Tuesday, September 14, 2021

Who Do You Think You Are UK Series 18

 The 2021 series of Who Do You Think You Are? has been announced – with Series 18 due to start broadcasting on BBC One in October.

Executive producer Colette Flight said: “Who Do You Think You Are? is back with another line-up of Britain’s best-loved celebrities exploring their family histories across the UK, Ireland, Denmark and Jamaica.

“The incredible personal stories they unearth of their ancestors’ lives – from royal love triangles to labourers fighting for their rights, from Victorian child sweeps to battling fascists in London’s East end – reflect and illuminate all our collective history.”

The complete celebrity line-up for Who Do You Think You Are? 2021 includes :

Josh Widdicombe

Comedian Josh Widdicombe is best known for co-hosting Channel 4’s The Last Leg. He won the first series of Taskmaster in 2015.

Dame Judi Dench

Dame Judi Dench is one of Britain’s best-loved actresses, with eight decades of acting on stage and screen and accolades including one Oscar win and six nominations.

Alex Scott

Alex Scott is a former professional footballer who played for the England women’s national football team. She is now a football pundit for BBC Sport and Sky Sports.

Joe Lycett

Joe Lycett is a comedian and TV presenter. He’s best known for standing up for consumer rights on Channel 4 show Joe Lycett’s Got Your Back.

Pixie Lott

Singer-songwriter Pixie Lott has released three albums, spawning six Top 10 singles. She was also a contestant on the 2014 series of Strictly Come Dancing.

Joe Sugg
Joe Sugg is the YouTuber behind the hit channel ThatcherJoe, and was also a finalist on the 2018 series of Strictly Come Dancing.

Ed Ball

Ed Balls served as a Labour MP from 2005 to 2015 and as shadow chancellor from 2011 to 2015.

Sunday, September 12, 2021

Memories of September 11

I find it hard to believe that we have just passed the 20th anniversary of the September 11 attacks in the United States.  How can it be 20 years since that dreadful day?

I doubt anyone will ever forget the events of that morning, where they were and what they were doing when they heard the news:

• At 8:46 a.m., AA 11 slammed into the North Tower of the World Trade Center.
• At 9:03 a.m., UA175 slammed into the South Tower.
• At 9:37 a.m., AA77 crashed into the Pentagon’s west side.
• At 9:59 a.m., the South Tower imploded and fell, raining debris and ash on the city.
• At 10:03 a.m., UA93 crashed into a field in the Pennsylvania countryside.
• And at 10:29 a.m., the North Tower collapsed from the top down. A cloud of ash turned day to night in the narrow streets of lower Manhattan.

In those terrible moments between 8:46 a.m. and 10:29 a.m., nearly 3,000 men, women and children lost their lives.  The youngest was two. The oldest was 85. 

Where I live in Australia, the clock is 14 hours ahead of New York.  So at the time of the first attack, it was 10:46pm my time.  I was already asleep.  Like much of the rest of Australia, I woke up to the news of the attacks on the morning of September 12. 

My family heard the news on the radio at 7:00am - there had been a terrorist attack in the US and the World Trade Centre in New York had been hit by a hijacked plane.  We rushed to turn on our TV.  As the picture came on, the first thing we saw was a replay of the second plane hitting the south tower.  For several minutes we weren't sure if this was live, or had happened several hours ago.

I was late for work that day.

In the library where I work, we dug out an old TV from our storeroom and set it up out in the public area of the building, keeping the news on all day.  People spoke in more hushed voices than usual.  Everyone was shocked.

While cleaning out the family home after my parents passed away, I found an thick notepad filled with writing.  It belonged to my mother, and in it she had recorded the entire first Gulf War, starting with the September 11 attacks.  It is her record of those events and another important document in my family history.  

It reminds me that we are all living through history, and how important it is to record the major events we have lived through, and pass our memories on to those who come after.  Because come events should always be remembered.

