Thursday Tidbits

MyHeritage Ancient Origins

This feature, which complements MyHeritage DNA ethnicity reports, traces origins up to 10,000 years ago. You should receive the results in a day once you accept the terms. My results arrived as I was putting this post to bed. It compares your DNA to ancient DNA samples and populations. There are many different kinds of reports, including breakdowns from several different historical periods. Stay tuned.

LAC Co-Lab Update for February

There are currently 4,196 items in LAC’s Collection Search identified as Co-Lab-only contributions, the same as in December.

Here is the progress on the challenges since January. Two show progress.

Games of the XXI Olympiad, Montréal 1976 remains at 80.8% complete.

Treaty 9, with 27 images, lists 37% that need review.

Mary Ann Shadd Cary is 85.5% complete, up from  69.4%.

Expo67 remains 5.1% complete.

Summiting Mount Logan in 1925: Fred Lambart’s personal account of the treacherous climb and descent of the highest peak in Canada is 17.9% complete, up from 13.4%.

Women in the War remains 1.4% complete.

Arthur Lismer’s Children’s Art Classes remains <1% complete.

John Freemont Smith, RG10, Volume number: 4079 remains 88.5% complete.

Molly Lamb Bobak’s Second World War diary remains 95.1% complete.

Diary of François-Hyacinthe Séguin remains 99% complete.

George Mully: moments in Indigenous communities remains 0% complete.

Correspondence regarding First Nations veterans returning after the First World War remains 98.5% complete.

Winnipeg General Strike of 1919 remains 94.7% complete.

Legendary Train Robber and Prison Escapee Bill Miner remains 99.5% complete.

Japanese-Canadians: Second World War remains 2.8% complete.

Projects that remain 100% complete are no longer reported here.

LAC is replacing the search engine and improving the visual experience. Try the new version now.

StatsCan updates Death Stats

On Wednesday Statistics Canada released Fall and drug overdose deaths are main contributors as accidental deaths continue to increase, 2017 to 2022/. It included links to more extensive death statistics and notable revised data for deaths from 2017 to 2022 with previously unavailable data for Yukon.

Here are five significant recent trends:

  1. Overall Increase in Deaths (2019–2023)
    The total number of deaths increased from 285,615 in 2019 to 326,215 in 2023, with a peak of 336,998 in 2022. This reflects an aging population, increased health challenges, and the impact of COVID-19.

  2. Impact of COVID-19 (2020–2023)
    COVID-19 became a major cause of death in 2020, ranking 4th from 2020 to 2022, with deaths peaking at 19,906 in 2022 before dropping to 7,963 in 2023. This decline aligns with vaccination efforts and improved treatments.

  3. Cancer and Heart Disease Remain Leading Causes
    Malignant neoplasms (cancer) and heart disease consistently ranked 1st and 2nd, with cancer deaths rising from 80,439 in 2019 to 84,629 in 2023, and heart disease deaths fluctuating but remaining above 53,000 annually.

  4. Increase in Accidental Deaths
    Accidental deaths (unintentional injuries) ranked 3rd throughout, increasing from 15,698 in 2019 to 20,597 in 2023, with a peak of 21,087 in 2022. This could reflect more opioid overdoses, traffic incidents, or workplace accidents.

  5. Decline in Alzheimer’s Disease and Suicide Deaths
    Deaths from Alzheimer’s disease fell from 6,185 in 2019 to 5,231 in 2023, while suicides decreased from 4,609 in 2019 to 3,811 in 2023. This may indicate better dementia care and mental health interventions, though long-term trends require further analysis.

 

Tuesday Tidings

This Week’s Online Genealogy Events

Choose from selected free online events today. All times are ET except as noted. Assume registration in advance is required; check so you’re not disappointed. Find out about a few more, mainly US events, at Conference Keeper.

