Sunday Sundries

Miscellaneous items I found interesting this week.

Londoners and the Oxford English Dictionary
Online from Gresham Collage, Professor Sarah Ogilvie, author of The Dictionary People: the unsung heroes of the Oxford English Dictionary, tells the fascinating stories of some of the hundreds of Londoners who helped create the world’s largest English dictionary.
Thursday, 16 Apr 2026 at 1 PM.

New at FamilySearch
FamilySearch quietly released four new collections on April 7, 2026, adding more than 484,000 records that cover births and baptisms from the early 1660s to the mid-twentieth century.

  • Canada, Births and Baptisms, 1661–1959,
    165,363 records
  • Canada, New Brunswick County Register of Births, 1801–1920,
    175,485 records
  • Canada, New Brunswick County Registers of Births Index, ca. 1812–1919, 101,981 records
  • Canada, New Brunswick County Registers of Births, ca. 1812–1919,
    41,746 records.

Ancestry Updates Somerset Records
Somerset, England, Church of England Confirmations, 1843-1924,
1,569 records
Somerset, England, Church of England Burials, 1813-1924
611,069 records
Somerset, England, Marriage Registers, Bonds and Allegations, 1754-1924
1,596,992 records
Somerset, England, Church of England Baptisms, 1813-1924
3,000,165 records.

Genealogical Miracles

Tune in to the Bruce County Genealogical Society at 7 pm on Monday evening, where Ken McKinlay is performing presenting genealogical miracles, some of the gaffs and errors found in family trees, such as “Resurrection”, “The well preserved”, and “Time travellers”. He covers how to prevent those mistakes in our own trees.
https://bit.ly/2026-04-13-KenMcKinlay

It would never be broadcast by the BBC in these enlightened times.

 

Findmypast Weekly Update

It looks like the Find My Past team took time off over the Easter break.

The Findmypast Photo Collection has grown by 41,373 new images, from 1900s to 1920s.

The Britain, School and University Students collection is now enriched with 132,851 new records from various schools across England. Dating from 1264 to 1926.

To give you a sense of what to expect, here’s an example index from the Highgate School Register, held at University College London:

Field Detail
Name Alexander Reid
Birth date 2 October 1863
Admission year 1880
Father’s name T. Reid
Qualifications D.S.O.
School Highgate School, London
Publication year 1938
Archive reference LONDON HISTORY 49.301 HIG

Check out the linked image; there may be more.

Newspapers
Just 71,299 new pages this week, with two Salvation Army titles now available:

  • War Cry (new title)65,382 pages, covering 1879–1985,.
  • Social Gazette4,106 pages, covering 1893–1909.

Forthcoming from Pan and Sword

A quick look at forthcoming publications, available for pre-order, and one published earlier in the year.  Check the Pen and Sword website for introductory offers on pre-orders and recent releases.

Recording the Nations: The Lives, Duties and History of the Census Takers

By Mish J Holman Expected: 30 June 2026

Mish J Holman explores the human side of Britain’s census by focusing on the enumerators who collected the data, drawing on personal accounts and contemporary anecdotes to reveal the individuals behind the records. Read it to appreciate the logistics and legends of our most used records.

Tracing Your House History on the Internet

By Gill Blanchard Expected: 30 April 2026

Gill Blanchard bridges the gap between traditional deeds and digital maps, offering practical advice for researching any dwelling, from grand manors to cottages. Peel back the layers of an ancestor’s domestic life using the convenience of the web.

Tracing Your Ancestors Using Newspapers

By Chloe O’Shea Expected: 30 April 2026

Chloe O’Shea provides a framework for effective searching, helping researchers verify ancestors and interpret everything from court proceedings to letters to the editor.  Newspapers can turn a basic family tree into a vivid life history, sometimes stories that may upset the received history.

Strange Will Requests and Bequests

By AJ Griffiths-Jones Expected: 30 April 2026

from vengeful codicils to bizarre instructions etched on eggshells, AJ Griffiths-Jones uncovers the “human” side of probate. These documents offer a direct line to an ancestor’s personality, revealing their secrets, humour, and spite. It is an entertaining reminder that our ancestors often used their final words to ensure they wouldn’t be forgotten.


Recently Published:

Tracing Your Ancestors Using What They Left Behind

By Dr. Simon Wills Published: 26 January 2026

Dr. Simon Wills focuses on the physical artifacts—unnamed photos, tobacco jars, and silver cases—that sit in drawers without context. Using a detective-style approach, he demonstrates how meticulous research can return a name and a story to these silent witnesses of history.

BIFHSGO April Meeeting

BIFHSGO welcomes you on Saturday morning.

The Travelling Genealogist: BIFHSGO members’ top tips for travelling to research your family history / 9 a.m. EDT
Moderator: Dianne Brydon

This session will focus on recommendations for a successful family history research tour, drawn from our members’ experience. From what we have already received, a common theme is “be prepared” —with variations. We’ll review the top tips and then open the mics so participants can share their own experiences. If you have a tip you’d like included, please send it to Dianne Brydon at . Or join us and share it live. There’s a wealth of experience in our community!

