Statistics Canada Steps Back from Real-Time Death Tracking

Statistics Canada is discontinuing the monthly release of provisional death estimates introduced during the COVID-19 pandemic. On 9 July, the final monthly update was published, covering the period from January 2024 to April 2026. The release of this data will revert to an annual schedule, with publication expected on 25 March 2027 to cover the 2025 reference year.

Are we going backwards in our access to public health data?

Historically, tracking mortality in real-time is an ancient concept. In London, weekly Bills of Mortality were first compiled in the late 16th century and published regularly from 1603 onward, specifically to monitor outbreaks of the plague. Parish clerks reported burials and causes of death to a central office, which then printed the tallies for the public. While these weekly reports were eventually superseded by systematic civil registration, they proved that timely data can be compiled, and is crucial during public health crises.

While Canada scales back its reporting frequency, the UK Office for National Statistics continues to issue current, high-frequency data, with its latest release publishing the provisional number of deaths for the week ending July 2, 2026.

New and Forthcoming from Pen and Sword

British publisher Pen and Sword lists six Family History books published this July and coming later in the year.

Starting with the three published this month.

Strange Will Requests and Bequests; Exploring the Vaults of Somerset House, by AJ Griffiths-Jones

From vengeful codicils and heartfelt farewells, to wills etched on eggshells or hidden in hollow bedposts, this book uncovers a trove of bizarre and entertaining bequests. Here are men and women who used their final words to settle scores, impose odd conditions, or deliver one last laugh — sometimes at the expense of expectant heirs.

Tracing Your House History on the Internet: A Guide for Family Historians
by Gill Blanchard

… an indispensable resource for house history enthusiasts of all dwellings, this new and comprehensive guide seamlessly blends those traditional research methods with the vast expanse of online resources. Whether your home is a grand manor, a cosy cottage, or a Victorian terrace, this book equips you with the tools and knowledge to navigate the ever-growing digital archives and databases with ease. From deciphering historical documents to unraveling the lives of past inhabitants, every chapter is filled with invaluable insights and practical advice.

Tracing Your Ancestors Using Newspapers: A Guide for Family Historians
by Chloe O’Shea

… guides you through the process of uncovering, understanding, and interpreting newspaper articles that feature your ancestors. You’ll explore the wide range of stories that can be found, from court proceedings and military exploits to lost pets, acts of bravery, letters to the editor, and unexpected community involvement. Along the way, you’ll learn how to assess the reliability of articles, trace relatives across regions and continents, and make the most of ever-expanding online archives.

Coming in September is Recording the Nations: The Lives, Duties and History of the Census Takers, by Mish J Holman.

In October, Tracing Your Victorian Ancestors: A Guide for Family Historians, by Jonathan Oates

And in November, Identifying Cap Badges: A Family Historian’s Guide,
by Graham Bandy

Westboro Anglo-Celtic Connections Friends Meetup

It’s that time of year again. Join us on Sunday at noon at the cafe at Westboro Beach.

The cafe reopened last year after renovations. It’s more or less where it was previously, just shifted a bit more toward the river. You’ll find more sunshades/umbrellas than last year.

Sunday’s forecast is “A mix of sun and cloud with 30 percent chance of showers. High 25.” Check back for a cancellation if the forecast turns rainy.

FamilySearch Update

Here’s a summary of FamilySearch’s  Record additions so far in July 2026:

Roughly 71 million records were added across 39 collections. There was one Canadian update.

