Plus 🎄🎄🎄
— Pam Ayres MBE (@PamAyres) December 20, 2022
Plus 🎄🎄🎄
— Pam Ayres MBE (@PamAyres) December 20, 2022
1939 Register of England & Wales
About 65,000 new records have passed the required 100-year mark and have been unredacted in this latest rolling release.
FMP holds the most up-to-date version of the 1939 Register, which dates to 29 September 1939.
Ireland: Licences to Keep Arms, 1832-1836
A new collection from a parliamentary report includes those who were granted a licence to bear a weapon (either a firearm or a sword) by their local magistrate. The records normally include a name, their residence, brief details of the licence, and the magistrate. Check the original image for additional details on the wepons, such as “Two guns, one pistol and one bayonet”, “One gun”, “One single-barrelled fowling-piece.”
Newspapers
Wow! 600,000 new pages have been added this week, comprising of 19 new titles and 152 updated titles.
More than 185,000 new Lloyd George Domesday land tax records have been added by TheGenealogist to its Landowner and Occupier records. Consisting of records from the counties of Berkshire and the Buckinghamshire, this release provides researchers with the ability to discover owners and occupiers of property in the period 1910 to 1915.
Covering an area of over 800 square miles, researchers can use these records to see the size, state of repair and value of the house in which their ancestors had been the landlord of, or had lived in.
TheGenealogist has linked all the records to the large scale Ordnance Survey maps that were used at the time.These detailed maps show each property plotted on detailed mapping that can be viewed with TheGenealogist’s Map Explorerâ„¢ tool. This interface will show the same coordinates on a variety of modern and historical maps. Using this allows house or family historians to see how the area they are researching may have changed over time and with it to then explore their ancestors’ locality.
Areas covered in this release include:
Aldermaston, Aldworth, Amersham, Arborfield, Ardington, Ashampstead, Ashley Green, Barkham, Basildon, Beaconsfield, Beech Hill, Beedon, Beenham, Binfield, Bisham, Bledlow, Blewbury, Boveney, Boxford, Bradenham, Bradfield, Bray, Brightwalton, Brimpton, Buckland, Bucklebury, Burghfield, Burnham, Catmore, Caversham, Chaddleworth, Chalfont St Giles, Chalfont St Peter, Challow (East and West), Charlton, Chenies, Chepping Wycombe, Chesham, Chieveley, Childrey, Chilton, Cholesbury, Clewer Within, Clewer Without, Cold Ash, Compton, Cookham, Crowthorne, Datchet, Denchworth, Denham, Donnington, Earley, East Garston, East Ilsley, East Lockinge, East Shefford, Easthampstead, Ellesborough, Enborne, Englefield, Eton, Farnborough, Farnham Royal, Fawley, Fawley, Fawley, Finchhampstead, Fingest, Frilsham, Fulmer, Gerrards Cross, Goosey, Grazeley, Great Coxwell, Great Missenden, Greenham, Grove, Hambleden, Hampden (Great and Little), Hampstead Marshall, Hampstead Norris, Hanney (East and West), Harwell, Hawridge, Hedgerley, Hedsor, Hendred (East and West), High Wycombe, Hitcham, Horsenden, Horton, Hungerford, Hurley, Ibstone, Ilmer, Inkpen, Iver, Kimble (Great and Little), Kintbury, Lambourn, Langley, Leckhampstead, Lee, Letcombe Bassett, Letcombe Regis, Little Marlow, Little Missenden, Maidenhead, Marlow, Medmenham, Midgham, Mortimer, New Windsor, Newbury, Newland, Old Windsor, Pangbourne, Peasemore, Penn, Princes Risborough, Remenham, Ruscombe, Sandhurst, Saunderton, Shaw, Shinfield, Shottesbrook, Slough, Slough, Sparsholt, Speen, St Giles, St Lawrence, St Mary, St Nicholas Hurst, Stanford Dingley, Streatley, Sunningdale, Sunninghill, Swallowfield, Taplow, Thatcham, Theale, Tilehurst, Towersey, Turville, Twyford, Upton, Waltham St Lawrence, Wantage, Warfield, Wargrave, Welford, West Ilsley, West Shefford, West Woodhay, White Waltham, Winkfield, Winnersh, Winterbourne, Wokingham, Wooburn, Woolhampton & Yattendon
Read TheGenealogist’s article: To the Cottage Born https://www.thegenealogist.co.uk/featuredarticles/2022/to-the-cottage-born-1645/
Starting tomorrow, Yuletide R&R posts will keep the blog active while I’m otherwise occupied. Expect mostly humourous items, many classics from previous years.
