Find A Grave Update on Ancestry
There are 3.9 million new entries on Ancestry’s version of Find A Grave since August. The U.S. has 1.6 million additions, with the UK and Ireland adding 1.1 million. Canada added over a quarter million.
| Region | December 2023 | August 2023 | May 2023 |
| U.S. | 175,802,716 | 174,219,998 | 172,857,217 |
| Global | 15,649,165 | 15,090,205 | 14,604,632 |
| Mexico | 69,789 | 66,008 | 62,956 |
| UK and Ireland | 19,341,965 | 18,201,134 | 16,712,454* |
| Norway | 223,985 | 220,413 | 216,182* |
| Italy | 343,946 | 329,383 | 318,700 |
| Sweden | 1,116,071 | 1,110,094 | 719,305 |
| Canada | 10,080,603 | 9,808,392 | 9,646,273 |
| Australia and New Zealand | 11,436,526 | 11,297,318 | 11,044,654 |
| Brazil | 189,211 | 186,642 | 165,727 |
| Germany | 3,017,935 | 2,822,677 | 2,520,011 |
Note that the UK and Ireland, and Norway entries in the May column refer to the prior March 2023 update.
The actual Find A Grave site, where you can search 566,253 cemeteries in 249 different countries, has additional entries.
Yuletide R&R
What to post on the blog during the festive period? In 2010 I began Yuletide R&R posts, sharing “a few links to some of my favourite YouTube items, classics of British comedy with some nostalgia items thrown in, that you, your British parents or even grandparents may have enjoyed. I hope you’re able to find a few minutes to enjoy.”
Since the first year and first item, still a favourite, the tradition (if one can call it that) continues while evolving.
I’m filling out the list and checking the Yuletide R&R list twice for this year. Do you have a favourite, old or new?
40,528,396
As of 1 October 2023, StatsCan estimates the country’s population as 40,528,396 and growing at a phenomenal rate. The quarterly increase of 430,635 people (+1.1%) was the highest population growth rate in any quarter since the second quarter of 1957.
Since forever, we’ve been thinking of Canada’s population as one-tenth that of the US — one Canadian for every ten in the US. Now it’s one for every 8.5.
LAC Co-Lab Update for December
No progress was reported on any of the Library and Archives Canada’s Co-Lab Challenges.
Mary Ann Shadd Cary remains 44% complete.
Expo67 remains 2 % complete.
Summiting Mount Logan in 1925: Fred Lambart’s personal account of the treacherous climb and descent of the highest peak in Canada remains 13% complete.
Women in the War remains 1% 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 94% 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 95% complete.
Legendary Train Robber and Prison Escapee Bill Miner remains 99% complete.
Japanese-Canadians: Second World War remains 3% complete.
The Call to Duty: Canada’s Nursing Sisters remains 94% compete.
Projects that remain 100% complete are no longer reported here. The eight projects identified by italics have seen no progress since December 2022.
Other unidentified Co-Lab activities not part of the Challenges have seen progress. There are currently3,765 items in Collection Search identified as Co-Lab only contributions, an increase from 3,754 last month. Fifty of all Co-Lab contibutions are categorized as genealogy, and all but eight of those, which are Land Petitions of Lower Canada, 1764 to 1841, are First World War Personnel Records.
This Week’s Online Genealogy Events
Choose from selected free online events in the next five two days. All times are ET except as noted. Assume registration in advance is required; check so you’re not disappointed. Find out about many more mainly US events when you subscribe to Conference Keeper at https://conferencekeeper.org/
Tuesday 19 December
2:30 pm: An Irish Genealogy Secret, by Ciara Chivers for Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center.
https://acpl.libnet.info/event/9615336
8 pm: Finding Sophia’s Family: A Case of Fratricide and Forgotten Identity, by Nancy A. Peters for Legacy Family Tree Webinars.
https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/finding-sophias-family-a-case-of-fratricide-and-forgotten-identity/
Wednesday 20 December
2 pm: Got Old Negatives? Scan Them With Your Phone and These 5 (Mostly) Free Apps! by Elizabeth Swanay O’Nea for Legacy Family Tree Webinars.
https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/got-old-negatives-scan-them-with-your-phone-and-these-5-mostly-free-apps/
21 – 23 December