Geographical distribution:

  • Ukraine – Three collections (Kyiv Confession Lists, Soviet Population Filtration Records, Odessa Census) totaling over 50 million records, dominated entirely by the Kyiv set accounted for over two-thirds of the month’s total so far.
  • United States – The largest number of individual collections (roughly 25), spanning immigration/passenger lists (California, Alaska, Maine, Texas, Vermont, South Carolina), military records (U.S. Colored Troops, Massachusetts Revolutionary War, various WWI collections), vital records (Michigan births, Kent County voter registrations), and general resources like the 1940 Census (3.2 million) and GenealogyBank obituaries/births/marriages (6.1 million). Combined, U.S. collections add up to roughly 13–14 million records.
  • Philippines – Nine regional civil registration collections (Western Visayas, Calabarzon, Metro Manila, Central Luzon, Ilocos, Mimaropa, Northern Mindanao, Cordillera, Zamboanga Peninsula) plus the national civil registration set, together contributing about 6.2 million records, with the national collection (5.9 million) providing most of that.
  • Other countries – Smaller but notable additions from Italy (Firenze Census, 80,800), Canada (Ontario Deaths, 316,331), and France (Réunion Civil Registration, 450,069).

The Full Text Search collection added two titles:
United States, North Carolina, Properties, from 7 January 1027 to 2007,  824,881 records added on 9 July 2026
United States, New Jersey, Properties, from 1600 to 1998, 509,267 records, added on 8 July 2026

Weir(d?)Times at Library and Archives Canada

  • Ādisōke June 2026 Update
    Progress on this joint LAC-City of Ottawa project, managed by the City, was reported to Ottawa City Council in June. The project is over budget, behind timeline, with no firm date for opening.
  • LAC’s partnership with Internet Archive Canada
    In its 2024–25 Departmental Results Report, LAC reported that by March 2025 the initiative had digitized more than 14,000 publications, producing 2.8 million images. LAC updated this figure last November, reporting that as of October 2025, 20,254 publications had been digitized, generating 4,320,900 images.
    However, a recent query to Internet Archive Canada found only 851 items from the Library and Archives collection publicly available — just four of which have been added since 2016. A further 27,503 items are currently in process.
  • The Xenotext
    LAC announced the addition of works by Canadian poet and innovator Christian Bök. The donation includes The Xenotext, “a landmark poetic work consisting of two sonnets encoded within the DNA of a living organism, the bacterium Deinococcus radiodurans.” The organism itself is stored at the Canadian Museum of Nature.
  • Library and Archives Canada’s Intellectual Freedom Statement
    Recently posted “Library and Archives Canada (LAC) supports intellectual freedom, the human right to seek information, learn, and share ideas without barriers.LAC upholds intellectual freedom by:

    1. Building national collections that reflect diverse voices
    2. Making our collections available to all
    3. Showcasing stories through our programming, exhibitions, and online content
    4. Creating space for the exchange of ideas
    5. Supporting discussions on intellectual freedom.”
      LAC invites questions. I have asked how the organization’s performance on the five items is to be measured and reported.

Ideas on How to Save my Genealogical Society

On Wednesday, 15 July at 8:00 pm, the Stanly County Genealogical Society of North Carolina will host an online event for Board Members of active Genealogical Societies to discuss ideas on finding new members, using social media, and activities that members enjoy. With many societies closing due to lack of new members or small numbers, societies need an open dialogue with others to see what is helping those that are currently successful.

Reach out to Pcollins.anc@gmail.com for meeting information. In the email include name and email to send the invite to.

This Week’s Online Genealogy Events

Choose from these selected free online events. All times are Eastern Time, unless otherwise noted. Registration may be required in advance—please check the links to avoid disappointment. For many more events, mainly in the U.S., visit https://conferencekeeper.org/virtual/

Tuesday, 14 July

2:00 PM: Ottawa Virtual Genealogy Drop-In, for OGS Ottawa Branch.
https://ottawa.ogs.on.ca/events/.