Today, in celebration of Hanukkah, enjoy this music.
Choose from a few selected free online events in the next five days. All times are ET except as noted. Those in red are Canadian, bolded if local to Ottawa or recommended. Assume registration in advance is required; check so you’re not disappointed. Additional mainly US events are listed at https://conferencekeeper.org/virtual.
TUESDAY 20 DECEMBER
2 pm: OGS Ottawa Branch Virtual Drop-in.
https://meet.google.com/nvz-kftj-dax
2:30 pm: New York State Genealogy, by Sara Allen for Allen County Public Library Genealogy Centre.
https://acpl.libnet.info/event/7602962
8 pm: Wayward Girls: A Context Case Study, by Stephanie O’Connell for BCG and Legacy Family Tree Webinars.
https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/wayward-girls-a-context-case-study/
WEDNESDAY 21 DECEMBER
2 pm: Designing with Canva for Your Genealogy, Society, or Business, by Colleen Robledo Greene for Legacy Family Tree Webinars.
https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/designing-with-canva-for-your-genealogy-society-or-business/
THURSDAY 22 DECEMBER
6:30 pm:Â Resources for Oregon Research, by Dawn Carlile for Allen County Public Library Genealogy Centre.
https://acpl.libnet.info/event/7571433
Anytime: Christmas Carols and Nostalgia, by Jeremy Summerly. A Gresham College classic from 9 Dec 2021.
https://www.gresham.ac.uk/watch-now/carols-nostalgia
FRIDAY 23 DECEMBER
Anytime: Christmas Lies and Legends, by Judith Flanders. A Gresham College classic from 9 Dec 2020.
https://www.gresham.ac.uk/watch-now/christmas-legends
SATURDAY 24 DECEMBER
Anytime: The Man Who Invented Christmas: Film Adaptations of Dickens’ A Christmas Carol, by Christine Corton. Gresham College classic from 10 Dec 2019.
https://www.gresham.ac.uk/watch-now/christmas-carol
For the third successive month, there is no progress to completion for Library and Archives Canada’s Co-Lab Challenges, perhaps because they are difficult to find on the new LAC website. However, one challenge reported less progress than last month.
Expo67 remains 0% complete.
Summiting Mount Logan in 1925: Fred Lambart’s personal account of the treacherous climb and descent of the highest peak in Canada remains 11% complete.
Travel posters in the Marc Choko collection is 96% complete, last month 98% complete.
Women in the War remains 0% complete.
Arthur Lismer’s Children’s Art Classes remains 0% complete.
John Freemont Smith remains 93% complete.
Canadian National Land Settlement Association remains 98% complete.
Molly Lamb Bobak remains 93% complete.
Diary of François-Hyacinthe Séguin remains 99% complete.
George Mully: moments in Indigenous communities remains 0% complete.
Correspondence regarding First Nations veterans returning after the First World War remains 99% complete.
Winnipeg General Strike of 1919 remains 96% complete.
Legendary Train Robber and Prison Escapee Bill Miner remains 99% complete.
Japanese-Canadians: Second World War remains 0% complete.
The Call to Duty: Canada’s Nursing Sisters remains 92% complete.
Projects that remain 100% complete are no longer reported here.
Other unidentified Co-Lab activities not part of the Challenges may have happened.
The LAC Departmental Results Report for 2020-2021 included the information “There were a total of 16,205 contributions from the public.” No further detail was provided.
Joy to
the World Ottawa Genealogists.
We’ve been waiting for it for a long time.
Ottawa Public Library is now a FamilySearch Affiliate Library. That means library clients will now have greater and more convenient access to the wealth of genealogical resources available through FamilySearch at OPL’s 33 branches.
Due to contractual obligations, some images are only viewable online through FamilySearch centers and Affiliate Libraries
Through the affiliate program, OPL customers have access to over 350 million additional records that are otherwise restricted. This resource is available for in-library use only.
At the branches, you will have to log on to the WiFi network if using your own computer, then into your OPL account, then into FamilySearch using your own unique FamilySearch username and password.
The same resources continue to be available at the LDS Church Family History Center on Prince of Wales Drive which is open for limited hours on Wednesdays and Thursdays.
