Wednesday, April 27, 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 

  • Regional variations in what we call our grandparents
  • Rootstech round-up
  • Distilling and brewing magazine is a ‘treasure trove’ of historic adverts
  • Quaker Women’s Petition 1659 added to FindMyPast
  • 5.8M records from JewishGen published at MyHeritage
  • Get more from the 1939 Register
  • Large-scale redevelopment planned for British Library site at Boston Spa
  • 43,000 historical Scottish prison records released by Scottish Indexes
  • Scottish house history
  • Ten steps to finding John Armstrong
  • Another brick in you wall?
  • Postcards from the Front
  • And more 

 

Monday, April 25, 2022

ANZAC Day

It is April 25th again, and once more I find myself reflecting on the meaning of ANZAC Day.  While I stand and say the Ode today, I will be remembering not only my father and several uncles who served in WWII, and those of my family who went before them, but all of those men and women who have served, as well as those who serve today.  I will remember especially those who did not come home and all of those who came home forever changed, as well as those who did not see fighting, but served in different ways both at home and abroad.

ANZAC has very much become a part of our national vocabulary.  The people who lived though that campaign were ordinary volunteers, just as Australia’s current veterans were ordinary volunteers.  They put their daily lives on hold to serve and protect us all, most with very little clear idea of just what they were volunteering for.

There are many resources available for those researching their family military history.  The Australian War Memorial has several databases available, including the Roll of Honour, Commemorative Roll, WW1 Embarkation Rolls and Nominal Roll, the Australian Red Cross Wounded and Missing Files, WW2 POWs and Missing Persons, and more.  The National Archives of Australia have the military records of many Australian military personnel from World War 1 and earlier digitised online, and researchers can order copies of many World War 2 dossiers as well.  The Commonwealth War Graves site commemorates the men and women of the Commonwealth forces who died in the First and Second World Wars, ensuring they will never be forgotten.  There are many other websites and resources available as well.

Around the world many towns and suburbs have plaques, cenotaphs and memorials commemorating local men and women who have served and paid the ultimate sacrifice for their country.  How often do we stop as we walk past them in our daily lives and spare a moment to remember these people?

I am forever grateful to all of you who have served and sacrificed on our behalf. It is a solemn undertaking to be ready to put your life on the line for your Country. One that is deserving of our gratitude.
Lest we forget.

Sunday, April 24, 2022

National Archives of Australia Digitisation

The National Archives of Australia has over 1 million records documenting the service of Australian men and women during World War II. These include service records for the Army, the Royal Australian Air Force and the Royal Australian Navy.

Over the past 15 years the NAA has digitised more than 200,000 WWII records and made them available to view online through RecordSearch, and in 2019 the Australian Government announced funding of $10 million to help digitise the remaining 850,000 records.

This project was planned to take place over 4 years, with work starting in July 2019.  Since is commenced the NAA has digitised 200,000 additional records, with over 3 million pages made available online.

Large-scale digitisation of the remaining WWII service records began in October 2020.

Army records

Records are being digitised by place of enlistment.

  • Citizen Military Forces personnel service records (Series B884) – digitisation began in October 2020
  • Second Australian Imperial Force personnel dossiers (Series B883) – digitisation due to begin mid-2022

Air Force records

Records are being digitised alphabetically by surname (Series A9300) and by service number (Series A9301).

  • Royal Australian Air Force Non-Commissioned Officers and other ranks personnel files (Series A9301) – digitisation began in July 2019
  • Royal Australian Air Force Officers personnel files (Series A9300) – digitisation began July 2021

Batches of records in these series will be temporarily unavailable to the public while they are being digitised. As records are digitised, the digital copies will be added to RecordSearch and made available free of charge.

The table below provides specific updates on the progress of records being digitised. The NAA updates this table regularly as work progresses.

Series    Batch    Progress
B884    Northern Territory
    Tasmania
    Western Australia
    Completed
B884    South Australia
    Queensland
    New South Wales
    Victoria
    In progress
B884    Papua New Guinea    Early 2022
A9300    AARONS to PEAD    In progress
A9300    ABBOTT to ZUCKER    In progress
A9301    Service number 1183 to 1495
    Service number 14448 to 21142
    Completed
A9301    Service number 21889 to 37057
    Service number 21090 to 27054
    Service number 60141 to 90337
    In progress
B883    All states    Mid-2022

So take a look at the National Archives of Australia and see if there is new information available for you about your WW2 Australian ancestors.

Friday, April 22, 2022

#52Ancestors - Week 16 - Negatives

Our theme for Week 16 is Negatives, and I'm going to take a slightly different interpretation of this topic than I originally intended.

Many of us have a collection of old photograph negatives stored away somewhere.  Sometimes they are paired with printed photographs, sometimes the photos have been given away or lost and it is just the negatives left.  Others have been made into slides, for which you may no longer have any kind of viewer available.

While cleaning out the family home after my parents passed away, I found such a treasure.  A shoebox full of old photographs and negatives, and another box full of photographic slides.  What I did not find, however, was any means of viewing the negatives or the slides.  I did have vague memories of seeing the slides projected on a wall using a slide projector as a child, but certainly no such device remained in the old house.

