Burials at Brentford

Human remains buried in the churchyard at St Lawrence, Brentford, are to be removed and re-interred at Brookwood Cemetery.

A pdf list of more than 900 burials at the church, which is at High Street, Brentford in the London Borough of Hounslow, with surname, first names, age, day/month of burial, year of burial is here. Burials are from 1843 to 1973. Appended are two lists of gravestones not in situ.

Sunday Sundries

Miscellaneous items I found of interest during the week.

Love the reaction as well as the original.

Ads are everywhere. Turn on the TV and you’ll likely see one. You have to watch an ad or two before and sometimes during viewing a YouTube video – as with the one above. On Saturday BIFHSGO broke new ground by inserting an ad seeking volunteer Board members into a monthly meeting presentation. Your opinion please.

How acceptable is inserting ads in family history society presentations?
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Additions to Findmypast on Friday included Australia, Inward, Outward & Coastal Passenger Lists 1826-1972. “We’ve merged our huge collection of Australian passenger lists into one searchable record set and added over 9 million new entries.”

Making it Count — Canada’s first census taken and revised.

Lost and Fonds: Our national archives’ poor record
An opinion piece by former LAC archivist Paul Marsden

Maths Challenges
Which is the better fit – a round peg in a square hole or a square peg in a round hole? In this question, “better fit” means filling more of the available space.
Want more maths challenges? Go to https://www.u3a.org.uk/learning/national-programmes/maths-challenge

For Mothers Day, celebrate “the biggest shake-up to the Marriage Act since 1837.” Mothers now to be listed on their children’s marriage certificates in England and Wales.

Thanks to this week’s contributors: Anonymous,  Cliff, Darrel. Dena, gail benjafield,  Glenn Wright, Ian, Nancy, Rod G., Susan, Unknown.

Findmypast Updates Devon Parish Records

Over 240,000 new baptism, marriage and burial records from Devon are ready to explore sourced from the Devon Family History Society and the Family History Federation.  Some are transcripts, many have images of the original record.

Over 122,000 baptism records (1538-1919 and 1921) are added for 46 parishes which now have a total of 200,361 entries. There are 2,553,052 baptismal records in the collection.

No new banns are added; the total remains 425,486.

Over 20,000 marriage records (1538-1799 and 1921) are added for 71 parishes. The total for those parishes is 733,270. The total for the collection is 1,944,242 marriages.

Over 104,000 burial records (1538-1917 and 1921) are added from 32 parishes which now have a total of 256,208 records. The whole collection has 2,133,751 burials.

Identification of the remains of Warrant Officer John Gregory

Y-chromosome haplotyping and genealogical evidence were used to confirm the identity of the remain from HMS Erebus.

That’s all the DNA detail available in the abstract of the article DNA identification of a sailor from the 1845 Franklin northwest passage expedition by Douglas R. Stenton, Douglas R. Stenton, Stephen Fratpietro,
Anne Keenleyside and Robert W. Park in the 28 April issue of the journal Polar Report. I’m not about to lay out $25 US to read the full article.

I shall be interested to find out if a formal analysis of location, carbon dating, physical information from the skeletal remains as well as the DNA and genealogical evidence were formally drawn together in forming the conclusion.

Genealogists can note with pleasure that two of the references are to the Lancashire Online Parish Clerk Project.

A Deeper Dive into the SDG Digitized Newspapers

You probably saw coverage of the launch for a digital newspaper archive for SDG (Stormont, Dundas and Glengarry to the uninitiated). Find a newspaper report here; go directly to the online archives here.

Over 200,000 pages of history in 15,634 editions of 13 newspapers is a laudable achievement. While of greatest interest to those with roots in the United Counties, it can also serve as a role model for other localities.

Taking a deeper dive into the newspapers here’s a listing of the title, number of pages and years with digitized content.

Winchester Press: (5467): 1895-1898, 1901, 1910, 1912, 1915, 1917-1958, 1960-1988, 1990-1991, 1993-1998, 2001-2020
The Glengarry News: (2477): 1961-2004
The Chesterville Record: (2391): 1902-1905, 1910-1913, 1915-1924, 1928, 1954-1963, 1965-2000
The Chieftain: (1442): 1982-2006
The Morrisburg Leader: (1342): 1907, 1911-1919, 1921-1929, 1934-1938, 1940, 1942, 1947-1949, 1952
The Iroquois Post: (739): 1956, 1964, 1968-1982
The Iroquois Post and Matilda Advocate: (549): 1931, 1936, 1943, 1945-1946, 1959, 1952-1963, 1965-1967
Dundas County Herald and St. Lawrence Reporter: (145): 1874-1877
The St. Lawrence News – Iroquois: (82): 1894, 1901, 1905-1906, 1908-1909. 1917-1920, 1922
Morrisburgh Courier: (32): 1865-1866, 1869, 1873, 1879, 1885-1987, 1892
The Williamsburg Times: (16): 1935, 1938
Morrisburg Banner: (7): 1977
The Mountain Herald: (1): 1905

No intense scrutiny is needed to see that the Winchester Press accounts for over one-third of the content. Add The Glengarry News and The Chesterfield Records and you have more than two-thirds of the content.

