Title
|
Category
|
Records
|
UK, Burial and Cremation Index, 1838-2014
|
Birth,
Marriage & Death, including Parish
|
1,610,623
|
Ireland, Royal Irish Constabulary Pensions, 1873-1925
|
Military
|
130,318
|
Canada, Certificates of Military Instruction, 1867-1932
|
Military
|
93,655
|
UK, Royal Air Force Muster Roll, 1918
|
Military
|
194,814
|
UK, British Jewry Roll of Honour, 1914-1918
|
Military
|
57,202
|
UK, Naval and Military Courts Martial Registers, 1806-1930
|
Military
|
838,431
|
Iowa, World War II Bonus Case Files for Beneficiaries, 1947-1959
|
Military
|
19,760
|
UK, British Army Lists, 1882-1962
|
Military
|
2,421,506
|
Orange Free State, South Africa, Estate Files, 1951-2006
|
Wills,
Probates, Land, Tax & Criminal
|
218,266
|
UK, Military Deserters, 1812-1927
|
Military
|
302,802
|
Hawaii, Passenger Lists, 1843-1898
|
Immigration
& Travel
|
165,630
|
Cape Province, South Africa, Estates Death Notice Index, 1834-1956
|
Birth,
Marriage & Death, including Parish
|
316,197
|
Western Australia, Australia, Land Leases, Licences, Applications and
Selected Images, 1821-1938
|
Wills,
Probates, Land, Tax & Criminal
|
313,805
|
South Africa, Select Estates Death Notice Index, 1833-2008
|
Birth,
Marriage & Death, including Parish
|
44,432
|
Transvaal Province, South Africa, Estates Death Notice Index,
1855-1976
|
Birth,
Marriage & Death, including Parish
|
449,990
|
South Africa, Slaves and Free Blacks Records Index, 1658-1835
|
Census
& Electoral Rolls
|
22,128
|
UK, British Army Recipients of the Military Medal, 1914-1920
|
Military
|
88,543
|
Dorset, England, Poor Law Apprenticeship Records, 1623-1898
|
Wills,
Probates, Land, Tax & Criminal
|
2,739
|
Bavaria, Germany, Lutheran Baptisms, Marriages, and Burials, 1556-1973
(in German)
|
Birth,
Marriage & Death, including Parish
|
3,625,488
|
UK & Ireland, Medical Directories, 1845-1942
|
Schools,
Directories & Church Histories
|
738,852
|
UK, The Midwives Roll, 1904-1959
|
Schools,
Directories & Church Histories
|
398,334
|
UK, Medical and Dental Students Registers, 1882-1937
|
Schools,
Directories & Church Histories
|
92,436
|
UK, Dentist Registers, 1879-1942
|
Schools,
Directories & Church Histories
|
124,647
|
UK, Roll of the Indian Medical Service, 1615 -1930
|
Schools,
Directories & Church Histories
|
8,443
|
A blog to talk about genealogy and family history, ask questions, highlight useful sites and share tips.
Friday, October 21, 2016
What's new on Ancestry?