The Rise and Fall of John Lowther Kemp Sr. 1793–1869 / 10 a.m. EDT
Presenter: Doug Loucks

This “riches to rags” story began with newspaper clippings found early in 2023 that reported: “Mr. John Lowther Kemp, formerly hop merchant at Canterbury, has been nominated by the Right Hon. the Earl of Romney as a poor brother of the Charter House.” This exciting find prompted hours of research and a trip overseas to tour the Charterhouse and to walk the streets of Canterbury, where Doug Loucks’ 4x great-grandfather John rose to great wealth before the changing times swept him into poverty.

This is a hybrid meeting, in person at Knox Presbyterian Church (Lisgar & Elgin) in Geneva Hall, or join online by registering.

 

Eureka Moments in (Genetic) Genealogy

On Saturday afternoon, speakers from the OGS Toronto Branch’s Advanced Genetic Genealogy SIG are hosting a free program titled “Eureka Moments in (Genetic) Genealogy” at North York Central Library.
There will be a mid-afternoon refreshment break and a lucky draw for DNA kits: 2 from Ancestry and a 37-marker Y-DNA test from Family Tree DNA. Pre-registration is required.
For details, see https://torontofamilyhistory.org/event/eureka-moments/?instance_id=1653

Thanks to Linda Reid for the tip.

The Family History AI Show – new episode

On Monday, episode 41, recorded on 30 March, was posted. I still haven’t listened to episode 40, posted while I was away.

The highlight of 41 is an interview with Dave Vance on AI at FamilyTreeDNA. He explains how “new genetic genealogy tests, provided by next-generation sequencing, deliver 400 times more genomic info than traditional microarray chips and what that means for matching, triangulation, and the future role of AI in genetic genealogy.”

https://podcast.show/3738800/episode/153788502/

Worcestershire Records New to Ancestry

For the West Midlands, the “black sheep” of the family tree may have just become easier to find. In a partnership with the Worcestershire Archive & Archaeology Service,

Worcestershire, England, Calendar of Prisoners, 1839–1921

Lists of prisoners awaiting trial or serving sentences. Beyond the basics of names, aliases, ages, occupations, and specific charges the linked original images often reveal the name of the presiding judge, the date a warrant was issued, and even unique notes like claims for goods taken during an execution.  44,382 records

Worcestershire, England, Quarter Sessions Order Books, 1632–1921

These handwritten logs document the court system’s activities, covering everything from minor thefts to serious assaults. They capture cases that were too serious for the “Petty Sessions” but not quite capital offenses destined for the “Assizes.” Both defendants and claimants are named.
257,096 records

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 ConferenceKeeper.


Tuesday, 07 April

Wednesday, 08 April

Thursday, 09 April

DNA Day Sale

Family Tree DNA (FTDNA) is advertising discounts on its full range of tests and pushing test bundles. The biggest discount is for the  Family Finder + Big Y-700 + mtFull Sequence bundle at $499 US.

If the paternal line is of most interest, the right test for you might be the Y-111 (111 markers tested) at $199 US. Be aware that FTDNA is now sequencing more locations on the chromosomes in its Family Finder test (about 9% of the total), just as MyHeritage is now doing.

https://www.familytreedna.com/

Ancestry adds records from the Borthwick Institute for Archives – University of York

While on break, I posted briefly about the England, Prerogative and Exchequer Court of York Wills, 1389–1858. With 2,462,539 records, it deserves a closer look.

In addition to extracting name, place of residence, relationship to head of household, will date, and probate date, the collection includes a list of individuals mentioned and their relationship to the testator. This feature is absent from Ancestry’s Prerogative Court of Canterbury Wills, 1384–1858, almost certainly because it relies on AI, which was not available when the PCC records first appeared on Ancestry in 2014.

A second, and even larger, addition to Ancestry from the Borthwick Institute is the Yorkshire, England, Bishops’ Transcripts of Church of England Baptism, Marriage and Burial Registers, 1558–1912, with 13,500,549 records. Baptism entries include name, date and place of baptism, and parents’ names (though not the mother’s maiden name). Marriage entries include names, date and place, and burial entries include name, date of death, and date and place of burial.

Both collections link to images of the original records. These days, it’s good practice to run those images through an AI tool for analysis. The results may not be perfect, but they’re often useful.

FreeBMD March Update

This is a gentle restart of blog posts after a relaxing break, cruising in the Mediterranean. There’s a lot to catch up on while I was away.

The FreeBMD database was updated on 23 March 2026 to contain 295,418,598 unique entries, up from 295,226,698 the previous month, an increase of 371,900 entries.

The years with more than 10,000 additions are 1995-6 for births and marriages, 1994 and 1996-7 for deaths.

Findmypast Weekly Update – briefly

Ireland, Dublin Port Employment records, 1862-1925
Years covered: 1862-1925
Records added: 1,635

The Jewish Year
Book
Years covered: 1895-1955
Records added: 425,089

Newspapers

225,300 pages added this week, with six new titles and sixteen updated publications. Featuring Suffolk to Scotland.