Tuesday 18 February

2 pm: Ottawa Virtual Genealogy Drop-In, OGS Ottawa Branch.
https://ottawa.ogs.on.ca/events/virtual-genealogy-drop-in-2-2025-02-18/

2:30 pm:  DecipherInk: Language Learning for Genealogists, by Taieno Kaiser for Allen Country Public Library Genealogy Center.
https://acpl.libnet.info/event/12680591

7 pm: The Davenports of Simcoe County, by Pam Tessier for OGS Nipissing Branch.
https://nipissing.ogs.on.ca/events/nipissing-branch-the-davenports-of-simcoe-county-pam-tessier/

8 pm: Applying Research Standards to the Census, by Diane MacLean Boumenot for BCG and Legacy Family Tree Webinars.
https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/applying-research-standards-to-the-census/

Wednesday, 19 February

2 pm: Navigating the Mayflower Families Silver Books: A Guide for Genealogists, by Bonnie Wade Mucia for Legacy Family Tree Webinars.
https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/navigating-the-mayflower-families-silver-books-a-guide-for-genealogists/

7 pm: Stories From New France – Part 3, by Carol Ufford and Dawn Kelly for OGS Thunder Bay Branch.
https://thunderbay.ogs.on.ca/events/thunder-bay-branch-stories-from-new-france-part-3

Thursday 20 February

6:30 pm:  Who Walked These Streets? How to Build an Online Platform for Historic Neighborhood Research, by Elizabeth Hodges for Allen Country Public Library Genealogy Center.
https://acpl.libnet.info/event/12680502

Friday 21 February

12 pm: Research Your Roots in Alsace Lorraine, by Gail Blankenau for Legacy Family Tree Webinars.
https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/research-your-roots-in-alsace-lorraine/

7 pm: Tremaine’s Maps, by Graham Segger for OGS Niagara Peninsula Branch.
https://niagara.ogs.on.ca/events/tremaines-maps-with-graham-segger-niagara-peninsula-branch-webinar-series

Saturday 22 February

1 pm: HMS Speedy: Tragedy and Mystery, by Dan Buchanan for the Kingston and District Branch of the United Empire Loyalists’ Association of Canada (UELAC) 
https://kingston.ogs.on.ca/events/uelac-kingston-meeting-22-feb-2025-dan-buchanan-hms-speedy-tragedy-and-mystery

EXTRA
Sunday 23 February

1 pm: Creating an Ancestor Sketch – A New Approach to Genealogy, by Thomas MacEntee for OGS Halton Peel Branch
https://haltonpeel.ogs.on.ca/

Oceans of Fate: Peace and Peril Aboard the Steamship Empress of Asia

Today is the official release date of this book by Dan Brown. Find out about it in an interview on  the Active History podcast. hosted by Sean Graham.

10 AI Uses Every Genealogist Should Know

Researching at LAC online: upgrades for 2025

A news post from LAC on 17 February. The strategic plan to 2030 includes a user comment “We are a big country. Not everyone can come to a centralized location to research their heritage. Better to digitize what we can so more people can access it.” Sadly, LAC’s commitment to digitization is weak. The only reference to AI is ” LAC will benefit from work being conducted in other domains, such as the digital humanities and ethical artificial intelligence.”

 

DNA Test Sales

Emails from MyHeritage and Ancestry came in about discounts on their DNA tests.

MyHeritage is advertizing a sale price of $56 Cdn instead of the regular $139 Cdn. Add on shipping and HST and the total is $79.34 Cdn. Order two or more kits and there is no charge for shipping. Their sale runs for another couple of days.

Ancestry’s offer is $79 Cdn instead of $129 Cdn until 20 January. The price, excluding taxes and shipping, is not revealed until you enter a credit card number. It includes a 3-month subscription to Ancestry World Deluxe for an additional one dollar for those not already subscribed.

 

Sunday Sundries

Miscellaneous items I found of interest during the week.

The Wreck of HMS Speedy

Author Dan Buchanan will speak on his book The Wreck of HMS Speedy: The Tragedy That Shook Upper Canada to. Kingston and District Branch, United Empire Loyalists’ Association of Canada on Saturday, February 22. Zoom access (starting 12:30 p.m.). via www.uelac.org/Kingston-Branch.

Ancestry adds Ballymena, Antrim, Northern Ireland, Internments, 1875-1934. 

Information on these 9,599 transcriptions is at the source at http://www.thebraid.com/explore-your-roots-page.aspx?title=further-genealogical-resources.

The Genealogists’ Best Friends

With the huge collections at the major genealogy websites, it’s easy to overlook smaller collections — ones that are more focused on a locality and too small to attract the attention of the behemoths. Local libraries,  record centres and museums are where you’ll find these sometime quirky, highly pertinent collections.
I’ve been researching in Lancashire recently. Take a look at the top level collections of the Liverpool Record Office and Archives and local history from the Manchester Central Library. As what’s online is often just a morsel of what’s in the collection it’s good advice to ask the librarian or archivist for advice by email. If you can conveniently do so in person so much the better.
In Ottawa on Tuesday, 18 February, starting at noon, there’s an opportunity when many local heritage institutions will be at Jean Pigott Place, City Hall for a celebration of Heritage Day.

