Miscellaneous items I found of interest during the week.
One of several YouTube videos on London street names
BTW, Alan Ruston’s presentation Maps for Family Historians, at the BIFHSGO conference on Thursday 29 September came to mind as he puts some focus on London geography.
The 2022 Canadian Museum Crossword
The Toronto History Lecture will take place online on Wednesady 3 August 2022 at 7:30 pm. This year’s speaker will be Adam Bunch and his topic will be The Toronto Circus Riot: A True Tale of Sex, Violence. Corruption and Clowns. It’s free. For more information and advance registration at https://torontofamilyhistory.org/the-toronto-history-lecture-for-2022/
The Good Old Days (6th April 1973). Bernard Cribbins leads the audience in a rousing rendition of The Marrow Song.pic.twitter.com/eipSk82A6o
— Archivetvmusings (@archivetvmus71) July 28, 2022
Thanks to this week’s contributors: Anonymous, Brenda Turner, Teresa, and Unknown.


The focus this week is on the London area.
This collection, sourced from BAnQ, contains 63,553 records from 1813 to 1864.
It’s taken a while for the August issue of FT to come online through PressReader.
The genealogy stars shine brightly at this year’s
Ancestry has released over 1.8 million additions to these extensive Greater London collections from the original registers deposited at London Metropolitan Archives and those formerly held by the Guildhall Library Manuscripts section. Records are from over 10,000 Church of England parish registers (including Bishop’s Transcripts).