MyHeritage has significantly boosted its offerings for Canadian family historians with the recent addition of four collections. Check them out if you have Quebec ancestry—or even a broader interest in Canadian genealogy.
Quebec Vital Records: Births, Marriages, and Deaths
The largest of the new collections is Canada, Quebec Marriages, comprising over 15 million records from 1747 onwards. These typically include the names of both the bride and groom, their parents, and the location and date of the marriage. You may even find references to previous spouses.
Canada, Quebec Births, with 7.7 million entries dates back as far as 1675. Most records include not only the child’s name and birth/baptismal details, but also the names of parents and godparents.
Rounding out the trio is Canada, Quebec Deaths, 1724–2013, adding nearly 3 million records. These typically list the name of the deceased, along with the dates and places of death and burial, and sometimesthe names of parents and spouse.
While these records have been available in other forms, such as the Drouin and BMS2000 systems, the integration within MyHeritage’s platform provides new access.
Canada Newspapers from OldNews.com
Also new is a Canadian newspaper collection from OldNews.com, featuring 1.76 million digitized pages from 243 titles. Covering everything from national to local papers, the range extends from the mid-1700s to the early 2000s. Names of relatives, social notices, obituaries, and even incidental mentions are now searchable thanks to OCR technology.