Sunday Sundries

Miscellaneous items I found interesting this week.

Save the Dates
The 2026 BIFHSGO Annual Conference is scheduled for 17 & 18 October with the theme “Flittin’ Day: Forces That Moved Our Scottish Ancestors.”

Canadians at 1924 Empire Exhibition Wembley London

Irish Railway Stations 1834-2000

Ancestry adds over 14 million records in England and Wales, Tithe Maps and Apportionments, 1775-1936 collection.

YouTube: Flanders & Swann – Documentary by John Amis

Thanks to the following individuals for their comments and tips: Anonymous, Christine Jackson, Gail, Gail Roger, Helen, Julia, Nancy Cutway, Penny, Teresa, and Unknown.

Expect few posts

I’m taking a break. There will be a Sunday Sundries tomorrow, otherwise expect limited posts, if any, resuming after the USA 250 celebrations.

 

Long-term Trends in Boy’s Names

The Office for National Statistics has tabulated the top 100 baby names in England and Wales over 13 years, from 1904 to 2024.

There are 287 unique boys’ names that appear at least once in the top 100, according to the ONS tabulation.

The Long-Lasting

James, William, Thomas, George, Edward

Except for Thomas, they are royal names. Edward, never in the top 10, was never lower than #52.

The Meteoric Rise and Fall

Mark, Michael, Christopher, Luke, Joshua

Mark appeared only in the second half of the 20th century, peaking at #2 in 1974.

The Rise

Mohammed, Oliver, Noah

Mohammed entered the top 100 in 1924 and, over the course of a century, rose to the top spot.

The Fall

John, Richard, Robert

John held one of the top two spots until 1954, then fell rapidly, clinging to a top 100 spot only at the start of the 21st century.

OGS Ottawa Branch Monthly Meeting

Migrations from NY to Canada on the Champlain and Erie Canals: Nineteenth to Early Twentieth Centuries is the topic of Pamela Vittorio’s presentation online at 7 PM on Thursday, 25 June.

The creation of the NYS Canal system in 1825 made many things possible–from moving people and cargo, to transporting language, religion, and ideas. Beyond the census, finding ancestors who did business alongside the canals, owned boats, or worked as labourers may seem like a challenging task. Many families from Canada migrated to New York to seek employment or transport cargo on the canals. Find out how to trace their most likely routes and pathways from Albany to Buffalo, from New York City, up the Hudson River, to the eastern part of NY State and on the Champlain Canal to Canada. Discover how families travelled on canal boat, and where they were likely to stop. Learn about the types of records you should look at, where to find the records, and how to analyze them.

All Ottawa Branch monthly presentations are open to the public at no charge. Register in advance for this Zoom presentation:

https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/wu1Or43PSXqkmaIEJGagVg

Weir(d?) Times at LAC

Information Commissioner 2025-2026 Annual Report
The Commissioner found that Library and Archives Canada (LAC) demonstrated measurable improvements in access to information compliance during the 2025–2026 fiscal year, driven by increased funding and leadership commitment. Through initiatives such as enhanced training and a streamlined delegation instrument to speed up request processing, LAC successfully reduced its active complaints inventory from a peak of 266 in 2021–2022 down to 101 by March 2026, while dramatically lowering the number of formal orders issued against it from 109 in 2023–2024 to 16 in 2025–2026. Despite these significant overall improvements and a strengthened collaborative relationship with the Office of the Information Commissioner, LAC still faced some legal hurdles, with 16 cases submitted to the Federal Court in 2025–2026 disputing ordered response dates for delay and extension of time complaints.

Recognition
The Canadian Association of Journalists has specifically recognized LAC for a Dishonourable Mention for declining to release a 40-year-old list of 700 suspected Nazis admitted to Canada after the Second World War. It was claimed it could interfere with international relations. The recognition of LAC was as part of the CAJ once again recognizing The Federal Government as a whole in awarding it the  Code of Silence Award for Outstanding Achievements in Government Secrecy.

Annual Report on Travel, Hospitality and Conference Expenditures
Library and Archives Canada spent $457K on travel, hospitality, and conferences in FY2024-25, down $120K from $577K the prior year. Travel fell the most (-$147K to $413K), driven by the federal Refocusing Government Spending initiative and the end of Federal Pathway funding for MMIWG2S+, with declines across operational travel, stakeholder engagement, and training. Hospitality rose $18K to $31K due to an AI and archives symposium hosted in September 2024, and conference fees increased $9K to $13K from broader staff participation. The report does not identify spending by individual, as in the past.

