Miscellaneous items I found of interest during the week.
AncestryExtra
Miscellaneous items I found of interest during the week.
Sad to record the passing earlier this month of Stanley George Andrew Magwood (1934-2020) from COVID-19. Stan will be well remembered by long-time BIFHSGO members.
ResearchBuzz is one of my regular stops on my morning rounds. On Thursday Tara Calishain posted:
My mother-in-law passed away at the end of March. Not of coronavirus, if you’re wondering. She was in Alaska and we’re in North Carolina, so we’ve been trying to take care of everything from here. We had two huge boxes of her papers and her daughter’s effects (both daughters are deceased) sent to our house. They were delivered yesterday, but nobody knocked or told us. They sat on our porch for at least 12 hours. Unfortunately it was raining the entire time. One box was standing in an inch of water when I found it.We won’t be able to salvage all of it, there’s too much damaged, but I want to save at least some of it for my husband’s kids and grandkids. If any salvage experts, archivists, etc have any ideas, please let me know. PLEASE don’t point me toward salvage documents — I know about those. I’m looking for advice like, “Don’t bother with the posterboard items, they’re hosed,” or “You can keep your Kodak slides from getting water spots by doing x.”
“I am certain that you have had the good sense to get everything out of the wet box, and spread it out on towels to air dry. Watch out for any mould growth, and if anything important (that you wish to save) develops mould, place it in a plastic bag and into the freezer. A conservator can kill the mould and reverse any staining.As for undulations, warping and distortion there are ways of flattening the documents. You will need to humidify them in order to relax the fibers. Use a large plastic container with a lid. Place a wet towel, at room temperature, flat against the bottom of the container. Place a plastic grid, that is at least 0.5 inches thick (sold as “Eggcrate or Plaskolite Light Diffuser” at hardware stores, cut to size with wire cutters) over the wet towel. Place the documents onto the plastic grid, making certain the wet towel does not touch the documents. You could probably get away with stacking about ten documents at a time. Place the lid over top and leave them sit for two hours, or until they feel slightly damp. Remove the documents, place them on a flat surface, place Plexiglas sheet or plastic cutting board over top of them (do not use wood or metal board), and add some weight overtop – about 5lbs or so should be enough. Let it sit like this for about a week and then check them, if not flat, let them sit for even longer. Do not use this technique if there is any chance of mould being present.Any staining that has occurred due to the water damage can be reversed by a trained Professional Conservator. The quicker you have this done, the more successful the treatment will be; try to have any staining addressed within one year. This could get expensive, so pick and choose which items are most important. Stains contain products that will deteriorate the archival materials.You mentioned slides and seem to have a question about avoiding water spot. You could wipe the down with a Kim Wipe (or lint free tissue – not facial tissue) slightly dampened with 99% iso propyl alchol. Do not use rubbing alcohol, or disinfectant wipe; these contain impurities that will cause damage. A much better cleaning solution for film based materials is tetra chloroethylene, however, you would require a ventilation unit (not just sitting outside) and thick nitrile gloves to work with this chemical.If you have any specific questions, or would like to explore the options of using a conservator, I would be happy to provide advice – kyla@bookandpaperconservation.com.”
There's a substantial update, over 400,000 records added, to Ancestry's collection of Surrey parish records just placed online. A comparison with the number of records previously available, as of my last post on 10 October 2019 is in the table below.
Title | Dates | Records | Previous |
Church of England Baptisms, Marriages and Burials | 1538-1812 | 1,879,463 | 1,864,596 |
Church of England Baptisms | 1813-1917 | 2,504,849 | 2,262,611 |
Church of England Marriages and Banns | 1754-1937 | 1,206,228 | 1,108,226 |
Church of England Burials | 1813-1997 | 565,353 | 519,990 |
With the temporary closures of culture facilities due to COVID-19, we’d like to receive public feedback about returning to our new normal operations.We would like the help of our community stakeholders to reach museum-goers. Please complete this survey yourself and feel free to share this survey link directly with any friends, family members, or local museum enthusiasts.Please note we are following the Ontario Government for the timeline for reopening our outdoor spaces, facilities and programs. As we have heard from all levels of government, reopening will be determined by data and recommendations of public health officials.By museum-goers taking a few minutes to complete the survey this will help us all in planning our reopening. These results, which we will share with you at future meetings, will address the types of measures we can put in place to make our public feel more comfortable coming back to our venues.
What do Austria, Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Denmark, Belgium, England and Wales, Finland, Germany, Iceland, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, and the USA have that Canada doesn't?
