Sunday Sundries
Miscellaneous items I found of interest during the week.
Therefore Let Us Not Be Silly
Troll news and yellow journalism run amok. In 2024, we can change. By Justin Ling
Predictions for 2024
Bari Weiss interviews Niall Ferguson, John McWhorter, Tyler Cowen, Peter Attia, Nate Silver, and others about the year to come. Long. US-centric. If the link doesn’t work try this.
It is not given to human beings – happily for them, for otherwise life would be intolerable – to foresee or to predict to any large extent the unfolding course of events.
Winston Churchill
2023: MyHeritage Year in Review
What to expect at CES 2024
The Consumer Electronics Show starts in Las Vegas on Tuesday. Bidet with Alexa and Google anyone?
Thanks to this week’s contributors: Ann Burns, Ann Rexe, Anonymous, Barbara May Di Mambro, Bonnie, Brenda Turner, Cheryl Bowman, gail benjafield, Gail Roger, Helen Gillespie, Glenn Wright, Ian Barker, Kim, Lolly Fullerton, Robert Halfyard, Stephanie Stone, Sunday Thompson, Teresa, Teri Murphy-Payne, Unknown.
Lady Killers
Sometimes the planets align to drag you down a rabbit hole.
I’ve recently been researching the ancestry of my niece’s husband in County Durham.
I’ve also been reading the book The Poisoner’s Handbook: Murder and the Birth of Forensic Medicine in Jazz Age New York, by Deborah Blum. It includes a brief reference to murder by arsenic in the UK.
In fact, handled with skill by a calculating murderer, the poison seemed to engender a homicidal overconfidence. in 1872, one notorious British murderer, Mary Ann Cotton, killed 15 people (according to some sources it could be as many as 21) , including all the children of her five husbands, and several neighbours who irritated her, before she was caught in 1872, tried and hung.
They came in conjunction when I found the scene of Cotton’s crimes was County Durham.
There’s a fascinating past episode on Cotton in the BBC Radio Four series Lady Killers with Lucy Worsley available on BBC Sounds. More episodes are coming.
I’ve not been able to link any of Cotton’s victims, all but six male, to the family I’m researching, except by geography. Maybe if I dig further I’ll be able to add the story to his family history.
Findmypast Weekly Update
There’s a mixed bag of military records this week. Should you be lucky enough to find a person of interest, the records are sufficiently obscure that you are likely to find new information about them.
British Army, Coldstream Guards 1800-1981
17,896 photo album records and 497 attestations are added between 1800 and 1981. The majority of these records comprise a digitized image and a transcript which serves as a finding aid for that image. There is one enlistment register for 1915, covering the regimental numbers 16055 to 18093, for which there are no images.
British Army, London Regiment, Surrey Battalions 1914-1940
3,517 new records spanning from 1914 to 1940.
British Army Service Records – South Wales Borderers
698 transcriptions are added to an existing service record collection from the South Wales Borderers regiment between 1890 and 1915.
Digitized 19th Century British Newspapers Now Free
A whole slew of digitized and searchable 19th-century British newspapers, 78 to be precise, which previously required a paid subscription, became available without charge through Findmypast in the New Year. Several major papers with over a 50-year run, including Lloyd’s Weekly Newspaper and Reynold’s Newspaper, are included.
Here’s the complete list.