I Am the Very Model of a Nincompoop President

(To the tune of “I Am the Very Model of a Modern Major-General”) With a lot of help from ChatGPT.

I am the very model of a nincompoop  president,
I slap on tariffs left and right, my trade wars are magnificent.
I call NAFTA the worst deal and I tore it up quite readily,
Then forced them all to sign again and claimed a massive victory.

I tax the steel, I tax the cars, I tax the dairy heavily,
And Canada’s so nice, you see, they barely even yell at me.
Their leaders try diplomacy, they think that we’re the best of friends,
But I’ll attack them anyway if Fox News says that it offends!

(But he’ll attack them anyway if Fox News says that it offends!)

I threaten Europe, scold the French, and tell the Brits to stand alone,
I praise strongmen in Hungary but call Trudeau a lightweight clone.
In short, in matters trivial, financial, or belligerent,
I am the very model of a nincompoop president!

(He’s short, in matters trivial, financial, or belligerent,
He is the very model of a nincompoop president!)

I claim that trade deficits mean other nations rob us blind,
Though how it really works is something I don’t seem to have in mind.
I pull out of agreements that my allies all find sensible,
Then blame them when relations start to look incomprehensible.

I call the Germans freeloaders, I say NATO is obsolete,
I cozy up to autocrats but tell my neighbours they must cheat.
I levy tariffs randomly and call it economic skill,
And when they counter back, I claim that proves they’re out to steal!

(And when they counter back, he claims that proves they’re out to steal!)

I slap new taxes just for fun, then tweet the markets into fright,
Then take credit when they rebound, for clearly I was always right.
In short, in matters trivial, financial, or belligerent,
I am the very model of a nincompoop president!

(He’s short, in matters trivial, financial, or belligerent,
He is the very model of a nincompoop president!)

 

Thanks to Ann Burns, Anonymous, Laurie Lloyd, Teresa, and Unknown for this week’s contributions.

 

 

 

Blizzard

“Snow at times heavy and local blowing snow. Amount 15 to 25 cm. Wind northeast 40 km/h gusting to 60. High minus 10. Wind chill near minus 23.”

That’s the official forecast for Sunday. A Winter Storm Warning is issued.

The forecast conditions appear to meet the criteria for a BLIZZARD — “winds of 40 km/hr or greater are expected to cause widespread reductions in visibility to 400 metres or less, due to blowing snow, or blowing snow in combination with falling snow, for at least 4 hours.”

Be prepared. Stay inside. Prepare for power cuts. Make sure your devices are fully charged, you have supplies for the duration of any power cut, and check up on any vulnerable friends and neighbours.

FindmyPast Weekly Update

Northamptonshire Militia Lists (1762–1819)

These 26,819 transcripts, created from the original militia lists held by the Northamptonshire Archives, document men who served in the county’s militia. The 1762 list covers most of the county; for 1817, it covers parishes in the Towcester area; for 1819, parishes in the Daventry area; and for 1774 and 1781, the parishes in the Higham Ferrers hundred (administrative region).

The 1771 Northamptonshire Militia List comes from the original militia lists held by the Northamptonshire Record Office.

Transcripts include name, year, occupation, hundred, place, county, country, and additional notes.

Herefordshire Burial Index (1580–1812)

An additional 9,941 burial records expand coverage to 150,184 for the county in the National Burial Index. These records can help establish an ancestor’s final resting place in periods before civil registration.

Middlesex Monumental Inscriptions (1867–2022)

A further 6,635 records from Isleworth Cemetery, Hounslow, bringing the total for the county to 79,293, provides details from gravestones, often including family relationships and personal messages.

Newspaper Archive Expansion

Of particular note are 4,308 pages from the Folkestone Daily News for 1910-1914, a new title updated 1 day ago.

Thursday Tidbits

Ancestry updates UK Death Indexes

Compiled from funeral directors’ records and obituaries, the contents as of 10 February are:
England & Wales, Death Index, 1989-2024: 7,674,311 records
Scotland & Northern Ireland, Death Index, 1989-2024
953,672 records.