2:00 PM: Treasures Abound in OldNews by MyHeritage, by Dawn Carlile for Legacy Family Tree Webinars.
https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/treasures-abound-in-old-news-by-myheritage

2:30 PM: Our National Stacks: Maximize Tools and Records at the U.S.
National Archives Remotely and In Person, by Ryan Johnson for Allen County Public Library  Genealogy Center.
https://acpl.libnet.info/event/16670707

Wednesday, 15 July

1:00 PM: Contacting and Collaborating with Cousins, by Nicka Sewell-Smith for Ancestry.com.
www.ancestry.com/c/discover/education

2:00 PM: Advanced Topics in DNA 4 of 5: Advanced Clustering and Organizing, by Blaine Bettinger for Legacy Family Tree Webinars.
https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/advanced-topics-in-dna-4-of-5-advanced-clustering-and-organizing

Thursday, 16 July

Friday, 17 July

2:00 PM: Wills and Testaments in the Spanish Colonial Southwest, by Henrietta Martinez Christmas for Legacy Family Tree Webinars.
https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/wills-and-testaments-in-the-spanish-colonial-southwest

Saturday, 18 July

10:30 AM: Using Libraries in Your Family History Research, by Maureen Brady for the British Interest Group of Wisconsin and Illinois.
https://us06web.zoom.us/meeting/register/XoZZbGhfTie6oaxtYzLKiw

BIFHSGO Conference 2026 Speakers

Just announced:

  • Sir Tom Devine, Professor Emeritus at Edinburgh University, will lead off with an overview of the socio-economic changes within Scotland from 1815-1914 that led to the emigration of so many;
  • Graeme Morton, Professor of Modern History and Director of the Centre for Scottish Culture at the University of Dundee, will tell us how the forces of industrialization drove people in Scotland to move;
  • Alison Spring, professional genealogist, will tell us how those who moved into cities lived, and how we can find them;
  • Morag Peers, professional genealogist and Director of Scottish Studies at the International Institute for Genealogical Studies, will show us how to trace a ship’s passenger back to their Scottish home;
  • Chris Fleet, Map Curator at the National Library of Scotland, will show the most useful maps for emigration and migration, and then give a website demonstration focused on newer tools and more advanced features of the NLS Maps website;
  • Dr. Frances Wilkins, Senior Lecturer in Ethnomusicology at the Elphinstone Institute, University of Aberdeen, and a professional musician, will explore the musical and cultural traditions of Scottish communities in Scotland and Canada, examining what emigrants brought with them, what they left behind, and how their heritage evolved in new homes.
  • Marjory Harper, Professor of History, Aberdeen University and Visiting Professor at the Centre for History, University of the Highlands and Islands, will speak about the effects of religious fragmentation in Scotland and how it drove internal and external migration.

Find out more at https://www.bifhsgo.ca/2026-conference

 

WDYTYA Magazine: July 2026

Catching up, a quick overview of feature articles in this issue:

Get the Most from Death Records
Nic­ola John­son briefly covers the resources; a death certificate, burial register, gravestone, coroner’s inquest, will, newspaper report, and occupational records.

Write a Memoir in Six Easy Steps
Helen Epstein briefly takes you through the process of penning the perfect account of a family member’s life.

The Birth of a Nation
Historian and author Jad Adams details the background to the 250th anniversary of the USA, and what the revolution would have meant for our ancestors.

Also

Sara Khan reveals how Assize records helped WDYTYA?  uncover the truth behind a shocking family story of British TV celebrity Amy Dowden.

Regular contributor Jonathan Scott looks at websites for researching Nelson’s Navy, while his continuing Around Britain series turns attention to West Sussex resources.

And much more.

More Welsh Records from Ancestry

Gwent, Wales, Electoral Registers, 1832-1969 – Now updated to 17,879,132 records. Gwent, formed in 1974, covers most of the historic county of Monmouthshire. Headers on records list the county as “Monmouth” or “Monmouthshire.”
Monmouthshire, Wales, Burial Registers, 1855-1970
– A new collection of 24,415 records from Abergavenny and Chepstow.

Sunday Sundries

Miscellaneous items I found interesting this week.

