Baby Names 2020

National Records of Scotland was much delayed in publishing the list of most popular baby names for 2020. Issued in December in previous years I missed the report which appeared in March.

Isla and Jack were the most common names for girls and boys in Scotland in 2020.

Isla moved up 2 places in the overall rankings from last year, and became the most common name for girls for the first time. There were fewer girls named Isla in 2020 than in 2019, but Olivia (previously the most common, now second) and Emily (previously the second most common, now third) fell by greater amounts.

Jack remained the most common boys name for the 13th consecutive year. Noah rose by 6 places to be the second most common name for baby boys, followed by James which remained third.

In Rare names at risk of becoming extinct UK Family Tree Magazine covered research on baby names from name label manufacturer My Nametags. It examines trends, not the most popular names.

For girls, Aria and Harper were the fastest growing in popularity. while Gemma and Tia saw the biggest declines.

Boys names Kieran and Scott had the most notable declines while Albie and Arlo were the big gainers.

MyHeritage adds Genetic Group Filtering

Now on MyHeritage you can filter DNA Matches to show only those in a certain Genetic Group. Use the new search field under Filter to select any of the 2,114 Genetic Groups your DNA test reveals.

I have 21,156 DNA matches from close to distant at MyHeritage. Filtering by Netherlands, Germany and England I have 6,078; by Netherlands, Germany and England 7,090; by England 4,653 and by Eastern and Central Europe, mostly Poland, Germany, Ukraine, Lithuania, Belarus and Russia 9,859; and by Northwest England 1,464. Some of the matches are in more than one group — unsurprising, and there are many more in my one grandparental endogamous line.

 

OGS Master Library Catalogue

New on the Ontario Genealogical Society website, a unified search capability across many of the library catalogues of OGS Branches.  Find it under the Libraries tab on the top banner.

Included are holdings of the OGS Provincial Library at the Toronto Reference Library, the British Home Child SIG, and various branches — Essex, Halton-Peel, Huron, Kawartha, Kent, Niagara Peninsula, Ottawa, Oxford, Quinte, Simcoe, Sudbury and Waterloo.

The detail available varies. Ottawa has more comprehensive descriptions of the branch library holdings than the other repositories.

A quick rundown of other library catalogue sites of interest.

Worldcat: 2 billion items
Aurora: LAC Collection
Voilà: Canadian National Union Catalogue via LAC
The British Library
US Library of Congress
FamilySearch Digital Library

Internet Archive Books
Google Books
HathiTrust Digital Library

and local public and university libraries.

Scottish Indexes Conference

Tune in on Saturday 22 May for the Scottish Indexes Conference. Find registration instructions for Facebook and Zoom at the link.
The schedule, calibrated to the Eastern Time Zone, is at https://www.scottishindexes.com/2021prog10EDT.pdf  There’s a wee hours option for night owls with the program repeated starting at 10 am for the rest of us.

The eight presentations, plus a Q/A Session include “Genealogy Without Borders” by Chris Paton and “Scots in Canada” by BC genealogist Diane Rogers.

Registration is free with an option for donations to help offset costs.

LAC Co-Lab Updates for May

Here’s a report on progress with Library and Archives Canada’s Co-Lab Challenges since last month. Two challenges report progress.

John Freemont Smith is 89% complete, 72% last month.

War Diaries of the First World War: No. 2 Construction Battalion is 100% complete, 79% last month.

Canadian National Land Settlement Association remains 94% complete.

Molly Lamb Bobak remains 88% complete.

Diary of François-Hyacinthe Séguin remains 98% complete.

George Mully: moments in Indigenous communities remains 2% complete.

Correspondence regarding First Nations veterans returning after the First World War remains 99% complete.

Winnipeg General Strike of 1919 remains 96% complete.

Legendary Train Robber and Prison Escapee Bill Miner remains 99% complete.

Japanese-Canadians: Second World War, remains 61% complete.

The Call to Duty: Canada’s Nursing Sisters remains 93% complete.

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

FamilySearch Indexing Update

Extracted from New Free Historical Records on FamilySearch: Week of 17 May 2021,  here are the updates and total indexed records for England.

