Here’s a report on progress with Library and Archives Canada’s Co-Lab Challenges since last month. No challenges report progress and two are less complete this month than last!
While other Co-Lab activity may have happened, the Challenges are a FAILURE this past month.
John Freemont Smith remains 89% complete.
War Diaries of the First World War: No. 2 Construction Battalion is 99% complete, 100% last month.
Canadian National Land Settlement Association remains 94% complete.
Molly Lamb Bobak remains 88% complete.
Diary of François-Hyacinthe Séguin remains 98% complete.
George Mully: moments in Indigenous communities remains 2% complete.
Correspondence regarding First Nations veterans returning after the First World War remains 99% complete.
Winnipeg General Strike of 1919 is 95% complete, 96% last month.
Legendary Train Robber and Prison Escapee Bill Miner remains 99% complete.
Japanese-Canadians: Second World War, remains 61% complete.
The Call to Duty: Canada’s Nursing Sisters remains 93% complete.
Projects that remain 100% complete are no longer reported here.


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.
On 14 June 1921 Alexander Pratt Menzies, age 24, was found drowned at Britannia Bay on the Ottawa River. There’s little additional information on his death certificate except birth 2-10-1897 in England. Newspaper reports were that he’d been in Ottawa for 3 weeks looking for work and staying at the Union Mission.