Wednesday, August 31, 2022

#52Ancestors - Week 35 - Free Space

I think we can all agree that there is very little in life that is free.  But there is a free space available to all, at our local public library.  It is a resource every genealogist needs to take advantage of.

So what does the free space that is you local library have to offer a family history researcher?  Free access to books for a start.  Check out your library catalogue to see what family history books are available.  From genealogical reference books to published family histories, there may well be treasures lurking on the shelves waiting for you to find them.  Check out the Local History collection too, especially if your family has lived in the area.  Try contacting the library in places your family has lived to see what the Local History collection offers.  Don't forget Inter-Library Loan either.  Many public libraries can access titles not in their own collection through reciprocal lending agreements with other libraries.

Check out online databases the library may subscribe to.  Many libraries have free public access to online genealogical databases you would otherwise have to pay to access.  Depending on the licencing agreement, you may be able to access them from home using your library card, or they may be in-house use only, like Ancestry Library Edition or Find My Past.  If the database is in-house only, you will need to visit your library and use their public computers or free wifi.

Check out online eResources too.  Does your local library offer online magazines?  Who Do You Think You Are, Family History UK, Family History Us and more might be available for you to download and read on your PC, laptop, tablet or smartphone, all free.

Ask about classes, talks and groups.  Does your library ever run family history classes, host family history society meetings or genealogy chats?  These can be a great way of expanding your researching knowledge and meeting other researchers to exchange research tips.

So take advantage of the free space that is your local library and see what they have to offer you.

Friday, August 26, 2022

#52Ancestors - Week 34 - Timeline

Timelines can be so important in our research, giving context to our ancestors lives.  Timelines of significant historical events help us to understand the times our ancestors lived in.  Did they live through conflicts or natural disasters - floods, famines, diseases?  Did they experience the crowning of a new monarch or a significant change in government?  What were the major social changes that happened during their lives?  Timelines of local events give us insight into our ancestors daily lives - holidays, popular passtimes, local culture and festivals.  

Personal timelines are also useful in highlighting potential errors in our research.  Look at your ancestors timelines to see how old they were at the birth of each child - especially the mother.  Is she too young or too old to reasonably be giving birth?  Look at the time between the birth of each child - you cannot have a child born only 6 months after a sibling.  How old were they when they married or died - and are these ages reasonable?

Sometimes your timeline will highlight an interesting fact that is not impossible but worth noting.  Did an ancestor enlist in the military underage - or overage?  How old were they when they left school, left home, or began working? 

Noting life events in a timeline gives context and helps flesh out our ancestors lives, deepening our understanding of the times in which they lived.

Wednesday, August 24, 2022

Who Do You Think You Are Magazine

The latest issue of Who Do You Think You Are magazine is now available free online for Campaspe Library members via our subscription to Libby eMagazines.

Inside this month’s issue 

  • Searching the streets of London
    Judith Batchelor explains how to place your London family on the map
  • The super recognisers - Meet the men and women using their facial recognition tools to solve family history problems
  • Reader story - Nigel Gray traced his family history in the Far East
  • Zeppelin attacks - The forgotten Blitz of the First World War
  • The English Civil War - The surviving records of the 17th century
  • The best websites for researching performers, using estate records, tracing Australian emigrants and more 
  • Lincolnshire - Everything you need to know about family history in the county

 

Tuesday, August 23, 2022

New on Trove

A number of new and expanded newspaper titles have been added to Trove recently.  It is always exciting to discover new additions to the database, many courtesy of the hard work of local community groups undertaking digitization projects.