Collection New Indexed Records Total Indexed Records
England, Middlesex Parish Registers, 1539-1988 62,652 2,022,858
England, Herefordshire Bishop’s Transcripts, 1583-1898 32,550 1,437,183
England, Northumberland Non-Conformist Church Records, 1613-1920 3,945 105,333
England, Essex Non-Conformist Church Records, 1613-1971 1,655 107,770
England, Hertfordshire, Marriage Bonds, 1682-1837 664 4,372
England, Lancashire, Marriage Bonds and Allegations, 1746-1799 368 994,024
England, Lincolnshire, Marriage Bonds and Allegations, 1574-1885 165 71,894
England, Gloucestershire Non-Conformist Church Records, 1642-1996 159 133,134

There were no new indexed records for elsewhere in the UK or Canada.

A major addition was Australia, Victoria, Wills, Probate and Administration Files, 1841-1926 with 3,998,555 digital images available, just 2,167 of them indexed.

Review: Genealogy Research Using Google

From Moorshead Magazines, new and updated from two previous publications, a special on Google resources.

Google keeps adding and deleting capabilities to its suite of products. You may feel like you’re running just to keep up.  Perhaps like me, you only use a fraction of the capabilities. Could you benefit from finding out what’s new or what you overlooked?

In  17 articles, about 55 pages, author Lisa Alzo coaches on the latest products and updates.

Here’s the table of contents with my comments.

PhotoScan …… Google solution for scanning family photographs. Comment — one that was new to me. 
Google Photos and Images ………. Google’s free photographic tools for working with images. Comment — more than organizing and view, useful basic editing although no rival to Photoshop or the free Photopea
What’s New in Google ……..Important changes to Google products.
Google Gurus……….Three power users share their thoughts on using Google for genealogy research.
More Google Tools …………. We look at some popular and some lesser-known products for your research toolkit.
Google Drive ………….Google Drive—your one-stop virtual space for your genealogy research.  Comment — if you make heavy use of Google you may well find yourself bumping against the 15MB free space available. For $28 Cdn annual subscription you can expand that to 100MB , but try using the hints on managing storage first which could save the cost of this publication in a few months.

A couple of hints about changes since the articles were written.

  1. If an account is inactive for 2 years (24 months) in Gmail, Drive or Photos — perhaps it’s an account of a deceased person that has information you would like to keep — be aware that Google may delete the content in the inactive product(s).
  2. As of 1 June, pictures you upload to Google Photos will count against your storage. Upload them before 1 June and they’ll be stored for free remaining accessible on Google’s servers (until Google changes its policy!)

Continuing the review.

Google Sheets ……….Keep track of genealogy research tasks. Comment — I use Google Sheets almost daily.
Google Docs ………We show you how to document your family history with Google Docs.  Comment — another product I use several times a week although mostly not to document family history.
Google Slides. ……How to create an online family history photo album.
Google Forms ………..Fun ways to use Google Forms for family history.
Google Chrome Extensions …….Fun and practical Google Chrome “helpers” to use for genealogy.
Google Calendar …………..Three ways to track your genealogy activities with Google’s popular scheduling tool.
Google Books …………Tips for using Google Books for genealogy.
Google Maps/Earth ………… Four ways to use Google Earth and Maps for genealogy.
Google Jamboard ………..Jamboard is a tool for brainstorming research problems and more.
New Improved Google Translate ……How to up your translation game with Google.
Google Cheat Sheet ….Create a Google cheat sheet to fast-track you to your favourite Google services. Comment — a two-page listing reminding of all the capabilities we’re overlooking!

Did you notice anything missing? Surprisingly, while Gmail mentioned there no coverage of recent additions like the ability to scheduled posts.

Genealogy Research Using Google – is $8.50 for PDF & $9.95 for Print Edition.

This post is based on a review copy provided by Moorshead Magazines.

This Week’s Online Genealogy Events

Choose from 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. Assume registration in advance is required; check so you’re not disappointed.

Tuesday 18 May, 2 pm:  Virtual Genealogy Drop-In, from Ottawa Branch of OGS and The Ottawa Public Library. https://ottawa.ogs.on.ca/events/.

