Curiosities of Ancestry’s Ontario Marriage Collection

Ancestry’s just updated collection, Ontario, Canada, Marriages, 1826-1943
Ontario, Canada, Marriages, 1826-1943 to 10,746,358 records. The Archives of Ontario (AO) has a continuing agreement with  Ancestry to make these records available online,

AO holds the original registration books of Ontario marriages until 1944. What about the 1944 records? It does take Ancestry a while to catch up.

If you search the Ancestry collection for 1944, it returns 10 entries, all of which transcriptions show a 1944 marriage. Examine the image, and you find discrepancies in the date. Most often, the year date of the Receiver General’s “Received” stamp predates the marriage. A Foster-Ridell marriage on 23 May 1944 is date-stamped 28 May 1942.  Did the last digit of the year on the stamp slip? It could easily happen. Then the document gets filed in the Receiver General’s office according to the date stamp, but Ancestry reads the real marriage date.

In case you’re wondering, one 1945 marriage, on 28 June, is date-stamped 2 July 1940. For a couple of other marriages that were erroneously indexed, corrections have already been noted in the Ancestry results.

Finally, Ancestry has “A full list of sources” as follows, but none for a gap between 1928 and 1933, nor for post-1939.

Ontario, Canada. Registrations of Marriages, 1869-1928. MS932, Reels 1-833, 850-880. Archives of Ontario, Toronto.
Ontario, Canada. Marriage License Books, 1907-1910. MS945, Reels 1-12. Archives of Ontario, Toronto, Ontario.
Ontario, Canada. Delayed Registrations of Marriages, 1892-1919. MS948, Reels 1-5. Archives of Ontario, Toronto.
Ontario, Canada. County Marriage Registers, 1858-June 1869. FHL microfilm 1030055-1030068. Family History Library. Salt Lake City, Utah (Archives of Ontario, MS 248, reels 5-18).
Ontario, Canada. District Marriage Registers, 1801-1858. MS 248, Reels 1-4. Archives of Ontario, Toronto.
Ontario, Canada. Roman Catholic Marriage Registers, 1828-1870. MS 248, Reels 20-23. Archives of Ontario, Toronto.
Ontario, Canada. Ontario Marriages, 1933-1939. Textual Records. RG 80-05-0. Archives of Ontario, Toronto, Ontario.

 

New and Updated for Hampshire from Ancestry

What’s new?
Hampshire and Isle of Wight, England, Cemetery Registers, 1840-1923 includes 48,455 transcription and image records

Bournemouth East Cemetery  (1898-1916)
Carisbrooke Cemetery (IOW) (1858-1864)
Knowle Hospital Cemetery (1877-1954)
Newport Cemetery (IOW) (1858-1923)
Odiham Cemetery (1860-1958)
Ringwood Cemetery (1864-1869)
Ryde Cemetery (IOW) (1863-1874)
Ventnor Cemetery (IOW) (1870-1873)
West Hill Cemetery, Winchester (1840-1918)

What’s Updated?
Hampshire, England, Wills and Probates, 1398-1858, with 95,240 index entries and images of the original. The handwritten wills are not transcribed, which can be done, albeit imperfectly, by better AI services such as Gemini.

Pen & Sword: 2025 Family History Releases

What’s new? Here is the rundown of Pen & Sword’s 2025 publications, including new releases and updated editions for family historians. If you’d like to know more, check out the listing at https://www.pen-and-sword.co.uk/Family-History/c/58/order/release_date/desc

Regional Research Guides

  • Tracing Your Welsh Ancestors by Beryl Evans
    Release: 11th December 2025
    Price: £13.59 (Save 20%)
    Focus: Navigating Welsh language, patronymics, and local archives.

    Tracing your Surrey Ancestors by Sarah Pettyfer
    Release: 14th July 2025
    Price: £12.79 (Save 20%)
    Focus: Archival resources for Surrey families.