New Victorian additions to Trove include :

  • Bacchus Marsh express (1919-1945), (1946-1954) [Bacchus Marsh and District Historical Society]
  • Ballarat Courier (1883-1884) [Ballarat and District Genealogical Society]
  • The Ballan Times/The Ballan Times and Blackwood, Blakeville and Myrniong Standard/The Ballan Times and Gordon, Egerton, Wallace, Millbrook and Blackwood Advertiser/The Ballan Times and Egerton, Gordon, Blakeville and Myrniong Standard (1890-1913, 1919-1920) [Ballan Shire Historical Society Inc]
  • The Brunswick and Coburg Leader (1922–1926) [Moreland City Libraries]
  • Elmore Standard (1882-1920) [Bendigo Regional Genealogical Society]
  • Kyneton Guardian and Woodend and Malmsbury Chronicle (1863-1870) [State Library Victoria]
  • Mildura Irrigationist/The Mildura Irrigationist and Murray River Cultural Advocate (1893, 1895-1896) [Mildura Rural City Council Library Service]
  • Nagambie Times (1882–1913, 1919-1920) [Nagambie Historical Society Inc]
  • Nagambie Herald and Goulburn Valley Advertiser (1873) [Nagambie Historical Society Inc]
  • The Nagambie Herald and Avenel, Murchison and Goulburn Valley Advertiser (1873) [Nagambie Historical Society Inc]
  • Richmond Guardian (1885; 1904-1924)
  • The Tarrangower Times and Maldon District Advertiser/The Tarrangower Times and Maldon and Newstead Advertiser/The Tarrangower Times and Maldon, Newstead, Baringhup, Laancoorie and Muckleford Advertiser (1862-1894) [Maldon Museum]
 For a full list of recent additions, click here.

Sunday, August 21, 2022

Family Tree US Magazine

The latest issue of Family Tree US magazine is now available free online for Campaspe Library members via our subscription to Libby eMagazines.  
 
Inside this month's issue :  
  • Out on a Limb
  • Writers in the Family
  • Ancestry Launches SideView
  • Ireland Reconstructs Lost Records
  • Portal of US History
  • FamilySearch Wiki Hits 100,000
  • NYC Vital Records Online
  • Power Tools
  • branchingout
  • Keep or Toss? - Declutter your genealogy
  • Public Access - Delve into the collections held by the U.S. National Archives
  • The NARA Network
  • Pomp and Circumstance - Finding school records online.
  • Hometown Heroes - Pinpoint an immigrant ancestor’s Old World town of origin
  • Filipino Family - Jump-start your ancestor search in the Philippines
  • The Hats Have It
  • Finding Publications with PERSI
  • Preserving Digital Media
  • Half-and Removed Relatives
  • 8 Keys to Cemetery Success

Friday, August 19, 2022

#52 Ancestors - Week 33 - Service

Many families have a history of service.  To me, service is not just serving in the military, but also serving the community in other ways.  Serving in the Police, SES, firefighting and in medicine and welfare.  The events of the past few years have highlighted the important roles filled by our doctors, nurses, paramedics and ambulance crews and other hospital personnel.  Volunteering for community groups and welfare services - undertaken quietly and without expectation of reward by so many.  

Several years ago I learned that my Great Uncle David James Clark received an Order of Australian medal for his service to the community.  By searching the website Its an Honour, which explains the Australian Honours system and allows people to search their database of Honours recipients, I was able to discover more.

The website his the following citation


While I have the military records of many family members who served in the First and Second World Wars, this is the first civilian honour I have found, and highlights another form of service for me, which I need to explore.

Wednesday, August 17, 2022

Family Tree UK Magazine

The latest issue of Family Tree UK magazine is now available free online for Campaspe Library members via our subscription to Libby eMagazines.

Inside this month's issue : 

  • ROOTSTECH 2023 will include online and in-person events
  • 50 years of military history covered in new FindMyPast British Army Personnel collection
  • Irish record project launches
  • Battle of Britain: The People's Project
  • New family garden trail at Elizabeth Gaskell House
  • 1.3 billion records added to MyHeritage
  • Explore your Viking origins
  • Millions of homes featured on the 1901 Census now plotted on georeferenced
  • From The Ashes: 1922 Irish Public Record Office Fire
  • Your ancestors’ career changes
  • Exploring the lives of your Welsh ancestors
  • Researching ancestors in South Africa
  • YOUR DNA WORKSHOP

Monday, August 15, 2022

Caring for Old Photographs

One question I am often asked is how to best store and care for old family photographs.  It is a challenge many family historians face - we become the family repository (if we are lucky) and our store of old,sometimes antique, photographs grows.

