Last Minute Legacy Offer

You have just a few hours, until 11:59 pm MST on Friday, to UPDATED – extended to 17 December

Grab a half-price offer on Legacy Family Tree Webinars (new subscribers only) at https://legacy.familytreewebinars.com/happy-holidays-2023-c322.php/.

Even at full price, with the huge backlog of webinars and accompanying handouts, it’s the best deal in genealogy. Don’t miss the opportunity.

If you’re looking for genealogy software, consider Legacy Family Tree 9.0 Deluxe, also with a half-price offer for the next few hours.

 

News from the Strathclyde Institute for Genealogical Studies

Here are two initiatives from the Strathclyde Institute for Genealogical Studies for 2024.

CONFERENCE
‘Advancing genetic genealogy: how the past is informing the present through revolutions in genetic research’ is a scheduled for 7-8 June 2024, hosted at the University of Strathclyde, Scotland and with hybrid access.

Guest Speakers are:
Dr Tom Booth – Francis Crick Institute
Michelle Leonard – Genes & Genealogy and the Fromelles Genealogy Project
Debbie Kennett – University College London
Jonny Perl – DNA Painter
Dr Karen Miga – The Miga Lab at University of California Santa Cruz and the T2T Consortium
Dr Pontus Skoglund – Ancient Genomics lab at Francis Crick Institute

Find our more at https://www.strath.ac.uk/studywithus/centreforlifelonglearning/genealogy/advancinggeneticgenealogy/

SPOTLIGHT TALKS
A series of free genealogy and family history guest speaker online talks.

The first, on Wednesday 24 January from 1 pm ET will feature guest speaker Nathan Dylan Goodwin, genealogist and author of the Forensic Genealogist fiction series (and other non-fiction and fiction books).

Find out more and register at https://www.strath.ac.uk/studywithus/centreforlifelonglearning/news/sigsspotlighttalks/

Sussex Records Updated on Ancestry

Two titles of early Sussex parish records have just been updated, The transcripts are linked to record images, some of which are older typed transcripts,

East Sussex, England, Church of England Baptisms, Marriages and Burials, 1538-1812, now has 2,963,607 records.

West Sussex, England, Church of England Baptisms, Marriages and Burials, 1538-1812, is updated to 1,525,804 records.

New at MyHeritage

The United States Veterans Burials collection contains 12,490,452 burial records of U.S. veterans and some family members from the year 1763 onwards. Records typically include the name of the veteran, date of birth, date of death, and place of burial.  In addition, some records contain the name of the spouse. Burials outside the US and US territories are not included.

The contents duplicate the US Nationwide Gravesite Locator where results returned are for exact matches only.

MyHeritage has also announced the launch of the MyHeritage Wiki: a new, community-led online encyclopedia for genealogy and DNA. It’s a beginning. MyHeritage is looking for wiki contributions.

Giving up rights to 23andMe? – follow up

In the 7 December blog post Giving up rights to 23andMe I asked someone with legal credentials to give an opinion on whether agreeing to the default change to 23andMe’s terms and conditions deprives us of rights we already have without giving anything back of equal value.

The answer is in a post 23andMe amends terms of service by Judy Russell, on her blog The Legal Genealogist. Her bottom line is the good to learn “overall my own take on this is it’s not that big a deal.” Read her blog post for her rationale.

Thanks to Alison Hare for letting me know about Judy’s post.

What’s happening at the LAC Foundation?

According to its website the Library and Archives Canada Foundation is an independent non-governmental registered charity that supports Library and Archives Canada (LAC) in its mission to collect, preserve, and make it easier to access and share the stories, memories and knowledge that foster the sense, meaning and identity of Canada as it has evolved throughout our shared history.

According to a listing in the Canada Company Directory, the Foundation’s registered address is care of Jacques Shore, 160 Elgin Street, Suite 2600, Ottawa, ON K1P 1C3. He is a Foundation director/trustee, one of the three in that impressive group who have served since inception, and was registered to lobby Library and Archives Canada.

