An interesting tweet

Dr Sarah Lockyer
@S_Lockyer
I’d like to sincerely thank a past supervisor & manager who were terrible. It is incredible what I learned from them regarding what not to do.

I now find myself supervising more people & as long as I do the exact opposite of those 2 atrocious examples, I’ll do a good job.

GOOD LUCK!

This week’s online genealogy events

Choose from 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. Many additional events are listed at https://conferencekeeper.org/virtual

TUESDAY 15 NOVEMBER

2 pm: OGS Ottawa Branch Virtual Genealogy Drop-in.
https://meet.google.com/nvz-kftj-dax

2 pm: Getting Started in Genealogy, Ottawa Public Library, Greenboro branch  https://biblioottawalibrary.ca/en/event/getting-started-genealogy

2:30 pm: Reaching Local Youth by Raising the Dead, by Mona Vance-Ali for Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center.
https://acpl.libnet.info/event/7465886

8 PM: Their Mark Here: Signatures and Marks as Identifying Tools, by Nicole Gilkison LaRue for Legacy Family Tree Webinars.
https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/their-mark-here-signatures-and-marks-as-identifying-tools/

WEDNESDAY 16 NOVEMBER

2 pm: Hunting For Henry: A Case Study Using Collaterals, by Teresa Steinkamp McMillin for Legacy Family Tree Webinars.
https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/hunting-for-henry-a-case-study-using-collaterals/

2 pm: The Anthropocene: Inside the Quest for the Human Epoch at Crawford Lake, Ontario, by Tim Patterson for Carleton University Science Café.
https://science.carleton.ca/cu-events/science-cafe-the-anthropocene-inside-the-quest-for-the-human-epoch-at-crawford-lake-ontario/

THURSDAY 17 NOVEMBER

6:30 pm: Navigating the (US) Records from The War of 1812, by Brian Rhinehart for Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center.
https://acpl.libnet.info/event/7465815

FRIDAY 18 NOVEMBER

2 pm: Newspapers in Mexico, by Lisa Medina for Legacy Family Tree Webinars.
https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/newspapers-in-mexico/

7 pm: Canadian Nurses in the First World War, by Ann McKibbon for Niagara Peninsula Branch OGS.
https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZMpdOysrjsuHdLXq-u-NMpdXoFVZFbG3ilr

SATURDAY 19 NOVEMBER

10 am: Meningful Gift Giving, by Christine Woodcock for Kingston Branch OGS.
https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZItdOCrrz4pGNDdDZjAfyaKXQHblgKen9wg

1 pm: I Found Them… They’re Mine (Ottawa), by Gordon McBean for Ottawa Branch OGS
https://us06web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZYlcO2grTMsGdM_wLDyCwQDavER-89ZuGDL

1 pm:  Great Moments, by Rick Hill: The Suspicious Death of Edward Navin; Wayne Wickson: Miracle Process for Cleaning Gravestones – Safely; Jane Simpson: “Just A Mere” – Just a House! for Qunite Branch  OGS.
https://us02web.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZAqdeihqzwoGNf85h53aX-AMvvlLJxE-kz5

for Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center.

Military Monday: British and Canadian Army Service Numbers for WW2

The website Researching the Lives and Records of WW2 Soldiers, by Robert Clark, includes a table of number blocks assigned to each corps or regiment of the WW2 British Army. This may be helpful if you have a number but don’t know the unit.

The numbers were allocated on joining, Beware, the soldier may have only been with that corps or regiment for a short time before transfer. The number stayed with them.

The Royal Artillery was assigned over one million numbers, just 599 to the Band of the Royal Military College.

Sub-blocks may have been allocated to various enlistment centres.

Find the table at http://www.researchingww2.co.uk/army-numbers-british-army-ww2/.

Canadian Army
WW2 Canadian Regimental Numbers had blocks with a letter prefix referring to the military district. For instance, the prefix B, for Trooper Anthony Dashney, Service Number: B/83334, who served with the  Royal Canadian Armoured Corps, indicates MD2 (Central Ontario including Toronto and northward). See https://www.canadiansoldiers.com/procedures/regimentalnumber.htm/.

Stay tuned for more detail on allocation of sub-blocks of numbers for the WW2 Canadian Army.

