Thursday, December 19, 2024

Week 51 (Dec. 16-22): Good Deeds

The penultimate 52 Ancestors prompt is 'Good Deeds', and has me thinking about how helpful the wider genealogical community can be.

Earlier this week I blogged about the 15th birthday of the Trove website.  Trove is a collaboration between the National Library of Australia and hundreds of partner organisations across Australia that contribute collections and digital content.

Everything you would find on a visit to a library or museum can be found in Trove. It brings together billions of pieces of information. Search for digital copies of newspapers, Government Gazettes, maps, magazines and newsletters. Or books, pictures, photographs, archived websites, music and interviews. Even information about famous Australians, including copies of letters, diaries and personal archives. And it is all available free.

Text correcting has been a part of Trove since its first days, and in Trove’s 15-year history, Voluntrove text correctors has corrected over 513 million lines of text – and this number increases every single day. 

There are a number of other websites out there that help genealogists research their family histories, not to mention the huge number of archives, societies and groups around the world.  There are transcribers and volunteers and researchers who give their time and expertise to help others.  

Countless good deeds.

 

Tuesday, December 17, 2024

Trove Tuesday

Trove was launched in December 2009, making this month Trove’s 15th anniversary. From humble beginnings as an aggregator for a range of library services, Trove has grown "into a home for freely accessible cultural content that reflects our vibrant contemporary and historical cultures". Trove's vision is for Australians to have their culture at their fingertips – now and decades into the future. 

Today, Trove is one of Australia’s most popular websites with an enormous and diverse community of users. Significant to the development of the website are the Trove Partners, who contribute to the vast collections in Trove, and the 'Voluntroves', who help make the collections more searchable and accessible.

Trove evolved from a number of websites and databases, including the Australian Bibliographic Network, the web archive Pandora, Picture Australia and more.  The Australian Newspapers Beta service was released in July 2008, starting with 11 newspapers, including The Sydney Gazette and New South Wales Advertiser, The Argus and The South Australian Advertiser. There are now over 700 newspapers with no plans to stop.

Text correcting has been a part of Trove since its first days, and in Trove’s 15-year history, Voluntrove text correctors has corrected over 513 million lines of text – and this number increases every single day.

If you think the text correcting numbers are huge, wait until you learn the size of the collections in Trove. There are over 6 billion records in Trove, contributed by around 900 Trove Partners across Australia. To learn more about Trove, you can visit the news page or subscribe to the monthly Trove Treasures newsletter to find out about what’s new in Trove.

Saturday, December 14, 2024

Traces Magazine

Edition 29 of Australian history and genealogy magazine Traces is now available free online for Campaspe Library members via our subscription to Libby eMagazines.

Inside this month's issue: 

  • Heritage news
  • Customs House, Brisbane Then & Now
  • Face value: the physiognomy fad
  • Austrialia del Espiritu Santo
  • Ruling the waves : The art of charts
  • The life and times of an early Melbourne detective
  • Starting out in family history
  • The lost and found of World War II
  • What’s that thingamajig?
  • The use and beauty of the aerial photograph
  • The almost unknown soldier
  • Speaking ‘Australianese’ : Quintessentially Australian words and expressions
  • From roast wombat to vanilla ice : Australia’s oldest surviving recipe book
  • When the walls can talk
  • And more...

Thursday, December 12, 2024

Week 50 (Dec. 9-15): Chosen Family

The theme for Week 50 is "Chosen Family." Family isn't necessarily just those you are genetically related to. What about the special family friends who become "Aunt" and "Uncle"? Special friends who are as close (or closer) than siblings?  Who was chosen to be part of your family?

One such 'Chosen Family' member was William Knox, known to all as Uncle.  For many years Uncle lived next door to my maternal grandmother, a close family friend who attended many family gatherings and took an active interest in my grandmother's children and grandchildren.

Pictured here in 1954, by the time I was born he was quite elderly.  I don't recall Uncle having any family of his own, but every time I visited by grandmother as a young child, a visit to Uncle was a highlight.

My mother could recall visiting Uncle when her parents were busy or ill, childhood trips to the theatre or cinema, or walks to the local shop to buy sweets as a treat.

"Chosen Family" indeed.

Tuesday, December 10, 2024

Trove Tuesday

As the Christmas season approaches, this week's Trove blog looks back at how mail has helped people connect with each other around Christmas time for decades.  Every Christmas, is seems, we are reminded by the Post Office to make sure we send our Christmas letters, cards and packages early to ensure their timely arrival.  In more modern times, we are also urged to complete our online shopping early to ensure delivery.

In the early twentieth century soldiers had limited ways to contact their family while serving their country. Christmas was a time they could sometimes send postcards or letters to their family to let them know they were safe and well, and perhaps receive letters or packages from home. During the Second World War Japan even agreed to let Prisoners of War send Christmas mail to their families.  During the First World War embroidered postcards became a popular item for soldiers to send to loved ones back home. These postcards were known as war silks and were especially popular around holidays like Christmas.  