Guided tour of the LAC Preservation Centre
Friday, 26 June

This Week’s Online Genealogy Events

Choose from these selected free online events. All times are Eastern Time, unless otherwise noted. Registration may be required in advance—please check the links to avoid disappointment. For many more events, mainly in the U.S., visit https://conferencekeeper.org/virtual/

Tuesday, 23 June

2:00 PM: Ottawa Virtual Genealogy Drop-In, for OGS Ottawa Branch.
https://us02web.zoom.us/j/86956419387 

2:00 PM: Top 10 Canadian Collections at MyHeritage, by Kaye Prince-Hollenberg for Legacy Family Tree Webinars.
https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/top-10-canadian-collections-at-myheritage/

7:00 PM: Exploring Family History at the Archives of Ontario, for OGS Wellington County Branch.
https://wellington.ogs.on.ca/events/wellington-county-branch-exploring-family-history-at-the-archives-of-ontario/

Wednesday, 24 June

1:00 PM: The Stories of US: Turning Records into Stories, Ancestry Virtual Event Series.
https://events.zoom.us/ev/Amlc6W-17CEfmJCeBiKQazOIA-Cj7k3CW6AL8dj-nu_Dj6yoA9w8~AtV74yrJV_X4d5jEAMoz4EQcDaofIZKWj8-tkLuAStdFguWfnlLwgb0Hgw

2:00 PM: WWII Internment of Japanese Immigrant “Enemy Aliens” in the San Francisco Bay Area, by Grant Din for Legacy Family Tree Webinars.
https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/wwii-internment-of-japanese-immigrant-enemy-aliens-in-the-san-francisco-bay-area/

Thursday, 25 June

7:00 PM: Migrations from NY to Canada on the Champlain and Erie Canals: Nineteenth to Early Twentieth Centuries, by Pamela Vittorio for OGS Ottawa Branch.
https://ottawa.ogs.on.ca/events/migrations-on-the-erie-champlain-canals-ottawa/ 

7:00 PM: ConferenceKeeper: Discovering Genealogical Education and Opportunities, byTami Osmer Mize for GRIP Genealogy Institute / NGS
https://tinyurl.com/2026GRIPThur

Friday, 26 June

3:28 PM: Revolution through a British lens, by Sean Cunningham and Graham Moore for TNA.
https://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/whats-on/events/revolution-through-a-british-lens/

Saturday, 27 June

MyHeritage adds United Kingdom, British Army Casualty Lists, 1939-1947

Added to MyHeritage on 21 June 2026, these records document members of the British Army who were wounded, killed, or went missing in action during World War II, spanning the full extent of the conflict and its immediate aftermath.

The 1,113,764 records capture casualties from many theatres of operation, including campaigns in Western Europe, North Africa, the Middle East, and the Far East. Records typically include the name of the individual, mostly initials and surname, and the date and place of the casualty. Many entries also include the individual’s rank, regiment, army service number, and casualty status. The original document does not include the nature of the injury.

Some entries reflect casualties whose status was later corrected in subsequent records. That was the case for my uncle.

MyHeritage produced the index from scanned images of the original documents held at TNA, Kew.

Canadiana Heritage 12 June Update

Is there anything of interest to you in this list of 22 microfilm files, just added? Included are:

11 Western Land Grants files, July 1907 – January 1921
4 Indian Affairs, Annuity Paylists, 1910 – 1933.

The following military files have full-text search capability:

Militia and Defence personnel file, 1910 – 1938
Royal Canadian Air Force courts-martial, 1939- 1945.

Sunday Sundries

Miscellaneous items I found interesting this week.

Reuters Climate Monitor
How do today’s temperatures compare to the historic average? How cool is that?

Deceased Online adds records for Fenland District Council 
70,000 records, dating back to the mid-19th century up to 2014, from Wisbech Cemetery, Walsoken Cemetery and Whittlesey Cemetery.

News is changing dramatically – here’s what the move away from mainstream media means for you as a consumer

The Perley Legacy
A short video featuring Glenn Wright.

London, England, Selected Poor Law Removal and Settlement Records, 1698-1922
Ancestry updated this collection, sourced from The London Archives, now with 1,413,959 records.

At the Drop of Another Hat
I don’t know how I missed this video of a performance by Flanders and Swann in New York. It includes songs you may not have heard previously, as well as their classics.