Are there Library and Archives Canada holdings you'd like to be available online?
LAC have a large online presence for genealogy, notably census, military, immigration and land records. We are fortunate that it's all available without charge.
Through their partnership with Canadiana.ca, other large collections of monographs, serials and government publications held by LAC are online and also available without charge.
But that's only a minor proportion of LAC's holdings, most are only available to those who can get to a LAC physical facility, which is everyone during the pandemic lockdown. Even in normal times most people have the expense of travel, accommodation and the accompanying non-productive time to access documentary heritage not online. You have to deal with opening and closing times whereas the online experience is never, well hardly ever, closed.
While many LAC holdings can't be made available online owing to access restrictions much has been opened in recent years, thanks to block review, but not yet digitized.
You perhaps have your own favourites you'd like to access online. At present mine are passenger lists for repatriated servicemen and women, and war brides, for 1945 and 1946 on microfilms C-5623 to C-5655 and C-5714 to C-5725. Very timely.
Through their feed form I sent a suggestion to LAC.
Please make available online open access microfilms C-5623 to C-5655 and C-5714 to C-5725 which include passenger lists for repatriated WW2 servicemen and women and war brides for 1945 and 1946. I understand you may choose to make these available through Canadiana.ca.Please help by also making this suggestion through the feedback form. Just cut and paste the paragraph above into the form and send it off. Only a few such suggestions should provide sufficient motivation to get it done.
The Commonwealth War Graves Commission registration for William Matthews who died 25 May 1920 shows he was Company Quartermaster Sergeant and age 50. That would make his birth year 1870.
According to his service file, he enlisted on 22 February 1915 giving his birth as 24 December 1875 in Cornwall, England. Some of the documents in his service file show a middle initial J and his wife's name as Annie.
There's an 1896 Ontario marriage registration showing a William Matthews marrying Anna Thomas with his age as 28 implying birth ca 1868. It gives his parent's names: Thomas and Mary. That's consistent with the 1901 census which has a birth date of 24 December 1868 and that he arrived in Canada in 1871.
It's not unusual for men to lie about their age when joining up. Did that lie carry over to his obit in the Ottawa Journal of 26 May 1920, which gives his name as William John Matthews? It informs "He was born in Cornwall. England, 45 years ago and came to Canada when a boy." That's consistent with an 1875 birth date. It also mentions a brother Thomas, sister Mrs. B Burnside, both of Ottawa, half-siblings John and Richard of Ottawa, as well as his children.
Tracing the siblings, a death registration for Thomas Matthews at Ottawa's Civic Hospital in 1943 gives his birthplace as Cornwall, date of birth 9 October 1867, and parents names Thomas and Grace (with Mugford added later).
There's an 1892 Ontario marriage registration for Mary Matthews, spouse Thomas Burnside. her parents are Thomas and Mary; they are repeated in the 1931 Beechwood burial register which gives her age as 59 (born 1872).
Three siblings with two different mothers?
I checked the 1871 census in England and found a family in the Cornwall registration district of Camelford, sub-registration district of Boscastle
First name(s) | Last name | Relationship | Marital status | Sex | Age | Birth year | Occupation | Birth place |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Thomas | Matthews | Head | - | Male | 24 | 1847 | - | Cornwall, England |
Grace | Matthews | Wife | - | Female | 22 | 1849 | - | Cornwall, England |
Thomas | Matthews | Son | - | Male | 3 | 1868 | - | Cornwall, England |
William | Matthews | Son | - | Male | 2 | 1869 | - | Cornwall, England |
Mary G | Matthews | Daughter | - | Female | 0 | 1871 | - | Cornwall, England |
Miscellaneous items I found of interest during the week.
Model generated words that don’t exist in real life and definitions for said imaginary words.
This is the 75th anniversary of the arrival of the Britannic in Halifax, one of the first ships to bring Canadian serviceman war brides to their new home country after VE-day.
I've previously posted estimates of the number of war bride survivors. I had read that their age distribution has never been published so I made an estimate of median age 25 years on arrival in 1946.
Rosary and Earlham Cemeteries, both owned and run by Norwich City Council, have just been published on www.deceasedonline.com.
Rosary Cemetery with 20,627 records, from 1821 to 2007 was the UK's first non-denominational burial ground. It has Grade II* listed status. It lies 1.5 km east of the city centre.
Earlham Cemetery with 170,930 records, from 1856 to 2008, is 2.4 km west of the city centre.
Thanks to all who took the survey, and in advance to those organizing events who consider these opinions in their planning.
