A blog to talk about genealogy and family history, ask questions, highlight useful sites and share tips.
Friday, June 20, 2025
Week 24 (June 11-17) Artistic
Wednesday, June 18, 2025
Website Wednesday - Arolsen Archives
The Arolsen Archives,
formerly known as the International Tracing Service, is a free database that consists of records from Second World War concentration
camps, including prisoner cards and death notices. In total, they
contain the names of over 2.2 million victims from across Europe.
The Arolsen Archives are an international center on Nazi persecution with the world’s most comprehensive archive on the victims and survivors of National Socialism. The collection has information on about 17.5 million people and belongs to the UNESCO’s Memory of the World. It contains documents on the various victim groups targeted by the Nazi regime and is an important source of knowledge, especially for younger generations.
To this day, the Arolsen Archives answer inquiries about some 20,000 victims of Nazi persecution every year. For decades, clarifying fates and searching for missing persons were the central tasks of the institution, which was founded by the Allies in 1948 as the “International Tracing Service”.
Research and education are more important than ever to inform today’s society about the Holocaust, concentration camps, forced labor and the consequences of Nazi crimes. The Arolsen Archives are building up a comprehensive online archive so that people all over the world can access the documents and obtain information.
Sunday, June 15, 2025
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 :
- USA pharmaceutical company to buy 23andMe
- Ancestry AI transcription tool beta-launched April 2025
- Scran retiring as Trove.scot steps in
- Family Tree Maker: new version out
- 20,385 new Kerry records at RootsIreland
- DNA Club news
- 105 million new records on MyHeritage
- New Suffolk collections on Findmypast
- Making the most of Ship's Passenger lists
- Untangling the Tonges in the census
- Marriage records in Ireland
- The paths the the 'blended family'
- What can Family Tree software do for you?
- Family Historian 7 take the tour
- An introduction to Medieval Records
Wednesday, June 11, 2025
Website Wednesday - Trade Union Ancestors
The scale of the British trade union movement is astounding. Tens of
millions of people have been members, and 5,000 trade unions are known
to have existed at one time or another. The website Trade Union Ancestors
can help you locate a specific trade union in time and place with the A
to Z index of trade unions and trade union family trees. In addition,
you can read about some of the events and people that shaped the trade
union movement through 200 years of history in their trade union
histories, trade union lives and striking stories.
The historic union records that survive illuminate the working lives,
daily concerns and political attitudes of our ancestors. Trade Union
Ancestors aims to help family historians to identify the correct union,
to discover the role their ancestor played in it, and to find out more
about trade union history.
Website editor Mark Crail stresses that the site is far from
comprehensive and he cannot guarantee it is mistake-free. Also, while
millions of people have been trade union members over the past couple of
centuries, millions more working people were not. At the beginning of
the 20th century, just one in ten working people were members. And
though masses of union records have survived, much more has been
discarded or destroyed down the years.
The site draws material from a range of sources. Among the most fruitful are:
- The first four published volumes of the Historical Directory of Trade Unions. These are a wonderful but incomplete guide to the development of the trade union movement published between 1980 and 1994 by Gower. The first three were compiled by Arthur Marsh and Victoria Ryan, and the fourth by Marsh and Ryan with the help of John Smethurst. Wonderful though they are, the series is incomplete and there are some rather obvious omissions as a result – not least the Transport and General Workers Union. Time has also moved on since they were published, with mergers and amalgamations taking place annually. There is now a fifth and a sixth and final volume available.
- The archive listings published online by Warwick University’s modern records centre. The centre has an unrivalled collection of original trade union papers, including the archives of many long since defunct trade unions deposited by their modern successors.
- A variety of published sources including the potted histories that some unions include on their websites, the books that unions have produced down the years about their origins and developments, and the many general union histories published since Sydney and Beatrice Webb originated the genre with their History of Trade Unionism, first published in 1894 and revised in 1920.
- Government papers and public records – some of them published (such as Labour Market Trends, from which data on this website is extracted) and some stored away in the National Archives waiting for someone with the time and interest in the subject to come along and find them.
Saturday, June 7, 2025
Week 23 (June 4-10) Wedding Bells
Wedding Bells frequently lead to some fascinating records and photographs for family historians. I have been lucky enough to amass quite a collection of family photographs, combining original photos, copied photos, digital photos and slides (any relatives out there please note - I am always happy to swap and share), and these include a number of wedding photos. I would have to say that my favourite is the wedding photo of my great grandparents James Nicholas Clark and Priscilla Veronica Mulholland. James and Priscilla married 3 August 1898, almost a year after James's divorce from his first wife Eliza (nee Hawley).
Also acquired from relatives , these from England, were wedding photos of my great aunt Constance Green, daughter of Walter Proctor Green, in
1909. This was a major event at the family home of Fordham Hall, with a
large party attending and
the event extensively reported in the local newspapers. Below is a
photograph of the wedding party, taken on the lawn at the rear of the
Hall.
| Wedding of Constance Boggis Green, 1909 |
A few years ago I acquired a neat little device that could attach to my computer and scan old negatives and slides, creating nice digital photos and I spent several weekends busily scanning away, hugely expanding my photo cache. Many I have waved in front of relatives, seeking details of when, where, what and who, and have made notes on each of as much information as I have.
My parent's wedding day, scanned from a slide.
Amongst the old slides and negatives I found when clearing our the family home was a box of over 60 slides from my parents wedding in 1968. Wedding bells indeed.
Friday, June 6, 2025
Traces Magazine
Edition 31 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:
- Beneath the prison floorboards
- Like melons on a vine
- Danger in the bay
- The one that got away
- What’s that thingamajjig?
- From raw data to human stories
- Hazel and Edna Pritchard Sisters of sport
- Inspiration from 1938
- Tavern tasties
- The hidden history of the Brisbane tram network
- The Australiana Fund’s working collection
- The objects we cherish
Wednesday, June 4, 2025
Website Wednesday - Irish Registry of Deeds Project
The volunteers of the Irish Registry of Deeds Index Project have been hard at work on the project over the past few months, greatly expanding the work already done.
The purpose of this project is to provide finding aids for the records held at the Registry of Deeds in Dublin. There are three sets of indexes produced by the project:
- The main index is building a name index for the memorial transcription books held at the Registry of Deeds
- The grantors index consists of transcriptions of the Registry of Deeds' grantors indexes
- The townland index consists of transcriptions of the Registry of Deeds' townland indexes
Each of these index databases can be searched on a number of fields. None, of course, is complete. Each has those index entries contributed by the project volunteers.
Since the last update, the free online index has expanded to 629,064 entries and the Townland index has grown to 703,835 entries.
The Grantor Index now had 52,757 records indexed and is continuing to expand.
All the Indexes are free to search.