MyHeritage updates 1926 Prairie Provinces Census

Updated on 9 February, now with 1,995,864 records, including images. Ancestry’s version has 2,012,756 records,

FamilySearch Experimental Full-Text Search Update

As of 11 February 2025, the FamilySearch Full Text Experimental Search has 955,716,593 records, up from  710,339,386 on 4 December. Here’s the breakdown by region:

Africa (3,792,733)
Asia & Middle East (3,139,333)
Australia & New Zealand (21,430,450)
Canada (34,636,395)
Caribbean and Central America (8,050,248)
Continental Europe (1,228,200)
Mexico (5,187,613)
Other (37,669)
Pacific Islands (1,123,539)
South America (59,639,071)
United Kingdom and Ireland (27,062,210)
United States of America (790,308,678)

The last update was on 14 January, when the following collections of Canadian and UK interest were added

Collection Title Records
Canada, Nova Scotia, Properties, from 1893 to 1894 965,858
Canada, Quebec, Legal, from 24 January 1906 to 25 July 1925 332,510
Canada, Saskatchewan, Legal, 1925 3,843,061
England, Norfolk, Legal, from 1225 to 1700 273,095
Isle of Man, Legal, from 1496 to 1955 753,752
Isle of Man, Properties, from 1506 to 30 April 1984 681,476
United Kingdom, England, Employment, from 1799 to 1829 2,538,721
United Kingdom, England, Others, from 1976 to 1990 1,270,275

 

Tuesday Tidings

This Week’s Online Genealogy Events

Choose from selected free online events today. All times are ET except as noted. Assume registration in advance is required; check so you’re not disappointed. Find out about a few more, mainly US events, at Conference Keeper.

Tuesday 11 February

2 pm: Norwegians in the New World: Tracing Norwegian Immigrants in the American Midwest, by Phoebe Cooper for Legacy Family Tree Webinars.
https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/norwegians-in-the-new-world-tracing-norwegian-immigrants-in-the-american-midwest/

2:30 pm: Give Your Past a Future – An Introduction to WeAre.xyz, by Simon Davies for Allen Country Public Library Genealogy Center.
https://acpl.libnet.info/event/12687468

6:30 pm: What’s New at MyHeritage, by Daniel Horowitz for OGS Lambton County Branch.
https://lambton.ogs.on.ca/events/lambton-branch-zoom-meeting-whats-new-at-myheritage/

7 pm:  Mapping Early Black Settlement in Amherstburg and Colchester Township, by Karleigh Kochaniec for OGS Essex Branch.
https://essex.ogs.on.ca/meetings/essex-county-branch-october-webinar-photo-preservation-and-storage/

Wednesday, 12 February

2 pm: Finding Your Elusive Female Ancestors in Local Archives, by Melissa Barker for Legacy Family Tree Webinars.
https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/finding-your-elusive-female-ancestors-in-local-archives/

7 pm: Black History in Ottawa Streets, by Jean-Marie Guerrier for the Ottawa Historical Society,
https://www.historicalsocietyottawa.ca/activities/events/eventdetail/156/16,17,18,19,20,21,22/black-history-in-ottawa-streets

7:30 pm: Celebrating Black History Month, by members of the Lakeshore Genealogical Society.
Registration at: LGSregister@gmail.com

Thursday 13 February

6:30 pm: The Genealogy Proof Standard in Action: Finding the Parents and Siblings of a Civil War Ancestor, by Lindsey Harne for Allen Country Public Library Genealogy Center.
https://acpl.libnet.info/event/12680543

Friday 14 February

12 noon: Creating Children’s Stories from Ancestral Lives, by Michael John Neill for Legacy Family Tree Webinars.
https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/creating-childrens-stories-from-ancestral-lives/

2 pm: Introducing 10 Million Names, by Cynthia Evans for Legacy Family Tree Webinars.
https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/introducing-10-million-names/

Saturday 15 February

10 am: “Exciting Cause: An Investigation into Women Confined in the 1890s to the Kingston Asylum for the Insane (Rockwood), Kingston, Ontario.”, by Laurie Fyffe for OGS Kingston Branch.
https://kingston.ogs.on.ca/

11 am: Canada and the Great War, by Glenn Wright for the International Society for British Genealogy and Family History.
https://isbgfh.com/event/winter-webinar-glenn-wright/

MyHeritage Launches MyStories

MyStories is “a new global service that enables people to capture their personal stories in a beautiful printed book.”