  • Tracing your Staffordshire Ancestors by Chloe O’Shea
    Release: 16th May 2025
    Price: £15.99
    Focus: Researching the Potteries, Black Country, and surrounding areas.

  • Researching Ancestral Crisis in Ireland by Chris Paton
    Release: 28th March 2025
    Price: £15.99
    Focus: Tracing ancestors during famines and historical unrest.

    Methodology & Records

  • DNA: A Guide for Family Historians by Graham S Holton
    Release: 6th November 2025
    Price: £13.59 (Save 20%)
    Focus: Understanding DNA testing and results for genealogy.

  • Tracing Your Ancestors’ Parish Records by Stuart A. Raymond
    Release: 10th October 2025
    Price: £16.99
    Focus: Updated guide to baptisms, marriages, and burials.

  • Using Gravestones to Trace Your Ancestors by Amanda Leedham
    Release: 28th March 2025
    Price: £14.99
    Focus: Interpreting inscriptions, symbols, and burial locations.

  • Tracing your Ancestors using the UK Historical Timeline by Neil Bertram & Angela Smith
    Release: 2nd April 2025
    Price: £12.99
    Focus: Contextualizing family history within major UK events.

Specialist History

  • Tracing Your Secret Service Ancestors by Phil Tomaselli
    Release: 9th September 2025
    Price: £14.99
    Focus: Locating intelligence and secret service records.

  • The Children of Charles the Second (Fonthill Imprint)
    Release: 30th April 2025
    Price: £22.00 (Hardback)
    Focus: A history of the monarch’s fourteen illegitimate children.

This Week’s Online Genealogy Events

Choose from these selected free online events. All times are Eastern Time, unless otherwise noted. Registration may be required in advance—please check the links to avoid disappointment. For many more events, mainly in the U.S., visit https://conferencekeeper.org/virtual/

Tuesday 16 December

2:30 pm: Beginning Genealogy 101: Little-Known Resources at the
Delaware Public Archives, by Leah Greer for Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center.
https://acpl.libnet.info/event/15069339

8 pm: Social Context and the KDP, by Eva Holmes for BCG and Legacy Family Tree Webinars.
https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/social-context-and-the-kdp/

Wednesday 17 December

1 pm: A Tudor Christmas, by Siobhan Clarke and Alison Weir for Gresham College.
https://www.gresham.ac.uk/whats-on/tudor-christmas

2 pm: A Dozen Names for Alcina: An Identity Case Study, by Margaret R. Fortier for Legacy Family Tree Webinars.
https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/a-dozen-names-for-alcina-an-identity-case-study/

7 pm: 10 Minute Ancestors: Tales from the Hunt, by OGS Thunder Bay Branch members.
https://thunderbay.ogs.on.ca/events/thunder-bay-branch-10-minute-ancestors/

Thursday 18 December

6:30 pm: The Goodwin Family of Hell’s Kitchen: A case study tracking
an Irish-American family, by Kevin Cassidy for Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center.
https://acpl.libnet.info/event/15069484

Friday 19 December

2 pm: The Best Uses of AI for Genealogists, by Steve Little and Mark Thompson for Legacy Family Tree Webinars. (Members only).
https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/the-best-uses-of-ai-for-genealogists/

Saturday 20 December

Openings of award-winning family history articles

What does it take to hook the reader of a family history article? Is it the opening line, the opening paragraph, or the first page? What can we learn from others’ successes? 

Below are the opening paragraphs from the first-prize-winners in the last three BIFHSGO quinquennial writing competitions.

Who was Annabella Chatterton? by Carol Annett
“Who’s in these photos?” This question can uncover surprising stories about
ancestors if you ask the right person. That’s what happened when I posed
the question to my mother-in-law, Velma Annett, who preferred to be called
Vel. At least once a week, she would telephone my husband, Richard. If I
answered, Vel chatted with me briefly before asking, “Is he there?” which
was my cue to pass the phone to him.

