Bert Hayward R. I. P.

Bertram Anthony (Bert) Hayward passed away on November 19, 2021, at the age of 83.

Bert was named to the BIFHSGO Hall of Fame in 2019 “In recognition of his life-long interest in, and encouragement of, family history and genealogy. Bert was a volunteer for many events and projects during his time as a BIFSHGO member, usually in the background.”  He had a particular interest in home children including assisting in the Children’s Emigration Homes (Middlemore) Indexing Project.

His other interests included woodworking and photography — contributing photographs as an Assistant Editor of Anglo-Celtic Roots.

Bert, who had a career with the Canadian military, was born in Essex, England in late 1937,  son of the late Trevor Hayward and the late Phyllis Morley. He was in a Home in Essex for a while during the War.

Sunday Sundries

Miscellaneous items I found of interest during the week.

How do we know the effect of boosters?

Mining the Seams workshop recordings
Talks about the archives of the coal industry in Derbyshire and Warwickshire.

Blog Posts from the Norfolk Record Office
An Enigmatic Diarist as Ever Was Known: The Syleham Diary 1784 – 1824
Great Yarmouth’s Early Modern Astrology

20 of the Most Important Moments in Internet History

Save on Fold3 New Subscriptions

Thanks to this week’s contributors. Anonymous, Brenda Turner, Gwen Gibson, John Sayers, Judith H., rob bennie, Unknown.

LAC Website News

My Twitter feed was swamped with congratulations and support to Andrea Eidinger who posted that she had been chosen to head up the Library and Archives Canada website team starting on Monday.

Andrea describes herself as “Historian of gender and ethnicity in postwar Canada. Jewish settler living in unceded Indigenous territories.” Born and raised in Montreal, she has a B.A. from McGill University and a Ph.D. from the University of Victoria, both in History.

LAC already has a web renewal initiative underway.

Findmypast Weekly Update

West Glamorgan Electoral Registers, 1839-1925
Over 80 years of electoral records added from Swansea, Wales, 1,643,483 index records, means there are now over 3.5 million records for Glamorganshire, and 334 full record sets for Wales.

Index to Death Duty Registers, 1796-1903
Exclusive to Findmypast, 5,000 records added to this collection, now with 3,385,928 items. Records usually include a combination of the following information:

Name of testator
Address of testator
Date of Death
Name of administrator
Address of administrator

Find out more from Findmypast at
https://search.findmypast.com/search-world-records/index-to-death-duty-registers-1796-1903
and FamilySearch at https://www.familysearch.org/wiki/en/Estate_Duty_Registers

 

Who Do You Think You Are: December 2021

The feature articles in the December issue.

PHOTO COMPETITION ON THE COVER
Share your old family photos for a chance to win £200 and other prizes in our first ever photo competition

SHARE YOUR TREE ON THE COVER
Chris Paton explains 12 easy ways to amaze your relations with your family history discoveries

TO JAB OR NOT TO JAB
The controversy about compulsory smallpox vaccination

MAKE A MOVIE
TV producerAlan Howard reveals his tips for recording your relatives’ precious memories using a smartphone

SEASON’S GREETINGS
The creation and development of the Christmas card

The county profile of this issue is research in Essex.

 

Fold3 and Newspapers.com Savings

These two websites, parts of Ancestry.com empire, have modest Black Friday sale prices.

Fold3, named for the third fold in some flag-folding ceremonies honours and remembers veterans for their sacrifice in defending their country and promoting peace in the world. Reflecting the origin of the term the collection is largely US-oriented original military records, photos, and stories of the men and women who served.

The offer, good to 6 December, is 40% off, $47.95 US annually, down from $79.95 US.

https://go.fold3.com/buynow

Newspapers.com, is offering a $10 US saving when purchasing or upgrading to a Publisher Extra subscription. The Publisher’s Extra subscription, about $80 US for six months, gives access to more recent publications. The offer runs through 5 December.

https://www.newspapers.com/

Multimedia Digital Archive of Rural and Northern Ontario Stories

The People’s Archive of Rural Ontario (PARO) officially launched on Wednesday with stories told by everyday people in video, audio, photographic or text formats.

As explained here

“People have different ways of sharing their stories. We want to be an archive that genuinely provides a space for people’s stories, and so we have to be open to the different media people use to tell their own stories in the way they think those stories should be told and presented, in the medium that suits them and their stories.”

Organizers expect the archive to become an educational resource for students from elementary to post-secondary, and for anyone interested in studying rural Ontario, including policymakers and academics.

A team of U of G graduate research assistants is now collecting stories from rural storytellers across Ontario. They hope people will contact the group to share their stories.

“There is great importance to documenting stories in people’s own words,” said Wittmer. “Being featured in a space where their voices are seen, heard and appreciated by broader audiences has great value. People have been very excited about presenting their stories and sharing them with their families, friends and communities.”

The site has a search capability so it’s easy to see if there’s anything of significance for your family history.

 

Historic Environment Scotland’s annual report 2020-21

Chris Paton posted a summary of this annual report on his Scottish GENES blog . Key statistics from the organization for the year are:

Invested over £13 million through the HES grants programme, helping communities to restore their built heritage and improve their understanding of the past, including the launch of the Historic Environment Recovery Fund.
Commercial income during this period was hit by the impact of COVID-19 and fell [87%] to £8.2 million.
HES welcomed 246,000 visitors to the staffed sites which were able to reopen in 2020- 2021.
A total of £25.3 million, inclusive of staff costs, was invested in conservation, maintenance and management of the PiCs.
More than 80,000 digitised items were added to Canmore, our online archive site, bringing the total available to 1.1 million.
We continued to make a positive contribution to net zero, with carbon emissions reduced by 34.8%, bringing the total reduction over 2014 – 2021 to 54.6%.
Around £16.1 million generated into the Scottish economy from heritage tourism.

Is the mention of carbon emissions reduction something we can hope to see more of from other organizations?

 

 

RootsIreland Savings

RootsIreland offers a unique database of more than 22 million Irish records. It contains data from 34 county genealogy centres on the island of Ireland. The main sources on the site are Irish Catholic and other church records of baptisms, marriages and deaths,  important sources for tracing Irish ancestry.

The offer is good until Friday 10 December. Find out terms at https://rootsireland.ie/ifhf/subscribe.php

TNA Catalogue Week

Quite a few years ago I was fortunate to be in Kew and attended most of The National Archives Catalogue Day presentations.

This year Catalogue Day has become Catalogue Week with 17 recorded presentations and blog posts to mark the 21st year.

There’s a summary of what’s on each day here. 

Thursday’s program looks to be of particular interest;

“First and Second World Wars. Laura Robson-Mainwaring discusses cataloguing First World War medical diaries, while Michael McGrady looks at the challenges presented by abbreviations and identification in cataloguing Second World War diaries. James Cronan continues the Second World War theme focusing on civilian honours, and our final blog release for the day highlights the case of Leonard Orpin, a British civilian interned during war time.”

It appears TNA is posting day-by-day links at https://blog.nationalarchives.gov.uk/category/archives-and-archivists/