Miscellaneous items I found of interest during the week.
Dead reckoning: Canada’s national cemetery is bringing truth about residential schools to light.
Something’s rotten in the state of the internet, and archivists are worried
Are advertisers coming for your dreams?
Amsterdam is laying down a model for what tourism should look like after COVID
How a Scottish graveyard in Kolkata revealed the untold stories of colonial women in India
TheGenealogist has added 24 million transcript records from the Census of Scotland 1841-1901. Already available on Ancestry, Findmypast and in part on FreeCEN and MyHeritage, they are transcripts, the images being available exclusively on ScotlandsPeople.
The Society of Genealogists announce the last day they will be open at their Charterhouse Buildings location is Saturday 17 July. The collection will be inaccessible and kept safe pending a move — location in London to be announced. Digitization work with archive partners will continue.
Is the new feed working for you?
I’ve had one comment about an annoyance with the new feed of the daily update email now it’s switched to MailPoet. Let me know about your experience, positive or negative.
Thanks to this week’s contributors: Anonymous, Brenda Maitland, Brenda Turner, Celia Lewis, Douglas Wallace, Gail B., Glenn Wright, Unknown.


Over 800,000 additions to a collection of over 6.6 million records, means you’ve got more chances than ever of finding a criminal connection. The new records from series MEPO 6, PCOM 2, and PCOM 4 include mugshots, prison registers, visitors’ details and many victims of crime.
There are over 1 million index records, 1,037,567 according to the catalogue entry, in this newly available collection.
For those who lead an impoverished life, not being members of the
This is an especially rich Internet Genealogy issue for those of us who research in England.