Thursday, March 25, 2021

Who Do You Think You Are Australia

A new season of Who Do You Think You Are Australia premiers on SBS Thursday 19 May with 8 new episodes scheduled.  This is the eleventh series of the popular family history program, which originally premiered in 2008.  The show follows the same format as the popular British series and follows several celebrities as they trace their own families.

It has been announced that the celebrities featured in series 11 will be Lisa Wilkinson, Bert Newton, Cameron Daddo, Lisa Curry, Denise Scott, Kat Stewart, Julie Bishop and Troy Cassar-Daley.

Over the years I have greatly enjoyed watching this program and the insights it provides into genealogical research and social history, while also being slightly envious of all the expert help the celebrity participants enjoy.  The twists and turns of each individual's family story and the emotional journey of their discoveries is fascinating watching and helps re-inspire me to continue my own researches.  Well worth marking in your diary.


Monday, March 22, 2021

Traces Magazine

The latest issue of Traces magazine is out now and is available free in digital form from Campaspe Regional Library via our eMagazines from Libby.  Ask our staff for more information or for help to download the magazine onto your PC, tablet or iPad.

Launched in December 2017, Traces is the only quarterly printed magazine dedicated to providing its readers with insight into the latest historical research, news and heritage projects taking place around Australia. The expert voices of historians, researchers, heritage professionals, genealogists, and journalists uncover the fascinating characters and stories of our past.

Focusing on Australian history, this edition features 

  • Melbourne's most notorious gangster
  • A Hobart Town love triangle
  • The story of Aboriginal exemption
  • And more

Tuesday, March 16, 2021

WDYTYA 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

  • Family history software
    Discover the best software to research and record your family tree with our buyers’ guide
  • The Society of Genealogists
    Else Churchill explains how the UK’s national family history society has adapted to thrive during lockdown
  • Australian ancestry
    The best websites for family history research down under
  • Gibraltar records
    How to trace your family history on the Rock
  • Eureka moment
    How WDYTYA? reader Sarah Fuller uncovered a family history that reads like a Catherine Cookson novel
  • Plus…
    How to find a missing street address, understanding Irish tithe applotment books, the lives of silk workers and much more…

Thursday, March 11, 2021

The Pandemic One Year In

It has now been over a year since the emergence of Covid-19 changed our world in so many ways.  While here in Australia we have certainly not seen the worst of the pandemic, it has nonetheless had a massive impact on our daily lives.  there have been lockdowns, border closures, limits on meeting numbers, business closures and stand-downs at work, and the daily stress of not knowing how long the restrictions will last.  Living in a border town, seeing police on the bridge and helping people fill out border passes at the library where I work is something I will never forget.

Genealogically speaking, the biggest impact for me has been the loss of face-to-face meetings.  How I have missed chatting face-to-face with Genea-mates and the networking and idea sharing that goes hand in hand with meetings and conferences.  Online meetings just are not the same.

Despite the down side of online meetings, however, the rise of virtual conferences has allowed me to attend inter-state and overseas meetings that I would never have been able to attend in reality.  The genealogical community has pulled together, made use of the internet like never before, and been a huge step in providing so many of us isolated at home with interest, stimulation and contact.

The list of those who have made information and resources available online during the pandemic seems almost endless.  Rootstech went completely virtual last month - not to mention also completely free.  Ancestry allowed many libraries and other institutions to allow Ancestry Library Edition to be accessed remotely by members when the normal in-house only use became impossible due to closures.  Family History Down Under, an Australian genealogy conference scheduled for later this month in Queensland, has also gone virtual, as has the Really Useful Family History Show in the UK in April.  The National Archives UK has made all their digital records free to access while they are closed.  The list goes on.

The efforts of all these groups and companies in taking their services online cannot be underestimated, and I would like to send a huge thank you to them all, those I have mentioned in this post and the many, many others.  You have helped keep us sane over the past year - kept us researching, learning, chatting and helping each other.  Well done to you all.

Wednesday, March 10, 2021

What's new of Trove

The newspapers listed below have recently been digitised and made available in Trove. Note that the year range listed for the item is an indication of what's currently available in Trove, and not always the full year range the item was published.