The Travels and Trials of Adam Logan, Dairyman by Claire Callender
By the time she married in 1930 at the age of 24, my granny, Anna Logan, had lived in more than 24 places. Not neighbouring places in the same parish, or different streets in the same town, but places all over Britain from Caithness in the very north of Scotland to Essex in southeast England.

Adventures of a Library, by Adrienne Stevenson
How many of us can relate to our ancestors? Many of our values and desires differ from theirs—our world has changed greatly since their time. So, when something from the past strikes a chord, it’s worth pursuing. A common love of books led me to investigate the story of the celebrated library of Robert Addison, missionary to the Mohawks and minister at Niagara (now Niagara on-the-Lake) from 1792 to 1829 and my great-great-great-greatgrandfather. When I first studied the subject, in the late 1980s, hearings challenging the rightful ownership of these books went as far as the Supreme Court of Ontario, but the debate was far from resolved. Now that it has been settled,
the whole story can be told.

Based on those, ChatGPT produced the following.

Three Hints for Opening Paragraphs in Family History Writing

1. Start with a hook that invites curiosity — a question, contrast, or striking fact.

Each article opens with something that immediately makes the reader lean in:

  • “Who’s in these photos?” — a simple question that signals a mystery.

  • “By the time she married… she had lived in more than 24 places.” — a surprising statistic.

  • “How many of us can relate to our ancestors?” — a reflective question about a universal experience.

Hint:
Use an intriguing question, unexpected number, contradiction, or vivid statement to make the reader want to know more about the ancestor.


2. Connect the ancestor’s story to the present through a personal gateway.

Award-winning articles don’t start with names and dates — they begin with you, the researcher, and how you encountered the story:

  • A phone call from a mother-in-law.

  • A granny’s unusual life pattern.

  • A shared love of books that bridges generations.

Hint:
Ground the story in a moment from your own research or family experience. This creates emotional entry points and shows why this ancestor matters today.


3. Establish the stakes or scope early — hint at the journey ahead.

Each opening paragraph telegraphs what kind of story is coming:

  • A mystery behind unidentified photos.

  • A life lived across an entire country.

  • A library contested up to the Supreme Court.

Hint:
Signal the scale, tension, or theme early on — migration, hardship, mystery, conflict, accomplishment — so the reader knows this is more than a list of facts; it’s a narrative with a trajectory.

 

 

Sunday Sundries

Miscellaneous items I found interesting this week.

An Irish town digs into its dark past at a former home for mothers and babies
 Globe and Mail deep dive on the legacy of the St. Mary’s Mother and Baby Home, Tuam, Ireland, “run by the Catholic Church from the 1920s to 1990s, when Ireland was desperate to differentiate itself from its Protestant English colonizers.”

Grenville County Ontario Digital Newspaper Archive
35,000 scanned and OCR’d pages of newspapers, dating 1889 to 1965, from the Prescott area are now online, courtesy of a Grenville County Historical Society initiative. There are search and advanced search capabilities. Results are shown alongside a section of the original paper. Click through to see the full page with the search term highlighted. Achieved with the cooperation of OurDigitalWorld and a grant of $48,933 from Library and Archives Canada’s Documentary Heritage Communities Program. Well done.

Ireland Census 1926 digitisation project
How’s progress toward the release of the Irish Free State Census on 18 April 2026?

The Latest Bytown Pamphlet
#129 in the Historical Society of Ottawa pamphlet series explores challenges women have faced and the remarkable progress they have achieved over the past few decades. It’s based on the winning essay submitted by Amilia Matheson for the Society’s 2024 Colonel By Award in History.

Directory of Graveyards in the Dublin Area, and more
John Grenham has slowed posting on his Irish Roots blog, so I don’t scan it often. Fortunately, Gail Dever does and included his latest post in This week’s crème de la crème on her Genealogy à la carte blog. Explore — Gail and John both include more.

