fixes.
British Newspaper Archive additions for November
The British Newspaper Archive now has 22,673,989 pages (22,481,573 pages last month). The 16 (46) papers with new pages online this month, includes those listed as being posted on the 30th, are tabulated below with the major additions bolded.
TITLE | DATE RANGE |
---|---|
Cambrian News | 1881-1883, 1885-1889, 1891-1896, 1898-1909 |
Coventry Evening Telegraph | 1898, 1904, 1906, 1908-1913, 1919, 1926, 1928-1929, 1931, 1933-1934 |
Daily Herald | 1938 |
Hampshire Telegraph | 1914 |
Irish News and Belfast Morning News | 1892 |
Isle of Wight Times | 1862-1866, 1871, 1873-1874, 1876-1879, 1889, 1897, 1901-1913 |
John Bull | 1833 |
Leominster News and North West Herefordshire & Radnorshire Advertiser | 1884, 1886-1896, 1898-1910 |
Melton Mowbray Mercury and Oakham and Uppingham News | 1881-1894, 1898-1900, 1904-1909, 1911, 1913-1915 |
Pall Mall Gazette | 1922 |
Ross Gazette | 1897, 1910 |
Surrey Gazette | 1860-1865, 1867, 1871-1872, 1875, 1879 |
The Graphic | 1869-1898, 1900-1901, 1903-1911, 1914-1932 |
Todmorden Advertiser and Hebden Bridge Newsletter | 1862-1867, 1869, 1871, 1873-1876, 1878-1895, 1898-1910, 1913-1934 |
Windsor and Eton Express | 1872-1875, 1877-1882, 1898-1902, 1904-1907 |
Yarmouth Independent | 1897 |
Tracing History Through Title Deeds
Tracing History Through Title Deeds (Paperback)
A Guide for Family and Local Historians
Local History Family History Social History
By Dr Nat Alcock
Imprint: Pen & Sword Family History
Pages: 224
ISBN: 9781526703453
Published: 30th November 2017
£11.99 Introductory Offer
RRP £14.99
Property title deeds are perhaps the most numerous sources of historical evidence but also one of the most neglected. While the information any one deed contains can often be reduced to a few lines, it can be of critical importance for family and local historians. Nat Alcock's handbook aims to help the growing army of enthusiastic researchers to use the evidence of these documents, without burying them in legal technicalities. It also reveals how fascinating and rewarding they can be once their history, language and purpose are understood. A sequence of concise, accessible chapters explains why they are so useful, where they can be found and how the evidence they provide can be extracted and applied. Family historians will find they reveal family, social and financial relationships and local historians can discover from them so much about land ownership, field and place names, the history of buildings and the expansion of towns and cities. They also bring our ancestors into view in the fullness of life, not just at birth, marriage and death, and provide more rounded pictures of the members of a family tree.
A Guide for Family and Local Historians
Local History Family History Social History
By Dr Nat Alcock
Imprint: Pen & Sword Family History
Pages: 224
ISBN: 9781526703453
Published: 30th November 2017
£11.99 Introductory Offer
RRP £14.99
Property title deeds are perhaps the most numerous sources of historical evidence but also one of the most neglected. While the information any one deed contains can often be reduced to a few lines, it can be of critical importance for family and local historians. Nat Alcock's handbook aims to help the growing army of enthusiastic researchers to use the evidence of these documents, without burying them in legal technicalities. It also reveals how fascinating and rewarding they can be once their history, language and purpose are understood. A sequence of concise, accessible chapters explains why they are so useful, where they can be found and how the evidence they provide can be extracted and applied. Family historians will find they reveal family, social and financial relationships and local historians can discover from them so much about land ownership, field and place names, the history of buildings and the expansion of towns and cities. They also bring our ancestors into view in the fullness of life, not just at birth, marriage and death, and provide more rounded pictures of the members of a family tree.
29 November 2017
Handwriting Transcription
TNA, the UK National Archives, jumping the gun a little with a report A Year in
Archives 2017, gives examples of progress during the year in the UK.
The one that caught my attention was University College London’s Bentham
Project using a Handwritten Text Recognition (HTR)
programme transkribus.eu/.
If successful HTR would be a breakthrough technology for genealogy. Imagine opening up all those PCC probate records without the need to learn paleography and making them full text searchable. HTR is something that's been worked on for years, but may finally be coming close to being a practical tool.
That's just as voice recognition has emerged -- see this example of a YouTube video with subtitles produced by voice recognition - click on CC at the bottom right hand side.
Archives 2017, gives examples of progress during the year in the UK.
The one that caught my attention was University College London’s Bentham
Project using a Handwritten Text Recognition (HTR)
programme transkribus.eu/.
If successful HTR would be a breakthrough technology for genealogy. Imagine opening up all those PCC probate records without the need to learn paleography and making them full text searchable. HTR is something that's been worked on for years, but may finally be coming close to being a practical tool.
That's just as voice recognition has emerged -- see this example of a YouTube video with subtitles produced by voice recognition - click on CC at the bottom right hand side.
28 November 2017
Browse GRO Ireland BMD Images
A blog post from SWilson.info shares how to browse images of the Civil Birth, Marriage and Death registers on the IrishGenealogy website. The tool adds a selection of next / previous links to make it easier to move backwards and forwards through the images without having to manually edit the URL. This can be useful to help locate mis-indexed entries, or records with missing index entries.
While at the site check out the other useful Irish resources linked.
While at the site check out the other useful Irish resources linked.
27 November 2017
Progress on Digitizing Tweedsmuir Community Histories
In January I reported that "135 GB of digitized material including Home and County newsletters, original constitution, 3 published history books, 11 Tweedsmuir histories and more" had been digitized in a Women's Institute project funded by the Documentary Heritage Communities Program.
With continued funding there are now 72 Tweedsmuir histories online for locations on the map. The majority are in Eastern Ontario where the project is based. They are: Amherst Island (6)
Appleton (1); Apsley (3); Arnprior (7); Balsam Hill (18); Braeside (4); Burnstown (4); Clay Bank (1); Delaware (2); Galetta (1); Glasgow (4); McGregor (1); North Tarentorus (1); Pine Grove (1); Ramsay (5); Renfrew South District (3); Stewartville (6); Teeswater (1); West Lorne (1); White Lake (1); Willow Run (1).
All these digitized copies can be browsed and searched, including for names in the full text, from here.
A few additional volumes under What's New are for Sidney South, Demorestville, Bloomfield, Solway and Quinte.
With continued funding there are now 72 Tweedsmuir histories online for locations on the map. The majority are in Eastern Ontario where the project is based. They are: Amherst Island (6)
Appleton (1); Apsley (3); Arnprior (7); Balsam Hill (18); Braeside (4); Burnstown (4); Clay Bank (1); Delaware (2); Galetta (1); Glasgow (4); McGregor (1); North Tarentorus (1); Pine Grove (1); Ramsay (5); Renfrew South District (3); Stewartville (6); Teeswater (1); West Lorne (1); White Lake (1); Willow Run (1).
All these digitized copies can be browsed and searched, including for names in the full text, from here.
A few additional volumes under What's New are for Sidney South, Demorestville, Bloomfield, Solway and Quinte.
Any questions for LAC?
Guy Berthaiume, Librarian and Archivist of Canada, is inviting everyone to ask questions he will answer for 90 minutes starting at 11:30 am (EST) on Monday, 4 December.
Are there questions you'd like to ask, or maybe comments (compliments would be welcome too) about LAC services.
It won't come as much of a surprise that mine will be why LAC is not providing leadership on Canadian newspaper digitization in the way that peer organizations in the US, UK, Australia and New Zealand do?
Are there questions you'd like to ask, or maybe comments (compliments would be welcome too) about LAC services.
It won't come as much of a surprise that mine will be why LAC is not providing leadership on Canadian newspaper digitization in the way that peer organizations in the US, UK, Australia and New Zealand do?
26 November 2017
Quiet at Ancestry
So far in November 22 new or updated collections have appeared on Ancestry. They came in a rush early in the month, the most recent, UK, Absent Voter Lists, 1918-1925, 1939, was posted on 8 November.
An unusually long quiet period can signal they're working on one or more major additions. Dare we expect some for Canada? I expect so.
An unusually long quiet period can signal they're working on one or more major additions. Dare we expect some for Canada? I expect so.
In From The Cold: the S.S. Crusader
The following 16 Canadian members of the crew of the S.S. Crusader were declared lost on this date in 1941 after their Merchant Navy ship was sunk by a submarine.
Robert BRADSHAW : Radio Officer
Armand CARRIERE : Fireman
Ernest GAMELIN : Fireman
Ralph GODIN : Able Seaman
Reginald HENDERSON : Third Engineer
Oskar HOROWITZ : Fireman
Arthur L'ABBE : Fireman
Robert LAIRD : Utility Boy
William LISTER : Able Seaman
Theodore MEDDIN : Fireman
James MOON : Oiler
Bernard PORTAL : Oiler
George SHARP : Ordinary Seaman
Lloyd SPARKS : Fireman
Albert SYLVESTER : Steward
Maurice THERIAULT : Messman
These men had been missing from the official Commonwealth War Graves Commission (CWGC) list of casualties from the First and Second World Wars. They were added to the database on 25 February this year as a result of the work of the In From The Cold Project and are to be added to 3,135 named on the Halifax Memorial in Nova Scotia.
The project has resulted in the memorialization of nearly 5,500 Commonwealth war dead.