Finding and Fixing Tree Inconsistencies
A shout-out for a presentation being given by Wayne Shepheard on Thursday, 21 December 2023, to the Family Tree Plus Gadgets Club meeting. It’s at 7- 8 pm UK time.
Wayne mentions it on his Discover Genealogy blog, adding, “You need to be a member of Family Tree Plus, either on a 7-day free trial, a one-month pass or a full member, which gets you access to all of their benefits in addition to the magazine subscription.”
https://discovergenealogy.blogspot.com/2023/12/tree-inconsistencies-presentation.html
Newspapers.com Updates
Updates to newspapers.com for Canada in the past month, aside from present-year issues are:
The Twice A Week Standard
St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada
3,919 pages
1896–1907
Niagara Falls Review
Niagara Falls, Ontario, Canada
991,354 pages
1914–2009
The Hamilton Spectator
Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
2,146,811 pages
1852–2017
Daily Record
Niagara Falls, Ontario, Canada
7,727 pages
1908–1917
For England, a newly added paper is The Sutton and Cheam Advertiser, etc. Archive
Sutton, London, England
23,345 pages
1908–1960
Updated newspapers from England are:
The Standard
London, Greater London, England
151,492 pages
1827–1900
Daily Post (Merseyside ed.)
Liverpool, Merseyside, England
160,131 pages
1955–1999
The Gloucestershire Echo
Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, England
282,392 pages
1884–1999
The Tamworth Herald, etc.
Tamworth, Staffordshire, England
97,746 pages
1870–1999
Atherstone Herald
Atherstone, Warwickshire, England
65,360 pages
1886–1999
For Scotland, one paper was updated
The Lennox Herald
Dumbarton, Strathclyde, Scotland
65,622 pages
1866–2002
There were no additions of updates for Ireland, Northern Ireland, Wales, Australia or New Zealand..
Family Tree Webinars Canadian Presentation
Although the title of this talk given last Friday refers specifically to Jewish genealogy, don’t let that put you off if you don’t have Jewish ancestry. Many of the resources described are more widely applicable, just illustrated with Jewish examples.
https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/landscape-of-dreams-jewish-genealogy-in-canada/
It’s available without a FTW membership until Friday. I particularly appreciated presenter Kaye Prince-Hollenberg’s comments about the limitations in the availability of historical documents in Canada compared to other countries and the confusion over old and new LAC websites.
Sunday Sundries
Miscellaneous items I found of interest during the week.
All Ireland, Wills and Admons, 1515-1858 just added at Ancestry has 87,055 index records. Information returned is name, will date, will place, occupation, description and “The Original Documents Referred to in This Index Do Not Exist. No Further Information, Other Than That Recorded Above, Has Survived.”
Legacy Half-off Offer Extended.
Genealogy Quebec Discount
25% off the yearly subscription available from 15 – 20 December.
Friends of the Ottawa Public Library Mammoth Book Sale
Saturday 16 December 2023

Thanks to this week’s contributors: Ann Burns, Anonymous, Basil ADAM, Brenda Turner, Christine Jackson, C Orr, gail benjafield, Kim, Nick Mcdonald, Pat Wood, Teresa, Toni, Unknown. Wayne Shepheard

Ancestry adds Dudley, England, Burials and Cremation Index, 1800-2020
Sourced from a website of the Dudley Metropolitan Borough in the West Midlands are index records for nearly 290,000 burials and cremations in ten cemeteries and crematoria. The earliest 156 burials are given the notional burial date of 1 January 1800. Interments grew substantially from the latter part of the 19th century.
Findmypast Weekly Update
Kent records keep accumulating.
This week, for baptisms, the Kent parish list shows 14,240 additions between 1842 and 1934, the majority from Margate parishes.
The latest additions for marriages and banns, between 1852 and 1939, are also dominated by Margate for the parishes of Holy Trinity, St Paul, Cliftonville and All Saints, Westbrook.
According to the parish list, most burials are for Margate, but the FMP announcement mentions “over 500 Canterbury Cathedral burial transcriptions and images covering 1955-1967!” The parish lists may still need to be updated.
Elsewhere, 187,771 previously redacted records from the 1939 Register for England and Wales are now available. These are added when deaths are reported, or people pass their 100th birthday.