The table doesn’t tell the whole story.

The Winchester Press, an eight-page weekly, starts in 1895 but there are only one to two issues a year available until 1918.

The Glengarry News, also an eight-page weekly, has good coverage from 1961 to 2004. Much earlier editions (Feb 1892 – Dec 1960), as well as of The Glengarrian (Feb 1887 – Dec 1910), are available here. Hopefully, they’ll be added to the new site soon for simplicity of searching.

The Chesterville Record has good coverage for the years mentioned except for only a single issue in 1929 in the middle of a gap from 1925 to 1954.

The search is a two-step process. From the main page search your term. You can select a newspaper first. This will take you to an array of papers where after a click or two a pdf will download that can be searched with CTL-F. The page will show with the hit highlighted,

Congratulations to United Counties researchers who now have a very nice free resource at their fingertips and to the local people who made it happen.

 

FreeBMD May Update

The FreeBMD Database was updated on Thursday 6 May 2021 to contain 280,104,498 unique records (279,663,246 at the previous update.) Years with major additions, greater than 5,000 records are: for births 1986-90; for marriages 1969, 1986-90; for deaths 1986, 1988-90.

Australian Second World War Casualties Commemorated in Canada

Today is the 80th anniversary of the death of Leading Aircraftman Douglas Mervyn Lord, age 22, of the Royal Australian Air Force. He is one of 146 Australian airmen commemorated in Canada.

The crash, which killed him while practising night flying out of No 2 Flying Training School, Uplands, Ottawa, occurred at 4 am about 2-1/2 miles south of the airport.  It also took the life of Flying Officer Bennett L. Duffey originally from Toronto.  

Douglas Mervyn Lord, born 17 July 1918 at Warrnambool, Victoria, the son of George Walter and Eliza Ellen Lord, is interred in Sec. 29. Lot 1. Grave 105 at Ottawa’s Beechwood Cemetery.

While he has a grave many don’t. The Ottawa Memorial “commemorates by name almost 800 men and women who lost their lives while serving or training with the Air Forces of the Commonwealth in Canada, the West Indies and the United States and who have no known grave.”

WDYTYA Magazine: June 2021

The June issue of Who Do You Think You Are Magazine appeared on 4 May. The three feature articles are:
Put your tree online
Chris Paton explores online free family tree builders from four major genealogy sites plus collaborative trees. 

Motor City
Steve Humphries tells the
fascinating stories of those who made Coventry a driving force in car manufacturing. You’ll enjoy learning the history if you like old British cars by makers like Hillman, Jaguar, Riley, Sunbeam, Talbot, Triumph. 

Wedding Traditions
From wedding rings to white gowns, Carolyn Roope reveals the origins of our cherished marriage customs.

Also

Best websites
Track do
wn records of police ancestors. There are local and national resources.

Around Britain
Everything you need to research your roots in Norfolk. Reports on the activity at the Norfolk Record Office during the pandemic, including indexing with a list of resources. If you’re looking for an image to illustrate a Norfolk ancestral location try Picture Norfolk.

As always, there much more. Check it out free on Press Reader through your local Canadian public library.

Further Additions to Canadiana Serials

Since last mentioned on 10 April, many more items are added to the Canadiana.ca Serials collection. This word cloud shows the range of topics, too many titles to list here. 

Find the start of the list of new items here. It has a link to the complete list for the last month and new items coming.

Browsing the titles I smiled at “Annual report of the Pomological and Fruit Growing Society of the Province of Quebec.” At first glance, I didn’t read it as pomological and it seemed like an unusual combination.

Add a new word to your vocabulary. Pomology is a branch of botany that studies fruit and its cultivation.

While Canadiana continues digitization nothing is being added to the Héritage collections as “digitization services at Library and Archives Canada remain suspended.”

LAC Asks “Trust Us”

On 30 April LAC posted a notice Update – Delays in responding to Access to Information Act and Privacy Act requests

The notice explains that “ability to respond within legislatively prescribed timelines to requests made under the Access to Information Act and Privacy Act has been greatly affected by both a marked increase in volume and health and safety measures related to the COVID-19 pandemic.”

Translated “greatly affected by” means LAC has failed to meet “legislatively prescribed timelines.”

The notice continues:

“We understand that such delays are difficult for our clients, and we are doing everything we can to remediate this exceptional situation.

Rest assured that we are actively looking at innovative processes and human resource solutions to address these delays and meet our increasing demand.”

LAC wants our trust. What does “actively looking at” really mean?  How can we be confident this is not just bureaucratic verbiage, as in this line from Yes Minister?

“under consideration” means “we’ve lost the file”; “under active consideration” means “we’re trying to find it”.

When will LAC move beyond looking to action?