The story Mysterious Loss of SS Crusader suggests the actual date of death was earlier. There is additional information here. When this was drawn to the attention of the CWGC they promptly changed the date in their records.
Robert BRADSHAW : Radio Officer
Armand CARRIERE : Fireman
Ernest GAMELIN : Fireman
Ralph GODIN : Able Seaman
Reginald HENDERSON : Third Engineer
Oskar HOROWITZ : Fireman
Arthur L'ABBE : Fireman
Robert LAIRD : Utility Boy
William LISTER : Able Seaman
Theodore MEDDIN : Fireman
James MOON : Oiler
Bernard PORTAL : Oiler
George SHARP : Ordinary Seaman
Lloyd SPARKS : Fireman
Albert SYLVESTER : Steward
Maurice THERIAULT : Messman
These men had been missing from the official Commonwealth War Graves Commission (CWGC) list of casualties from the First and Second World Wars. They were added to the database on 25 February this year as a result of the work of the In From The Cold Project and are to be added to 3,135 named on the Halifax Memorial in Nova Scotia.
The project has resulted in the memorialization of nearly 5,500 Commonwealth war dead.
The story Mysterious Loss of SS Crusader suggests the actual date of death was earlier. There is additional information here. When this was drawn to the attention of the CWGC they promptly changed the date in their records.
25 November 2017
FreeBMD November Update
The FreeBMD database was updated on Friday 24 November 2017 to contain 264,917,588 distinct records (264,343,835 at previous update).
Years with major updates (more than 5,000 entries) are: for births: 1963-64, 1966, 1977-1981; for marriages: 1965-66, 1969, 1977, 1979-80, 82-83; for deaths 1979-82.
Years with major updates (more than 5,000 entries) are: for births: 1963-64, 1966, 1977-1981; for marriages: 1965-66, 1969, 1977, 1979-80, 82-83; for deaths 1979-82.
Balmaghie Church link to Canada
Many families from Scottish parish of Balmaghie, Dumfries and Galloway, emigrated to Canada in the 19th century. They include Thomas McCrae & Jane Campbell, who married on 15 March 1842 in Balmaghie. They were the grandparents of John McCrae, writer of "In Flanders Fields."
Rick Roberts of Global Genealogy emailed to let me know about a petition to save the church for the community. Check out the site where you can find out more about the community and sign the petition here.
24 November 2017
Findmypast adds Wales Probate Abstracts and Westminster Catholic Records
Image browse files of Wales Probate Abstracts 1544-1858 are now on Findmypast for the Welsh dioceses of Bangor, Hawarden, Llandaff, St. Asaph's (which includes 11 parishes in Shropshire, England), and St. David's. The abstracts include testator’s name, residence, the date of the will and probate as well as the names and relationships of other family members.
Each of the 583 volumes is for a diocese and year or group of years. At the start of each is an index by place name and by given name. The names are not searchable. This collection includes images of transcripts from FamilySearch.
Also new this week are additions to England Roman Catholic Parish records for The Archdiocese of Westminster. Along with baptism, marriage and burial records there is a collection of anniversary books, confirmation lists, congregational lists, lists of benefactors and converts, parish diaries, and more under the title Congregational Records.
Each of the 583 volumes is for a diocese and year or group of years. At the start of each is an index by place name and by given name. The names are not searchable. This collection includes images of transcripts from FamilySearch.
Also new this week are additions to England Roman Catholic Parish records for The Archdiocese of Westminster. Along with baptism, marriage and burial records there is a collection of anniversary books, confirmation lists, congregational lists, lists of benefactors and converts, parish diaries, and more under the title Congregational Records.
New | Total | |
---|---|---|
Baptisims | 94,000 | 584,000 |
Marriages | 13,000 | 110,000 |
Burials | 9,600 | 51,000 |
Congregational | 41,000 | 169,000 |
Genetic Genealogy Ireland, in Belfast
I'm looking forward to 16-17 February in Belfast and a (tentative) program of genetic genealogy presentations.
Prof Jim Mallory ... The Origins of the Irish
Ed Gilbert ... The Irish DNA Atlas Project - final results
Martin McDowell ... DNA & the North of Ireland Family History Society
Donna Rutherford ... DNA & Game of Thrones
Debbie Kennett ... Mysteries of the Titanic solved by DNA
Brad Larkin ... DNA, Clans, & Monarchy
Katherine Borges ... DNA testing for beginners
Linda Magellan ... Introduction to DNA Testing
John Cleary ... A Y-DNA Ulster family Case Study
James Irvine ... Y-DNA of a Scots-Irish diaspora
Michelle Leonard ... Using your autosomal DNA results
Maurice Gleeson ... Triangulating on a specific ancestor
Ask the Experts session ... 20 minutes at the end of each day.
Full details at
http://ggi2013.blogspot.ca/2017/11/ggi-belfast-our-first-event-for-2018.html
Prof Jim Mallory ... The Origins of the Irish
Ed Gilbert ... The Irish DNA Atlas Project - final results
Martin McDowell ... DNA & the North of Ireland Family History Society
Donna Rutherford ... DNA & Game of Thrones
Debbie Kennett ... Mysteries of the Titanic solved by DNA
Brad Larkin ... DNA, Clans, & Monarchy
Katherine Borges ... DNA testing for beginners
Linda Magellan ... Introduction to DNA Testing
John Cleary ... A Y-DNA Ulster family Case Study
James Irvine ... Y-DNA of a Scots-Irish diaspora
Michelle Leonard ... Using your autosomal DNA results
Maurice Gleeson ... Triangulating on a specific ancestor
Ask the Experts session ... 20 minutes at the end of each day.
Full details at
http://ggi2013.blogspot.ca/2017/11/ggi-belfast-our-first-event-for-2018.html
How many autosomal DNA matches?
Earlier this week Blaine Bettinger posted a survey on Facebook asking how many 3rd cousin or closer matches you have on Ancestry DNA. More than 1,200 people responded. While the most frequent answer was 1 - 5 matches there was a wide distribution. Some had none, some had more than 100 matches.
A simple way of looking at what to expect is by analogy to the urn problem -- coloured balls in an urn are either one colour or another, say black or white. If you draw a certain number of balls how many of them are likely to be of each colour?
What you need to know is how many balls there are in the urn, how many are there of each colour and how many are drawn.
For the autosomal DNA matching you need to know how many there are in the population from which those who take the test are drawn, how many 3rd cousin or closer relatives you have, and how many tests there are in the company database. The more 3rd cousin or closer relatives you have, and the larger the company database the more likely you are to find a match.
The AncestryDNA test is sold in many countries, by far the largest proportion in the USA which has a population of 325 million. Ancestry advertize they have sold 6 million tests. Using those figures and either 100, 500 or 1,000 3rd cousin or closer relatives, the number will vary by family, the bar chart shows the probabilities of the test detecting the given number of 3rd cousin or closer relatives calculated using the binomial distribution.
The distribution found by Blaine Bettinger's survey combines respondents with different family sizes. Pedigree collapse and endogamy will make more distance cousins appear closer. Where people have deliberately tested known cousins (the equivalence of deliberately drawing the chosen colour ball from the urn) the number of matches will be greater.
Those of us without US ancestry are effectively drawing from a population with fewer or even no 3rd cousin or closer relatives. To increase the chances of finding a match remember to transfer your data to Family Tree DNA (another 10 per cent ot results), GEDmatch, MyHeritage, and especially for those of us with British ancestry LivingDNA when it become available.
A simple way of looking at what to expect is by analogy to the urn problem -- coloured balls in an urn are either one colour or another, say black or white. If you draw a certain number of balls how many of them are likely to be of each colour?
What you need to know is how many balls there are in the urn, how many are there of each colour and how many are drawn.
For the autosomal DNA matching you need to know how many there are in the population from which those who take the test are drawn, how many 3rd cousin or closer relatives you have, and how many tests there are in the company database. The more 3rd cousin or closer relatives you have, and the larger the company database the more likely you are to find a match.
The AncestryDNA test is sold in many countries, by far the largest proportion in the USA which has a population of 325 million. Ancestry advertize they have sold 6 million tests. Using those figures and either 100, 500 or 1,000 3rd cousin or closer relatives, the number will vary by family, the bar chart shows the probabilities of the test detecting the given number of 3rd cousin or closer relatives calculated using the binomial distribution.
The distribution found by Blaine Bettinger's survey combines respondents with different family sizes. Pedigree collapse and endogamy will make more distance cousins appear closer. Where people have deliberately tested known cousins (the equivalence of deliberately drawing the chosen colour ball from the urn) the number of matches will be greater.
Those of us without US ancestry are effectively drawing from a population with fewer or even no 3rd cousin or closer relatives. To increase the chances of finding a match remember to transfer your data to Family Tree DNA (another 10 per cent ot results), GEDmatch, MyHeritage, and especially for those of us with British ancestry LivingDNA when it become available.
TheGenealogist starts adding 1910 Lloyd George Domesday Records with annotated maps
The following is a news release from TheGenealogist.
TheGenealogist is releasing the first part of an exciting new record set; The Lloyd George Domesday Survey - a major new release that will find where an ancestor lived in 1910. This unique combination of maps and residential data, held by The National Archives, can precisely locate your ancestor’s house on large scale (5 feet to the mile) hand annotated maps of London that plots the exact property.