- Agree that presentations can be shorter but depends on the topic and how much there is to cover. Thanks for setting up this survey.
- I never considered it before. But, shorter presentations make sense
- Hard to say what is "optimal". I think the availability of online presentations is reaching people who need it and so the more indepth we can go plus ample time for questions is Optimal.
- Quality of speaker's voice matters to me.
- The length of a session is dependent on the topic IMHO. Additionally, if the questions outweigh the length of the session, that usually indicates more should have been covered by the presentation
- Yes to a presentation, no to a conference. There was no way to give both of these answers.
- Willingness to pay would depend on the potential quality Of the presentation. There is ample available material without a fee.
- For virtual meetings it would be good to see the speakers for announcements, introductions, start of presentations, and questions -- maybe the people asking questions too, if their cameras are on.
- I think that given the demographic of genealogists and the restrictions on us going to public events, Zoom meetings will become more and more important, as we are discouraged from being together. I can cope with someone talking to me for about 40 minutes but presentations either live or online should not be longer than that. I would like to see online society meetings make better use of break out rooms where a few people could chat about the presentation. The social time and resulting friendships is an important part of why we belong to a society. On line presentations with members who live to far away to attend physically are also a great thing. Adapt or die.
- Every time I have tried to do a presentation or register I have never been able to get registered????
- Depends if we are still under lockdown. You did not make that clear. The on-line branch meetings are great for those of us who belong to many branches that we cannot travel to (e.g. Sudbury, Ottawa, Lanark. [We live in Toronto]. We have noticed attendance of over 200 people on-line - even some from America participating - don't get that many at physical meetings.
- There are still members without a computer or a reliable high-speed connection. There are others who won't use many of the social media services. Genealogy meetings are social events which are much more enjoyable than sitting in front of a monitor.
- "I do not attend Canadian online meetings because they are held in the middle of my night. Not all are repeated later for far afield members.
- "
- I would and have paid for specific online meetings or presentations but would not pay for online conferences.
- Thank goodness for ZOOM and similar platforms, that can keep us in touch, and provide on-line courses to us. I have now attended meetings in Ottawa, Kingston, Halton-Peel, & Toronto that would not have been otherwise possible. We may well be in this isolation boat for quite some time to come otherwise.
I've struggled for a long while with copy (Ctrl+C) and paste (Ctrl+V). They or the right mouse click equivalent work well. But it has no memory back from the current item. That's annoying when you copied something, then something else but want to paste the former.
What I did not know until a couple of days ago is that Windows 10 has had a Clipboard since October 2018.
Activate it by following Settings > System > Clipboard. Then turn the Clipboard History switch on. You copy in the same way, but instead of Ctrl+V use Win+V - that's the key with the four window panes. A window opens and you select the item you want.
We are being very cautious in our planning for return. Our initial top priority is the safety and security of our staff. We have a team looking at the building, people and work to find the best ways forward. We will maintain telework in the long term and phase onsite work back in slowly while we practice social distancing and will define have isolation of all materials coming into the facility. And we know that we need to be ready to return to the approach over the past 9 weeks at a moment’s notice.Comment: I'm sure we all support a prudent approach to reopening the LAC physical facilities. The closure reinforces the message that the more resources digitized and online the better LAC's ability to serve clients Canada-wide whatever the physical access conditions.
And we are planning for welcoming back our users, but in a later phase, likely during the summer.
"This is a joint venture among several Nova Scotia Heritage organizations formed last fall with an interest in preserving and digitizing a set of very interesting historical maps created in the late nineteenth century. The maps got their name from the cartographer, Ambrose Finson Church, who led and organized the work. They are referred to as the A.F. Church maps.Find further information at https://www.mircs.ca/geogen/
Preserving these maps is an important first step, but their importance is related to the uniquely valuable genealogical information on them. As part of his topographical mapping, Mr. Church identified the location of households on the map, and wrote in the first initial and last name of the owner or head of household beside the dot. With appropriate research, the surnames can be used as a means to create links to household-level census information and other genealogical and historical data.
At the end of November, these Heritage organizations issued a Public Announcement calling for donations of the original lithograph prints, and a considerable number of donations were received. The members of this joint venture, which happen to be located in three different counties, have moved forward with a project to physically conserve and digitize a partial set of these maps. Library & Archives Canada has generously agreed to help with the financial costs of this work.
The work ultimately leads to a connection between geographical and genealogical data. We are referring to it as the GeoGen Project."
