Tuesday, October 17, 2023

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 : 

  • Where would we be without them?
  • ‘Stolen’ adoptee reunites with his birth family thanks to DNA
  • World Heritage status for 51 Commonwealth war cemeteries and memorials
  • New archives partnership releases two million Worcestershire records
  • Herculaneum scrolls: A 20-year journey to read the unreadable
  • How comfortable are we discussing death with family members?
  • RootsTech 2024 registration is now open
  • Sources, Evidence and Proof : What is proof?
  • Imagine… one single family tree in the world
  • The Granddad I never knew
  • Friends,Associates & Neighbours
  • The 1868 Bradford Election
  • And more.....

Friday, October 13, 2023

Traces Magazine

Edition 24 of Australian histroy 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
  • The Hero of Waterloo Hotel, Sydney
  • A history of Sydney Harbour
  • Sideshow Barkers
  • Acts of bravery – lives saved at sea
  • Finding skeletons in the closet
  • Researching Chinese-Australian family history
  • How famous ancestors can grow your family tree
  • Minnie Berrington’s opal dreams
  • The Admiralty Islets diorama
  • ‘Wait awhile’ in Western Australia
  • What’s new online?
  • The iconic Australian worker’s cottage

 

Tuesday, October 10, 2023

The Family Histories Podcast

It has been confirmed that the sixth series of The Family Histories Podcast has begun production.

Series Five concluded on 18th July 2023 with the bonus episode ‘The Rioter’ with show host Andrew Martin, which saw him unexpectedly end up in an alternate reality, where everything was the same but also a little different. In that reality, the show was hosted by Dr. Wanda Wyporska.

 

Now safely home in the correct dimension, the new series, the sixth since 2021, will once again be hosted by Andrew Martin, and will consist of 7 episodes, with 7 guests, 7 life stories, and 7 brick walls for listeners to help solve. The new series will air in late 2023.

Friday, October 6, 2023

23andMe Data Hack

Genealogy website 23andMe is one of the latest companies to suffer a data hack.  

Judy Russell at The Legal Genealogist has sent out a timely reminder about the importance of being security conscious after the breach was reported to users of the website.

So far, personal information about roughly a million users has been offered for sale on the so-called Dark Web. The data offered included full names, birth years, location information and more. As yet it is unknown exactly how many accounts were accessed or how much data was harvested, but currently there is no indication that any raw DNA data was hacked.  The incident is still under investigation.

The success of this breach highlights the danger of using the same password across multiple websites.  The story is that hackers collected passwords associated with specific email addresses that had already been hacked at other sites and then reused them at 23andMe to see if they worked.  For many, they did.

So if, like me, you are guilty of sometimes using a generic password on different websites, it is time to have a think about changing habits and updating your passwords.

Read Judy's full blog post,  Judy G. Russell, “Change your password!,” The Legal Genealogist

 

Monday, October 2, 2023

Ancestry DNA Update 2023

Recently, Ancestry again updated their DNA Ethnicity Estimates, so I have again been studying my new, updated results.  I have commented before that with every ethnicity estimate, my results seem to move further from my family tree as I know it.  This time actually moved a little back towards what my existing tree leads me to expect.

The table below shows my ethnicity estimates over the years since I first tested.  It is worth noting that in 2018 and 2019 the Irish ethnicity represented Ireland and Scotland combined.  According to my researched Family Tree, my father's family is 100% English back to the early 1700s and further and is primarily from the Essex/Suffolk area. My father's parents married in England before they came out to Australia.  My mother's family is at mostly English with some Irish (a Great-Grandmother), German (Great-Great-Grandfather) and Scottish (Great-Great-Grandmother) mixed in.  Most of her lines arrived in Australia in the 1840s and 1850s, and the various nationalities intermarried out here.  This is not reflected in my ethnicity estimate. 

 

Sep 18

Sep 19

Sep 21

Apr 22

Sep 22

Sep 23

England

65

78

54

45

33

43

Ireland

22

10

2

2

1

0

Scotland

0

0

33

32

38

32

Germanic Europe

8

3

0

0

4

5

Ivory Coast/Ghana

2

1

1

2

2

2

Sweden/Denmark

2

5

0

2

19

15

Norway

1

2

9

14

0

0

Mali

 

1

1

0

0

0

Wales

 

 

 

3

3

3

The breakdown of my maternal DNA and paternal DNA also shows some unexpected results.  All the Sweden/Denmark DNA comes from my father’s side, as does a small amount from Scotland and Germany.  My Irish ancestry has disappeared completely from my mother’s ethnicity.  And I have never known where that 2% Ivory Coast/Ghana comes from.

Maternal

Paternal

Total

England 14%

England 29%

England 43%

Scotland 28%

Scotland 4%

Scotland 32%

Germanic Europe 3%

Germanic Europe 2%

Germanic Europe 5%

Ivory Coast/Ghana 2%

Ivory Coast/Ghana 0%

Ivory Coast/Ghana 2%

Sweden/Denmark 0%

Sweden/Denmark 15%

Sweden/Denmark 15%

Wales 3%

Wales 0%

Wales 3%

Ultimately, we need to remember that these numbers are estimates only and can still be quite inaccurate.  More important to most who are actively researching are their cousin matches, people whom the DNA tests show are being related. I have cousin matches on all the major branches of my tree intersecting at various grandparents, great grandparents and further back, so for several generations back I am reasonably confident my tree is accurate - or as accurate as it can be.