Wednesday, August 25, 2021

New Record Set on FamilySearch

For those of you with Irish ancestors, you may be interested in a new collection of  prison records for Ireland from the 18th to 20th centuries which has been added to the FamilySearch website.
The new collection, which comprises 3,127,924 records, is a compilation of prison records from collections held in the National Archives of Ireland. It includes most surviving prison records from the 26 counties of the Republic of Ireland. 
The records can contain the following information about individuals:
  • Name
  • Age
  • Birthplace
  • Name of prison
  • Dates of admission and release
  • Physical description
  • Next of kin
  • Details of crime and name of victim
Remember FamilySearch is a free resource for family history researchers.  To access you need to register with the website, then you have access to all their wonderful records.  To take a look and see what you can find.

Thursday, August 19, 2021

Ancestry Terms Update

Recently, Ancestry announced changes to its terms and conditions for users, and they are changes every user needs to take in and consider.  As of this change, effective 3 August 2021, any content uploaded to Ancestry by its subscribers, Ancestry can use as it sees fit, forever.

Part of Ancestry's terms and conditions no read as follows :

"By submitting User Provided Content through any of the Services, you grant Ancestry a perpetual, sublicensable, worldwide, non-revocable, royalty-free license to host, store, copy, publish, distribute, provide access to, create derivative works of, and otherwise use such User Provided Content to the extent and in the form or context we deem appropriate on or through any media or medium and with any technology or devices now known or hereafter developed or discovered. This includes the right for Ancestry to copy, display, and index your User Provided Content. Ancestry will own the indexes it creates."  (“Ownership of Your Content” in “Ancestry Terms and Conditions,” effective 3 Aug 2021, Ancestry.com)

What this means it that any content you upload into Ancestry - photos, documents, stories, etc - in essence now belong to Ancestry, forever.  They can use that content in any way they see fit, and there is no way for you to permanently remove it from their database.

Over the years that I have been a subscriber to Ancestry I have posted a number of photographs and other documents into my family tree.  I have always understood that others could copy those documents, download them, save them to their own family trees, and that even if I deleted that content from my own tree it could remain linked to other trees eternally.  I have always understood that by uploading that content, in some ways I would lose control of it forever.  According to these new terms, however, I lose even more control of any uploaded content to Ancestry itself.  I'm not sure how comfortable I feel about that.

For more information, read the truly excellent blog posts by Judy Russell, the Legal Genealogist 'One Big Change at Ancestry' about these new changes, and also her follow-up post 'Ancestry Retreats' about the subsequent addition to the new terms.

 

Tuesday, August 17, 2021

WDYTYA 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

  • Sporting ancestors Uncover the sporting achievements of your family, from enthusiastic amateurs to Olympians

  • Photo books How to bring your family photos together in a professional printed book

  • The packet service The sailors who delivered the post to the furthest reaches of the British Empire

  • Reader story Anne Padfield's relative was an unsung heroine of the suffragette movement

  • Best websites The best genealogy forums

  • Plus: Uncover Canadian censuses, finding theatrical ancestors, using trade directories and much more…

Thursday, August 12, 2021

British Court Records

During the course of our research there would be very few of us who have not found at least a couple of ancestors who ran afoul of the law and found themselves before the courts.   Many laws in England (and elsewhere) were set by the rich and landed in order to control and suppress the poor, to keep the rights and protect property of the wealthy and powerful.  By the 1800s over 200 crimes were punishable by death, usually by gallows.  Hanging crimes included things like murder, treason and piracy, but also crimes such as robbing a rabbit warren, cutting down trees, associating with gypsies and a number of other more petty crimes.

There was little understanding of, or sympathy for, the desperate social conditions which all but forced many of the poor to resort to crime in order to survive.  Criminality was seem as the result of bad blood or bad character, and punishment was set harshly as a deterrent to others.

The English justice system divided crimes into categories to be dealt with by a three-tiered criminal justice system. 

The Court of Petty Sessions 

This court was established around the 1730s because the more historic Quarter Sessions Courts were getting too busy and were meeting too infrequently.  They tried minor offences or misdemeanours such as minor theft and larceny, poaching, assault, drunkenness, vagrancy, bastardy examinations, and civil actions such as arbitration.
Courts of Petty Sessions were held when needed before a stipendiary magistrate or two or more justices of the peace who could summarily decide a case without needing to empanel a jury. Thus the cases themselves were known as summary offences.
Punishments meted out by these courts did not include death or transportation.