Co-Lab is a Library and Archives Canada crowdsourcing tool aiming to make their content more accessible and usable through transcription, translation, tagging and description. LAC is actively seeking your ideas for challenges,
How do I suggest an idea for a challenge?We would love to hear your ideas! Please send us an email at bac.co-lab.lac@canada.ca with your suggestions. Make sure to include a reference number, MIKAN number or e-copy number for the record you are interested in seeing in a Co-Lab challenge.I took up the challenge of making a suggestion and found one appropriate for the 75th anniversary of the end of the Second World War.
My hard drive failed Thursday morning. I do daily backups. It took to Friday to get a new drive but I fully restored by late Friday to my backup Wednesday. Probably lost 4 hours of stuff, but in my case none was irreplaceable.I was surprised to find out it was a 3-4-year-old solid-state drive (SSD) that failed. Charles replaced it with one with double the capacity for $100.
Family history society meetings online are following the physical meeting format. Why do online presentations still have to be 50 minutes plus time for questions?
When you go to a meeting in person you may well spend as much time travelling to and from the event as in the meeting. Then there's time to dress to go out. You wouldn't do all that for a 10 or 20-minute presentation, but with an online meeting there's no special dressing, no travel or parking. So why continue with the physical meeting length presentations?
TED Talks are 18 minutes, "long enough to be serious and short enough to hold people’s attention. It turns out that this length also works incredibly well online." That's from The Science Behind TED's 18-Minute Rule.
You might be interested in this series of short talks organized by The Walrus in November 2019. The average talk is 7 minutes.
The average YouTube video is less than 5 minutes.
BIFHSGO holds Great Moments in Genealogy sessions twice a year with three of four presentations of 15 minutes each. They're usually the most population meetings of the year.
And with longer presentations, there's more Zoom Fatigue.
Please respond to the short survey. It may need a Google account.
Thanks for responding to the survey.
So many people arrived in New York on their way to Canada, either as immigrants or returning from pleasure or business trips that it's worth noting Ancestry's update to this collection, now with 83,000,681 records.
There are also listings for arrival in NY from or via a Canadian port. For Montreal, there are 145,344 passengers, for Quebec City 35,451, for Halifax 257,526.
Miscellaneous items I found of interest during the week.
The Huguenots: London's First Refugees
Ethnicity
Some argue there's no such thing as ethnicity. Others want ethnicity recorded on death certificates in England and Wales to start building a clearer picture of the impact of Coronavirus.
As F. Scott Fitzgerald is quoted “The test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in mind at the same time and still retain the ability to function.”
Have you been waiting for Ontario civil registration marriage records for 1938?
Ancestry is loading them to the collection Ontario, Canada, Marriages, 1826-1938.
On Friday evening when I checked there were 12 for 1938, this morning 61,373, although the total number in the collection, 9,681,280, had not changed. I suspect there are more to come.
Over 1.5 million transcript records from the original register provided by 192.com. Each transcript gives name, year, street, town, district, county, country, postcode, address, district, age guide – provides the age range of the individual, electoral roll, occupancy (years), other occupants. A company director field will show if that person is listed on the Companies House Directors register.
This is the resource you need for tracing cousins and "lost" British friends.
According to an article from The Guardian, The Oxford Dictionary of Family Names in Britain and Ireland is online for free for a limited time - one week.
Compiled by a team of researchers from UWE Bristol, it includes every surname that currently has more than 100 bearers, and all those that had more than 20 bearers in the 1881 census. That's tens of thousands of family names.
When I tried it here the site couldn't be reached. Try later if that's your experience.
Thanks to Susan Courage for the tip.
New Zealand, a country with a population about one-eighth that of Canada, has achieved six million pages digitized through the Papers Past initiative of the National Library of New Zealand. Read about it here.
To put the achievement in perspective, six million pages is 1.25 pages per person.
Australia's digitized newspaper collection TROVE, from the National Library of Australia, has 23,498,368 pages or 0.94 pages per person.
Both are free to full-text search and view.
When complete later this year the British Newspaper Archive, a cooperative project from the British Library, will comprise 40 million pages, or 0.60 pages per person on a subscription basis.
In Canada, how is Library and Archives Canada doing? Neither the LAC project that digitized four First Nation’s titles, nor the Canadiana.ca newspaper digitization initiative gives the number of pages digitized.
Most genealogists consider a DO-OVER as a way to correct inaccuracies that have crept into their family history file over time. We all improve on our research and recording skills as we get more experienced, leaving a lot of our earlier research questionable. Also, new databases and resources become available which might confirm or discount an earlier decision we made about an ancestor.