Thanks to the following individuals for their comments and tips: Ann Burns, Anonymous, Gail, Glenn Wright, Julia, Lesley Anderson, Nadine, Sean, Sunday Thompson, Teresa, and Unknown.

 

 

 

Becoming (and maybe Unbecoming!) a Canadian Citizen

There has been a surge in document requests, and work for professional genealogists, following a December 2025 legal expansion that allows people with distant ancestral ties to claim Canadian citizenship under specific circumstances.

Some who have been through the process and received a certificate of Canadian citizenship are now being asked to return it as the grant is under  review. The problem appears to be that the evidence provided did not meet the legal standard required.

The NYT has an article, Are Your Ancestors Canadian? Here’s What to Know About Becoming a Citizen, which explains the process applicants must follow, and mentions that some people are being asked to return their certificates.

Findmypast Weekly Update

New Records

Britain, Retired Railway Officers’ Society (1902–1963) — 25,330 records

These records document the senior management elite of British and British Empire railways. The Retired Railway Officers’ Society was an exclusive body for high-ranking officials — Chief Engineers, General Managers and the like — making this a rich source for biographical research. Standout items include Member Portrait Albums combining photographs with detailed career histories, service dates, and company positions, covering the golden age of steam into nationalisation.

Fields available: name, occupation, company, birth date, years entered and left service, and death date.

England, Cromford Canal Company (1789–1908) — 8,253 records

The Cromford Canal was engineered by William Jessop and Benjamin Outram to connect Derbyshire’s coal mines and limestone quarries to Richard Arkwright’s cotton mills via 14.5 miles of waterway. This collection covers the company’s operational life through original minutes and permit books, naming the boatmen, carriers, and merchants who powered the Industrial Revolution in the East Midlands before the canal was purchased by a railway company in 1852.

Fields available: name, event date, event type.

England, Ludlow and Clee Hill Railway Company (1860–1892) — 1,338 records

Built to haul “dhustone” (dolerite) from the high-altitude quarries of Clee Hill down to the main lines at Ludlow, this Shropshire mineral branch tackled some of the steepest gradients in British railway history, including a 1-in-6 cable-worked incline. Trade ledgers and administrative minutes document its operations up to absorption by the Great Western Railway and London and North Western Railway in 1893.

Fields available: name, event date, occupation.

Dorset Early Census Returns (1724–1821) — 2,140 records

An index compiled from census returns made by Rev Dawney in 1724, 1725, and 1769, together with records of the Overseers of the Poor researched by M.B. Weinstock for the book Old Dorset. Rev Dawnay’s survey recorded 156 houses and 605 inhabitants, including 30 non-parishioners. The accompanying Poor Law accounts name individual recipients of relief — money, clothing, nursing care — and paint a vivid picture of village life, including an outbreak of smallpox that claimed lives in the Riggs family and subsequently spread to children boarded with Elizabeth Vine. Records courtesy of Dorset FHS.


New Newspapers

Seven new titles join the archive this week: The earliest is from 1827, the latest 1919.

Title Date Range Pages
Cinderford Journal 1875–1877, 1879, 1889, 1891 1,214
Guardian and Constitutional Advocate 1827–1836 3,746
Illustrated Poultry Record 1918 20
St. Mary Cray, Orpington & District Times 1905–1919 7,162
Southport Critic 1878–1879 1,650
Sunderland Daily Shipping News 1865, 1872, 1888, 1897, 1910 3,138
Weldon’s Practical Hairdressing 1918 16

Significant Updates (10,000+ pages added)

The following existing titles, with an emphasis on Scotland, received substantial additions this week:

Title Date Range Pages Added
Abergele & Pensarn Visitor 1997–2005 39,378
Stirling Observer 1836–1843, 1868–1874, 1878–1880, 1893–1901, 1903–1913, 1919–1938, 1946–1960, 1969–1970, 1975–1976 36,398
Blairgowrie Advertiser 1861–1878, 1881–1884, 1887–1935, 1953–1969, 1996–1999 36,142
Lennox Herald 1946–1962, 1966–1984, 1999–2002 35,908
Perthshire Advertiser 1953–1970, 1997–1999 54,196
Hamilton Advertiser 1995–1999 17,780
Belfast Telegraph 1984–1985 13,978
New Observer (Bristol) 2000–2003 11,960
Norwich Argus 1877–1892 10,186