The Court of Quarter Sessions
These courts were called Quarter Sessions because they were held each quarter: around Epiphany (6 January - winter session); Lent/Easter (spring session); Midsummer (24 June – summer session); Michaelmas (29 September – autumn session).
They were held in each county before a 'bench' that consisted of at least two Justices of the Peace who were presided over by a chairman who sat with the empanelled jury.
Quarter Sessions Courts heard the more serious offences which required a jury and could not be disposed of 'summarily' by a magistrate. Offences that were punishable by death were usually sent to the higher Assize Courts.  The Prosecutor at the Quarter Sessions was often the victim of the crime, and if the victim didn’t have the time or money to pursue the case the perpetrator frequently got off.
The distinction between the Assize courts and the Quarter Session courts were blurry until 1842 when an Act consigned all death penalty and life imprisonment cases to the Assize Courts. 

The Court of Assizes
The Assize Courts tried more serious offences: felonies such as homicide, infanticide, serious theft, highway robbery, rape, forgery, counterfeiting, witchcraft.  Judges from the High Court travelled to the Assize Circuit Courts two or three times a year to hear the cases.
The Old Bailey, renamed the Central Criminal Court in 1834, was the trial court for most London crimes and was similar to an Assize Court.

Legislation and the Death Penalty

1823 - the Judgement of Death Act allowed judges to commute the death penalty except for the crimes of murder and treason.
1832 - the Punishment of Death Act eliminated execution as the punishment for two-thirds of what were once capital crimes including theft, forgery and counterfeiting.
1861 - the Criminal Law Consolidation Acts eliminated the death penalty for all crimes but murder, high treason, piracy with violence, and arson in the Royal Dockyards, although effectively “murder” became the only capital crime.
1868 saw the last public execution, as distaste for this 'spectator sport' grew.
1964 saw the last execution in England.

Monday, August 9, 2021

Family History in Lockdown

Well here we are again, back in lockdown.  As a Victorian, this is my sixth, and it is time to get back into organising my family history files, checking that all my research is properly recorded and filed.  The time definitely goes faster when I have a project to immerse myself in.

I expect we are all guilty of occasionally letting filing and updating get a little behind, and I have certainly got some catching up to do.  My printed family sheets, that I use when researching, are covered in scribbled notes and references to new documents I have found.  My 'new' folder of documents that I need to check are properly referenced on my family group sheets and filed in their appropriate folders is starting to bulge.  My backup files could do with updating too.  I really have a fair bit of work to do.

There has been a number of special opportunities made available to Family Historians around the world during lockdowns.  Ancestry has allowed many libraries subscribing to Ancestry Library Edition, normally only accessed on site, to be accessed from home by members.  For Campaspe Library members, go to the library homepage and click on Genealogy in the page menu, then click on Databases.  There you will find the link for Ancestry Library Edition from Home.  Follow the prompts to type in your library card number and PIN, and enjoy free access to the worldwide database from home.

Another great resource to access right now are the digital records available through the National Archives UK.  While their Reading Room access is limited due to restrictions, they have been offering all their digital records you would normally pay to obtain for free.  Registered users are able to order and download up to 10 items at a time, to a maximum of 100 items every 30 days.  And yes, registration is free as well.

If that isn't enough to keep me occupied, I still have several videos to watch from the truly excellent 'Family History Down Under' conference held earlier this year.  So many knowledgeable speakers, so much learning to do.  Then there are the many events listed for Family History Month Australasia 2021, which is held throughout August.  While I expect a number of events will be cancelled or postponed because of the current situation around the country, many were already planned to be held online and hopefully will still go ahead.

So to everyone out there who is locked down at home right now, take some time to revisit your family history, make sure all your research is up to date and backed up, and take advantage of the various free learning and researching opportunities out there.  I've only touched on a few.  There are more out there - so go find them!