It has been announced that home access to Ancestry Library Edition
will continue
until 31 December 2021. Ancestry made the decision back in
April 2020 to allow this database, normally only accessed in the library
buildings using our public PCs or wi-fi, to be accessed from home while
the CoronaVirus pandemic impacted library access for many. So Campaspe
Library
members can continue to access this
fantastic genealogical resource from home.
A blog to talk about genealogy and family history, ask questions, highlight useful sites and share tips.
Friday, July 9, 2021
Ancestry Library Edition Home Access
Tuesday, July 6, 2021
Ancestry Time
Don't forget to tune in to Ancestry Time tonight,starting at 7.00pm AEST. While the theme is 'Family History Advice for Beginners', there is always more to learn and who knows what little nuggets of gold may come up? There is always something to learn and so many friendly and helpful genealogists out there who are willing to offer others a bit of advice.
Monday, July 5, 2021
The Hidden Branch
The Hidden Branch is a new generation of Genealogists who are growing up during the digital age. They have just launched their website https://thehiddenbranch.com/ and are active on social media.
On their website they state : "We advocate for Gen Z researchers (born from 1995 to 2010) in the field of genealogy. We publish articles, podcasts, and videos on research skills, topics, and more in order to give a bigger voice to the Gen Z genealogists in the field, as well as help others further their education in genealogy."
For younger genealogists this is a wonderful resource that can put them in contact with people their own age who have also developed an interest in their family history young - something I wish had been around when I started my own research at 16 and was constantly met with astonishment that I was interested in such a topic.
I will be watching this group with interest and wish them success in sharing their interest with other Gen Zs.
Monday, June 28, 2021
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
- Parish registers online
Discover your ancestors’ baptisms, marriages and burials with our updated region-by-region guide to UK parish registers - Canadian war brides
John D Reid uncovers the stories of the British women who travelled to Canada after the Second World War - Boxing and wrestling
Sarah Elizabeth Cox grapples with the legendary fighters of Victorian London - Reader story
Kyle Ring on tracing his family tree from Trinidad to the Domesday Book - Best websites
Discover ancestors who worked as fishermen and whalers - Plus…
Finding your ancestors’ hospital records, the lives of felt hatters, how to use WikiTree and much more…
Around Britain
- Dumfries and Galloway
Our guide to family history from south-west Scotland
Wednesday, June 23, 2021
Scottish Indexes Conference
The conference is hosted by genealogists Graham and Emma Maxwell. In order to make their conferences time-zone friendly they start at 7 am UK time and keep going until 11 pm UK time.. Each presentation is shown twice, once between 7 am and 3 pm, then again between 3 pm and 11 pm. You can come and go throughout the day. This years' conference includes:
- ‘Merchant and Trades House Records’ by Dr. Irene O’Brien
- ‘Tracing Scottish Women’ by Kirsty Wilkinson
- ‘Tracing Scottish Ancestors Before 1855’ by Alison Spring
- ‘Overcoming Brickwalls: Case Studies’ by Emma Maxwell
The event also includes a Q&A session where attendees can pose questions to the panel of experts.
Registration is free on Zoom and Facebook. Follow the directions at Scottish Indexes.
Monday, June 21, 2021
Unlike Your Ancestors
1. Make all of your own clothes
Although craft and fabric stores still offer a wide variety of cloth, patterns, and thread for the purpose of creating clothing, and homemade is making a bit of a resurgence, for most people sewing is just a hobby to supplement a store-bought wardrobe. In the past, though, every garment had to be hand-sewn, at least until the sewing machine and some mass-produced clothing was introduced in the mid-1800s. In fact, many families would have sewn all of their own clothes well into the 20th century. Of course, those with money often employed others to do the work for them – but the task of ordering fabrics, choosing designs and undertaking measurements would have still been much more time-consuming.
2. Travel by ocean liner, steamboat, or horse-and-buggy
If you get frustrated with the length of your daily commute, imagine how your great-great grandmother felt when it came time to travel from her farm into town in a horse-drawn wagon or by foot, or spend days or weeks on dangerous roads and boats to visit family, or move to a new place. Before the spread of airliners in the 1950s the only way across the ocean was spending weeks on a ship, and travel was costly as well as time consuming.
3. Correspond with those you love entirely by mail
Years ago the only way to connect with loved ones was through a hand written letter that could easily take weeks - or months if travelling overseas - to arrive at its destination. That was the reality for your ancestors.
4. Read about your postal tardiness in the newspaper
Home mail delivery has had a relatively short life. Years ago, mail was sent from post office to post office, and only delivered elsewhere for an extra fee. That’s why you’ll sometimes see notices in 1800s-era newspapers warning a list of local folks to pick up their mail soon or risk it being sent to a “dead letters” department.
5. Sit for a formal portrait
Genealogists cherish the brittle old tintypes and cabinet cards of our ancestors, with their rigidly posed and unsmiling subjects. It won’t be long, though, before our descendants equally cherish our own (often-awkward) family portraits, because sitting for a formal family photo has largely become a thing of the past. Why herd the entire crew to a stuffy studio when you can just use a selfie stick to capture a digital image? Unless you’re printing and framing (or at least digitally preserving) these treasures for future generations, the classic family portrait may cease to exist.