So here are the basics.

  • The best place to store photographs is in a cool, dry place. Attics, sheds and basements are not good places to store your photographs.  A cardboard box in the shed or garage is just an invitation for mice to make a nest.
  • Avoid storing photos extreme temperatures or in extremely high or low humidity. High humidity promotes mold growth and low humidity promotes brittle photos.
  • Avoid storing photos in direct light - this will fade the images.
  • Avoid magnetic or glue photo albums - these will discolor and ultimately destroy your photos.

The best storage is an archival safe box - but what does “archival safe” mean when it comes to storing your photographs? Archival safe means the photo box, album, sleeve, etc is lignin-free, acid-free, PVC-free and has a neutral pH to prevent the degradation of your photos.

Photo boxes are a popular way to store family photographs, and they are available from many camera shops and other stores. Even when you are using archival safe photo boxes, however, there are ways to further safe guard your precious photographs.

  • Do not over fill the photo box. Stuffing “just one more” into the box risks scratching or tearing of your photo.
  • Do not under fill your photo box either. Under filling a box encourages bowing of the photographs.  Avoid this by using the correct size box or use a spacer to if needed.
  • Store similar sized photos together. This prevents excessive shifting that could scratch your photographs.
  • Use archival photo sleeves to further protect your oldest or damaged photographs. Sleeves come in a variety of sizes.  Place only one photo in a sleeve and use a sleeve that is slightly larger than the photograph.  You do not want the edges of your photo extending beyond the sleeve.
  • Over-sized photos?  Store in an appropriately sized flat box. Archival photo boxes come in a variety of sizes.
  • Remember when you are handling your photographs, make sure your work area is clean and dry and your hands are free of any lotions or oils.
Disaster plan.  Sometimes the unimaginable happens and a natural disaster destroys your precious heirlooms.  A little disaster planning can prevent the loss of all your precious photos.
  • Have copies made and store them off-site.  Distribute copies among other family members for safe keeping.
  • Digitize photographs and back them up in cloud storage and/or on flash drive.  Always have backups of anything precious.
  • This can apply to other physical items.  Take good photos of other precious items and heirlooms.  If Great Great Grandma's vase gets broken or her brooch is lost or stolen, at least you will have good photos of them.  
  • Remember to record the 'who/what/when/where/why' in as much detail as you can.  It is all very well if you know this bundle of photographs were taken during your parents honeymoon at Hall's Gap in 1968 - but do your children and grandchildren know?  Will those details be handed down to whoever inherits your photo collection?  One of my 'lockdown projects' in the last few years as been to create a contents list for each photo box I own, and to go through all my digital photos adding details to the photo title.
 

Friday, August 12, 2022

Searching Deeper into Ancestry

Ancestry has one of the largest databases of genealogical records available, but do you take full advantage of what the database has to offer?  Hidden amongst the bigger, shinier records like BMDs, Census and Convict records are many smaller record collections that are often overlooked.  These records often don't show up in the first few pages of results when we are researching, and so we often fail to locate them until we dive deeper, narrow our results, to go exploring areas like the card catalogue and somehow stumble across them.

For example, did you know that Ancestry includes Non-Conformist and Non-Parochial Registers 1567-1936?  The card catalogue contains the following description of these records :

About England & Wales, Non-Conformist and Non-Parochial Registers, 1567-1936
This collection is mainly comprised of birth, marriage, and death registers from non-conformist congregations and churches in England and Wales that were turned over to the Registrar General following the Non-Parochial Register Act of 1840 and a later request in 1857. It also includes non-parochial registers from the Church of England at St Petersburg, Chelsea and Greenwich Hospitals, and registers from burial grounds and non-denominational cemeteries. You will also find Presbyterian, Baptist, and Methodist birth certificates. Details found in the records will vary depending on the event and the time period.