There are two ways to approach this reconstruction:
• The easy way or top-down approach where we methodically re-visit everyone in our file
confirming dates and adding or editing information about new individuals and events.
• The hard way or bottom up approach involves starting a new family file with ourselves and adding our parents and so on with the associated proof and sources.
In the Documentary Heritage Community Program competition for 2020-21 GANS was successful in being awarded $24,964 for the Three County Geographical Genealogy (GeoGen) Mapping Project.
There's no further information about the project available. I'll post further when I get a response from GANS. In the meantime see https://legacy.stoepel.net/en
Find the list of 40 projects funded by the DHCP for 2020-21 here.
A study Grandparents’ wealth and the body mass index trajectories of grandchildren by Ying Huang published 30 April 2020 published in PLOS ONE finds that
Grandparental wealth is a critical SES marker that can play a pivotal role in influencing their grandchildren’s weight status beginning in early childhood. Grandparental wealth is an important financial resource that shapes the opportunities structure that a child faces and the environment that a child lives in. Grandparental wealth may play a role in influencing grandchildren’s BMI growth trajectories through the “purchasing” function of wealth. In other words, grandparental wealth may help grandchildren to access material goods and services that mitigate obesity risks.Is the author suggesting a subsidy program for grandparents in concluding "elevating the wealth levels of the grandparent generation could potentially reduce their grandchildren’s obesity risk"?
Researchers from Ontario and Quebec health institutions have launched a study to examine the psychological, social, and financial impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic in the general population and in people receiving care from hospitals in these provinces.
Free to access on Ancestry for a very limited time — 12 May 2020 at 10 a.m. EDT to 13 May at 10 a.m. EDT. :
London, England, Poor Law School District Registers, 1852-1918With a library membership, these records are available through Ancestry Library Edition which is also free at home for a limited time.
Canada Census collection
UK Census Collection
Ontario, Canada, Marriages, 1826-1937
Canada, WWI CEF Personnel Files, 1914-1918
“Every time I look at a genealogy website these days I see lists of events which are cancelled or postponed. Some societies have adjusted to this by offering webinars or remote sessions via Zoom. We are left wondering if we will ever meet in groups, or go to our local Family History Center again. Or is this the end of genealogy as we have known it?”Dick's opinion is "I believe the opposite is true. I believe we are seeing the new opportunities being offered to many more genealogists, opportunities we never had before."
What are you doing on 6-7 June? Some of us will attend the first OGS/Ontario Ancestors Virtual Conference in lieu of the planned Hamilton conference.
Here's what's on offer:
Follows four Dutch people who were born just after the Second World War and who suspect all their lives that their unknown father was a soldier. The track runs to Canada, America and France. But only thanks to the latest DNA techniques was the riddle is finally solved. Who was their father?
In Dutch, English and French with English or Dutch subtitles. Keep the Kleenex handy!
This is one of a Dutch series "War Children" that ran weekly from mid-March.
Miscellaneous items I found of interest during the week.
VE Day as reported by British newspapers
"The Guardian paid particular attention to neutral Ireland, where only days earlier the Taoiseach, Eamon de Valera, had called on Dr Hempel, the German ambassador to express condolences for Hitler who had committed suicide on April 30."
Researching British Home Children
Date: Tuesday, May 12
Time: 10:00 a.m. EDT
Where: Ancestry Canada Facebook Page (https://www.facebook.com/AncestryCA/)
Description: From the late 1860s right up to 1948, over 100,000 children of all ages were sent to Canada from the United Kingdom. Known as the British Home Children, they are the ancestors of an estimated 10% of Canada’s current population. Join us as genealogist Gloria Tubman shares her advice and guidance on identifying the British Home Children in your family tree, and walks us through the resources available for uncovering their stories.
We Must Have Swam Over - Research Strategies, Tips and Tricks for Finding Your Immigrant Ancestors
Date: Thursday, May 14Debutantes at the St Andrew's Ball in Montreal, 1897-2019
Time: 12:00 p.m. EDT
Where: Ancestry Canada Facebook Page (https://www.facebook.com/AncestryCA/)
Description: Finding your immigrant ancestors can be tricky. Join us as Cara MacDonald, Manager of Reference Services at the Canadian Museum of Immigration at Pier 21, shares her research process and tips for locating those hard to find immigration records. From the "why" behind being unable to locate difficult records to effective wildcard searching and gathering information from non-immigration sources, this workshop will help take your genealogy skills to the next level.