TheGenealogist is releasing the first part of an exciting new record set; The Lloyd George Domesday Survey - a major new release that will find where an ancestor lived in 1910. This unique combination of maps and residential data, held by The National Archives, can precisely locate your ancestor’s house on large scale (5 feet to the mile) hand annotated maps of London that plots the exact property.
Researchers often can’t find where ancestors lived as road names change over time, the Blitz bombing areas to destruction, developers changing sites out of all resemblance from what had stood there before, lanes and roads extinguished to build estates and office blocks. All this means that searching for where an ancestor lived using a website linked to modern maps can be frustrating when they fail to pinpoint where the old properties had once been.
● TheGenealogist’s new release will link individual properties to extremely detailed ordnance survey maps used in 1910
● Locate an address found in a census or street directory down to a specific house
● Fully searchable by name, county, parish and street.
● The maps will zoom down to show the individual properties as they existed in 1910
Complementing the maps on TheGenealogist are the accompanying books that will also provide researchers with basic information relative to the valuation of each property, including the valuation assessment number, map reference, owner, occupier, situation, description and extent.
The programme begins with the first release of the IR91 Index with subsequent releases of the more detailed IR58 Field books planned.
The mammoth project has over 94,500 Field Books each having hundreds of pages to digitise with associated large scale IR121 annotated OS maps.
The initial release from TheGenealogist is for the City of London and Paddington maps with their index records. Future releases will expand out across the country with cross linked maps wherever they are available.
Find out more at: TheGenealogist.co.uk/1910Survey/
23 November 2017
Excess Winter Mortality in England and Wales
When deaths in England and Wales for the period December to March are compared to the average of deaths occurring in the preceding August to November and the following April to July an excess winter mortality is found. The first graph, from a release by the UK Office of National Statistics shows the trend in excess winter mortality since 1950.
Disease of the respiratory system, and secondarily the circulatory system are identified as the main causes of excess winter mortality.
The data used by the ONS isn't available further back, but statistics from FreeBMD can be used to show a longer term trend back to 1838. For each year I used the first quarter for the winter mortality and third for summer. Points are annual figures, the blue line the six year moving average and the red line the six year average for the period covered by the first graph.
The most notable feature is the higher mortality in the 20th century which persists even when the growth of population is factored in.
Could it be the result of increased coal combustion as the nation became more wealthy? Is the drop following the pea-souper fogs or the early 1950s connected to coke, and then gas replacing coal? Statistics on domestic coal consumption, millions of metric tonnes, reflect the same trend.
Deaths in the years of high excess winter mortality 1951, 1929, and 1919 were dominated by influenza and pneumonia.
Three of my grandparents died in January or February. Were they victims of coal?
Disease of the respiratory system, and secondarily the circulatory system are identified as the main causes of excess winter mortality.
The data used by the ONS isn't available further back, but statistics from FreeBMD can be used to show a longer term trend back to 1838. For each year I used the first quarter for the winter mortality and third for summer. Points are annual figures, the blue line the six year moving average and the red line the six year average for the period covered by the first graph.
The most notable feature is the higher mortality in the 20th century which persists even when the growth of population is factored in.
Could it be the result of increased coal combustion as the nation became more wealthy? Is the drop following the pea-souper fogs or the early 1950s connected to coke, and then gas replacing coal? Statistics on domestic coal consumption, millions of metric tonnes, reflect the same trend.
Deaths in the years of high excess winter mortality 1951, 1929, and 1919 were dominated by influenza and pneumonia.
Three of my grandparents died in January or February. Were they victims of coal?
Ottawa Branch OGS November Meeting
The main event for Ottawa Branch of OGS this Saturday, 25 November, 13:00 – 15:00, is a presentation My Ancestors Were All English “Ag Labs” - Or Were They?
Presenter Christine Jackson explores the origins of her maternal grandmother's Durrant/Dudman family by attacking her Sussex 17th century brick wall from both sides. If the connection across the brickwall is correct it means she has a 16 generation line back to her original immigrant to England. Much of the material is taken from Christine’s award-winning article in the 40th Anniversary Writing Competition of the U.K.-based Sussex Family History Group.
The pre-meeting "Back to Basics" event, for those not attending the Scottish SIG meeting at 10 am, is Gloria Tubman who will offer hints to Discovering Ancestors Through Census Information. Hints to discovering more information about your ancestors through census returns and schedules from 1842 to 1921 will be covered as well as for using other census: Ireland, England & Wales, and the United States of America.
The Computer SIG will convene after Christine's presentation.
Presenter Christine Jackson explores the origins of her maternal grandmother's Durrant/Dudman family by attacking her Sussex 17th century brick wall from both sides. If the connection across the brickwall is correct it means she has a 16 generation line back to her original immigrant to England. Much of the material is taken from Christine’s award-winning article in the 40th Anniversary Writing Competition of the U.K.-based Sussex Family History Group.
The Computer SIG will convene after Christine's presentation.
22 November 2017
Hampshire Bishop's Transcripts on FamilySearch
You can view transcripts of 836,206 records in the new/updated FamilySearch collection England, Hampshire Bishop's Transcripts 1680-1892.
To see images of the originals means going to a FHC or an affiliated library, or being a member of the LDS Church in which case you can see them at home.
There you can also browse through 70,735 images on 47 digital microfilms.
To see images of the originals means going to a FHC or an affiliated library, or being a member of the LDS Church in which case you can see them at home.
There you can also browse through 70,735 images on 47 digital microfilms.
Comparing Canadian and UK Vital Statistics
According to a 20 November UK Office of National Statistics publication Vital statistics: population and health reference tables in the UK a newborn baby boy could expect to live 79.2 years and a newborn baby girl 82.9 years. That's if mortality rates remain the same as they were in 2014 to 2016 throughout their lives.
The 2012/2014 statistics for Canada, the latest available, have life expectancy at birth as 79.7 years for men and 83.9 years for women. That's slightly longer than in the UK. Both countries show a narrowing gender gap for life expectancy.
Infant mortality in the UK was 3.9 deaths per 1,000 live births, unchanged since 2013, the lowest rate on record. That compares to 4.7 deaths per 1,000 live births in Canada in 2014, itself the lowest rate observed in Canadian history.
This suggests to me that when historical statistics are missing for Canada, or vice versa, those from the other are a reasonable approximation.
The 2012/2014 statistics for Canada, the latest available, have life expectancy at birth as 79.7 years for men and 83.9 years for women. That's slightly longer than in the UK. Both countries show a narrowing gender gap for life expectancy.
Infant mortality in the UK was 3.9 deaths per 1,000 live births, unchanged since 2013, the lowest rate on record. That compares to 4.7 deaths per 1,000 live births in Canada in 2014, itself the lowest rate observed in Canadian history.
This suggests to me that when historical statistics are missing for Canada, or vice versa, those from the other are a reasonable approximation.
Historical Society of Ottawa; November Meeting
November 24, 2017 - Ian McKercher -- 1930s Ottawa & Birth of the Bank of Canada
Details: The Great Depression buffeted Ottawa, but failed to bring the city to its knees. Key events took place here during the 1930s that have had a lasting impact on Canadian history into the twenty-first century. Creation of the Canadian Radio Broadcasting Commission (forerunner of the CBC) in 1932 and the Bank of Canada in 1935 contend to lead this list.
Biography: Ian McKercher was born in London, Ontario, attended Queen’s University and moved to Ottawa in 1969 to teach English at Glebe Collegiate. He has a strong interest in local history and was a founding member of the Glebe Historical Society. After retirement, he became a regular columnist at the Glebe Report, a community monthly, and has published over a hundred articles during the last fifteen years. His first historical fiction novel, The Underling was published in 2012. The sequel, The Incrementalist, came out in 2016. Both books are set in Ottawa in the 1930s and revolve around the fictional exploits of Frances McFadden, a secretary hired to help get the Bank of Canada up and running. The novels are multi-layered, and deal with the coming of age of a young woman, a national institution, and Canada itself. McKercher’s writing flows from a belief that Canada has an esteemed but undiscovered history that is ripe for acknowledgement. Copies of his novels may be purchased for $20 each.
The meeting starts at at 1:00 pm in the lounge of the Routhier Community Centre, 172 Guigues Street at Cumberland.
Details: The Great Depression buffeted Ottawa, but failed to bring the city to its knees. Key events took place here during the 1930s that have had a lasting impact on Canadian history into the twenty-first century. Creation of the Canadian Radio Broadcasting Commission (forerunner of the CBC) in 1932 and the Bank of Canada in 1935 contend to lead this list.
Biography: Ian McKercher was born in London, Ontario, attended Queen’s University and moved to Ottawa in 1969 to teach English at Glebe Collegiate. He has a strong interest in local history and was a founding member of the Glebe Historical Society. After retirement, he became a regular columnist at the Glebe Report, a community monthly, and has published over a hundred articles during the last fifteen years. His first historical fiction novel, The Underling was published in 2012. The sequel, The Incrementalist, came out in 2016. Both books are set in Ottawa in the 1930s and revolve around the fictional exploits of Frances McFadden, a secretary hired to help get the Bank of Canada up and running. The novels are multi-layered, and deal with the coming of age of a young woman, a national institution, and Canada itself. McKercher’s writing flows from a belief that Canada has an esteemed but undiscovered history that is ripe for acknowledgement. Copies of his novels may be purchased for $20 each.
The meeting starts at at 1:00 pm in the lounge of the Routhier Community Centre, 172 Guigues Street at Cumberland.
