Ancestry updates UK Death Indexes

With this latest Ancestry update, England and Wales Death Index, 1989-2022, has 6,947,083 entries.

Scotland and Northern Ireland, Death Index, 1989-2022
now has 897,449 entries.

A search provides name, gender, age, birth date, last residence (town), postal code district and death date. The source is not specified but appears to be compilations from unofficial records, such as funeral homes and newspapers,  from GreyPower Deceased Data and Wilmington Millennium, West Yorkshire. I estimate it covers about half the deaths occurring.

Ulster Settlers database

A digital humanities project that “models existing data into life events and then digitally links all these related events to reconstruct a searchable prosopography or biographical map of the entire settler cohort.”

Prosopography is a description of a person’s social and family connections, career, etc., or a collection of such descriptions.

Scroll down at https://ulster-settlers.clericus.ie/ for a video on Navigating the Database.

 

Sunday Sundries

Miscellaneous items I found of interest during the week.

A J Casson Jigsaw
https://jigex.com/uXTH

Doug Ford’s Greenbelt mess is just the latest example of his disdain for rules

Rigorous Science – Wilfrid Derome
Forensics pioneer. Canada’s History magazine on the life and work of Dr Wilfrid Derome (1877-1931). Interred in Montreal’s Notre-Dame-des-Neiges cemetery.

New London Quakers: A Coda
The latest blog post from The Canadian Friends Historical Association. The Assocation website includes a mass of open access publications and documents relating to Canadian Quaker history, including transcriptions of handwritten meeting books going back to 1798.

TheGenealogist adds Lloyd George Land Tax Records for Oxfordshire

Sad to note the passing of BIFHSGO member Chuck Taylor

Five little-known inventors of the Victorian era

Thanks to this week’s contributors: Ann Burns, Anonymous, Brenda Turner, Daniel Horowitz, gail benjafield, Glenn Wright, Ken McKinlay, Nick McDonald, Nick Thorne, Patricia McGregor, Teresa, Susan Courage, Unknown.

 

 

Ancestry updates Birmingham C of E Parish Records

These are the annual update as records come out of the embargo period.

Birmingham, England, Church of England Baptisms, 1813-1922, now with 2,943,642 records.

Birmingham, England, Church of England Marriages and Banns, 1754-1939, now with 1,740,297 records.

Birmingham, England, Church of England Burials, 1813-1964, now with 536,245 records.

New on Ancestry: Ireland, Abstracts of Wills and Marriages, 1620-1923

This collection of genealogical abstracts from Ireland has over one million entries, a significant addition to the available Irish resources, especially for early years. According to the Ancestry information, most pertain to wills and marriage bonds, and some miscellaneous abstracts are included. I found many indicated as “residence.”

The collection appears to have been indexed by AI handwriting recognition technology.

Testing with the surname Marmion found 30 hits with both first and last names. Ten were event-type residence, 18 wills, one marriage, and one death. Eight had additional information on event dates or relatives in the listing.

Each hit is linked to an image of the original page or a two-page image. Given my mediocre paleographic skills, I struggled to find the corresponding entry in the original. It would be helpful if it were highlighted and a transcription of the whole page was available with the hit highlighted.

Findmypast Weekly Update

Focus this week is on Derbyshire, with 450,00 new parish records. They are mainly transcripts, a few include images. They are not only from the Established Church (CofE). Baptist, various Methodist, Presbyterian and Independant congregations are included.

Baptisms
231,270 new records from across the county for the years 1524 to 1991. The total is now 1,237,175 records for 324 parishes

Marriages
114,294 added records, now totalling 776,313. Many of the early records have no last name for the bride.

Burials
108,015 new records, from 1539 to 1997.

These collections are published in partnership with Derbyshire Family History Society, the Family History Federation and FamilySearch.

Newspapers
The week also saw 155,862 pages added to eight titles.
Bath Chronicle and Weekly Gazette, 1780, 1794
Croydon Express, 1912
Huddersfield Daily Examiner, 1970, 1972, 1977-1979
Lichfield Post, 1991
Liverpool Echo, 1968
London Daily Chronicle, 1886, 1889, 1923, 1926, 1929
South Wales Echo, 1912
Wexford and Kilkenny Express, 1900

The Financial Health of Canadian Genealogical Societies 2022

Each year organizations federally registered as charities in Canada for tax purposes are required to file returns with the Canada Revenue Agency. Financial and other information is available on the Revenue Canada website. Search for individual society reports at
https://apps.cra-arc.gc.ca/ebci/hacc/srch/pub/dsplyBscSrch?request_locale=en.