If you followed the link to the website, you may have received a warning “Phishing page blocked for your protection,” as I did from Bitdefender. If you take the risk and check out the news and events tab, you’ll find the latest item is from 29 September 2021 about the appointment of a new director. Prior to that, there’s an item, purchase of 70 contemporary Judica items on 22 June 2021. Futher back there’s notice of LAC Scholar Awards in 2020.

What has the LAC Foundation done in the past two years?

From a page on the LAC website, having missed making Scholar Awards for 2021, recipients for 2022 were Jean-Marc Carisse, Jeremy Dutcher, Stan Douglas, Naomi Fontaine, and Deepa Mehta. For 2023 recepients were Anita Rau Badami, Eric Chan, Michel Jean, Kevin Loring and Dorothy Williams.  Unlike the 2020 scholars, Margaret Atwood, Roch Carrier, Charlotte Gray, Serge Joyal and Terry O’Reilly, awards are now going to those with (presently) less of a profile.

How is recognizing these scholars, which appears to be the sole Foundation activity in the past two years, helping the collect, preserve, access and share mission of LAC? I may have missed other activity, but they didn’t surface in a web search, so they don’t appear to be raising LAC’s profile.

As a registered charitable organization the LAC Foundation has to report annually to the Canada Revenue Agency on it’s activities, with emphasis on finances. As the table of the last four years of reports shows, the Foundation has been increasing revenues, limiting expenditures  and building up assets. The bump in expeditures reported in 2022 is likely due to the Judica donation.

Report date Assets Liabilities Revenue Expenditures
2023-03-31 $298,251.00 $39,948.00 $150,095.00 $13,728.00
2022-03-31 $156,935.00 $5,000.00 $121,966.00 $66,373.00
2021-03-31 $99,095.00 $2,752.00 $56,556.00 $15,585.00
2020-03-31 $55,474.00 $69,445.00 $14,971.00

What will the Foundation do?

As the Foundation does not issue a regular report, except that to Revenue Canada, the Foundation specific intention for use of the accumulating assets is obscure.

Does it seek to support LAC by acquiring unique materials that come on the market from time to time? That’s the precedent.

Would it be wishful thinking that the Foundation might consider following up on the “make easier to access” mission by funding enhanced online access to existing LAC holdings of benefit to a broader range of LAC clients than can visit its facilities? 

OTD: The Newfoundland Regiment and the Second World War

Prominent in the Great War, some sources state there was no Newfoundland Regiment in WW2.

Yet twenty-nine men are listed with a date of death during the Second World War on the Newfoundland Regiment Honour Roll (Formerly Newfoundland Militia). All but seven died on 12 December 1942. What happened?

In the St John’s Knights of Columbus Hostel fire a total of 99 people died.  Eighty of them were Newfoundlands and Canadians or British and American servicemen. Nineteen were civilians. Arson by enemy agents was suspected. German vessels were active in the waters off Newfoundland at the time. The ferry Caribou had been torpedoed in Octoberwith the loss of 137 lives, mainly Newfoundlanders, on a voyage from North Sydney, N.S. to Port Aux Basques, Nfld.

Many Newfoundlanders saw overseas service with British and Canadian forces.

This Week’s Online Genealogy Events

Choose from selected free online events in the next five days. All times are ET except as noted. Assume registration in advance is required; check so you’re not disappointed.  Find out about many more mainly US events when you subscribe to Conference Keeper at https://conferencekeeper.org/

Tuesday 12 December

2 pm: Ottawa Virtual Genealogy Drop-In, for OGS Ottawa Branch.
https://meet.google.com/nvz-kftj-dax

2 pm: The Latest Developments in Searching Historical Records on MyHeritage, by Maya Geier for MyHeritage and Legacy Family Tree Webinars,
https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/the-latest-developments-in-searching-historical-records-on-myheritage/

2:30 pm: Discover the ‘Memory Archive’ on People’s Collection Wales: Using digital archive materials for reminiscence, by Reina van der Wiel for Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center.
https://acpl.libnet.info/event/9615198