After locating this set of records in the Ancestry Card Catalogue (the dataset includes some 5.7 million records), you can then search this set of records specifically.  By drilling down in this manner I have located a number of relevant records, and my family tree now included Methodists, Quakers and Baptists that I never knew about and had not found in my general searches. 

Similarly, I regularly browse the card catalogue to see what new record sets have been added and what smaller sets of records I have overlooked.  By drilling down in the card catalogue to look only at records for Victoria, Australia I have found several record sets I had not known were available.  These include the following :
Australia, Army Militia Service Records, 1901-1940

Australia, Royal Australian Air Force Personnel Files, 1921-1948
Victoria, Australia, Battle to Farm, 1919-1935
Victoria, Australia, Divorce Records, 1860-1940
Victoria, Australia, Coroner Inquest Deposition Files, 1840-1925
Victoria, Australia, Asylum Records, 1853-1940
Victoria, Australia, Wills and Probate Records, 1841-2009
Victoria, Australia, Cemetery Records and Headstone Transcriptions, 1844-1997

Each of these records sets, when searched individually, gave me new information about my family I had previously failed to find.  Several I had previously only located indexes - such as asylum and divorce records - so locating the full record files was particularly exciting.

So take a closer look at Ancestry, drill down through the records, and see what specific record sets are available - you never know what you might find!

Thursday, August 11, 2022

#52Ancestors - Week 32 - At the Library

It is always useful to know what your local (plus State and National) library has to offer you as a family history researcher.  So make sure you are a member of your local library and head on down to see just what they have to offer you.

My local library has a number of resources on offer.  Each library branch has a significant Local History collection available.  While many of these resources cannot be borrowed, they are available to use within the library building, and relevant pages can be photocopied.

They offer free access to Ancestry Library Edition, via the library's public computers or using you own device logged in to the free library wifi.  Ancestry Library Edition allows access to all the records available through a paid worldwide subscription.  The only major difference is it does not allow you to create and update your own online family tree, and it must be used onsite (you cannot access this database from home).

My local library also has access to free online magazines.  Amongst the hundreds of titles available are Who Do You Think You Are, Family Tree US, Family Tree UK, Traces, and a number of BBC History magazines.  All can be read online anywhere in the world by logging in with your library card number and PIN, and it is available free.

The library holds various Family History talks, and the class notes from all those talks are available on the library website.  There are also a number of useful links for Family History researchers and downloadable family record sheets.  There is also this blog.

Library staff are always available to assist with accessing these resources and help you get started using them.  And it is all free.

Sunday, August 7, 2022

#52Ancestors - Week 31 - Help

For many of our ancestors, there would have been times when they needed help.  For many who fell on hard times, help from family, friends and neighbors may have been a necessity.  For some help could be obtained from charities, guilds and other sources.  For many, the workhouse was the place of last resort when they were in need of help and unable to find it anywhere else.

The origins of parochial poor relief extend back at least as far as the fifteenth century.  With the decline of the monasteries, care for the poor gradually moved from its traditional voluntary framework to become a compulsory tax administered at the parish level.  Over several centuries the enactment of the Poor Laws saw the rise of the Workhouse, with few other sources of help available.

Stories about the Workhouse abound.  People ended up in the workhouse for a variety of reasons, usually because they were too poor, old or ill to support themselves. This may have resulted from a lack of work during periods of high unemployment, or someone having no family willing or able to provide care for them when they became elderly or sick. Unmarried pregnant women were often disowned by their families and the workhouse was the only place they could go during and after the birth of their child. Prior to the establishment of public mental asylums in the mid-nineteenth century (and in some cases even after that), the mentally ill and mentally handicapped poor were often consigned to the workhouse. Workhouses, though, were never prisons, and entry into them was generally a voluntary although often painful decision for those in need of help.

Admission into the workhouse first required an interview to establish the applicant's circumstances. This was most often undertaken by a Relieving Officer who would visit each part of the Workhouse union on a regular basis. Formal admission into the workhouse proper was authorised by the Board of Guardians at their weekly meetings, where an applicant could summoned to justify their application - an intimidating experience for those in need of help.

