
Between 1940 and 1944, LADY RODNEY made 40 westbound personnel voyages to Halifax, more than any other passenger vessel. That’s a finding from extracting data on 328 voyages in files of Canada’s Directorate of Movements, the military organization that managed troop and other military transportation. According to the article The Lady Boats, by war’s end, Rodney had safely transported almost 60,000 troops in addition to another 66,000 passengers.
The Directorate of Movement files for the period, on LAC microfilms C-5704 to C-5717, are organized in roughly chronological order. Some are available in the canadiana.ca Heritage collection — C-5704 (Jan 1940 – June 1941), C-5709 (May-June 1943), C-5711 (August 1943 – Feb 1944), and C-5714 to C-5720 (from July 1944).
Ships in this collection that completed more than 10 westbound passenger voyages to Halifax during the period are:
LADY RODNEY 40
FORT TOWNSHEND 23
FORT AMHERST 20
LADY NELSON 18
BAYANO 10
It may be that the FORT TOWNSHEND and FORT AMHERST, which only appear from March 1943, were involved in coastal trade, not crossing the Atlantic.
Not all military personnel from the UK to Halifax were in ships in this database. For instance, the Duchess of Atholl, which left Liverpool for Halifax on 12 October 1940 had RAF, Fleet Air Arm, and Royal Navy personnel from barracks at Chatham, Portsmouth, Devonport


The bar chart shows the number of records in 20 year periods centred on the date shown. The gap at 1650 reflects the drop during the Cromwell Protectorate. Only 23 entries are for the 1650s with none for 1653 and 1654.
Today is the 80th anniversary of the death of 

Global Genealogy
This week sees over 43,000 baptism and burial transcription records from several Essex churches added at Findmypast. They are all on the east side of the River Lea, now in the London Borough of Waltham Forest and obtained from the Waltham Forest Family History Society.