NSW Newspaper titles

  • NOTA - News Of The Area (Hawks Nest & Tea Gardens, NSW) 1970-1999
  • Nowra Colonist (NSW) 1899-1904
  • The Telegraph and Shoalhaven Advertiser (NSW) 1879-1881
  • Windsor & Richmond Gazette (NSW) 1888-1961
VIC Newspaper titles

  • Box Hill Reporter (Vic) 1925-1930
  • The Reporter (Box Hill, Vic) 1889-1925
  • The Brunswick and Coburg Leader (Vic) 1914-1921
  • Mildura Telegraph and Darling and Lower Murray Advocate (Vic) 1913-1920
WA Newspaper titles

  • Dampier Herald (Kununoppin, WA ) 1928 - 1937
  • Cathedral Chronicle (Geraldton, WA ) 1931 - 1954
  • Corrigin Chronicle and Kunjin-Bullaring Representative (WA) 1925 - 1943
  • Weekly Judge (Perth, WA) 1919-1931

Monday, March 8, 2021

Beyond 2022 : Ireland's Virtual Record Treasury

June 30th, 2022, marks the centenary of the explosion and fire at the Four Courts, Dublin, which destroyed the Public Record Office of Ireland (PROI) and, with it, centuries of Ireland’s collective memories and records.
The losses in that historic fire include records of the payment of taxes, the enactment of laws, births, marriages and deaths, wills, maps, parish registers and town records from across the island.
Beyond 2022 is an international collaboration to launch a Virtual Record Treasury for Irish history—an open-access, virtual reconstruction of the Record Treasury destroyed in 1922.
Across the globe, more than seventy repositories hold substitute materials that can replace the documents destroyed in the Four Courts blaze.  Thanks to pioneering digitization techniques, the project aims to automatically transcribe large volumes of handwritten records, allowing users to connect, group and search diverse records from archives across Ireland and the World.
The Beyond 2022 team is working to assemble a complete inventory of loss and survival of the 1922 fire. In doing so, the team has identified ten main categories of surviving or substitute sources:
  • Survivors: records that survived almost unscathed because they were held in the Reading Room of the Public Record Office, not the Record Treasury itself
  • Salved records: records damaged by the fire, but not completely destroyed, now in varying states of conservation
  • Duplicates of original records now held in partner archives
  • Facsimile images made before 1922
  • Antiquarian transcripts
  • Printed editions
  • Certified copies
  • Published calendars summarizing the contents of the records
  • Unpublished calendars in manuscript form
  • Legal abstracts
Ireland’s Virtual Record Treasury will gather into a single database all the information it can about these substitute sources from archives and libraries in Ireland and internationally. The entire archive will be fully searchable, with its contents ranging from basic descriptions to fully restored records ranging in date from the thirteenth to the nineteenth centuries.
This is a truly stunning project which will help ease the frustration of many researchers trying to trace lost Irish ancestors, and significantly fill the gaps in Ireland's history that the fire created.

Thursday, February 25, 2021

RootsTech has Started!

For some time now I have been looking forward to this year's RootsTech, which is 100% online.  In the past, I have enjoyed watching presentations after the event, as I have not been able to travel to Salt Lake City in America for the conference itself.  This year, however, I am able to attend the online event and participate more fully.

The list of presentations is impressive, covering a wide variety of topics.  You can search the presentations several ways, including by language or by topic - Keynotes ; Connecting with family ; Finding Ancestors ; DNA ; Placves, Records and Research ; Memories - Stories, Photos and Videos ; Traditions and Heritage ; Websites, Tools and Apps ; Latter-Day Saints.  Truly there is something here for everyone.

Not all the presentations are long - some run for only a few minutes but are still well worth watching - and not all are live - quite a few have been pre-recorded.  All will be available to watch over the next few months.  There is even the facility to create yourself a playlist of all the sessions you want to watch when you have time.

There is also an Expo Hall where you can visit virtual booths by sponsors and exhibitors from around the world.  Many have links to extra information, conference specials, downloads and more. 

I have already started creating my playlist and visited a few of the booths in the Expo Hall, and I know I will be spending a significant portion of this weekend glued to my computer watching some of the excellent presentations on offer.

Happy RootsTech!