21 November 2017
Ontario Records Online: Survey Results
As of 7 pm on Monday, 20 November 384 responses to the online survey had been received. While a few more are trickling in they are unlikely to change the results in a significant way.
72.4 per cent of respondents were Ontario residents and 71.1 per cent OGS members.
In general are you in favour of greater online availability of Ontario records of genealogical interest?
YES - 99.2 per cent; MAYBE: 0.3 per cent; NO - 0.5 per cent
Do you favour the Ontario Genealogical Society advocating for online availability of Ontario materials of genealogical interest?
YES - 98.2 per cent; MAYBE - 0.8 percent; NO - 1 per cent
Specifically, do you favour Ontario probate indexes presently available on microfilm being made available online?
YES - 98.2 per cent; MAYBE - 1.6 percent; NO - 0 per cent
Specifically do you favour all Ontario probate documents presently available on microfilm being made available online?
YES - 94.5 per cent; MAYBE - 5 percent; NO - 0.2 per cent
Specifically, would you favour the Ontario Genealogical Society advocating for online availability of Ontario probate records now available on microfilm?
YES - 95.5 per cent; MAYBE - 3.4 percent; NO - 1 per cent
Would you accept Ontario probate indexes and documents being exclusively available online for a limited time, after which they would become freely available, through a commercial arrangement, such as with Ancestry, Findmypast or MyHeritage, in order to fund online availability and as long as the existing availability through microfilm was retained?
YES - 70.9 per cent; MAYBE - 21.7 percent; NO - 7.3 per cent
63 people left comments which are reproduced below with identifying information redacted in two cases.
Thank you to all who responded to the survey, and to OGS for publicizing it.
What next? I'll ensure the results are made known to OGS and to John Roberts, Chief Privacy Officer and Archivist of Ontario.
72.4 per cent of respondents were Ontario residents and 71.1 per cent OGS members.
In general are you in favour of greater online availability of Ontario records of genealogical interest?
YES - 99.2 per cent; MAYBE: 0.3 per cent; NO - 0.5 per cent
Do you favour the Ontario Genealogical Society advocating for online availability of Ontario materials of genealogical interest?
YES - 98.2 per cent; MAYBE - 0.8 percent; NO - 1 per cent
Specifically, do you favour Ontario probate indexes presently available on microfilm being made available online?
YES - 98.2 per cent; MAYBE - 1.6 percent; NO - 0 per cent
Specifically do you favour all Ontario probate documents presently available on microfilm being made available online?
YES - 94.5 per cent; MAYBE - 5 percent; NO - 0.2 per cent
Specifically, would you favour the Ontario Genealogical Society advocating for online availability of Ontario probate records now available on microfilm?
YES - 95.5 per cent; MAYBE - 3.4 percent; NO - 1 per cent
Would you accept Ontario probate indexes and documents being exclusively available online for a limited time, after which they would become freely available, through a commercial arrangement, such as with Ancestry, Findmypast or MyHeritage, in order to fund online availability and as long as the existing availability through microfilm was retained?
YES - 70.9 per cent; MAYBE - 21.7 percent; NO - 7.3 per cent
63 people left comments which are reproduced below with identifying information redacted in two cases.
The most important need is for some type of online newspaper archive, such as Trove in Australia. Clearly this is a major undertaking as the original sources or copies would need to be gathered first.
It would be wonderful to have access to the probate records online. Right now I'd have to travel to see them or order the microfilm.
If free access followed by commercial access is necessary (because otherwise project could not proceed)... then I would prefer that the monies derived from the commercial access go to an Ontario institution, e.g. directly to the Archives of Ontario... (Maybe grant funding can be obtained for the digitization projects).
I am in the UK so online information would be wonderful.
I'm not a fan of BIG CORPS owning everything and making us pay for taxpayer owned public records. I do understand that these corps can help in the digitisation process and should get a financial reward but after a set time period - agreed upon by both parties- the records then should be accessible on all plarforms for free .
As the microfilmed probate records are now fully available to the public but through a needlessly complex and restrictive search process, I see no reason why they shouldn't be made available online. As always, the issue is the cost of digitization. Private sector participation seem unavoidable but should be carefully negotiated to ensure that provincial ownership and control of these records is maintained. Hence my "Maybe" response to the access scenario proposed above.
Kudos to OGS for pursuing this general initiative on digitization! The provincial government itself should be acting more forcefully on this. Surely online availability of records would improve the efficiency of their own operations.
I'm trying to break a brick wall so I've been digging DEEP into geography and document availability in those localities. I have leads but they often stop just as I'm getting started. I hired a "professional" researcher 2 years ago. I got nothing other than my own family tree at ancestry copied and and sent to me. I have had good luck with on line repositories who only charge for the documents or for time and documents. But that means I have to find it first and then get the copy. So often there are multiple men with the same name and in the same place that it's impossible to know which one is mine. If I had online access to more I might be able to compare and figure out if any of them are mine. I'm too far away from Canada to even think about in person research.
I would prefer to see resources made exclusively available online for a limited period of time at a non-profit organization such as FamilySearch or The Ontario Genealogical Society before a commercial organization. Perhaps coupling a non-profit with a commercial entity, such as Findmypast/OGS or FamilySearch/Ancestry.
I'd be willing to help with indexing
I have long thought that the Ontario Probate records should be prioritized for digitization and online access! So glad to hear that the OGS is investigating this possibility! Fingers crossed that this idea becomes a reality.
I was just looking into getting the microfilm so this is very timely.
I had to travel from England to find several wills of my mother's immediate family. I couldn't afford to go back again to widen my search, but would happy to make a donation.
I reside in BC researching my ancestors who settled in ON. Having more access to ON genealogical records via my OGS membership would be very much appreciated. OGS please do!
Since I live in Calgary it would be a great help if we could go online to make use of these records!
Sharen Haggarty
Would prefer AO to offer records on own website as does BC Archives vital stats
Concerned with ability of OGS to manage theses datasets given decline in branches/members/executive
In my opinion, if OGS puts the effort into advocating and indexing these records then there should be some continuing benefit to the OGS membership, and these records should be freely available to the membership on a continuing basis. Since the Archives of Ontario holds the microfilms, they should host the digitized and indexed files. If AO hosting is not possible, then I would accept Ontario probate indexes and documents becoming freely available through a commercial arrangement ONLY IF OGS members continued to enjoy free access to them, and the commercial company hosting them makes them available for free to OGS members.
This could be done in stages - first digitize the films so they can be browsed online. Then index the indexes so they can be searched. Then link the indexes to the actual probate files.
I think this is a GREAT IDEA!!!
This would be of huge value to anyone interested in genealogical research. Microfiche takes an extraordinary amount of time to use. And for researchers with Ontario roots who now live out of province an online version would be invaluable!!
Just found out my husband has Canadian ancestors
For those of us who have deep Ontario connections having these and other records on line would make a huge difference.
As someone who has roots in Ontario and lives elsewhere, it would be wonderful to have more online resources to aid in family history research.
It is vital to make these records more available. For people not living near the Ontario Archive it is so time and energy consuming even committed and enthusiastic get depressed and half the time don't complete those researches!
On line availability would be very helpful for everyone but especially for those of us who live at a distance.
As well, sometimes our local branch microfilm reader is not available or broken.
We have seen how successful this type of arrangement has been with the release of the 1921 census through Ancestry
I don't support the use of commercial sites for this project at all, regardless of the company.
Have you considered free-access FamilySearch as an alternative to subscription-based Ancestry, My Heritage or Find My Past?
Not currently a member, however, I have been a member in the past. I live in BC and just about ALL my ancestors came through Ontario, so I would use the Ontario information.
Index should be online with a fee to download the full document
to get the free on-line I would re-register as an OGS member
Thank you for undertaking this valuable mission!
These records, and other like them, are an important part of our historical record, and as such should be readily available to all Canadians using the updated methods now available.
Thank you for starting a conversation about this. Since so many Ontario records are governed by strict privacy laws, more expedient (i.e. - online) access to those records that are already available on microfilm would greatly advance genealogical research with Ontario records.
These specific questions with positive response answers are truly important for determining correct family tree relationships. They can hold information that reveals unknown family members as well as information on family values and relationships. This can be a goldmine for determining your family tree. I was born and grew up in Ontario and am now living in Victoria, B.C. and find it very difficult and time consuming to go through the existing process of ordering films in relation to being able to access them online. This could be a huge benefit to the genealogy community to be able to ensure more accurate trees to be passed down to the next generation.
The more documents that can be put on-line the better for people who do not have a mobility option to research their ancestor's which is what this is all about. Thank You for what you are doing.
I was born and lived in Ontario until 11 years ago. In the course of my research I discovered a branch of my mum's paternal family immigrated to the Hamilton area. I have been tracing them and would welcome further records to search. Also, I work at a library and help patrons with their genealogy, so am interested in this from a professional point of view as well.
This is a wonderful idea!!
I would want assurance that OGS membership would have guaranteed free access to the records before handing them over to a commercial entity.
Great initiative. Thanks for taking this on.
I was a member for many years. Have been stuck in Ontario fro over 40 years with a common Irish name (1840-1880 period). Having probate indexes and documents might down my brick wall.
Is there a possibility of transcribing records, once digitized, from one's home, like Family Search does? Many people/volunteers involved could cut costs.
Living in another province makes it impossible for me to use records that are only available at the Ontario Archives, etc. Hiring someone to do research for you is just to expensive.