Military Monday

Wanting to learn about what your grandparent or ancestor did during wartime? Which regiment they joined? What their job was? Where they served? What they experienced?

On Tuesday, 15 November at 1 p.m. (EST) – the Canadian War Museum invites you to a Zoom session to explain the research methods, tools and resources used by the Canadian War Museum’s Military History Research Centre. Learn more about family members by exploring their military service.

Register here.

On Wednesday, 16 November at 1 p.m. there’s a similar session in French.

Sunday Sundries

Miscellaneous items I found of interest during the week.

A journey through the Book of Kells & Old Trinity College Dublin Library

Fine-scale cultural variation reinforces genetic structure in England

Family history is not sufficient for assessing inherited disease risk

Six Canadian battles shaped by weather and climate

Margaret Atwood: Russia’s propaganda narratives don’t stand up

Thanks to this week’s contributors: Ann Burns, Anonymous, Barbara Di Mambro,  Brenda Turner, Bruce Murduck, Ellie Ayton, Gail B., Kathie Cornes, Maria Laty, Michael Penzer, Sheila Faure, Teresa, Unknown,

 

Family Tree Magazine: December 2022

Here are some of the main contents of the December issue, released on 11 November.

FAMILY HISTORY NEWS
Includes news of the passing of Guy Etchells. Without his dogged pursuit of the release of the 1939 Register of England and Wales, we may well still not have access. R. I. P.

AWAITING THE 1921 SCOTTISH CENSUS
Genealogist Chris Paton anticipates the release of the 1921 Census for Scotland and recommends some records to research the period while we wait.

DEAR PAUL
Paul Chiddicks continues examination of errors and oddities from readers and takes a trip down memory lane on favourte chidhood toys and games.

PHOTOGENEALOGY: STEP 5
Aon Larknam advises us on the final step on the photogeneaiogy project — securing your legacy.

TWIGLETS
Gill Shaw gives a salutary, and intriguing reminder that two records are always better than … although they may not provide the clarity sought.

WW2 MILITARY CASE STUDY
Graham Caldwell provides Miltary Competition winner
Lindsay Seels wih a report about her grandfather.

INTERWAR HOBBIES
Jayne Shrimpton brings to life popular culture and our ancestors’ pastimes of the 1920s & 30s.

WHAT’S INSIDE THE PARLIAMENTARY ARCHIVES?
Senior Outreach Archivist Penny McMahon shows us around.

CONSIDERING THE USEFULNESS OF NAME LISTS
Family Tree Academy’s David Annal evaluates their uses & limitations.

BOOKS & CO
Helen Tovey & Rachel Bellerby review a selection of new history-related tities.

THE SINKING OF THE ‘ALERT PACKET’
Family historian Melanie Winterbotham stumbled on the story of the sinking of the Alert Packet when tracing the life and death of her 3x great-grandfather.

GENEALOGY GADGETS
Discover the tools that fellow family historians are putting to use in their search, for fun and efficiency. One mentioned is zoompast.com (or .org) which looks interesting and I hope to examine in a coming post.

NEW ANCESTRYDNA TOOL
Discover the revolutionary new beta tool from AncestryDNA being rolled out,

DNA WORKSHOP
Karen Evans investigates a case study to help a reader find her grandfather.

YOUR QUESTIONS
Our experts share their insights on reader research problems.

PHOTO CORNER
Jayne Shrimpton helps a reader puzzle out a photo and sets a puzzle of her own.

DIARY DATES
Online, in person, or hybrid – events to enjoy this November.

THOUGHTS ON – WARTIME MEMORIES
Diane Lindsay reflects on how the slightest thing can cause the memories to come flooding back |

 

Deceased Online adds Wolverhampton’s Bushbury Cemetery and Crematorium, and Bilston Cemetery Records

Bilston Cemetery’s 64,600 records date from 1855 to 1993 and provide an insight into the local history by including occupation in the early records. The cemetery itself features a number of very old, large memorials, as well as 111 Commonwealth War Graves from the First and Second World Wars.

Bushbury Cemetery, 19,973 records, opened in 1949 and the Crematorium, 75,023 records, followed shortly thereafter in 1954.