Wednesday 13 December

8 pm: Where Did Your U.S. Ancestors Go to Church? 5 Ways to Find Out, by Sunny Morton for Legacy Family Tree Webinars.
https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/where-did-your-u-s-ancestors-go-to-church-5-ways-to-find-out/

Thursday 14 December

6:30 pm: Essential Immigration Records for Researching
Your Mexican Ancestors, by Colleen Robledo Greene for Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center.
https://acpl.libnet.info/event/9615205

Friday 15 December

2 pm: Landscape of Dreams: Jewish Genealogy in Canada, by Kaye Prince-Hollenberg for Legacy Family Tree Webinars. https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/landscape-of-dreams-jewish-genealogy-in-canada/

Saturday 16 December

1910s Northamptonshire Property Records and Maps

TheGenealogist continues collaboration with The National Archives to grow its collection of Lloyd George Domesday Survey resources. The latest is over 170,000 searchable property records for 1910s Northamptonshire.  Use them to research family, house or social history, taking advantage of the amazing map resources.

Covering 345 parishes that were surveyed in the years between 1910 and 1915 for the Inland Revenue Valuation Office. The records comprise the IR 58 Field Books and accompanying IR 121 to IR 135 Ordnance Survey maps.

Find out more at thegenealogist.co.uk/1910Survey.  Read TheGenealogist’s article in which these records were used to find the property of a notable Northamptonian.

BTW: Records for the Soke of Peterborough, in the northeasternmost part of present-day Northamptonshire, but previously independent, are to be released in the new year.

Military Monday

When conversation lags one of the topics I raise is asking about places people have lived or travelled to. Picking up on the idea, occasionally, let’s examine some of the sites with Commonwealth War Graves Commission burials.

The most easterly CWGC burials in Canada are at longitude 52.69934W, in St John’s Anglican Cemetery, St. John’s City East. Tucked between a soccer stadium and penitentiary, south of Quidi Vidi Lake, it contains 42 burials from both wars.

For the 14 FWW burials, the median age is 21. Most were with the (Royal) Newfoundland Regiment. Two were with the Royal Navy, two with the Royal Navy Reserve. Extensive research of these and others who Died in Service is documented in a recebtly compiled commemorative database featuring some 1,800 individual wartime biographies of those from Newfoundland and Labrador, or who died there, during the First World War.

The 28 SWW burials have a median age of 33. Twelve were from the merchant navy and five the Royal Navy.  Four were assigned to a secret shore establishment, H.M.C.S. Avalon, that “facilitated the safe and timely arrival of the Atlantic convoys.”

Sunday Sundries

Miscellaneous items I found of interest during the week.

A medieval cold and flu remedy

10 Websites For The History Of Ordinary People

Early estate maps of Dumfries-shire, 1760s-1820s added to NLS maps.

Ancestry updated England & Wales, Civil Divorce Records, 1858-1918 (90,710 records) and UK and Commonwealth, Law Examination Records, 1836-1947 (537,286 records.)

Gmail’s AI-powered spam detection is its biggest security upgrade in years

Today in Ottawa History: The YMCA —YWCA

Want more? Try Atlas Obscura

Thanks to this week’s contributors: Alison Hare, Ann Burns, Anonymous, Brenda Turner, Christine Jackson, gail benjafield, Lolly Fullerton, Teresa, Unknown.

LostCousins is FREE for the rest of this year!

Do you use Peter Calver’s LostCousins website and read his newsletter?  The latest has the following announcement.

“Until midnight on New Year’s Eve the LostCousins site will be completely free, allowing you the opportunity to connect with as many new cousins as you can – and unlike some other sites you won’t be asked to provide bank or credit card details. Because this offer coincides with the start of my Annual Competition (see below) the ancestors and cousins you add to your My Ancestors page will also count as entries – it’s a really great opportunity!”

That newsletter includes an item comparing AncetryDNA matches to the number you might expect. The article is Lies, damned lies, and statistics!