Tuesday 18 May, 2:30 pm: Are There “Black Sheep” in Your Family? by Cynthia Theusch for Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center. https://acpl.libnet.info/event/5086521

Tuesday 18 May, 8 pm: The Paternal Ten: Searching for Missing Heirs, by Claire Ammon for Legacy Family Tree Webinars. https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar_details.php?webinar_id=1589

Wednesday 19 May, 10 am:  Maps for Family and Local History. from the National Library of Scotland. https://maps.nls.uk/communities/local-history/

Wednesday 19 May, 2 pm: Notion for Genealogists, by Lisa Alzo for Legacy Family Tree Webinars.  https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar_details.php?webinar_id=1628

Thursday 6:30 pm: Researching Your Civil War Ancestors, by Amy Johnson Crow for Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center. https://acpl.libnet.info/event/5097842

Friday 21 May 2 pm: Researching Canadian Nurses, Pilots and Sailors in the First World War, by Kathryn Lake Hogan for Legacy Family Tree Webinars.
https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar_details.php?webinar_id=1665

Saturday 22 May 1 pm: Building on Success: A Review of Recent Projects at the Arnprior & McNab/Braeside Archives, by Irene Robillard for Ottawa Branch OGS. https://ottawa.ogs.on.ca/events/arnprior-mcnab-braeside-archives-update-ottawa-branch/

Saturday 22 May, Scottish Indexes Conference. www.scottishindexes.com/

Saturday 22 May. Free UK Genealogy 2021 Conference. http://familytr.ee/geneconf

LOOKING AHEAD

4 — 6 June 2021: OGS Conference. conference.ogs.on.ca 

19 – 26 September 2021: BIFHSGO Conference. Irish Lines and Female Finds: Exploring Irish records, female ancestors and genetic genealogy. www.bifhsgo2021.ca/.

The Dambusters Raid

Just slightly late in covering a recent release byTheGenealogist of fully searchable RAF Operations Record Books (ORBs) on the anniversary of the famous No 617 Squadron Dambusters raid on the Ruhr Valley dams on 16-17 May 1943. 

According to the press release from TheGenealogist,  the latest release of 1,550,018 records brings the total to 6,748,021 of these new diary-like RAF documents,  They are uniquely fully searchable by:-
● Forename and Surname
● Squadron
● Date Range
Using keywords users can also search for Service Number, Rank, and Duty, Aircraft type and location where the fields appear in the record. This makes it possible to easily find Royal Air Force personnel and discover more about their wartime activities on the base and in the air.
giving an insight into their lives

Family Tree Magazine: June 2021

Highlights of the June issue available free online through many Canadian public libraries.
Baby Boomers: now it’s up to us
Keith Gregson issues a rallying cry: it’s time to tell your stories and add to your chapter to the Family History annals

Rationed Fashion
Dress historian Jayne Shrimpton looks at clothes rationing introduced in Britain 80 years ago this June and its impacts. An annual ration of 66 coupons per year, reduced in later years, didn’t go far. See the allocation here

Ships Doctors and Their Patients
From surgery on the high seas, to births and simple old seasickness, Simon Wills looks at maritime maladies and the role of the ship’s doctor, both military and merchant, in treating them. 

Shipwrecked in WW1
5,000 vessels were sunk by U-boats alone. In a two-page article Simon Wills details how to research the ships sunk and, sometimes, the crew.

Military Monday: Lieutenant-General Kenneth Stuart

He served with the Canadian Army and died on 3 November 1945. His headstone at Beechwood Cemetery is in the military section but not a CWGC stone. The date of death is within the range where Second World War servicemen were entitled to a Commonwealth War Graves Commission headstone and to be included in the CWGC database. 

No CWGC headstone! Is this an oversight?

Acceptability of Ads

The results are in.  After an ad was inserted in the BIFHSGO monthly meeting presentation earlier this month I asked about the acceptability.
Nearly half the votes recorded found it acceptable.  Surprising to me was that another two in ten would accept a broader range of ads.
I’m told the ad was successful in recruiting a couple of volunteers for BIFHSGO. Information is there is no intention of continuing ads on a regular basis.