TITLE | YEARS |
Aberdare Times | 1889, 1892 |
Aberdeen Press and Journal | 1798-1900 |
American Settler | 1880-1892 |
Ayrshire Weekly News and Galloway Press | 1879-1891 |
Boston Gazette | 1861 |
Bradford Observer | 1834-1875 |
Brechin Herald | 1890-1892 |
Brecknock Beacon | 1883-1896 |
Bright’s Intelligencer and Arrival List | 1860 |
British Yachtsman | 1894 |
Brondesbury, Cricklewood & Willesden Green Advertiser | 1892 |
Brunswick or True Blue | 1821 |
Colonies and India | 1875-1898 |
Comet for Hornsey, Crouch End and Highgate | 1889 |
Course of the Exchange | 1825-1900 |
Daily News (London) | 1846-1900 |
Derby Exchange Gazette | 1861 |
Derby Mercury | 1800-1900 |
Dublin Hospital Gazette | 1856-1862 |
Dudley Guardian, Tipton, Oldbury & West Bromwich Journal and District Advertiser | 1874-1875 |
East Kent Times | 1859, 1861-1864 |
East Suffolk Mercury and Lowestoft Weekly News | 1858-1859 |
East Wind | 1875-1876 |
Eastern Star | 1853 |
Eastleigh Weekly News | 1895-1900 |
English Mail | 1859-1860 |
Evening Times (London) | 1852 |
Evening Times 1825 | 1825-1826 |
Faversham Gazette, and Whitstable, Sittingbourne, & Milton Journal | 1855-1857 |
Financial Standard | 1891 |
Finsbury Free Press | 1868-1869 |
Freeman’s Journal | 1820-1900 |
Glasgow Property Circular and West of Scotland Weekly Advertiser | 1879-1891 |
Gloucester Mercury | 1861-1884 |
Govan Chronicle | 1864-1884 |
Grantown Supplement | 1894-1900 |
Haddingtonshire Advertiser and East-Lothian Advertiser | 1881-1888 |
Hampshire Advertiser | 1831-1832,1834-1849, 1851-1852, 1854-1863 1834-1849, 1851-1852, 1854-1863, 1865, 1867 – 1895, 1897 |
Hampshire Telegraph | 1802-1878, 1880-1900 |
Hartlepool Free Press and General Advertiser | 1860 |
Hebrew Observer | 1853-1854 |
Holmes’ Brewing Trade Gazette | 1878-1886 |
Holt’s Weekly Chronicle | 1837-1855 |
Illustrated Times | 1853-1854 |
Ipswich Journal | 1800-1828, 1830, 1833-1896, 1898, 1900 |
Isle of Man Times | 1869, 1872, 1874-1985, 1897-1900 |
Isle of Wight Observer | 1852-1870, 1873-1876, 1878, 1895, 1898-1900 |
Labour Pioneer (Cardiff) | 1900 |
Leeward Islands Gazette | 1893 |
Leith Herald | 1879-1891 |
Liberty | 1894-1896 |
Little Times | 1867 |
Lloyd’s Weekly Newspaper | 1842-1900 |
London & Provincial News and General Advertiser | 1861-1867 |
London and Liverpool Advertiser | 1847 |
London and Scottish Review | 1875 |
London Life | 1879 |
London Mirror | 1871-1876 |
London News Letter and Price Current | 1859-1865 |
London Weekly Investigator | 1855-1857 |
Luton Weekly Recorder | 1855-1857 |
McPhun’s Australian News | 1853-1855 |
National Observer | 1888-1897 |
North Wales Chronicle | 1827-1900 |
Northman and Northern Counties Advertiser | 1880-1886 |
Nottinghamshire Guardian | 1849-1871 |
Oxford Journal | 1800-1895 |
Preston Chronicle | 1831-1885 |
Radnorshire Standard | 1898-1900 |
Reynolds’s Newspaper | 1850-1900 |
Scottish Border Record | 1881-1892 |
Seren Cymru | 1851, 1892-1893, 1895 |
The Era | 1838-1900 |
The Star | 1869-1877 |
Weekly Free Press and Aberdeen Herald | 1876 |
Wrexham Advertiser | 1854-1857 |
Y Genedl Gymreig | 1877-1900 |
Y Goleuad | 1869-1900 |
TNA Online Events for January
The National Archives, UK, offers five online presentations in January.
Family History: Using First World War Army Records
Saturday 13 January 2024, 10:30 (5:30 am EST)
Will Butler, Head of Military Records at The National Archives,, explores key sources for researching those who served in the First World War.
Family History: Using Civilian Internee Records
Saturday 20 January 2024, 10:30 (5:30 am EST)
Roger Kershaw, Collections Specialist at The National Archives, explains how to find records of civilian internment relating to individuals.
The Forgers: The Story of the Holocaust’s Most Audacious Rescue Operation
Wednesday 24 January 2024, 19:30 (2:30 pm EST)
Roger Moorhouse in conversation about the forgotten story of the Holocaust’s most audacious rescue operation, saving thousands of Jewish lives in the Second World War.
