Sunday Sundries

Miscellaneous items I found of interest during the week.

Family Oral History Across the World – New Book

Artificial Intelligence Genealogy Insights – The Power of AI in Tutoring – video

Artificial Intelligence Genealogy Insights – Can ChatGPT Help with Genealogy Citations? – video

Passionate Mothers, Powerful Sons
I picked up this, the newest book by Charlotte Gray, for Christmas reading, at a major discount at Costco.

Thanks to this week’s contributors: Anonymous, Brenda Turner,  Christine Jackson, gail benjafield, Glenn Wright, Joseph Denis Wayne Laverdure, Sunday Thompson, Teresa, Unknown.

1931 Census of Canada at LAC

The 1931 census, Schedule 1: Population, is now available in name indexed form at Library and Archives Canada.

LAC released census images on 1 June. However, a name-indexed version now being available for free at their site seems little publicity.

The indexing is by Ancestry and FamilySearch using AI technology with the index linked to original images.

 

Findmypast Weekly Update

This week’s biggest update is to the National Burial Index collection for England & Wales. Added are 122,691 transcriptions for the county of Herefordshire. These records, between 1539 and 1840, are unique to Findmypast.

The FMP Kent Burials collection adds 14,506 transcriptions from the borough of Medway covering 1981 to 2020.

Dunn’s Funeral Directors Registers for the town of Bromley sees the addition of 1,478 records, transcriptions, and images of the original register to the Kent Burials collection covering 1803 to 1839. In some cases, an occupation is also listed, as well as additional notes – such as marital status, parents’ names, and whether the deceased was a foundling.

Ancestry updates UK, Portraits and Photographs, 1547-2018

There are now 156,917 entries in Ancestry’s UK, Portraits and Photographs, 1547-2018 database.

Sourced from The National Portrait Gallery (UK) this collection contains portraits in a variety of mediums, including paintings, photographs, sculptures, drawings and prints. Early works are primarily those of importance to British culture and history — nobility and political figures. Later entries can be from a wider range, notably the arts and sport. There are even 47 entries for meteorologists – 10 for one person.

You can also search by the artist who created the work.

Explore further at the website of the New National Portrait Gallery.

Lowest Prices of the Year

Black Friday offers continue to flood in. Here are two that look interesting. Just be sure you’re likely to get enough benefit.

AncestryDNA is offering their test for $69 CDN, plus taxes and shipping. The offer ends 28 November 2023 at 11:59 p.m. ET. 

AncestryDNA has more than 25 million tests in its database, so all else being equal, which they aren’t, you’re more likely to find a match there than at the other test sites. Leah Larken has a useful graph showing the number of people in the database of each of the testing companies.

It may be you’re ancestry is better represented in one of the other DNA company databases, I thinking particularly of MyHeritage. You can always copy your AncestryDNA results over to other site and get the advantages of both.

The Genealogist is offering an annual Diamond Package subscription before the 1 December for a discount of over £120, or 55%. The actual price is £98.95 (about $169 CND) with a guarantee the price will never increase. The Genealogist has some unique content, notably the Lloyd George Domesday Survey records.

Family Tree DNA Discounts

Is your email inbox overflowing with Black Friday offers, most of which you can do without? Here’s one not to miss IF YOU NEED IT. A Y-DNA test can significantly aid in researching your paternal line, the paternal line from a brother if you’re a woman, or from a male cousin. Some consider it an essential part of a reasonably exhaustive search. Family Tree DNA is THE place to get it.

Don’t miss out on their Black Friday Sale with a wide range of discounts on their various test, not just Y-DNA, including bundles, until 30 November.

Take a look at the offers here.

Ancestry Updates Newspapers.com Obituary Indexes

For Canada, the Newspaper.com Obituary Index has 42,320,060 entries as of mid-November, up 2.08 percent since July 2022.
The corresponding US title increased by 17.17 percent to 1,129,742,602 entries.
Australia and New Zealand saw a 1.19% decrease, now 5,738,512 entries.
For the UK, historical figures are lacking; total entries now are 30,053,253.

 

LAC Co-Lab Update for November

One project reports progress, one was less complete than last month and one challenge was added among the Library and Archives Canada’s Co-Lab Challenges; 13 report no change.

Treaty 9. New. No progress

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 is 95% complete, last month was 96% 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 is 94% compete, last month was 93% complete.

Projects that remain 100% complete are no longer reported here.

Other unidentified Co-Lab activities not part of the Challenges have seen progress. There are currently3,754  items in Collection Search identified as Co-Lab only contributions, an increase from 3,742 last month.

This Week’s Online Genealogy Events

I’m pleased to report that I’m back to full internet service, so posts should return to a normal schedule. 

There are very few free webinars this week.

If you are having problems with your subscription, perhaps only receiving one post in digest mode when there are the normal two, try resubscribing or switch to individual post delivery. 

Over the quiet Christmas period, I shall look again at an alternate subscription service.

Choose from selected free online events in the next five days. All times are ET except as noted. Assume registration in advance is required; check so you’re not disappointed. Are you looking for more options? Additional mainly US events are listed at https://conferencekeeper.org/virtual.

Tuesday 21 November

2:30 pm: Voting Records – Genealogy’s Best Kept Secret, by Pam Vestal for Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center.
https://acpl.libnet.info/event/9324254

7 pm: A Magnificent Young Man in His Flying Machine, by Pam Tessier for OGS Nipissing Branch.
https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZAld-qtqTwiGt1TgQY9pmi6cOm1B83_Nc9Y

8 pm: Why Standards Are for Everyone, by LaBrenda Garrett-Nelson for BCG and Legacy Family Tree Webinars.
https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/why-standards-are-for-everyone/

8:30 pm: Kierkegaard’s book, Repetition, as a model for writing a family memoir (Leaving a Legacy), by George Kuhrts.
https://www.eventbrite.com/e/leaving-a-legacy-registration-723023491727

Wednesday 22 November- Friday 24 November

Saturday 25 November

10 am: Scottish Indexes Conference, see https://www.anglocelticconnections.ca/2023/11/15/advance-notice-scottish-indexes-conference/