Thanks to the following individuals for their comments and tips: Ann Burns, Anonymous, Teresa, and Unknown.

 

Findmypast Weekly Update

New this week:

London Metropolitan Police Leavers
Years covered: 1889-1947
Records added: 55,122

These records, which are transcripts sourced from TNA, show my relative Edwin Digby joined the force on 17 January 1881, and left on 5 March 1906 when his last posting was with T Division as a Sub Divisional Inspector.

Badge under the reign of Charles III since July 2024London Metropolitan Police Attestation

Years covered: 1829-1972
Records added: 20,657

Some of the same data as above, note the earlier start year.

London Metropolitan Police Certificate of Service

Years covered: 1889-1909
Records added: 1,154

Edwin Digby is missing from this transcript database. The facts are duplicates of those in the two previous databases.

Merchant Seamen’s Campaign Medal Records

Years covered: 1939-1945
Records added: 107,387

The transcript information included in this substantial update is: First name, Last name, Date and year of birth, Event year, Discharge number, and Honours, as well as the TNA Archive Reference.

Newspapers
This week the Athlone Times (1889-1902), Gwalia (1881 – 1898), Transport Worker (1911- 1912) and Walton Gazette and Harwich and Dovercourt Advertiser (1881 – 1899)  have joined the newspaper archive. There are other updates, including the Ulster Gazette (1844, 1850-1871, 1875-1896, 1908-1909).

 

BIFHSGO December Meeting

13 December 2025—Holiday Social // Great Moments

OGS Ottawa Branch Christmas Social & Dessert Potluck

Branch members are invited to attend the annual Christmas Social and Dessert Potluck on Saturday, 13 December, from noon to 2 pm at Room 226, City of Ottawa Archives, 100 Tallwood Drive, Ottawa.

Please bring your own lunch and a dessert to share. The branch will provide coffee, tea, milk, sugar, and other beverages.

This month’s gathering is a social event with no formal presentation and offers an opportunity to network with fellow genealogists. Please note that this is an in-person event only; there is no virtual attendance option.

 

He Wore Two Blue Coats: William Henry Northwood

The contents page for the Winter issue of Anglo-Celtic Roots, BIFHSGO’s quarterly chronicle, is:

A Valiant Man (Lynne Willoughby) ** He Wore Two Blue Coats: William Henry Northwood (John Reid) ** We Shall Remember Them: Acting Lance Corporal John Samuel Thomson (Nigel Lloyd/) ** TECH TALK Standalone Genealogy Applications (Paul Cripwell).

BIFHSGO publishes in greyscale, so the Two Blue Coats impact is rather lost.  While the online version could be in colour, the editorial decision was it would set too much of a precedent. Major editorial decisions are not to be taken lightly.

Here’s the first of those coats, with the blue in all its glory.

It’s from the London Visitors website, showing the Christ’s Hospital uniform, a rich, deep royal blue or Prussian blue hue. The image dates from around the time William Henry attended in 1850. Another image on the same website, from a later date, shows a navy-blue, almost-black coat.

There was a shift from organic to synthetic dyes around 1870, shortly after the invention of a blue coal-tar dye.

If you’re interested in the other blue coat, you’ll have to read the article in the Winter issue of Anglo-Celtic Roots, which should be available on the BIFHSGO website for members, if not now, very, very soon. Paper copies are in the mail for those who pay an additional fee.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Remembering Tim Cook

The Canadian War Museum invites you to honour the life and legacy of Dr. Tim Cook, Chief Historian and Director of Research at the Canadian War Museum, author, and long-time contributor to Canada’s military heritage.
Together, we will reflect on Dr. Cook’s extraordinary contributions, share memories, and celebrate the profound impact he had on the understanding of Canada’s wartime history.

Friday, December 12
4 to 6 pm

https://www.warmuseum.ca/events/dr-tim-cook