Two societies, AGS and OGS, reported substantial financial donation in 2022.

Figures for the previous financial period (usually calendar year) follow the most recent in parentheses.

Alberta Genealogical Society

For the reporting period ending 2022-12-31, total assets of $1,041,398 ($590,395) and liabilities of $212,232 ($175,854.) The total revenue was $614,488 ($188,456.) That included an extraordinary item, a charitable tax eligible gift or gifts, totalling $422,882.  Expenditures totalled 199,863 ($183,798). The individual annual membership fee remains $50 for digital journal subscription. 

British Columbia Genealogical Society

For the reporting period ending 2022-12-31, total assets of $216,503 ($233,931) and liabilities of $20,517 ($37,201.) The total revenue was $27,392 ($29,895.) Expenditures totalled $28,201 ($29,895). The individual annual new membership fee remins $65.

British Isles Family History Society of Greater Ottawa

For the reporting period ending 2022-12-31, total assets of $119,762 ($126,373) and liabilities of $16,770 ($20,213.) The total revenue was $28,096 ($42,071.) Expenditures totalled $31,405 ($30,897.) The individual annual new membership fee remains $50.

Family History Society of Newfoundland and Labrador Inc

For the reporting period ending 2022-12-31, total assets of $78,308 ($80,912) and no liabilities. The total revenue was $32,500 ($35,743.) Expenditures totalled $34,912 ($27,526.) The individual annual membership fee remains $42.

Manitoba Genealogical Society

For the reporting period ending 2023-03-31 information is not yet posted. The individual annual membership fee is $60 ($50.)

New Brunswick Genealogical Society

For the reporting period ending 2022-12-31, total assets of $211,514 ($225,680) and liabilities of $23,619 ($12,342.) The total revenue was $37,671 ($71,388.) Expenditures totalled $39,226 ($48,791.) The basic individual annual new membership fee remains $40.

Genealogical Association of Nova Scotia

For the reporting period ending 2022-12-31 information is not yet posted. The individual annual new membership fee remains $39.

Ontario Genealogical Society

For the reporting period ending 2021-12-31, total assets of $2,034,220 ($1,577,182) and liabilities of $280,466 ($271,019,) The total revenue was $1,004,580 ($552,102.) That included an extraordinary item, a gift or gifts, totalling $651,492.  Expenditures totalled  $556,489 ($518,402.) The individual annual membership fee remains $63.

Québec Family History Society

For the reporting period ending 2021-07-31, total assets of $18,985 ($24,235) and liabilities of $4,593 ($7,260.) The total revenue was $29,203 ($43,066.) Expenditures totalled $31,785 ($31,269.) The individual annual fee remains at $75.

Saskatchewan Genealogical Society

For the reporting period ending 2022-12-31 information is not posted. Individual basic annual membership remains $70.

Société généalogique canadienne-française

For the reporting period ending 2022-12-31 information is not yet posted.

Victoria Genealogical Society

For the reporting period ending 2023-05-31 information is not yet posted. Individual annual membership remains $60.

Look for this post to be updated when reports for the five societies with 2022 information missing are added.

FamilySearch experimental search of handwritten wills and deeds

A FamilySearch collection, “Wills and deed records from the United States, 1630-1975,” was recently the subject of an experimental research project. One hundred and ten million records processed by handwriting recognition technology were opened up for searching.  Several people tried it before the experiment was closed and posted about their experience and enthusiasm on Reddit,”. A YouTube post by GenealogyTechnology demonstrated using it.

If you want to know more, the RootsTech presentation Advances in Computer Assisted Indexing of Historical Records by John Alexander from FamilySearch provides a helpful backgrounder.

In Canada, we benefitted from Ancestry’s index to the 1931 census completed in 2 days. The release was delayed for quality control.

The day is coming when AI interpretation of handwritten records will be something we can apply ourselves to a collection where online images are available. What Canadian records would you want to use it for?

Back to Family History

The Back to School ads are appearing as we get closer to September. They serve as a reminder that the pace of genealogy picks up too after the summer lull.