Friday, October 14, 2016
Scotland's Places is now free to search
Big news for those with Scottish ancestors - the Government-supported website ScotlandsPlaces has removed the subscription fee from its digital collections, meaning users now have unlimited access to millions of historical documents including the following :
Historical Tax Rolls
- Carriage Tax, 1785-1798, (20 volumes)
- Cart Tax, 1785-1798, (14 volumes)
- Clock and Watch Tax, 1797-1798, (2 volumes)
- Consolidated Schedules of Assessed Taxes, 1798-1799 (32 volumes)
- Dog Tax, 1797-1798, (2 volumes)
- Farm Horse Tax, 1797-1798, (13 volumes)
- Female Servant Tax, 1785-1792, (28 volumes)
- Hearth Tax, 1691-1695, (43 volumes)
- Horse Tax, 1785-1798, (33 volumes)
- Inhabited House Tax, 1778-1798 (64 volumes)
- Land Tax, 1645-1831, (129 volumes)
- Male Servant Tax, 1777-1798, (27 volumes)
- Poll Tax, 1694-1698, (88 volumes)
- Shop Tax, 1785-1789, (8 volumes)
- Window Tax, 1748-1798, (218 volumes)
Ordnance Survey Name Books
- Aberdeenshire, 1865-1878, (91 volumes)
- Argyll, 1868-1878, (81 volumes)
- Ayrshire, 1855-1857, (64 volumes)
- Banffshire, 1867-1869, (28 volumes)
- Berwickshire, 1856-1858, (41 volumes)
- Buteshire, 1855-1864, (7 volumes)
- Caithness, 1871-1873, (15 volumes)
- Clackmannanshire, 1861-1862, (7 volumes)
- Dumfriesshire, 1848-1858, (55 volumes)
- Dunbartonshire, 1860, (18 volumes)
- East Lothian, 1853-1854, (55 volumes)
- Fife and Kinross-shire, 1853-1855, (135 volumes)
- Forfarshire (Angus), 1857-1861, (84 volumes)
- Inverness-shire, 1876-1878, (86 volumes)
- Kincardineshire, 1863, (20 volumes)
- Kircudbrightshire, 1848-1851, (159 volumes)
- Lanarkshire, 1858-1861, (50 volumes)
- Midlothian, 1852-1853, (135 volumes)
- Morayshire, 1868-1871, (23 volumes)
- Nairnshire, 1869, (7 volumes)
- Orkney, 1878-1880, (26 volumes)
- Peeblesshire, 1856-1858, (47 volumes)
- Perthshire, 1856-1858, (79 volumes)
- Renfrewshire, 1856-1857, (21 volumes)
- Ross and Cromarty, 1848-1852, (187 volumes)
- Roxburghshire, 1858-1860, (42 volumes)
- Selkirkshire, 1858, (15 volumes)
- Shetland, 1877-1878, (26 volumes)
- Stirlingshire, ca 1864, (27 volumes)
- Sutherland, 1871-1875, (35 volumes)
- West Lothian, 1855-1859, (69 volumes)
- Wigtownshire, 1845-1849, (88 volumes)
RCAHMS Archives
- Alexander Curle diaries, 1908-1953 (14 volumes)
- Inventories, 1909-1992 (30 volumes)
Burgh registers
- Aberdeenshire Burgh Registers, 1398-1511 (8 volumes)
Official Reports
- Medical Officer of Health Reports, 1891
- Land Ownership Commission Reports, 1872-1873
Published Gazetteers and Atlases
- Hay Shennan, County and Parish Boundaries, 1892
- An Atlas of Scottish History to 1707
Hydrographic Surveys
- Bathmetrical Surveys of Scottish Lochs, 1898-1909
Friday, October 7, 2016
PROV Website Test Available
The new PROV website is now available in test (beta) form: beta.prov.vic.gov.au. The new site has been developed to provide you with a
faster search and simpler navigation, making finding what you’re looking
for a lot easier.
It includes:
It includes:
- topic pages for our most popular collections
- common questions for new and experienced researchers
- a photographic page listing both our digitised and non-digitised collections
- a page featuring online exhibitions about Victorian state history.
Friday, September 23, 2016
Find Your Ancestor by Researching Other People
It may seem
like a waste of our valuable research time to research people who we don’t even
know are related, but it can be time well spent.
Look at the
people mentioned in wills – who were the executors and administrators of the
estate? Who witnessed the will? Who
were the guardians of any minors? Remember guardians were not
necessarily appointed to take care of the children personally – their role was
to protect their legal interests. All these important roles were generally not
given to strangers. Who were the beneficiaries? Wills do not just list surviving children,
they often also give the married names of adult daughters. How does each person
fit in?
Look at
godparents at a christening or baptism, not just for your direct ancestors, but
for all their siblings as well. Each
child may have different godparents – again, it is not a role given to
strangers. Who are they, and why were
they chosen for the role?
Unless your
couple eloped, look at the witnesses to a marriage. Remember to look at both the civil and church
marriage records if applicable, and if a person married more than once, check
both marriages. The same applies for
informants on a death certificate, neighbours in a census or electoral
roll.
In shipping
records, look at where others on the same ship came from. Look at others already settled in the place
your family settled. Sometimes people
from the same area migrated in a group, or followed others who had already made
the journey.
Revisit your
documents now and then. With new
information discovered since you obtained each document, new names connect to
your family in new ways. You never know
what brick walls you might break through by researching someone who, at first
glance, does not appear to be connected to your family at all.
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