When was the last time you looked at the Ancestry card
catalogue? If your answer is "Never" then you may be missing
out on a great way to narrow down you searches on the website, and discovering
specific sets of records that you may otherwise be missing.
To
get to the card catalogue, log
into Ancestry (or Ancestry Library Edition at your local public library or research centre if you don't have a
subscription) and click on the Search tab at the top of the page, then
select the "Card Catalogue".
The Card Catalogue is a searchable
list of all the record collections available. Because of the way their
databases are titled you can use the title search box to narrow all the
resources for a specific place, such as "Victoria, Australia". You can
then browse through the various data sets, click on one which interests
you, and conduct a specific search of those records for anything
relevant to your family.
Using this method, I discovered that Ancestry holds the Victorian Divorce Records 1860-1940.
I
immediately did a search of this specific record set for James Clark
and came up with a listing for his divorce, complete with a link to the
original documents.
Viewing
the record was the bonanza - some 55 pages of statements and court
proceedings and other documents. Full details of the circumstances of
the marriage and its breakdown, dates and addresses, and the final
Decree Nisi that dissolved the marriage.
These documents fill in the detail of the marriage breakdown and subsequent divorce and are a wonderful find!
While you are looking at particular datasets on Ancestry,
it's a
good idea to read the "about" section for more detail. To do this scroll past
the
search box and you'll see information about where the data came from and
more
details about what is in that particular resource.
For example, the Rate Books 1855-1963 for Victoria,
Australia are by no means complete, and the detail makes this clear.
While the list below is not the complete list of Rate Books available,
it gives you the general idea that different areas covered different
year ranges. For the complete list, please check the card catalogue
yourself.
There
is nothing more frustrating than spending your valuable researching
time looking for information that is not covered by the database, even
though the broad description implied that it was there. So try checking
the description of some of the datasets available on Ancestry to see
exactly what they cover - it may explain why you cannot find a records
you were expecting to be available.