The boxes travelled around with me for a few years, glanced at every now and again. Then, just before Christmas, I discovered an intriguing little device that plugged into my computer that could convert slides or negatives into digital photos!  I ordered it immediately and waited impatiently for it to arrive.

And it has been marvellous!  For the past few months, I have been eagerly converting hundreds of those old negatives into digital photos, many of which I have absolutely no memory of seeing.  Some I can identify, others are a mystery, but I have happily worked my way through those old boxes.  In the process, I have unearthed many treasures.

One container of about 50 slides were from my parents' wedding.  Another was baby photos of my sister and I, a third photos of the sheep station where we were born.  One container was filled with images of the prize winning Merino sheep my father bred.  Treasures indeed.

So have a look around for any old negatives sorted away, and investigate getting them printed or converted into digital images, either by using a similar device or visiting your local camera shop for help.

Wednesday, April 20, 2022

Look History in the Eye Podcasts

The new podcast series Look History in the Eye, produced by the Public Record Office of Victoria, continues this week with Episode 5 - Pentridge Prison Escape : How Hard was it to Break Out of Pentridge?

The episode focuses on the 1955 escape of five prisoners and the Board of Inquiry appointed by Governor in Council Charles McLean.  The Board conducted hearings in Melbourne on successive days from 1st to 7th September, and visited Pentridge on two occasions. Twenty-nine witnesses gave evidence.  This report was then presented to both Houses of Parliament.

The Look History in the Eye series now includes :

  1. The silent prison : Pentridge and the Panopticon
  2. Monuments for the masses : the 1978 Melbourne Landmark Competition
  3. The called her Madame B : uncovering Melbourne's infamous madame
  4. From Deadtown to Musictown : when Melbourne got cool 
  5. Pentridge Prison escape : how hard was it to break out of Pentridge? 

So visit the Public Records Office of Victoria today and discover the back story to some iconic Melbourne and Victorian people and places, and download the archival record which inspired each episode.

Saturday, April 16, 2022

Ancestry DNA Update

Ancestry has again updated the ethnicity estimates for those who have done DNA tests with them, as well as adding a new feature showing Ethnicity Inheritance - an estimate of which parent testers have inherited each portion of their ethnicity from.

Once again my Ethnicity Estimates have changed slightly, and once again they have moved a little further from what I expected.  My estimate is now 45% England, 32% Scotland, 14% Norway, 3% Wales, 2% Ivory Coast & Ghana, 2% Sweden & Denmark and 2% Ireland.  This is different to my last estimate, which was 54% England, 33% Scotland, 9% Norway, 2% Ivory Coast and Ghana and 2% Ireland.  My original estimate, back in 2018, was 65% England, 22% Scotland & Ireland, 8% Germanic Europe, 2% Sweden,  2% Ivory Coast & Ghana.

My known German heritage has still vanished, turning into unexpected Scandinavian ethnicity.  My Scottish ethnicity is unexpectedly high, and my Irish extremely low.  I still have no explanation for the fairly consistent 2% Ivory Coast & Ghana, and every update seems to diminish my dominant English heritage even further.

My Ethnicity Inheritance makes it immediately obvious to me that Parent 1 must be my mother and Parent 2 my father.  Parent 2 is almost completely English, and my father's family comes almost exclusively from Essex and Suffolk.There is a small amount of Scandinavian heritage there as well.

My mother would logically be Parent 1.  It is from her grandparents and great grandparents that I trace my German, Irish and Scottish ancestors, although I have no explanation as to why I have inherited absolutely no English ethnicity from her.


The new tables for Ethnicity Inheritance are another great tool for tracing how we receive the Ethnicity Estimates provided by Ancestry and where any unexpected results may come from.

While the numbers raise some questions for me, they are still a fascinating insight into my heritage and another tool to help my further understand where I come from, and I hope to spend some time over Easter exploring more.

Although I would still love to know how my German ancestry became Norwegian.

And if anyone out there can give me an ancestor from the Ivory Coast / Ghana, I would love to hear from you!


Wednesday, April 13, 2022

#52Ancestors - Week 15 - How Do You Spell That?

Spelling.  The bugbear of all genealogists.  The lack of consistency in spelling by our ancestors (and by those many clerks, enumerators, priests and officials who actually wrote their names down) is something that causes researchers endless frustration.

Misspeld knames are a commun probblem for reeserchors.  In times when literacy levels were low, how a name sounded was often more important than how it was spelled, and many officials who created records simply wrote names down as they heard them.  Generally your ancestor was not the person who actually recorded their name, and they had little opportunity to correct a misspelled or misheard name.  This means that spelling variations and incorrectly recorded names abound in records.  No one stopped to ask 'how do you spell that?'

It is something we hear time and time again as researchers - always consider possible alternate spelling of any name.  Consider Anglicization of names – especially non-British names.  First names as well as surnames often changed. Local dialects and foreign accents often made a significant difference, and 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. 

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.  In my family database I have exactly no surnames that are spelled the same way - including Green (Greene, Greyne), Hart (Harte, Heart, Hearte) and Pike (Pyke, Peak, Peake).

So when you are researching, always stop and ask - How do you spell that?  And more importantly - how did THEY spell that?