Sunday, July 16, 2023

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:  

    • Replant your family tree Could your family history research benefit from uploading your tree to other websites?
    • Their Finest Hour How you can get involved in a project preserving memories of the Second World War
    • The history of divorce What a lack of legal divorce meant for women in your family tree
    • Indian family history research How to trace ancestors with a connection to the Indian subcontinent online
    • Reader story Chris Hussey's grandfather emigrated to Canada and fought on the Western Front
    • Nottinghamshire family history Don't miss our complete guide to the best family history resources for tracing ancestors from the county

Friday, July 14, 2023

Changing Place Names Mapped

The Tadeusz Manteuffel Institute of History, part of the Polish Academy of Sciences, has unveiled a new interactive map feature on their website: Mapy z Przeszłością (Maps of the Past). The online tool superimposes historical maps over a modern map of Central and Eastern Europe, allowing researchers to visualize and compare shifting borders and place names over time. 

The turbulent nature of Poland’s history, with its boundaries expanding, contracting, and disappearing over several centuries, is reflected in the geographic range of the maps available as overlays. The new map tool is useful for users with ancestry from modern Poland, Germany, Ukraine, Belarus, and Lithuania, or the historical territories of the German, Russian and Austrian Empires.

In Central and Eastern European genealogy, you will encounter place names that changed depending on who controlled an area and when. This complicates research as we sort out and weigh the accuracy of the various place names that are found in overseas sources. For example, researching a Lithuanian immigrant ancestor, you may find that their town of origin is reported in its Polish form in the sources of the country they emigrated to, such as Great Britain, America or Australia, reflecting the official name from the early nineteenth century. The same town or village may be recorded in another record with an approximation of its Russian name, from when Lithuania was part of the Russian Empire. The town name may also appear in its Lithuanian form, which became official in the twentieth century. Researchers with Jewish ancestry may also find a distinct Yiddish form of their ancestral town or village recorded in overseas sources.

A historical map with Polish placenames overlayed on a modern map of Grodno, Belarus

With the new map overlays, a researcher can alternate between historical periods, translating placenames in the process. This is most effective for placenames with Polish and German variants. Pay attention to the names of nearby towns and villages. Those placenames may appear later in religious or civil records. Some maps also include symbols that mark the nearest religious community.

Wednesday, July 12, 2023

GRO Digital Ordering Update

Some great news for Family History researchers with civil birth and death registration records from selected years are now available as instant-access digital images via the General Register Office (GRO) website.

Civil registration of births, marriages and deaths was introduced in England and Wales in 1837.  Birth records from 1837 to 2021 and death records from 1837 to 1957 and 1984 to 2021 are indexed on the GRO website.

Family historians have previously had the option of ordering records as either a print record for £11 with a GRO index reference supplied, or a PDF for £7. It takes up to four working days for orders to be despatched.

However, the GRO has now launched a scheme for births from 1837 to 1922 and deaths from 1837 to 1887 to be available as digital images.  The digital images currently cost £2.50 each and are available to view immediately after purchase.

The scheme to order digital images is in the beta testing phase, but is publicly available to all registered users of the GRO website.

This makes accessing these records not only quicker but also less expensive, so take advantage of this great service.

 

 

Monday, July 10, 2023

Look History in the Eye - Episode 11

Episode 11 of the Public Record Office of Victoria podcast series 'Look History in the Eye' is out now.

 Jonathan Butler's debut book The Boy in the Dress was nominated for The Age Book of the Year in 2022. It shares his archival research journey trying to uncover the truth about what happened to his ancestor Warwick Meale, a World War Two serviceman found murdered in Townsville 80 years ago. 
This episode is a recording of the Melbourne Writers Festival event at the Victorian Archives Centre from 2022 with Jonathan Butler in conversation with Dr Yves Rees. Dr Rees is an historian at La Trobe University and co-host of the Archive Fever podcast.
Duration: 51 min
By Public Record Office Victoria

Friday, July 7, 2023

Irish Tithe Applotment Books

Tracing your Irish ancestry is often challenging because many of the country's key records are missing, including the 19th century census records. The Tithe Applotment books are therefore an important Irish family history resource. 

Tithe Applotment books were compiled in Ireland between 1823 and 1837. Their purpose was to assess the monetary rate of the tithe, a 10 per cent religious tax on the agricultural output of land in the country that was levied for the upkeep of the Church of Ireland. All of the agricultural lands in Ireland were surveyed and the name of the occupier, the size of their holding and the rate of the tithe were recorded.

Although they are not a comprehensive record of all households, the Tithe Applotment books are the earliest documents listing the occupiers of property in 19th century Ireland. If you've found an ancestor in Griffith's Valuation, you may find them in the Tithe Applotment books a generation earlier. Only the head of the household was recorded, so you won’t find other relatives. Also, the tithe was applied solely to agricultural land, which largely excludes urban areas and landless labourers and tradesmen.

The Tithe Applotment books were not exactly uniform in their content, and the quality of information gathered varies. One book might only record the landlord as the tithe payer, while another may contain detailed notes on each occupier. The terms “& Co.” and “& partners” do not refer to a business arrangement, but to a group of tenants farming common land. Occasionally, the occupiers of urban property were enumerated and one surveyor recorded the trade or profession of each individual in a town.

The tithe was a very unpopular tax especially with Catholics as they were expected to the support a church to which they did not belong. Farmers began withholding their tithe payments in 1830, and as this movement gained momentum there were outbreaks of violent conflict between tenants, Tithe collectors and clergymen. The ‘Tithe War’ was ended by the 1838 Tithe Commutation Act, which transferred the burden of the Tithe from tenant farmer to landlord.

For Northern Ireland an index for all six counties has been published at Roots Ireland where you can undertake an all-Ireland search or target a specific county. The Public Record Office of Northern Ireland (PRONI) has recently published digital images of the tithe applotment books for Northern Ireland, which can be accessed through its online catalogue. For the Republic of Ireland (ROI) there is an index of names and places published at Ancestry in the collection ‘Ireland, Tithe Applotment Books, 1805–1837’. This index does not include the acreage, quality and valuation or other annotations from the original record. Half of the 26 counties for the ROI have been similarly indexed at RootsIreland.


Tuesday, July 4, 2023

Ancestry's Card Catalogue

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.

Friday, June 30, 2023

Family Tree US Magazine

The latest issue of Family Tree US magazine is now available free online for Campaspe Library members via our subscription to Libby eMagazines.  

Inside this month's issue : 

  • Tree Talk - your favorite mobile apps for genealogy
  • 5 Questions with: Cyndi Ingle, creator of Cyndi’s List
  • ‘Preserve the Pensions’ Returns
  • Genealogy and AI
  • Close to Home - Living in an ancestral home continues to spur new family history discoveries
  • Crown Jewels - The 101 Best Genealogy Websites
  • 75 Best State Websites of 2023
  • Tap into the resources of the massive FamilySearch Family Tree
  • Find Your U.S. Ancestors
  • identity crisis - tips to help you overcome common pitfalls for establishing identity
  • Smart scanning-  the eight top smartphone scanning apps
  • Service Records
  • Discovering Places and Stories with Historypin
  • Preserving Shoes and Footware
  • Sites for Finding Heirlooms
  • Endogamy and DNA Research
  • Genealogy Research Planner
  • Polish Genealogy
  • And more...