I think it would be a valuable resource
Because I live in California, this proposal would be especially helpful for my family research
Having the Ontario probate records online would be awesome!!
It seems sensible for the Ontario Genealogical Society to sponsor such a move to make Ontario Archival records available online.
I am a remote member from northern Alberta so anything online is a help.
I'm not sure about the structure of the survey. Who's going to answer anything other than Yes to the first 5 questions? It might be more useful to ask how people would prioritize probate record digitization versus other records. Personally probate records and land records would be my priorities among Archives of Ontario records.
Good idea!
Hope this goes throught and would like more Indian information. Thank You
Probate records have been vital in my genealogical journey, proving many points.
I believe that the records should be available on line for free even after Ancestry or FMP or another service has access. I pay for Ancestry and FMP for the indexing, ease of searching and access to non-local records. Making them available for free with a browse feature is appropriate as they are public records.
I have been a member of OGS for 40+ years, but live in California so have a problem getting to records. This would be a real benefit.
If the 'exclusively available online for a limited time' means available to OGS members only, I might be willing to take out a membership if I needed to get early access. Since most of my ancestors were farmers, and most likely didn't have wills, I'm not sure when or if I would need access to probate documents. However, I am all in favour of getting as many documents made as available as possible while honouring reasonable privacy guidelines.
I have ancestors who arrived from England and settled in Ontario for several decades and many who remain in Ontario to this day, while others moved to the USA.
This would be a huge help since I live in Alberta and finding a local microfilm reader is difficult. Thank you.
This would be a huge benefit to people unable to travel to Toronto. Although I am a library patron, well versed in using the library website, the process to order them from the library is somehow daunting and off-putting. One goes through all the effort to order them and when one receives them one could find oneself caught up in something else going on in one's life, work or the community, and not have the time to use the material. Having the records available online at all times would be most appealing.
I think probate records should be available on the gov't website.
Family came to Wentworth County in 1820 -- however I live in Surrey BC -- so the more resources available on-line, the more extensively I can research our family tree since travelling to Ontario / Toronto is not an option at this time.
This would provide access to people with Ontario ancestors, but who currently do not live close enough to the repository for reasonable access.
Ontario probate records need to be Open Access; it would be better to apply for funding (for example, from LAC's DHCP program - http://www.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/services/documentary-heritage-communities-program/Pages/dhcp-portal.aspx) to digitize these records, and then make them openly accessible, as opposed to housed by a commercial partner.
would also like to see Ontario Census that are not on line.
I trust the LDS but NOT Ancestry. Their records are contaminated, transcriptions more than often wrong. They are a huge corporate entity which has overtaken free genealogy websites and claim an interest in genealogy, but rather they are Corporations now housed in Switzerland, I believe, with no transparency as to who transcribes their records, or where the original sources come from.Thank you to all who responded to the survey, and to OGS for publicizing it.
What next? I'll ensure the results are made known to OGS and to John Roberts, Chief Privacy Officer and Archivist of Ontario.
22% Less Digitization at LAC?
Library and Archives Canada's recently issued Departmental Results Report for 2016-2017 shows a surprising decline in the number of images digitized. You have to read that report along with the one for the previous year to discover it.
Without in any way discounting the essential work of other aspects of LAC's operations, necessary for continuing service, the concentration in this post is the activity of Program 2.3: Access to documentary heritage in the Results Report which is of most immediate pertinence for the user community.
The report on Program 2.3 is in three sections: Description, Results and Results achieved.
Comparing the Description to the corresponding section in the 2015-2016 report shows, in addition to several minor edits, the additions highlighted in the two paragraphs reproduced below.
This program is designed to make Canada’s documentary heritage known and available to Canadians, to promote a better understanding of Canadian society.
It includes activities to digitize, describe, organize, index and interlink this documentary heritage, to facilitate access.
The final two paragraphs in the section are reversed from the previous year moving the section including the Documentary Heritage Communities Program ahead of that on Access to Information Act and the Privacy Act activities.
The Results section states that "LAC digitized 9,287,106 images, which focused mainly on the First World War, Indigenous realities and Expo 67." The previous year report stated "LAC digitized over 12 million images ..." Why the decrease of 22 per cent?
It is not due to any decrease in the pace of digitization of First World War Service Files as can be seen from the graph.
According to Normand Charbonneau, LAC Assistant Deputy Minister and Chief Operating Officer, the same resources were dedicated to the digitization effort in both years, but in the previous year much was digitized from microfilm for Canadiana.ca, which goes quickly, whereas in 2016-2017 the source was original material in different sizes, and from some slides requiring disassembly.
The report is silent on digitization from the LAC published collections, such as newspapers and city directories. By contrast the new Librarian of Congress, Carla Hayden, is making digitization of library materials one of her top priorities because of the widespread benefit.
During the year LAC and its partners adopted a national digitization strategy and developed a three-year action plan. Let's hope that will lead to more digitization and not just more strategy and plans.
LAC made major efforts during the year to increase service in and beyond 395 Wellington. About 60 events and exhibitions were held in several Canadian cities, up from 20 the previous year. Agreements to provide LAC service in Halifax and Vancouver were signed and staff are now in place. Exhibitions continue to be staged at 395 Wellington and more events were held.
Signing of an agreement with OCLC to replace AMICUS late in the fiscal year followed the "progress" reported the previous year.
The TD Summer Reading Club reported at increase to 700,000 from 300,000 children enrolled the previous year.
The Results Achieved section has two resource measures and the one service standard measure reproduced below. Note that the figure does not provide a valid basis of comparison.
Two service standards reported the previous year (1) Percentage of service standards met for formal access to information and privacy (ATIP) requests, and (2) Percentage of service standards met for digital copies, were not in the current report. Accountability is lost when consistent reporting is lacking. That's why the monthly reporting on CEF service file digitization is so welcome.
Without in any way discounting the essential work of other aspects of LAC's operations, necessary for continuing service, the concentration in this post is the activity of Program 2.3: Access to documentary heritage in the Results Report which is of most immediate pertinence for the user community.
The report on Program 2.3 is in three sections: Description, Results and Results achieved.
Comparing the Description to the corresponding section in the 2015-2016 report shows, in addition to several minor edits, the additions highlighted in the two paragraphs reproduced below.
This program is designed to make Canada’s documentary heritage known and available to Canadians, to promote a better understanding of Canadian society.
It includes activities to digitize, describe, organize, index and interlink this documentary heritage, to facilitate access.
The final two paragraphs in the section are reversed from the previous year moving the section including the Documentary Heritage Communities Program ahead of that on Access to Information Act and the Privacy Act activities.
The Results section states that "LAC digitized 9,287,106 images, which focused mainly on the First World War, Indigenous realities and Expo 67." The previous year report stated "LAC digitized over 12 million images ..." Why the decrease of 22 per cent?
It is not due to any decrease in the pace of digitization of First World War Service Files as can be seen from the graph.
According to Normand Charbonneau, LAC Assistant Deputy Minister and Chief Operating Officer, the same resources were dedicated to the digitization effort in both years, but in the previous year much was digitized from microfilm for Canadiana.ca, which goes quickly, whereas in 2016-2017 the source was original material in different sizes, and from some slides requiring disassembly.
The report is silent on digitization from the LAC published collections, such as newspapers and city directories. By contrast the new Librarian of Congress, Carla Hayden, is making digitization of library materials one of her top priorities because of the widespread benefit.
During the year LAC and its partners adopted a national digitization strategy and developed a three-year action plan. Let's hope that will lead to more digitization and not just more strategy and plans.
LAC made major efforts during the year to increase service in and beyond 395 Wellington. About 60 events and exhibitions were held in several Canadian cities, up from 20 the previous year. Agreements to provide LAC service in Halifax and Vancouver were signed and staff are now in place. Exhibitions continue to be staged at 395 Wellington and more events were held.
Signing of an agreement with OCLC to replace AMICUS late in the fiscal year followed the "progress" reported the previous year.
The TD Summer Reading Club reported at increase to 700,000 from 300,000 children enrolled the previous year.
The Results Achieved section has two resource measures and the one service standard measure reproduced below. Note that the figure does not provide a valid basis of comparison.
Two service standards reported the previous year (1) Percentage of service standards met for formal access to information and privacy (ATIP) requests, and (2) Percentage of service standards met for digital copies, were not in the current report. Accountability is lost when consistent reporting is lacking. That's why the monthly reporting on CEF service file digitization is so welcome.
20 November 2017
Parish Registers for England on Microfilm at Ottawa FHC
Over the years the Ottawa Stake Family History Centre acquired a collection of microfilms catalogued on a spreadsheet downloadable from www.ottawastakefhc.on.ca/.
As an experiment on plotting from locations in a spreadsheet this Google map plots the locations for which they hold microfilm of parish registers for various locations in England. Note there is no guarantee the list is up to date as some of the information on the website is outdated, such as "This is to help avoid ordering films from the Family History Library that are already here".
These days you should be able to get access to many such parish registers as online digital microfilms through the computers at Family History Centres and affiliated institutions.
As an experiment on plotting from locations in a spreadsheet this Google map plots the locations for which they hold microfilm of parish registers for various locations in England. Note there is no guarantee the list is up to date as some of the information on the website is outdated, such as "This is to help avoid ordering films from the Family History Library that are already here".
These days you should be able to get access to many such parish registers as online digital microfilms through the computers at Family History Centres and affiliated institutions.
Did Old King Coal Kill in Your Family History?