New on Ancestry: Kensington and Chelsea, UK, World War II Related Records, 1939-1956 

These 7,384 records contain information about air raid precautions, bomb damage, refugees and war relief, welfare work and relief, and rolls of honour. They include employee cards, applications for military medals, London Gazette articles, death and burial registers, refugee lists, and lists of air raid wardens and messengers.

 

Sunday Sundries

Miscellaneous items I found of interest during the week.

Renowned Canadian historian Margaret MacMillan defines the historical moment we now find ourselves in

The Grub Street Project

A digital edition of eighteenth-century London. By mapping its print culture, literature, and trades, it aims to create both a historically accurate visualization of the city’s commerce and communications, and a record of how its authors and artists portrayed it.

Irish National Archives has a new site

Ancestry updates Australia, City Directories and Almanacs, 1845-1948

Lacking census records for Australia, directories play an important role. This collection, updated on 5 February, now has 37,480,812 records

MyHeritage France Vital Records


On 4 February MyHeritage updated:
Church Baptisms and Civil Births – 171,240,855 records
Church Burials and Civil Deaths – 162,332,111 records
Church Marriages and Civil Marriages – 140,303,613 records

I’ve Got a Little List (Poilievre Problems Edition)

(To the tune of The Mikado)

Oh, Canada is struggling, yes, we’ve all heard Pierre complain,
He’ll tell you that it’s broken, but his fix might be insane!
He rails against the taxes, and he hates the CBC,
But ask him for real answers—well, he’s got none, actually!
He loves to talk of freedom and the people he’ll defend,
But only if they all agree and follow where he bends!
And now he’s knocking on the door, but here’s what will be missed,
If Pierre becomes the PM—well, I’ve got a little list!

(Chorus)
I’ve got a little list, I’ve got a little list,
With all the things that Pierre would break—they surely would be missed!

He talks about affordability, but has no plan at all,
Just blames the Bank of Canada, like they caused housing’s fall!
He says he’ll cut the carbon tax and make life cheaper too,
But never says what else he’d do to fix what’s overdue!
He mocks the “woke elites” and how they’ve ruined all our lives,
Yet spends his days on Twitter posting rage-bait to survive!
He blames the press, the gatekeepers, and “elites” for all the grift,
But somehow, when he cashes in—it isn’t on his list!

(Chorus)
I’ve got a little list, I’ve got a little list,
And all his contradictions, well, they surely won’t be missed!

He claims he’s tough on China, yet his MPs take their cash,
And suddenly that convoy’s fine—don’t question, don’t rehash!
He hates when laws are weak on crime, but here’s the biggest quirk:
He loved it when his party slashed the cops and prison work!
And though he rails at handouts and the way that cash is spent,
His gold-plated pension stays—that’s quite convenient!
So if he wins, good luck to us, we’ll finally see the twist—
That when he runs the country, we’ll all be on his list!

 

Thanks to Ann Burns, Anonymous, Barbara Tose, Gail, Gail Roger, John Estaño DeRoche, Maureen Guay, Teresa, and Unknown for this week’s contributions.

 

 

EP23: The Family History AI Show

Mark Thompson and Steve Little offer AI Predictions for 2025

What We Can Look Forward to In 2025
01:02 AI Agents: The Next Big Thing
08:06 Local Language Models: Improved Privacy and Security
13:09 Social Media Chatbots: Coming to Your Groups
18:24 AI Writing Tools: The New Normal
24:16 AI Costs: Dropping Fast
30:43 The AI Horse Race: Who Will Lead?

Anti-Predictions: What Won’t Happen in 2025
36:01 Handwritten Text Recognition
40:21 AI-Generated Family Trees and Diagrams
44:06 Generated Text in Images

https://blubrry.com/3738800/141790397/ep23-ai-predictions-for-2025-agents-local-models-social-media-chatbots-writing-tools-ai-costs-drop/

Thursday Tidbits

Final reminder: This Evening: OGS February Webinar | Connecting Weather and Personal Histories

The Ugly American

Another opinion piece by Dan Gardner.

They weren’t all Ugly

Andrew Carnegie was a Scottish-American industrialist and philanthropist.

TheGenealogist adds Lloyd George Domesday Record Collection  for Dorset

In partnership with The National Archives, TheGenealogist now has early 20th-century records for Dorset covering 1,000 square miles and documenting 128,485 individuals and organisations. 

UK to Canada Genealogy

A shout-out to Penny Allen’s blog. Penny is a Canadian librarian-genealogist living and working in London, so her blog has that unique perspective.  Penny also does Lookups in London and UK Archives as time and resources permit.