OGS has its annual conference, themed Diversity in Genealogy, from 8 – 10 September. It’s virtual. There’s a good mix of presentations and a workshop from Findmypast to start things off. Find out more at https://conference2023.ogs.on.ca/

I expect to be away taking advantage of a reduced number of tourists in Europe to visit sites in my family history. It means I don’t have to make the choice between that and other events that weekend. I’ll miss the September BIFHSGO monthly meeting; fortunately it will be recorded for later viewing by members.

Those are far from the only major events that weekend. There’s the Scottish Indexes XXI Conference, and the American-Canadian Genealogical Society Virtual Fall Conference. The Edmonton Chapter of the American Historical Society of Germans from Russia is offerring a virtual Wall Breaker Conference

I’ll be back in good time for the 2023 BIFHSGO Virtual Conference: Scotland and Migration, being held on 28-29 October. Find out more about that at https://www.bifhsgo.ca/2023-conference

Ancestry adds Meath and Kildare, Ireland, Graveyard Collection 1554-2014

Do you have ancestors from the parishes of Balyna, part of Carbury and part of Newtown in county Kildare and the parishes of Enfield/Rathmolyon, Longwood/Killyon, Coole/Summerhill and Clonard in county Meath?

That includes the graveyards of Agher, Ardenew, Ardkill, Ballinadrimna, Broadford, Broadford Church, Cadamstown, Castlerickard, Clonard CoI, Clonard RC, Cloncurry, Clondalee, Croboy, Dunfierth, Gallow, Jordanstown, Jordanstown Church, Kilglass, Kill, Kilrainey, Kilshanroe New, Kilshanroe Old, Ladywell, Mylerstown, Newtown, Nurney, Rathcore, Rathmolyon, Templadooath, The Moy, TíCroghan.

Ancestry sourced this 11,961 record collection from the Enfield & District Graveyard Website.

Manchester Burials

MyHeritage just added a collection of 855,785 England, Lancashire, Manchester Burials.

Included are index records from 1850 to the present year for Blackly, Gorton, Manchester General, Philips Park, and Southern cemeteries, and Blackly Crematorium.

The records, also at other major genealogy sites, may be searched without charge at  https://www.burialrecords.manchester.gov.uk/ where additional genealogical information may be purchased.

This Week’s Online Genealogy Events

Choose from selected free online events in the next five days. All times are ET except as noted. Assume registration in advance is required; check so you’re not disappointed. Looking for more options? Additional mainly US events are listed at https://conferencekeeper.org/virtual.

Tuesday 8 August

9 am: Researching your family history: 1837-1911, by Jessamy Carlson for The National Archives (UK).
https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/researching-your-family-history-1837-1911-tickets-636509375677?aff=em

2 pm: Ottawa Virtual Genealogy Drop-In, from OGS Ottawa Branch.
https://ottawa.ogs.on.ca/events/virtual-genealogy-drop-in-2-2023-08-08/

2 pm: Ten MORE Secrets to Using MyHeritage by Daniel Horowitz from MyHeritage for Legacy Family Tree Webinars.
https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/ten-more-secrets-to-using-myheritage/

2:30 pm: “Mein Feld ist Die Welt”: A Historical Research Guide to Hamburg Passenger Lists, by Logan Knight for Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center.
https://acpl.libnet.info/event/8802269

7:30 pm: The Tragic Fate of Huron Elliott: A Forgotten Indigenous Worker on Toronto’s Water Tunnel Project, by Eric Sehr,  the Toronto History Lecture 2023 for OGS Toronto Branch.
http://events.constantcontact.com/register/event?llr=i6wnctjab&oeidk=a07ejt0zf212dea1a34

Wednesday 9 August

2:30 pm: Ideas for Researching Non-Conformist Ancestors, by Jackie Depelle for the Guild of One Name Studies.
https://register.gotowebinar.com/register/6100494461309349469?source=Guild+website

8 pm: Finding Prussian Ancestors in Online Archives, by Nancy E. Loe for Legacy Family Tree Webinars.
https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/finding-prussian-ancestors-in-online-archives/

Thursday 10 August

6:30 pm: Finding Scottish Ancestors Online, by Nancy Loe for Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center.
https://acpl.libnet.info/event/8802340

Friday 11 August

2 pm: Born on the Fourth of July: Case Study of War of 1812 Veteran Joseph King, by Michael L. Strauss for Legacy Family Tree Webinars.
https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/born-on-the-fourth-of-july-case-study-of-war-of-1812-veteran-joseph-king/

Saturday 12 August