Use and enjoy.
The databases were updated on 16 December with nearly 4.5 million addition since August 2022. The US accounts for 2.2 million additions.
Canada has 331,370 additions for the four-month period, a rate well ahead of the annual number of deaths of 323,221 reported by Statistics Canada.
Country | August 2022 | December 2022 | Increase |
---|---|---|---|
U.S. | 168,814,684 | 170,992,351 | 2,177,667 |
UK and Ireland | 14,651,323 | 15,329,390 | 678,067 |
Global | 13,288,732 | 13,711,794 | 423,062 |
Australia and New Zealand | 9,833,836 | 10,351,076 | 517,240 |
Canada | 9,085,991 | 9,417,361 | 331,370 |
Germany | 1,999,171 | 2,275,506 | 276,335 |
Sweden | 313,255 | 356,925 | 43,670 |
Italy | 269,307 | 287,125 | 17,818 |
Norway | 200,269 | 206,975 | 6,706 |
Brazil | 132,347 | 132,690 | 343 |
Mexico | 52,524 | 56,015 | 3,491 |
Totals | 218,641,439 | 223,117,208 | 4,475,769 |
The standalone Find a Grave website, now operated by Ancestry, was created in 1995.
The Canadian Virtual War Memorial (CVWM) database, and Books of Remembrance, include more than 118,000 Canadians and Newfoundlanders who have died in military service since Confederation.
It records the following breakdown from the Books of Remembrance: First World War ( 66,339 entries), Second World War ( 44,778), Newfoundland ( 2,396), Korea (516), South African War / Nile Expedition (296), Merchant Navy (2,206), In the Service of Canada (1947 – 2014) ( 1,912), In the Service of Canada, Vol II (2015 – )Â (82). That’s a total of 118,525. There’s also a book for the RCMP (225).
The Commonwealth War Graves Commission (CWGC) maintains a database that includes 65,003 individuals who died serving with Canadian Forces during the First, and 45,388 during the Second World War.
Why the differences?
1, The Books of Remembrance seperate out Newfoundlanders from Canadians. 1,614 Newfoundlanders died during WW1, 739 during WW2. The CWGC combines them with Canadians.
2. The CWGC database records deaths by nationality of the unit in which they served whereas the CVWM includes all “Canadians” who served with Canadian and allied forces. For instance, there are 41 deaths for Canadian serving in the Royal Army Medical Corps, Canadian medical personnel were actively recruited. More unusually, Oscar Cameron died on 24 January 1918 serving with the Australian Infantry, A.I.F. 59th Bn. His parent’s address is in Nova Scotia.
3. There could be confusion as there was no such thing as a Canadian Citizen until the passage of the 1947 Canadian Citizenship Act. Before that Canadians were legally British Subjects.
4. The CWGC website search tool finds 143 WW1 entries and 1,289 for WW2 for merchant mariners. The Canadian Merchant Navy Book of Remembrance records 680 deaths for WW1 and 1,592 for WW2. The difference appears to reflect Canadian merchant mariners serving on non-Canadian registered ships.
In case you’re not sufficiently confused by the above, the four volume, four book set by Robert P. “Bob” D’Aoust, published under the collective title They Gave There All, lists a total of 1,701 Canadian Merchant Sailors including 5 women who died while serving with the Merchant Navy.
Canadian Merchant Navy 1939-1940 Vol. 1 – lists all 199 (198 men and 1 woman) who died serving Canada between 1939 and 1940. 305 pages
Canadian Merchant Navy 1941 Vol. 2 – lists all 483 who died serving Canada in 1941. 535 pages
Canadian Merchant Navy 1942 Vol. 3 – lists all 629 (626 men and 3 women) who died serving Canada in 1942. 723 pages
Canadian Merchant Navy 1943-1947 Vol. 4 – lists all 390 (389 men and 1 woman) who died serving Canada between 1943 and 1947. 529 pages.
Miscellaneous items I found of interest during the week.
Battersea Power Station – London’s newest attraction.
Just one of several YouTube videos.
Carleton University: Shannon Lectures
MyHeritage adds 75,722 Northern Ireland, Wills and Administrations, 1621 and 1858
Winter edition of  Irish Genealogy Matters newsletter (pdf) from the Irish Family History Foundation.
Thanks to this week’s contributors: Anonymous, Brenda Turner, gail benjafield, Glenn W., Nick Mcdonald, norm prince, Teresa.