Monday, January 5, 2026

Week 1 (Jan. 1-7) An Ancestor I Admire

This year I have once again decided to participate in the 52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks blogging challenge run by Amy Johnson Crow. The challenge prompts often have me looking at my family history in new ways and exploring records I haven't revisited for a while.

Week 1 id "an ancestor I admire" and I have chosen my great grandmother Eliza Beseler.

Eliza was born in 1871 in Learmonth, Victoria to Edward Beseler and Emma (nee Flower).  Eliza married Alfred Pummeroy in1895 in St Kilda, where Alfred worked as a plasterer.  They had four children before Alfred suddenly became ill with pneumonia and died on 6 Feb 1901, leaving Eliza with 4 young children and in a desperate situation.

The family lived in rented housing and had little by way of savings.  With four children to look after, the eldest 4 years old and deaf and mute, the youngest (my grandfather William) only 2 months old, Eliza was unable to do much by way of paid work.  She took in washing to make a little money, and was given 3 shillings a week by the local Ladies Benevolent Society.  It wasn't enough.

After struggling for a month after her husband's sudden death, Eliza took the step of applying to the local court for help, risking having her children removed from her custody and placed in an orphanage, something she was adamant she did not want.  The judges hearing the case awarded her 10 shillings from the poor box and committed the children to the department, with the recommendation they be handed back to their mother.

This appeal was reported in several newspapers.  Two reported the case with a fair amount of detail, including the fact that the children all appeared clean and well cared for, while a third much briefer article gave a somewhat different impression, especially with the heading 'Neglected Children'.

Prahran Telegraph, Sat 9 March 1901, p3.

The Argus, Sat 9 March 1901, p15.

The Herald, Fri 8 March 1901, p5.

How much courage and desperation Eliza must have felt to take the step of appealing to the courts for aid.  Standing before three magistrates to plead her case, knowing they had the power to take her children away, while still mourning the death of her husband.  I admire her greatly.

Who Do You Think You Are Magazine Jan 2026

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 : 

  • Family historians invited to take part in 2031 census consultation
  • Ancestry adds legal examination records
  • St Helens Archive Service relocated
  • TNA introduces £42.25 fee for WW2 service records
  • 50 websites to watch 2026 
  • Declaration 250 - Celebrate the anniversary of the USA’s gaining independence
  • Hospital Records - how to trace patient records and other sources from general hospitals
  • Theatres and Performers 
  • Irish Military Pension Applications 
  • How do I find children missing from the census?
  • What uniform are these women... 
  • And more .... 



Saturday, December 27, 2025

Week 52 (Dec. 24-31) Memorable

"Memorable' is the final prompt for 2025, and it has me looking back over the year and my memories of 2025.  What does this year leave with me?  What memorable Family History finds did I make?

The discoveries I have made throughout the year include : 

  • my father's Air Force enlistment photograph from the National Archives of Australia
  • my great uncle's listing on the Rats of Tobruk website
  • newspaper articles too numerous to mention individually
  • photographs of the Newbridge Mill owned by my Argent ancestor's thanks to The Mills Archive
  • new records available online including digitized Suffolk baptisms, marriages and burials on Ancestry
  • new DNA matches with distant relatives
  • reconnecting with a cousin I hadn't spoken to in years and sharing family stories

All these finds have been highlights of my years and feed my enthusiasm to continue my researching. 

Who knows what memorable finds await in 2026. 

Wednesday, December 24, 2025

Merry Christmas

To all those who have read this blog throughout the year, and to all those our there in the wider Genealogical community, I wish you a happy, healthy and safe Christmas and New Year.

Monday, December 22, 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 : 

  • Uncovering Australia's past traces
  • New British Library catalogue
  • Ness of Brodgar Time Team dig confirmed for Summer 2026
  • Storied cards - 12 simple questions to get friends and family reminiscing
  • Scottish Indexes: free online conference
  • Vilnius University creates first open-access AI Yiddish transcription tool
  • Essex Regiment Museum closing January 2026
  • DNA Club news 
  • Go beyond just names, places and dates and really discover your family story
  • ‘Diana otherwise Jessie’ Tracing one of Britain’s ‘Brown Babies’
  • Old, Out of the Ordinary Occupations
  • The Edwardian History Society discovering the past of a rare surname
  • Getting started with medals
  • The family tree AI bookcamp
  • Tracing the shadows in the Beck-Bailey mystery
  • DNA glossary helpful terms and phrases for DNA testing
  • Medieval Wills & Feet of Fines
  • And more... 

Friday, December 19, 2025

Week 51 (Dec. 17-23) Musical

The prompt for Week 24 was 'Artistic', and as to the best of my knowledge there have been no artists in my ancestry I chose to focus on music, which is the focus for Week 51.   So as I have already blogged about my mother's musical talent, I searched my records for other musical talent amongst my ancestors.

Included in my newspaper records, I found several articles relating to musical events and concerts in which various ancestors performed, especially my Argent branch of my family tree.


 The article above is from the Essex Standard published Friday 7 January 1876 and has several members of my Argent family preforming.  My Great Great Grandfather John Thompson Argent was Chair or the event and his sister Ada Emily Argent was the pianist.

These musical evenings were apparently a regular winter highlight, and reports of similar concerts appeared in several newspapers.


The final concert for the winter of 1875/76 was reported above in the Essex Standard on Friday 11 February 1876, with the following season's first concert reported below on Friday 1 December 1876.


 Clearly music was a large part of my ancestors' lives and musical performances formed a large part of the social network in their community.

Monday, December 15, 2025

Australian Air Force Photographs

The National Archives of Australia (NAA) have added a number of Australian Air Force photographs to their online database.

Through the NAA's RecordSearch, Air Force Personnel Records can be searched by name or by service number.

Searching the database for my father, Peter Jeffrey Green, returns two results.


The first result is his digitised personnel file, some 43 pages in length.  The second file is his enlistment photograph.


Locating this photo was quite a surprise - I had never seen it before and, along with a posed photo of him in Air Force uniform taken some weeks later, it is among the few photos I have of my father as a young man.