Coal was and is dangerous. Was your family history changed by coal?
In Canada miners died in tragic numbers. Do you remember the 1992 Westray disaster? In the UK 160,000 people were killed or injured in mines and quarries between 1700 and 2000, mostly in the 20th century.
Even more people died, or had their lives cut short, living and breathing in an area where a lot of coal was burned for industry or for domestic heating.
Will your future family history be changed as coal, the most carbon intensive fuel, is phased out to limit climate change?
Writing this reminded me of my childhood experiences with coal growing up in England.
Our house was heated by coal. Every few weeks coal would be delivered by the hundredweight in sacks to a wooden bin in the back yard. A chore each day was to fill a metal coal scuttle and carry it inside. Lighting a fire, involving layers of scrunched-up newspaper, kindling wood and the coal on top, was made easier by a gas poker attached to the mains gas supply.
Smoke would periodically belch into the house until the chimney warmed and began to draw, a process aided by blocking the top part of the fireplace opening with sheets of newspaper.
Although that smoke wasn't healthy the appearance and smell helped convince you of the prospect of warmth even though you might only feel it by standing close by with your back to the fireplace, known as warming your buns.
In Canada miners died in tragic numbers. Do you remember the 1992 Westray disaster? In the UK 160,000 people were killed or injured in mines and quarries between 1700 and 2000, mostly in the 20th century.
Even more people died, or had their lives cut short, living and breathing in an area where a lot of coal was burned for industry or for domestic heating.
According to the article Air pollution in Victorian-era Britain – its effects on health now revealed, coal combustion led to repeated respiratory illness, slower growth during childhood and shorter adult stature. Men born in the 1890s, whose birthplace and heights were recorded when they enlisted in the British army during World War I, who grew up in the most polluted districts were almost an inch shorter than those who experienced the cleanest air.
I wondered if that was true for the British-born men in the CEF. Men born in Wolverhampton and Birmingham had an average height of 5ft 6in compared to 5ft 7in for the CEF as a whole.
I wondered if that was true for the British-born men in the CEF. Men born in Wolverhampton and Birmingham had an average height of 5ft 6in compared to 5ft 7in for the CEF as a whole.
A higher death rate in urban areas, especially for young children, was about one-third attributable to industrial coal use.
Will your future family history be changed as coal, the most carbon intensive fuel, is phased out to limit climate change?
Writing this reminded me of my childhood experiences with coal growing up in England.
Our house was heated by coal. Every few weeks coal would be delivered by the hundredweight in sacks to a wooden bin in the back yard. A chore each day was to fill a metal coal scuttle and carry it inside. Lighting a fire, involving layers of scrunched-up newspaper, kindling wood and the coal on top, was made easier by a gas poker attached to the mains gas supply.
Smoke would periodically belch into the house until the chimney warmed and began to draw, a process aided by blocking the top part of the fireplace opening with sheets of newspaper.
Although that smoke wasn't healthy the appearance and smell helped convince you of the prospect of warmth even though you might only feel it by standing close by with your back to the fireplace, known as warming your buns.
19 November 2017
Deceased Online adds Lambeth Cremation Records
Newly available, sourced from Lambeth London Borough Council, Deceased Online has digital scans of registers for:
Read more about these records here.
It has been quite a while since Deceased Online added any new records. There's the promise of more: "Records for the Lambeth, West Norwood, and Streatham cemeteries have been digitised and will be released at a future date."
- Lambeth Cremations; 52,000 records from 1958 to 2012
- West Norwood Cremations; 38,000 records from 1915 to 2004
Read more about these records here.
It has been quite a while since Deceased Online added any new records. There's the promise of more: "Records for the Lambeth, West Norwood, and Streatham cemeteries have been digitised and will be released at a future date."
Narrowing the Gender Gap
There's good news from Statistics Canada, and not only because of a slight improvement in timeliness. On Thursday they released Deaths and causes of death, 2014 several months in advance of the previous schedule.
While Canada in 2014 saw slightly more male deaths (130,761) than female deaths (128,060) these numbers have been converging over the last three decades. There is a more rapid decline in male mortality than in female mortality since the late 1970s because women's and men's lifestyles have become increasingly similar.
The 2012/2014 statistics show Canadian life expectancy at birth reached 79.7 years for men and 83.9 years for women. Every year over the last 30 years, life expectancy at birth has increased by an average of 2.9 months for men and 1.8 months for women in Canada. As a result, the gap in life expectancy between men and women was reduced to 4.2 years, compared to more than seven years at the beginning of the 1980s.
Other good news is that infant mortality was the lowest rate observed in Canadian history. It's 4.7 deaths per 1,000 live births in 2014 compared to 77.4 in 1921.
While Canada in 2014 saw slightly more male deaths (130,761) than female deaths (128,060) these numbers have been converging over the last three decades. There is a more rapid decline in male mortality than in female mortality since the late 1970s because women's and men's lifestyles have become increasingly similar.
The 2012/2014 statistics show Canadian life expectancy at birth reached 79.7 years for men and 83.9 years for women. Every year over the last 30 years, life expectancy at birth has increased by an average of 2.9 months for men and 1.8 months for women in Canada. As a result, the gap in life expectancy between men and women was reduced to 4.2 years, compared to more than seven years at the beginning of the 1980s.
Other good news is that infant mortality was the lowest rate observed in Canadian history. It's 4.7 deaths per 1,000 live births in 2014 compared to 77.4 in 1921.
18 November 2017
Findmypast adds British Military Records
The major new addition to Findmypast this week is
British Army, First World War Soldiers' Medical Records
with over 212,000 names from The National Archives' series, MH106, War Office: First World War Representative Medical Records of Servicemen.
Included are admissions and discharge records from hospitals, field ambulances, and casualty clearing stations together with records from Queen Alexandra's Military Hospital dating from 1910.
If you're looking for someone with a common name good luck. First names are not given, just initials. There are 646 people named J. Smith. Perhaps you can narrow down the possibilities from the index information that he was a gunner, service number 3611 serving with the Royal Field Artillery admitted in 1917 to the 14th Field Ambulance. Additional information in the attached image is that he was age 26 and had served 2-4/12 years and that, unlike most, no religion was given.
There are seven other military additions or updates to Findmypast this week.
British Armed Forces, First World War Widows' Pension Forms
Transcripts and images from The National Archives' series PIN 82, Ministry of Pensions: First World War Widows' Pensions Forms. The over 8,000 transcripts will reveal service number, regiment, cause and date of death, spouse's name, marriage year and children's names. Images may provide further details about your ancestor, such as their attestation year, rank and date and place of death. Some records will also note any awards or medals.
British Army, Royal Welch Fusiliers 1807-1948
More than 96,000 enlistment registers, transfer registers, discharge registers and casualty reports from 1830 to 1946 to uncover a detailed history of Royal Welsh Fusilier military service. Each result will include both a transcripts and an image of the original document.
Hampshire, Portsmouth Military Tribunals 1916-1919
From the Portsmouth History centre 14,141 records to find out about exemptions from military service through a military tribunal. Under the 1916 Military Service Act certain occupations were deemed exempt or essential to the war effort. Others could also seek exemption by applying to a tribunal for reasons such as illness, potential business damage, conscientious objection, or family hardship.
From the transcripts together with the linked image of the original record you will likely find birth year, marital status, the date of their tribunal hearing, the location, addresses, occupations, employers' details and decisions or recommendations made by the tribunal.
Military Historical Society Bulletins
More than 6,000 pages of fully searchable Military Historical Society Bulletins in pdf, from 1950 through to 2017, reveal historical facts about military events, background information about regimental uniforms, and regimental histories, images of soldiers, uniforms, and badges.
British Army, First World War Casualty Lists
Explore over 2,000 issues of the War Office Weekly Casualty List, a publication of the names of those who were reported as missing, taken prisoner of war, wounded, or killed in action, providing the individual's name, rank, regiment, and service number.
British Army Service Records.
Over 47,000 new records for the Scots Guards records are added to the collection of British Army Service records. The collection includes a myriad of Army forms including attestation papers, medical forms, discharge documents, pension claims, and proceedings of regimental boards.
Prisoners Of War 1715-1945
New records covering non-British Soldiers include the names of thousands of prisoners from nations around the world.
And the non-military addition this week is:
Middlesex, Harrow School Photographs Of Pupils & Masters 1869-1925
Portrait or group photographs along with a transcript of details related to the student originally captured by Hills & Saunders. Findmypast has added supplemental information about each student from the Harrow School Registers that may include their house, housemaster, clubs, monitor, father's name and address.
This image is of a student who later became a Governor General of Canada. Who is it?
British Army, First World War Soldiers' Medical Records
with over 212,000 names from The National Archives' series, MH106, War Office: First World War Representative Medical Records of Servicemen.
Included are admissions and discharge records from hospitals, field ambulances, and casualty clearing stations together with records from Queen Alexandra's Military Hospital dating from 1910.
If you're looking for someone with a common name good luck. First names are not given, just initials. There are 646 people named J. Smith. Perhaps you can narrow down the possibilities from the index information that he was a gunner, service number 3611 serving with the Royal Field Artillery admitted in 1917 to the 14th Field Ambulance. Additional information in the attached image is that he was age 26 and had served 2-4/12 years and that, unlike most, no religion was given.
There are seven other military additions or updates to Findmypast this week.