Then there were children writing hopeful letters to Santa, assuring him they had been good and listing toys and gifts they hoped to receive, many promising to leave out a snack for Santa and his reindeer when they visited.

The National Library of Australia holds a letter to Santa from award-winning author Patrick White in their collection. He was six years old at the time of writing.  The letter reads, “Dear Father Xmas. Will you please bring me a pistol, a mouth organ, a violin, a butterfly net, Robinson Crusoe, A History of Australia, some marbles, a little mouse what runs across the room. I hope you do not think I am too greedy but I want the things badly. Your loving Paddy”  

Perhaps the most famous letter to Santa comes from New York newspaper The Sun’s 1897 editorial featuring 8-year old Virginia O’Hanlon. Some of her friends had told her Santa wasn’t real, so she wrote to the paper to ask:  ‘Please tell me the truth, is there a Santa Claus?’  

The response penned to Virginia was so moving that it has continued to be printed in global newspapers for decades.  “Yes, Virginia, there is a Santa Claus. He exists as love and generosity and devotion exist, and you know that they abound and give to your life its highest beauty and joy. Alas! how dreary would be the world if there was no Santa Claus. It would be as dreary as if there were no Virginias.”  One such version of the article was published in the 18 December 1926 edition of Sydney's The World’s News.

Friday, December 6, 2024

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 : 

  • Census websites tested What's the best website for searching census results?
  • Al Murray The comedian and podcaster on his new book about the Battle of Arnhem
  • Reader story Megan Harrison's ancestor was a campaigner for women's education
  • The RNLI How to trace lifeboatmen in your family tree
  • Children's Christmas traditions The origins of beloved festive activities
  • Around Britain Herefordshire family history
  • And more.....

Thursday, December 5, 2024

Week 49 (Dec. 2-8): Handed Down

There is so much that can be 'Handed Down' by family.  Heirlooms, certainly, but we are also handed down so much more.  Stories are often handed down by generations, family legends that may or may not be 100% accurate.  Traditions are also 'handed down', some of which are common, some cultural and some unique to your family.  Family traits are handed down in our DNA.  Even names can be 'handed down' within the family, used generation after generation.  The list goes on.

I have blogged several times about my family's Christmas traditions, which started last Sunday when my Christmas tree went up and decorating began.  As usual, the tree will stand un-decorated for a week until my cat loses interest, and tinsel will not be used in my decorating as he sees tinsel as a food group (his stomach and vet both disagree).

A few years ago I posted about my experience of my sister and I cleaning out the family home after the deaths of our parents - our father in 2013 and mother in 2015 - and the importance of knowing the stories behind the many treasures tucked away in cupboards and drawers, or out in the shed.

Cleaning out the house, we came across treasures in every corner.  A hand tinted photo of my mother as a child, a box of slides and negatives from early in our parents' marriage, a small garnet brooch that belonged to my great grandmother, a bronze alligator nutcracker made by my grandfather, and so much more. 

Then there is my heirloom garden gnome.  Some family treasures are small, portable and easy to take with you when you move.  Some, like my gnome, are not.  He is about 50 cm tall, and my family purchased two of them for my father's 50th birthday, back in January 1976.  When we sold the family home my sister and I decided we wanted to keep one gnome each.  At the time we first brought them, there was a rash of gnome-napping happening where we lived, with gnomes disappearing from gardens, never to be seen again.  So my father filled the concrete shells with solid concrete, then installed them on concrete plinths about 30 cm in diameter and 10 cm thick, out in our front yard.  They weigh a ton, and needless to say, they have never been successfully 'gnome-napped'.

Then, there is the heirloom hare's foot fern.  The original hares-foot belonged to my grandmother.  Before she passed away, my mother took a cutting from her plant, brought it home and potted it.  It thrived in our greenhouse and by the time my parents passed away it had overgrown its pot, attached itself to the wooden shelf the pot sat upon, and was firmly attached to the shelf.  Clearly it was not moving with me to my new home.  So much as my mother had done, I took a few cuttings, potted them and hoped for the best.


These two little cuttings have thrived.  They quickly outgrew the little pots I had started them in, and have since been transplanted to bigger pots.  They sit, one in my main bathroom and one in a stand in my dining room, and I think of my mother and grandmother whenever I see them.  I have recently taken a new cutting from one of these plants and potted it for a friend.  And so the heirloom hares-foot fern continues the be 'handed down', hopefully for many years to come.

What items do you have tucked away in odd corners that you hope to 'hand down' to the next generation??  Do your children or grandchildren know the stories behind those treasures you have stored away??  If they don't, chances are they will dismiss those items as junk and they will be lost.  If your children don't know the story behind Great Aunt Mary's tea set - or even that the tea set in the shed was Great Aunt Mary's and not something you picked up on a whim at a jumble sale - then they will have no reason to keep it, value it, and ultimately pass it - and its story - on to another generation.