One of the interesting resources on the website of Wilfrid Laurier University History Prof Amy Milne-Smith is an excel document with transcriptions of all Courts Martial (CM) from the WO 90/3 and WO 90/4 series at the National Archives in London 1851-1901.
The more than six thousand cases indexed include date, rank, name, regiment, location of CM, charge, sentence and any remittances.
The 656 locations where the proceedings occurred give insight into the scope of colonial military activities. The top ten locations where CM occurred are:
| Place | Count of Courts Martial |
|---|---|
| Ladysmith | 291 |
| Halifax | 251 |
| Malta | 218 |
| Gibraltar | 211 |
| Montreal | 162 |
| Quebec | 157 |
| Port Louis | 130 |
| King William’s Town | 108 |
| Toronto | 87 |
| Colombo | 73 |
In total more of these were in South Africa and India than Canada (as now constituted). The Royal Artillery accounted for a larger number than any other regiment.
While the transcriptions are raw there’s lots of potential for research, for individuals as I’ll illustrate in a couple of posts, and for social/military history.
Another source linked from Amy Milne-Smith’s website is a series of nearly 40 military diaries available online, most for the second half of the 19th century. One, Wolseley, Garnet J. The Story of a Soldier’s Life v. 2, 1903, has the most extensive coverage of service in Canada.


I received an email from Ancestry.ca offering a 6-month membership at 40% discount. For the complete, World Deluxe 6-month membership the offer was $77.99 Cdn
Over 107,000 Manitoba birth index records from 1882 to 1922. Included are first name(s), last name, gender, baptism year, place, date of birth, date of registration, registration number, father’s first name(s), father’s last name, father’s birth place, mother’s first name(s), mother’s last name, mother’s birth place, parent’s married, mother’s marital status and administrative information.
Born in Ottawa on Thursday 29 June 1899 according to his Ontario birth registration, son of Adebert and Charlotte Young, Cecil Charles Young lied about his age when he enlisted with the PPCLI in December 1916.
Here are the contents of the forthcoming issue, available on 12 July.