Wednesday, August 23, 2017

Researching Abroad Day 1

A while ago I said I was booked in for the Unlock the Past Researching Abroad roadshow in Melbourne - and if you have not booked in to the Roadshow at one of its locations you are definitely missing out.  Last Friday and Saturday I was at the Veneto Club in Bulleen, Melbourne for two days of wonderful talks.
Day 1 concentrated on the British Isles, with Chris Paton the main speaker.  His four presentations covered British and Irish Newspapers ; Scottish Research Resources before 1800 ; British Censuses and Substitutes ; and Discover Irish Land Records.  A few gems from among the 20 plus pages of notes I took during the day (I concentrate better with a pen in my hand)
  • Some newspapers publish two (or more) editions during a day and each will vary - and not every version will be digitised.  It pays to check.
  • Browse as well as search - you never know what you might find if you look around.
  • Scotland is not England - Scotland has its own legal, religious and cultural structures and seems to have delighted in doing things differently than their English counterparts.  Before 1707 they even had their own units and measures - and Scottish handwriting had its own little ways too!
  • Ireland is also not England - they too had their own structures and ways of doing things.
  • People lie (this I already knew, but it is worth reinforcing).  Any record is only as good as the informant - and for a variety of reasons sometimes people lie!
 Also on the day Unlock the Past had a table of brochures to pick up and books for sale, and their were also tables staffed by VicGUM, Australian Institute of Genealogical Studies, Genealogical Society of Victoria and FIBIS.  Intersperced with Chris's talks there were presentations from AIGS and GSV on the British Isles resources they have available, and a presentation on what My Heritage and Living DNA have to offer.

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