The records available to view on www.deceasedonline.com comprise digital scans of the original burial registers, cemetery maps showing the section in which the grave is located for most records, and grave details for each of the graves and their occupants.

There are now 284,224 Wolverhampton records in the Deceased Online collection.

BIFHSGO November Meeting

On Saturday, 12 November, BIFHSGO has two presentations to enjoy.

At 9 am Anxious Mothers, Voluntary Aid Workers and Military Nurses: Letters from Canadian women during the First World War will be presented by Melanie Morin-Pelletier, historian, War and Society at the Canadian War Museum.

At 10 am, BIFHSGO popular speaker Carol Annett in Stories from the War, will recount the experiences of RCAF bomb aimer Richard Glanville “Dick” MacKinnon during WWII,

You have the choice of attending in person at Knox Presbyterian Church (Lisgar & Elgin) in Geneva Hall using the Garden Entrance on Elgin Street, or online.

Find out more at https://www.bifhsgo.ca/events

Findmypast weekly update

Prisoners of War Sound Recordings 1916-1918
Linked from the British Library’s website,  56 audio recordings of British prisoners of war. Featuring various accents and dialects, all soldiers recite the Passage of the Prodigal Son. You may find notes on their trade, family life, religion, place of origin and the date they were captured.

Prisoners of War, General Correspondence, 1915
Sourced from The National Archives, series FO 383, this collection consists of official documents, reports and letters, offering a glimpse into the treatment of First World War prisoners of war in Germany. You could maybe discover information on the treatment of prisoners and the concerns raised by their loved ones back home. A total of 1,184 records.

British Rolls of Honour and Nominal Rolls, First World War
An additional 251 records for Coventry are now in this collection. You may find birth year, details of the previous occupation, and more information on their time serving in the military, and perhaps a photo of your ancestor.

Newspaper additions this week include War Pictures Weekly and the London Illustrated Weekly, 1914-1916.

 

Remembrance Day

Perhaps like me, when 11 November comes around, you think of those who died in bloody combat on the battlefields and in the skies of Europe.

This year, remember that 1914-18 and 1939-45 were world wars. Would you expect there to be two Great War Canadians commemorated in Italy or three from WW2 in Australia?

The article below recounts the story of Canadians who died in Alaska in 1943, not fighting with the enemy but of friendly fire during the fog of war.

Lest We Forget – When Canadian soldiers helped liberate a remote Alaskan island

 

The victims, on Kiska Island, were Gaston Boisclaire, Peter Poshtar, and Sidney Vessey. They are interred at Fort Richard Cemetery, Anchorage, Alaska along with Gerard Dejardins who was the victim of a mine.

Fold3

Perhaps you missed, as I did, that Fold3 has opened its nearly 600 million records to free access, with registration,  from 10 to 12 November. That complements the Ancestryopen access to military records ending on Friday.

More WW2 war dead records online from LAC

The following is a news post from Library and Archives Canada.

In this week of remembrance, Library and Archives Canada (LAC) announces more than 43,000 newly available digitized records from the Second World War. It is now easier than ever for Canadians to find and access the records of family members who died while serving their country.

The digitized records are the service files from Canadian Forces members who died during the Second World War (1939–45) or soon after. These include Canadian Forces members who were killed in action, those who died while in service, and those who died from service-related injuries in 1946–47.

These service files can be found through Collection Search. LAC has improved access by:

-Increasing the number of digitized files from 1,629 to more than 43,000
– Creating a new embedded search form to focus your search on these records
– Making it possible to search first and last names separately
– Improving search wildcards to make it easier to check various spelling options
– Adding tips to the page so you can access help without visiting another page
– Allowing users to download a service file in a single bundle rather than page by page
– This initiative is part of LAC’s efforts to improve your online experience. Feedback on this tool is welcome here and will serve as a guide in this process of continuous improvement.

Users are encouraged to bookmark the new search page because the outdated Second World War Dead 1939–47 database will be closed in the coming weeks.

COMMENT
This is a most welcome addition to the LAC website increasing the number of records available. It appears to match those that have been available for some years through Ancestry. Perhaps the exclusivity period expired.

I’m told the online file contains the major documents but may not be all that’s available. To obtain the full file an application to LAC is required.