British Armed Forces, First World War Widows' Pension Forms
Transcripts and images from The National Archives' series PIN 82, Ministry of Pensions: First World War Widows' Pensions Forms. The over 8,000 transcripts will reveal service number, regiment, cause and date of death, spouse's name, marriage year and children's names. Images may provide further details about your ancestor, such as their attestation year, rank and date and place of death. Some records will also note any awards or medals.
British Army, Royal Welch Fusiliers 1807-1948
More than 96,000 enlistment registers, transfer registers, discharge registers and casualty reports from 1830 to 1946 to uncover a detailed history of Royal Welsh Fusilier military service. Each result will include both a transcripts and an image of the original document.
Hampshire, Portsmouth Military Tribunals 1916-1919
From the Portsmouth History centre 14,141 records to find out about exemptions from military service through a military tribunal. Under the 1916 Military Service Act certain occupations were deemed exempt or essential to the war effort. Others could also seek exemption by applying to a tribunal for reasons such as illness, potential business damage, conscientious objection, or family hardship.
From the transcripts together with the linked image of the original record you will likely find birth year, marital status, the date of their tribunal hearing, the location, addresses, occupations, employers' details and decisions or recommendations made by the tribunal.
Military Historical Society Bulletins
More than 6,000 pages of fully searchable Military Historical Society Bulletins in pdf, from 1950 through to 2017, reveal historical facts about military events, background information about regimental uniforms, and regimental histories, images of soldiers, uniforms, and badges.
British Army, First World War Casualty Lists
Explore over 2,000 issues of the War Office Weekly Casualty List, a publication of the names of those who were reported as missing, taken prisoner of war, wounded, or killed in action, providing the individual's name, rank, regiment, and service number.
British Army Service Records.
Over 47,000 new records for the Scots Guards records are added to the collection of British Army Service records. The collection includes a myriad of Army forms including attestation papers, medical forms, discharge documents, pension claims, and proceedings of regimental boards.
Prisoners Of War 1715-1945
New records covering non-British Soldiers include the names of thousands of prisoners from nations around the world.
And the non-military addition this week is:
Middlesex, Harrow School Photographs Of Pupils & Masters 1869-1925
Portrait or group photographs along with a transcript of details related to the student originally captured by Hills & Saunders. Findmypast has added supplemental information about each student from the Harrow School Registers that may include their house, housemaster, clubs, monitor, father's name and address.
This image is of a student who later became a Governor General of Canada. Who is it?
Friends of the City of Ottawa Archives AGM and Presentation
A reminder that the Annual General Meeting of the Friends of the City of Ottawa Archives is this Sunday, 19 November, 2 pm at the Archives building, 100 Tallwood Av.
The featured talk is Digging Through the Archives: A Journey of Metis Self-Discovery.
The featured talk is Digging Through the Archives: A Journey of Metis Self-Discovery.
17 November 2017
Ontario Records Online: Survey
"If it's not on the internet it doesn't exist" is a quote that goes back at least ten years.
For some a reasonably diligent search ends if you can't find it online -- too obscure to warrant the effort to seek it out and the cost of travelling to view it. Those genealogical resources are and will remain in repository obscurity ... unless.
That came to mind in discussing Ontario probate records, a large collection underused. It's trapped on microfilm. For access you go to the Archives of Ontario (AO), or order microfilms to a local library. Some other archives hold copies of the microfilms for their locality. In any case it's a two step process.
"First, borrow and examine the INDEX microfilm in order to find an estate file number.
Second, borrow the correct ESTATE FILE microfilm that contains the will and other documentation that you are seeking."
If you're not near the AO the process can take weeks. If you've been doing genealogy for a while you'll remember that's the way it used to be with Ontario civil registration records before Ancestry entered the picture.
What about the unless? Suppose a credible organization lobbied for specific record sets to be made available online? Is that what you'd want? In Ontario the obvious organization for genealogy is the Ontario Genealogical Society.
I've shared these survey questions with OGS and they are interested to find out the community opinion. They tell me the survey will be mentioned in their Saturday OGS eWeekly Update which is free to anyone who subscribes whether or not you're an OGS member.
Please take the survey HERE. You may need a Google or Gmail account to do so.
For some a reasonably diligent search ends if you can't find it online -- too obscure to warrant the effort to seek it out and the cost of travelling to view it. Those genealogical resources are and will remain in repository obscurity ... unless.
That came to mind in discussing Ontario probate records, a large collection underused. It's trapped on microfilm. For access you go to the Archives of Ontario (AO), or order microfilms to a local library. Some other archives hold copies of the microfilms for their locality. In any case it's a two step process.
"First, borrow and examine the INDEX microfilm in order to find an estate file number.
Second, borrow the correct ESTATE FILE microfilm that contains the will and other documentation that you are seeking."
If you're not near the AO the process can take weeks. If you've been doing genealogy for a while you'll remember that's the way it used to be with Ontario civil registration records before Ancestry entered the picture.
What about the unless? Suppose a credible organization lobbied for specific record sets to be made available online? Is that what you'd want? In Ontario the obvious organization for genealogy is the Ontario Genealogical Society.
I've shared these survey questions with OGS and they are interested to find out the community opinion. They tell me the survey will be mentioned in their Saturday OGS eWeekly Update which is free to anyone who subscribes whether or not you're an OGS member.
Please take the survey HERE. You may need a Google or Gmail account to do so.
Qualicum Beach Family History Society 2018 Conference
Advance registration is now open for the 20-21 April, 2018 Qualicum Beach FHS conference.
Featured speaker, Thomas MacEntee, will be giving four presentations of interest whatever your ancestral background.
Featured speaker, Thomas MacEntee, will be giving four presentations of interest whatever your ancestral background.
- 10 Ways to Jumpstart Your Genealogy
- Successful Collateral and Cluster Searching
- The 15 Habits of Highly Frugal Genealogists
- You Use WHAT for Genealogy? – Wonderful Uses for Unusual Tools.
My friend Lesley Anderson will speak on
- Searching Effectively on Ancestry
- Ancestry DNA – How it Can Help Your Research
Tara Shymanski will focus on Canadian records
- Canadian Census Records
- Exploring Canadian Records to Find Your Ancestors.
Find out more at www.qbfhs.ca/workshops/unlocking-the-past-2018-conference/
Kingston Branch OGS November Meeting
The Kingston Branch will meet on Saturday, 18 November at 10 a.m. at the Kingston Seniors Centre, 56 Francis St. in Kingston.
Nancy Cutway will present her talk "In Remembrance: Vimy and Other European Memorials."
Visitors always welcome. Further details at www.ogs.on.ca/kingston
By way of advance notice, here are the monthly meeting presentations scheduled for January - May 2018.
January 20, 2018 -- SPECIAL--MEETING BEGINS AT 9:00 a.m.Marian Press has kindly offered to give TWO presentations: (1) Are You Really Finding It All When You Search?: Mining Databases For Every Nugget Of Information and (2) Putting Your Family Tree Online: Making Use of Modern Technology to Share What You Know.
February 17, 2018 -- Annual General Meeting and 45th Anniversary.
March 17, 2018 -- Dr. Bruce Elliott will speak on Ireland, Irish Immigration and Research in Canadian Records.
April 21, 2018 -- Kyla Ubbink will speak on Preservation of Documents and Photos.
May 19, 2018 -- James Brownell will speak on The Lost Villages and Genealogy Records.
Nancy Cutway will present her talk "In Remembrance: Vimy and Other European Memorials."
Visitors always welcome. Further details at www.ogs.on.ca/kingston
By way of advance notice, here are the monthly meeting presentations scheduled for January - May 2018.
January 20, 2018 -- SPECIAL--MEETING BEGINS AT 9:00 a.m.Marian Press has kindly offered to give TWO presentations: (1) Are You Really Finding It All When You Search?: Mining Databases For Every Nugget Of Information and (2) Putting Your Family Tree Online: Making Use of Modern Technology to Share What You Know.
February 17, 2018 -- Annual General Meeting and 45th Anniversary.
March 17, 2018 -- Dr. Bruce Elliott will speak on Ireland, Irish Immigration and Research in Canadian Records.
April 21, 2018 -- Kyla Ubbink will speak on Preservation of Documents and Photos.
May 19, 2018 -- James Brownell will speak on The Lost Villages and Genealogy Records.
16 November 2017
British and Irish research: the differences
Irish ancestry? If so you may benefit from viewing Wednesday's Legacy Family Tree webinar, given by Brian Donovan. It is online free to view for a week.
"Ireland was England’s oldest colony, so many assume the records will be the same. They are not precisely because the two country’s histories and their relationship to each other were different. We all know about the terrible loss of Irish records, but there are great treasure troves of surviving records which don’t exist in England - records about war, rebellion, security and land control. So while there are great obstacles (record loss, language, differing histories), there is a great wealth of resources rarely accessed by genealogists. This talk will examine these differences in records and research techniques between Britain and Ireland, why Irish records were created, or destroyed, and how they can be used to unlock your past."The presentation started with an overview of Irish history and geography then moved on to the records and where they may be found online. The pace accelerated toward the end, you may want to pause the playback to note the web address unless you have a subscription giving access to a handout with clickable links.
BIFHSGO November Meeting
The main presentation on Saturday, 18 November 2017 is:
Not So Quiet on the Western Front - The Grants of Formby in the Great War
Presented by Tara Grant
10:00 am to 11:30 am.