Using Fable 5 to Untangle a Tough Archiving Problem
A blog post from Mark Thompson recounting how he used Anthropic’s Claude AI models to rescue a stalled genealogy project—consolidating index records from 1870s Victoria, BC police charge books that volunteers had transcribed but never merged due to inconsistent spellings, drift in the original records, and broken links to renamed scanned images. Mark frames this as a lesson in using AI for tireless, verifiable work while always checking its output against source material, with human review and public publication still ahead.

Free Online Lecture Recording from IGRS
Lesser known sources for family history
The Great Famine eviction database
Leading the Way: Michael Leader’s transcripts of Church of Ireland parish registers
Virtual Treasury 101: Records, Resources and Research

“Wets” vs “Drys”: The Manitoba Prohibition Story

What’s Your Society Journal AI Policy?
From strict prohibition to constrained acceptance, journals are, or should be, adapting to a world where AI is often embedded in the tools researchers/authors rely on.

How do you feel about these guidelines from AIP Publishing?

The use of AI tools to prepare manuscripts or improve the readability of original content created by the authors is permitted and does not require disclosure.

AI use should be disclosed when it has the potential to affect the findings or conclusions of an article, including but not limited to:

Analysis of content, data, or images
Designing or conducting experiments
Extracting or synthesizing information.

Canadian Jigsaw Puzzles

Thanks to the following individuals for their comments and tips: Ann Burns, Anonymous, Gail, Penny, Teresa, and Unknown.

Findmypast Weekly Update

London, Chatham and Dover Railway Company

This new collection consists of 13,788 railway records, spanning the 19th and 20th centuries. If a family member is in these records you’ll find Name, Year, Occupation, Birth date, Year of appointment, Appointment date, Last year, Archive and reference. The linked original image may reveal even more, such as: Wage rates, Resignation dates, Notes on their character, Medical examinations, and possibly Ship names

Manchester, Sheffield and Lincolnshire Railway Company

Covering 1818 to 1931, there are 80,813 records to discover.

The transcriptions will include: Name, Year, Occupation, Age, Birth year, Birth date, Residence, Station, Year of appointment, Last year, Last date, Archive and Reference. The images of the original records may provide you with even richer detail, such as: Career progression, Remarks on character, Salary, Illness, and Death date.

Newspapers

100,308 pages were added this week: five new titles and updates to 29 existing publications.

New titles:
Barking Gazette and South Essex Mercury, 1909-1910
Devonport Independent, 1864-1865, 1889, 1891
Irish Presbyterian, 1853-1858
Lichfield Mercury, Tamworth, Burton and Walsall Gazette, 1830-1833
Sunderland Herald, 1859, 1861, 1873, 1897

Updated titles:
Barrow Times, 1874-1875, 1878-1879
Billericay Gazette, 2000
Bootle Times, 2005
Bury Times, 1879
Crewe Chronicle, 2001
Dublin Mercantile Advertiser, 1847-1849
Eastern Daily Press, 1877
Eastwood & Kimberley Advertiser, 1983-2004
Edinburgh Evening News, 1958
Ellesmere Port Pioneer, 2000-2001
Glasgow Evening Times, 1881, 1888
Glasgow Weekly Mail, 1885, 1887
Hampshire Advertiser, 1860, 1908-1913
Harrogate Herald, 1859, 1874, 1952
Herapath’s Railway Journal, 1836
Hertford Mercury and Reformer, 2002
Hertfordshire Express, 1914, 1950
Hexham Courant, 1912
Liverpool Courier and Commercial Advertiser, 1877
London and China Telegraph, 1900
Paisley Daily Express, 1950
Rothesay Chronicle, 1903, 1910, 1912
Salford Weekly News, 1876, 1879, 1881, 1889
Salisbury and Winchester Journal, 1750, 1753-1755, 1761
Teignmouth Post and Gazette, 1916-1919
Widnes Weekly News and District Reporter, 2002
Willesden Chronicle, 1919
Worcestershire Chronicle, 1910
Wrexham Guardian and Denbighshire and Flintshire Advertiser, 1889, 1911