Discover 220,000 new marriage transcription records from 470 Herefordshire parishes between 1538 and 1838, new on Findmypast.
I found four entries for an ancestral 1822 marriage, None included the father’s name, only available for later marriages, and one gave the additional information, the home parish of the groom.
The FMP announcement on Friday mentioned the records were “provided by the Hereford Family History Society and published solely on Findmypast.” However, the record mentioned above has been available from FamilySearch for many years and is part of the Ancestry “Select” collection.
Miscellaneous items I found of interest during the week.
Essex and Suffolk Interest
A shoutout to http://essexandsuffolksurnames.co.uk/
with parish register transcriptions and family history. Worth scanning if you have an area of interest. The most recent post is nearly 1,000 marriages from 1562-1667 for Barking, Suffolk, including Needham Market and Darmsden. No transcriptions for these marriages are available anywhere else.
Large trees are essential for healthy cities – IN THEIR PLACE Alison Munson and Anaïs Paré of Laval University, writing in The Conversation Canada, seemingly never considered the disadvantages of urban trees.
Disruption to livelihood, businesses and remediation costs.
Inconvenience due to leaves and other shedding from trees.
Shading of roofs making photovoltaic solar panels uneconomic.
Cost of tree maintenance.
Trees, especially large trees, belong in forests, woodlands and parks, away from vulnerable urban infrastructure.
Mighty (from Family Tree DNA)
Did you know typing at 200 letters per minute, it would take a human 29 years to type out the whole genetic code (without stopping for a break)?
24 June, 9 am: MyHeritage Day: a deep dive.
24 June, 7 pm: Opening Session, followed by “The Journey to Genealogy Services at Ādisōke” by Library & Archives Canada / Ottawa Public Library
25 & 26 June: 28 diverse, inclusive and educational presentations. At 1 pm on the 25th: Second World War British Migrants to Canada, by John D. Reid.
The cost is $79 for Conference and $25 for MyHeritage Day. Everyone who registers for Conference on or before June 1 will be entered into the Early Bird prize draw.
Thanks to this week’s contributors. Anonymous, Brenda Turner, Glenn Wright, Jane MacNamara, Randy Seaver, Teresa, Toni, Unknown.
The London Metropolitan Archives (LMA) quarterly newsletter includes news of a new interface and viewing process for maps on the London Picture Archive site.
Also published online to the London Picture Archive for the first time are the London County Council Bomb Damage Maps. LMA’s Digital Services team have digitally joined the 110 sheets to create a top-level index image, which users can zoom into for a detailed view of London’s streets.
This new collection from TheGenealogist has almost 60,000 records from the 1851 Dublin City Census Index.
This index, compiled in 1915, before the mass destruction early census records, may be searched using name, address or keywords.
The heads of household index covers the parishes of
St. Andrew’s, St. Anne’s, St. Audeon’s, St. Bridget’s, St. Catherine’s, St. George’s, St. James’s, St. John’s, St. Luke’s, St. Mark’s, St. Mary’s, St. Michael’s, St. Michan’s, St. Nicholas Within, St. Nicholas Without, St. Patrick’s Deanery, St. Paul’s, St. Peter’s, St. Thomas’s, St. Werburgh’s and the civil parish of Grangegorman.
Ancestry’s new Scottish National War Memorial collection includes names and details of people killed during the First and Second World Wars. Information about each person may include:
First and last name
Military rank
Service number
Military awards and medals (decorations)
Birthplace
Date of death
Place of death
Cause of death
Unit name.
The Scottish National War Memorial, from which Ancestry’s collection is scraped, commemorates nearly 135,000 Scottish casualties in the First World War, 1914-18, more than 50,000 in the Second World War, 1939-45, and the campaigns since 1945, including the Malayan Emergency, the Korean War, Northern Ireland, the Falklands War and the Gulf War.
The ability to subscribe to this blog through Jetpack is working. The subscription box is in the right-hand column.
You will receive a confirmation email and a choice of receiving posts when made or on a daily or weekly basis.
As the previous service departed abruptly, it was impossible to automatically resubscribe those with existing mailpoet subscriptions.
Aircraftman 2nd Class Bert Aidan George
Service Number: 905114
Royal Air Force Volunteer Reserve
Born 5 Dec 1916, registered at Aston (Birmingham)
Died 07 December 1940, 23 years old
Son of Basil George and Sarah Elizabeth (Trilloe) George, later Taylor, of Cheltenham, Gloucestershire, England.
Aircraftman 2nd Class John Spencer Debenham
Service Number: 623688 Royal Air Force Born 20 October 1919, registered at Alton, Hampshire
Died 07 December 1940, 21 years old
Son of Herbert Debenham and Hilda Annie (Spencer). Debenham.
Both accidentally drowned by falling through the ice into Lake Huron
Over 100,000 family notices are included in an index abstracted from the local press, from 1800 until 1918, now online from Inverclyde Libraries, Museums and Archives. Sources include the Greenock Advertiser, Greenock Telegraph and other local papers.
The Intimations pdfs available are ordered by surname.
Thanks to advice from Jane MacNamara, the blog is now connected to another subscription service. You will need to resubscribe as it was not possible to carry over subscribers from the previous list. Please do. I hope it works as advertised — we always need to be prepared for issues with anything new.
One difference is that emails will arrive as the item is posted on the blog, not in a single daily email.
Jane’s blog, Where the story takes me…Tales of family and local history research and folk I meet along the way is well worth visiting.