I am really looking forward to the Unlock the Past 4th Genealogy Cruise which starts 4th February. I'll be reporting on the cruise in this blog and am really impressed by the program that has been put together. This is the first time I will have made it to one of these cruises but I certainly hope it will not be the last. The cruise is a southern Australian ports cruise out of Sydney visiting Melbourne, Adelaide
and Hobart with a varied program planned with leading Australian, New Zealand and
overseas presenters – around 60-70 topics in all, some as parallel
electives. To all those who are booked on the cruise, I look forward to meeting you and sharing our knowledge and enthusiasm for genealogy.
A blog to talk about genealogy and family history, ask questions, highlight useful sites and share tips.
Thursday, January 16, 2014
Monday, January 13, 2014
FamilySearch
FamilySearch has created a massive new collection of indexes for births,
marriages and deaths that cover England and Wales from 1837 to 1920. In total,
there are 65.6 million births listed, 35.1 million marriages, and 40.6 million
deaths. Note these are indexes and not complete records. These indexes will,
however, point you to the exact location of the record. Access is free. Either search the full FamilySearch site or access each index individually - UK Birth Index, UK Marriage Index and UK Death Index. Other new FamilySearch collections include the Catholic Church records from the district of Santarém, Portugal. The collection
now consists of some 650,000 images of baptism, marriage and death records
spanning the years from 1544 to 1911. The images can be searched by
municipality, parish, type of record and year. Another recent addition is approximately 100,000 civil marriages from Denmark that span the years from 1851
to 1961. These records can be searched by first and last name. The records cover
the small percentage of people who did not get married in the state church.
Friday, January 10, 2014
London's Pulse
The Wellcome Library has unveiled London's Pulse, a free website which allows you to search more than 5500 Medical Officer of Health (MOH) reports from
the Greater London area. The
era of the Medical Officer Health saw the emergence of new ways of thinking
about the connections between poverty, health and government. The
reports provided statistical data about births, deaths and diseases, but they
also allowed the authors to express the diversity of their local communities and
their own personal interests. Many
of the daily concerns and shifting preoccupations of Londoners can be seen
through the eyes of their Medical Officers of Health.
Wednesday, January 8, 2014
The Gazette
There is now easier access to the digitised editions of the London, Edinburgh and Belfast Gazettes as The Gazette launches its new website. Fully searchable, the site offers access to millions of articles dating back to the 17th century, ranging from Royal announcements to insolvency notices. A free resource, users can set up a personal account and save clippings, as well as share favourite finds through social media. Search and browse all notices including the Queen’s Honours and Awards,
Military, State, Transport and Planning notices, or choose a specific option to search Wills and Probate, Insolvency, or Awards and Accreditation. Wills allow you to search and browse Section 27 Trustee Act notices or read the guides and
checklists for managing probate yourself. Insolvency allows you to search and browse corporate insolvency and personal bankruptcy notices. In Awards and Accreditation you can search and browse military and civilian awards.
Tuesday, December 31, 2013
London Lives
London Lives makes available, in a fully digitised and
searchable form, a wide range of primary sources about eighteenth-century
London, with a particular focus on plebeian Londoners. This
resource includes over 240,000 manuscript and printed pages
from eight London archives and is supplemented by
fifteen datasets created by other projects. It provides access
to historical records containing over 3.35 million name
instances. Facilities are provided to allow users to link
together records relating to the same individual, and to compile
biographies of the best documented individuals. Every document display page includes a link to the relevant background page
which provides information about that document type. The site also features historical background notes and a user wiki.
Friday, December 27, 2013
Memoire Des Hommes
Mémoire des hommes intends to provide the public with digitised
documents and data from the archives and collections held by the Ministry of
Defence of France. France lost over 1.4 million men in WW1 and you can find a certificate for each man on the website. Searches are done by name and the scans of the documents show where a man was from and when and where he died. The Minister for Defence proposes that users of the site annotate the pages of
certain useful digitised documents for genealogy and searching in local history.
Tuesday, December 24, 2013
Photo London
PhotoLondon is a database of 19th Century Photographers and Allied Trades in London:
1841-1901. The site has compiled a
database of approximately 9,000 biographical entries on photographic companies
and the people who worked within the photographic industry in London during the
19th century.
Read about pioneering photographers such as Antoine Claudet, Camille Silvy and Oscar Rejlander and less well known figures such as Walston Caselton, and the sisters Marion, Jane and Anna Dixon.
Read about pioneering photographers such as Antoine Claudet, Camille Silvy and Oscar Rejlander and less well known figures such as Walston Caselton, and the sisters Marion, Jane and Anna Dixon.
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