Tara Grant’s grandfather, Alexander Henry Grant, and his three brothers, George, John Leslie and Douglas, all served with the British army during WWI. Enlisting in the Territorial Army, the brothers served in different regiments and battalions and fought at many of the major battles including Hill 60, Vimy, Carporetto, Canal du Nord and Cambrai. Combining their service records with the Regimental war diaries and newspapers it was possible to follow their military careers through the four years of the Great War. Overcoming her fear of researching the mass of First World War records (what is a brigade?) has added enormously to Tara’s understanding of the harrowing years her grandfather and his brothers experienced.
Tara Grant's ancestry is predominantly British and Scottish with a little Loyalist, German, French Huguenot and East India Company (although there is a half Dutch-Moroccan pirate way back on the tree). Working on her family history taught her more about Canadian and British history than she ever learned in school. Tara works as an archaeological conservator for the Canadian Conservation Institute (another way to learn history you were never taught in school).
The warm-up educational presentation is:
Using the Collections of the Military History Research Centre to Aid and Augment Genealogy
Presented by Carol Reid
9:00 am to 9:30 am.
Carol Reid is the collections manager, one of two archivists in the Military History Research Centre at the Canadian War Museum. She trained as a museum professional and has more than 30 years of experience in a variety of museums and archives in Ottawa. She has been with the Canadian War Museum for the last 29 years and been responsible for the acquisition, cataloguing, and care of the museum’s paper and audio archive collections for 18 years.
Join us in The Chamber, Ben Franklin Place, 101 Centrepointe Drive, Ottawa, Ontario.
Between presentations there will be displays of military related artifacts from members.
REMINDER. A significant winter storm is expected this weekend. Ottawa is likely to be near the line between rain and snow -- not so quiet on the warm front! Before leaving for the meeting check your email for a possible cancellation notice sent to BIFHSGO members by 8 am.
Not So Quiet on the Western Front - The Grants of Formby in the Great War
Presented by Tara Grant
10:00 am to 11:30 am.
Tara Grant’s grandfather, Alexander Henry Grant, and his three brothers, George, John Leslie and Douglas, all served with the British army during WWI. Enlisting in the Territorial Army, the brothers served in different regiments and battalions and fought at many of the major battles including Hill 60, Vimy, Carporetto, Canal du Nord and Cambrai. Combining their service records with the Regimental war diaries and newspapers it was possible to follow their military careers through the four years of the Great War. Overcoming her fear of researching the mass of First World War records (what is a brigade?) has added enormously to Tara’s understanding of the harrowing years her grandfather and his brothers experienced.
Tara Grant's ancestry is predominantly British and Scottish with a little Loyalist, German, French Huguenot and East India Company (although there is a half Dutch-Moroccan pirate way back on the tree). Working on her family history taught her more about Canadian and British history than she ever learned in school. Tara works as an archaeological conservator for the Canadian Conservation Institute (another way to learn history you were never taught in school).
The warm-up educational presentation is:
Using the Collections of the Military History Research Centre to Aid and Augment Genealogy
Presented by Carol Reid
9:00 am to 9:30 am.
Carol Reid is the collections manager, one of two archivists in the Military History Research Centre at the Canadian War Museum. She trained as a museum professional and has more than 30 years of experience in a variety of museums and archives in Ottawa. She has been with the Canadian War Museum for the last 29 years and been responsible for the acquisition, cataloguing, and care of the museum’s paper and audio archive collections for 18 years.
Join us in The Chamber, Ben Franklin Place, 101 Centrepointe Drive, Ottawa, Ontario.
Between presentations there will be displays of military related artifacts from members.
REMINDER. A significant winter storm is expected this weekend. Ottawa is likely to be near the line between rain and snow -- not so quiet on the warm front! Before leaving for the meeting check your email for a possible cancellation notice sent to BIFHSGO members by 8 am.
William Cowan Crawford: CEF Beechwood
Private William Cowan Crawford died on 16 November 1916, age 26 after a lengthy illness. The son of Margaret Crawford, of 331, Main St., Alexandria, Dumbarton, Scotland. He had no relatives in Canada.
His lengthy service file here documents his war-related service before and after enlisting and cause of death.
His lengthy service file here documents his war-related service before and after enlisting and cause of death.
15 November 2017
CEF Service Files November Update
As of today, 15 October 2017, 518,124 (502,740 last month) of 640,000 files are now available online in the LAC Personnel Records of the First World War database. That's according to a LAC Digitization of the Canadian Expeditionary Force Service blog post.
The latest box digitized is number 8803 (8555) for last name Sharp (Russell).
If my calculations are correct at last month's rate the project will be finished by July 2018.
The latest box digitized is number 8803 (8555) for last name Sharp (Russell).
If my calculations are correct at last month's rate the project will be finished by July 2018.
Beads in a Necklace: Family Stories from Genealogy Ensemble
Congratulation to the ladies who cooperated to produce a book of family stories, the subject of this press release.
Announcing the publication of
Beads in a Necklace: Family Stories from Genealogy Ensemble
The nine women who write the Genealogy Ensemble family history blog have fleshed out the dashes between the dates on their family trees, chosen their favourite stories about their ancestors and published them in a book called Beads in a Necklace: Family Stories from Genealogy Ensemble.
Inspired by family myths, heirlooms, letters, and vintage photographs, these are historically accurate stories with a huge heart. They describe the lives of merchants and military men, society ladies and filles du roi, reverends, rogues, medical men, restless women, cooks and farmers, each of whom was somehow related to one of the book’s authors.
These ancestors lived between 1650 and 1970 and hail from Montreal, rural Quebec, Ontario, New Brunswick, the United States and other places around the world.
Contributors Lucy Anglin, Barb Angus, Marian Bulford, Claire Lindell, Sandra McHugh, Dorothy Nixon and Mary Sutherland, for the most part amateur authors, developed their creative writing skills over a five-year period under the guidance of professional writers Janice Hamilton and Tracey Arial, who also co-authored and edited the collection.
Getting together monthly, they experimented with a variety of narrative techniques to preserve the ever-fading memories of their great uncles and four-times great-grandparents, and to shed light on the times in which these people lived. They publish their stories on www.genealogyenesemble.com, and polished their favourites for the book. The result is a volume of easy-to-read articles, filled with fascinating bits of social history, and with enough footnotes to satisfy the most exacting genealogist or historian.
Meet:
The authors hope that Beads in a Necklace will serve as a model for people from any country or culture to write up their own family histories. They will be making presentations at Montreal-area libraries to share what they have learned about writing and publishing family history.
If you are a genealogist, a creative writer, or are the kind of person who loves reading about the lives of ordinary people whose real-life actions and relationships were discovered within piles of papers, historical photos and old newspaper clippings, Beads in a Necklace is for you.
A self-published limited edition paperback is on sale for $20 in Montreal at Livres Presque 9/Nearly New Books, 5885 Sherbrooke O; Montreal, Quebec H4A1X6 while supplies last.
An Amazon Kindle edition is available for $3.89.
Announcing the publication of
Beads in a Necklace: Family Stories from Genealogy Ensemble
The nine women who write the Genealogy Ensemble family history blog have fleshed out the dashes between the dates on their family trees, chosen their favourite stories about their ancestors and published them in a book called Beads in a Necklace: Family Stories from Genealogy Ensemble.
Inspired by family myths, heirlooms, letters, and vintage photographs, these are historically accurate stories with a huge heart. They describe the lives of merchants and military men, society ladies and filles du roi, reverends, rogues, medical men, restless women, cooks and farmers, each of whom was somehow related to one of the book’s authors.
These ancestors lived between 1650 and 1970 and hail from Montreal, rural Quebec, Ontario, New Brunswick, the United States and other places around the world.
Contributors Lucy Anglin, Barb Angus, Marian Bulford, Claire Lindell, Sandra McHugh, Dorothy Nixon and Mary Sutherland, for the most part amateur authors, developed their creative writing skills over a five-year period under the guidance of professional writers Janice Hamilton and Tracey Arial, who also co-authored and edited the collection.
Getting together monthly, they experimented with a variety of narrative techniques to preserve the ever-fading memories of their great uncles and four-times great-grandparents, and to shed light on the times in which these people lived. They publish their stories on www.genealogyenesemble.com, and polished their favourites for the book. The result is a volume of easy-to-read articles, filled with fascinating bits of social history, and with enough footnotes to satisfy the most exacting genealogist or historian.
Meet:
- Fille du roi Anne Thomas, who married master carpenter Claude Jodoin in Montreal way back in 1666;
- Felicité Poulin, 18th-century career woman, Ursuline nun and matchmaker;
- Stanley Bagg, Massachusetts-born merchant who helped build the Lachine Canal in the 1820s;
- Gospel singer Edward McHugh, whose 1910-period debut at the Montreal Hunt Club launched an international career;
- William Anglin, respected Victorian-era Kingston, Ontario surgeon and wannabe thought-reader;
- and many more.
The authors hope that Beads in a Necklace will serve as a model for people from any country or culture to write up their own family histories. They will be making presentations at Montreal-area libraries to share what they have learned about writing and publishing family history.
If you are a genealogist, a creative writer, or are the kind of person who loves reading about the lives of ordinary people whose real-life actions and relationships were discovered within piles of papers, historical photos and old newspaper clippings, Beads in a Necklace is for you.
A self-published limited edition paperback is on sale for $20 in Montreal at Livres Presque 9/Nearly New Books, 5885 Sherbrooke O; Montreal, Quebec H4A1X6 while supplies last.
An Amazon Kindle edition is available for $3.89.