 

Thursday, August 4, 2022

#52Ancestors - Week 30 - Teams

The prompt of 'Teams' immediately turns my thoughts to sport, to ancestors who played as part of a sporting team, especially as I watch the Commonwealth Games on TV each evening. 

During precious leisure hours, our ancestors may have played - or been involved in - a variety sports, many involving teams.  Cricket, various forms of football and other team sports may have been played by our ancestors.  Some of the sports our ancestors played have survived almost unchanged, while others have evolved greatly over the years and others still are rarely if ever played today.

Finding the evidence of our ancestors involvement in sporting teams and be challenging.  Newspapers are a great source of information, with match reports, player profiles and statistics often included, especially in local newspapers.  Administration records and meeting minutes may still exist, and long-standing sporting teams which still exist today often have many old records, rolls, trophies and memorabilia on display or stored in archives.

Even if they were not themselves players on a team, our ancestors may still have been involved.  Were they part of the administration of a team or involved in umpiring, scoring, grounds-keeping or maintenance?  Or were they supporters, attending matches when they could, cheering on the players? 

Discovering information about any teams our ancestors belonged to or supported helps us to flesh out their lives, adding detail to their likes and dislikes, giving colour to our knowledge of their daily lives.

Tuesday, August 2, 2022

Who Do You Think You Are Magazine

The latest issue of Who Do You Think You Are magazine is now available free online for Campaspe Library members via our subscription to Libby eMagazines. 

Inside this month's issue 

  • Online parish registers Our essential regional guide to church records and where to find them
  • Royal Navy records How to use muster records to trace naval careers
  • Reader story: Sally George discovered a love story that beat the odds in an old collection of letters
  • Dance Halls: Caroline Roberts steps back into the past to explore where our ancestors went for a night out
  • Children's Homes Peter Higginbotham reveals the best places to look for records of children who were placed in care
  • Plus: The best websites for finding historic maps and how to use the Ogilby Muster to trace First World War soldiers


Monday, August 1, 2022

#52Ancestors - Week 29 - Fun Fact

Misspeld Knames are a commun probblem for reeserchors.

It constantly surprises me how often I hear fellow family history researchers say "That can't be MY ancestor - the spelling of the name is wrong."  It invariably launches me into a speech about how common spelling variations are and how much we need to be aware of them.  Fun Fact - there is not a single surname in my family tree - and not many first names either - that do not have multiple spelling variations.  That includes Green (Greene, Gren, Grene), Clark (Clarke, Clerk, Clerke) and Pike (Pyke, Peck, Pack).

In times when literacy levels were low, how a name sounded was far more important then how it was spelled.  Generally your ancestor was not the person who actually recorded their name.  You can bet that those who actually did the recording — the census takers, clerks, tax collectors, etcdidn’t stop to ask about spelling, or check they had heard a name correctly.

People also changed their names for a variety of reasons.  We need to consider Anglicization of names – especially non-British names.  First names as well as surnames often changed, especially around the time a person moved from one area to another.  Local dialects and foreign accents also often made a significant difference, especially if the person recording the name wasn't familiar with the accent or dialect.  How our ancestors were known by those around them may not match earlier records.

Many first names were truncated or written in short form.  William recorded as Wm, Patrick as Pat or Patk, James as Js and so on.  You also have common shortened names – William as Bill, James as Jimmy, Elizabeth as Eliza or Liz or Beth or Betty. 

When we are researching we need to consider how well the search engine of any database might cope with alternate spelling, truncation and so on.  Several searches may be necessary to ensure you don’t miss potential matches.

Another fun fact I have been caught by in my research.  In some areas, particularly around Germany, two names were often given to a child at birth or baptism.  The first name - what we often refer to as the given name - was a spiritual name, usually to honour a favourite saint, and it was often used repeatedly in families.  It was the second name – or middle name - by which the person was actually known.  That's how I ended up with 4 brothers - August Wilhelm, August Carl, August Friedrich and August Johanne.