NLS Maps News

New online! Ordnance Survey 1:50,000 maps (published in 1974), these ‘OS Landranger’-style maps and provide a colourful overview of the landscape. The maps cover most of England and Wales (with northern England added next year as the maps go out-of-copyright). Keep up with recent additions to the National Library of Scotland online map collection at https://maps.nls.uk/additions/.

Ancestry offers $10 bait!

Until 11 February, Ancestry is offering new subscribers the first 4 months of World Deluxe membership for $10 per month.  Unless you cancel at least two days before your renewal date by logging into your Account Settings page or by contacting Ancestry, the subscription will automatically renew at the end of the 4‑month period at $29.99 per month.

Tuesday Tidings

This Week’s Online Genealogy Events

Choose from selected free online events today. All times are ET except as noted. Assume registration in advance is required; check so you’re not disappointed. Find out about a few more, mainly US events, at Conference Keeper.

Tuesday, 4 February

2 pm: Ottawa Branch OGS Virtual Drop-in. https://meet.google.com/nvz-kftj-dax

2:30 pm: Recognizing Inaccurate and Misleading Genealogical Records, Citations, and Sources, by Bryan L. Mulcahy for Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center.
https://acpl.libnet.info/event/12680398

7:30 pm: Six Free Websites Every Ontario Genealogist Needs, by Janice Nickerson for OGS Durham Branch.
https://ogs.on.ca/events/durham-branch-six-free-websites-every-ontario-genealogist-needs-janice-nickeron-u-e/

8:00 pm: Oops! Married twice (at the same time) Case Studies in Bigamy! by Helen V. Smith for Legacy Family Tree Webinars.
https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/oops-married-twice-at-the-same-time-case-studies-in-bigamy/

Wednesday, 5 February

2:00 pm: Foundations in DNA, 1 of 5: Introduction to DNA and Genetic Genealogy, by Blaine Bettinger for Legacy Family Tree Webinars. https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/foundations-in-dna-1-of-5-introduction-to-dna-and-genetic-genealogy/

7:30 pm: Exploring the Library and Archives Canada Online by Ken McKinlay for OGS Huron Branch. 
https://huron.ogs.on.ca/events/huron-branch-exploring-the-library-and-archives-canada-online-ken-mckinlay/

Thursday, 6 February

7:00 pm: Connecting Weather and Personal Histories by John D Reid for the Ontario Genealogical Society. 
https://ogs.on.ca/events/february-webinar-connecting-weather-and-personal-histories-john-reid-3/

Friday, 7 February

12:00 pm: 50 State-Level Digitized Memory Platforms You Don’t Want to Miss! by Diane L. Richard for Legacy Family Tree Webinars.
https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/50-state-level-digitized-memory-platforms-you-dont-want-to-miss/

2:00 pm: Researching Your LGBTQ+ Ancestors, by Michael J. Leclerc for Legacy Family Tree Webinars.
https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/researching-your-lgbtq-ancestors/

Saturday, 8 February

BIFHSGO Monthly Meeting
9 am: Excel and Family History: How they can work together, by Paul Cripwell.
10 am: E.F. Kelly and The Champagne of Ginger Ales, by Dawn Kelly
https://www.bifhsgo.ca/events

10:30 am: Land Records in your Pyjama’s, by Linda Corupe for OGS Simcoe County Branch. 
https://simcoe.ogs.on.ca/events/simcoe-county-branch-land-records-in-your-pyjamas-with-linda-corupe/

MyHeritage updates Ethnicity Estimates

More refined ethnicity estimates are now being provided by MyHeritage. Previously I had an estimate of 61.8% Irish, Scottish, and Welsh combined. Now it’s 36.3% Scottish and Welsh, 21.3% English, and 12.5% Irish. That’s 70.1% combined.
Compare those to Ancestry‘s 50% for England and Northwest Europe with a possible range of 35 to 57%; 18% Ireland, with a possible range of  11 to 25%; 5% Scotland with range 0 to 16%; and 3% Wales with range 1 to 8%.
Family Tree DNA suggests 40% Central Europe and 29% Ireland.
LivingDNA has 46.1% Great Britain and Ireland, including 8.9% Ireland. Also 39.5% France!
23andMe estimates  75.5% British and Irish combined, with no quantitative breakdown.

Two other announcements are expected from MyHeritage this week.