Poverty, Language and the New Poor Law in Wales, 1834–1871
Friday 26 January 2024, 14:00 (9 am EST)
Records specialist Paul Carter delves into the difficulties faced by the poor in England and Wales when dealing with a central poor law authority, responsible for the high-level administration of poor relief for millions of poor people across a bilingual society.
Family History: Using Prisoner of War Records
Saturday 27 January 2024, 10:30 (5:30 am EST)
Roger Kershaw is back to help get started researching ancestors who were taken as Prisoners of War during the Second World War. You’ll be introduced to Prisoners of War from across different theatres of war and some of the key records held by The National Archives.
Find out more and book at https://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/about/visit-us/whats-on/online-events/
Ships that stopped at Grosse Île Quarantine Station
Library and Archives Canada has a database, linked from here, with 33,036 references to immigrants who stayed, were born/baptised, married or buried at the Grosse Île Quarantine Station between 1832 and 1937.
The records are particularly valuable for those of Irish origin for the period before 1865 after which passenger lists for incoming vessels to Quebec City/Montreal became available.
The database has transcribed all information contained in the various source documents. While it is possible to obtain copies of some of the original records, those in the custody of the Québec Service Centre of Parks Canada contained in oversized registers are too fragile to consult, or even for photocopying.
That’s unfortunate as the search capability at LAC is limited. You can search by surname, given name(s), and keyword. If you know the name of a ship of interest you can search for that in the keyword but results displayed don’t show the year. You have to click the item number for each hit to see that. It would be useful to have a tabulation of the ships by year, but you cannot keyword search by year.
You could get lucky and find information on a ship and voyage, but hardly any passenger names, at The Ships List.
Artificial Intelligence and Genealogy
In This Week’s Online Genealogy Events post, I highlighted (bolded) Wednesday afternoon’s Legacy Family Tree Webinar presentation, “Artificial Intelligence and Genealogy: New Beginnings in 2024” by Steve Little.
If you missed it, I recommend taking 90 minutes to view it in the next few days while it’s free if you’re not a LFTW subscriber. If you’ve some experience with AI, like ChatGPT, Bing or Bard, be patient with the first part.
It will be interesting to see how his predictions for the year pan out when he reviews them at year’s end. Will handwriting recognition technology reach the stage where we can employ it ourselves on a document of our choice, which Little says is still beyond the boundary of practicality?
WDYTYA Magazine: Jan 2024
The main cover story for the January 2024 issue is
Websites To Watch
Jonathan Scott previews resources coming
online in 2024 and identifies Second World War service records being digitized by Ancestry as the biggest highlight. He speculates that with the 80th anniversary of the D-Day landings falling in June, that might be the focus for the initial release.
Library and Archives Canada gets a mention in the coverage of Findmypast, while the focus of their effort is expected to be extracting family notices from the newspaper collection.
In the other featured article, Felicity Day explores why our Georgian ancestors loved to dance.
That scratches the surface. Fire up your browser to read the rest of the magazine available online via your public library in much of Canada.
FamilySearch 2023 Highlights
Catch up on what was new at FamilySearch in 2023 in this review of highlights. The article covers free records, family trees, digital books, libraries and centers, discovery experiences, help and support, and RootsTech 2023.
It also highlights the FamilySearch collaboration with Library and Archives Canada and Ancestry to make the 1931 Census freely available online.
I thought to add the Ottawa Public Library becoming a FamilySearch affiliate, but looking back, that was over a year ago, in December 2022.
Yuletide R&R: Ancestry parody
James Wolfe Anniversary
Today is the 297th anniversary of the birth of James Wolfe in Westerham, Kent.
Remembered chiefly for his victory in 1759 over the French at the Battle of the Plains of Abraham in Quebec, leading to the capture of Montreal in 1760 and the acquisition of Canada by Britain in 1763. He is arguably one of, if not the most significant persons in the history of Canada.
The photo shows the vista over London from his statue at the Royal Observatory Greenwich, adjacent to the zeroth meridian.