6. Wear a corset
Remember that scene in Gone With the Wind when Scarlett holds on for dear life to her bedpost as Mammy forcefully tugs the strings of her corset until Scarlett achieves her famous 17-inch waist? Corsets were a common component of women’s fashion for more than 500 years–until the early 1900s, when medical professionals finally put an end to the painful practice by announcing the health risks of shifting internal organs and restricting breathing.
7. Use an Icebox
Before we had the fridge ice was harvested from colder areas and shipped for storage in specially constructed ice houses. Homeowners could pick up or request delivery of ice blocks to their homes, where the blocks were kept in wooden or metal boxes lined with straw or sawdust. In fact, ice boxes were common into the 1930s and beyond. It was the only way to keep food cold and prevent it spoiling.
8. Let blood
Bloodletting (thankfully) went out of fashion in the 1800s, but prior to that, a bad headache or practically any other ailment may have led to your physician cutting into a vein and letting a few pints of blood drain out to cure your ills. Today’s researchers believe that excessive bloodletting led to the deaths of King Charles II in 1685 and U.S. President George Washington in 1799.
9. Die from TB, smallpox, measles, yellow fever or cholera
Thanks to improved sanitation and health care many diseases that shortened the life spans of our ancestors have been eradicated. Today the average worldwide life expectancy stands at a robust 72 years, compared to the 30- to 40-year expectation of our 18th and 19th century predecessors.
10. Wait days or weeks to hear the latest news
These days, instant notifications and “breaking news” banners on our various screens alert us to what’s happening in the next town or across the globe within minutes. But before radios and televisions, news traveled through word-of-mouth, mail, and newspapers–at a significant delay for those in rural communities. Imagine not knowing about the death of a family member, the election of a president, or a declaration of war for weeks.
11. Use an outhouse at home
Portable public toilets may come close, but they’re not constructed of splintery wood, filled with spiders and situated in our backyards. And while we often associate outhouses with fun camping trips and iconic homesteads, the reality of sewage disposal before modern plumbing was anything but pleasant. Chamber pots are also thankfully no longer a necessity.
12. Manage a funeral and burial
As if the grief of losing a loved one wasn’t enough, our ancestors were once tasked with preparing bodies for viewing (usually in a home’s living area or parlour) and digging and closing the grave in the family or town cemetery.
13. Employ child labor
As children, our ancestors were often awoken at daybreak to work on the family farm, help with daily chores, and perhaps even report for duty at a factory or a mine. Many families relied on the extra income a child might be able to earn or the extra labor they could provide to a cottage industry or farm. Older children might also be expected to stay at home to look after younger siblings while their mother went out to work.
14. Have dental work without pain relief
Imagine having a tooth extracted with no pain relief. Modern dental care was unknown to our ancestors, and the only remedy for badly decayed teeth was extraction, often with little provision for numbing the pain.
15. Travel away from family and friends forever
While many of us today will travel far from home to make a new life, we have the ability, in most cases, of visiting home and family again quite easily. But for many of our ancestors, a big move meant saying goodbye to family forever. It was a steep price to pay for a chance at a better future, but many did it.
Friday, June 18, 2021
In the Census
How accurate are the census records? I'm sure this question has arisen for every genealogist at some point in their research. We quickly learn that census records cannot be considered the absolute and final authority.
Why does someone's age change every census by less (or more!) than the 10 years between censuses? Why is a surname being spelled differently on three different censuses? Why does an ancestor have a different first name in the 1861 census (is it even the right person?)? And why does the census give a different place of birth for great grandma each time?Consider first what question was actually asked by the census taker. For example with ages - did he ask about how old the person was, or how old they were on their last birthday or..... Were the ages of all the adults in an area rounded up (or down) to the closest multiple of five (yes, it happened)?
People lied about their ages, or sometimes simply got it wrong. My grandmother always insisted she was born on 30 June 1906. According to her birth registration, however, she was born on 30 June 1905.
Remember spelling was not exact back in the 1800s and earlier. A census taker wrote what he heard, and whether or not he was a good speller or was familiar with the surname dictated what we see recorded on the census page. You get what I will grumpily refer to as 'some semi-literate clerk's best guess". Keep in mind that it was not your ancestor who filled in the census themselves.
Different first names? Children were usually given at least two names at birth and an individual might choose to be known by their middle name, or perhaps a nickname. My ancestor Elizabeth Green (nee May) was always known as Betsy - and that is the name recorded in several censuses.
The next question we need to ask ourselves is - who provided the answers on that census? Was it a parent? Mothers may have had a better idea of their children's birth years and ages than the father. Was it an older child (perhaps the parents were not home), a grandparent or even a neighbour giving the information? Tracing a family through several censuses may have seen a different respondent each time. All these factors will affect the quality of the census information.
As with many other genealogical records, the census records can contain inaccurate information, mistakes and even outright lies