Sunday Sundries

Miscellaneous items I found of interest during the week.

Here’s what I wasn’t able to play fully on Saturday.

Here’s the full video of the 1943 year-end storm in Ottawa that got cut short.

The current state of historical societies in Canada
How alike are genealogical and historical societies? I wondered whether the working paper from this project, which aims to build connections between 14 different groups interested in history, professional historians from universities, and community groups, including those from various regions of Canada and both English and French speakers, might offer some insight.
The document describes the purpose and scope of the survey, outlines the report’s structure, and provides some general observations about each historical societies’ roles and challenges. There’s a lack of analysis, that may be why this is termed a working paper rather than a report. Worth watching.

Attention Span Decreasing? Can You Spare 10 Minutes?
All About That Place is a free annual UK event running from Friday, 27 September, to Sunday, 6 October. It includes 140 short (10-minute) talks on various topics. Organised by the Society of Genealogists, the Society for One Place Studies, the British Association for Local History, and Genealogy Stories, this diverse collection will surely interest those with British heritage. https://www.sog.org.uk/all-about-that-place-2024/

Thanks to this week’s contributors: Anonymous, Brenda Turner, gail benjafield, Gail Roger, Glenn W., Ken McKinlay, Lolly Fullerton, Maureen Guay, Nancy Cutway, Patte Wood, Sam Silvey, Teresa, Unknown.

TheGenealogist Unveils Additional 1910 Lloyd George Domesday Records

TheGenealogist now includes coverage of the 1910 Lloyd George Domesday records and geolocated maps for the entire county of Wiltshire. There’s information on more than 175,000 individuals and organizations.

Researchers can now:
● Locate ancestral homes and businesses with precision
● Discover details about the area their ancestors lived in, such as locating their local school, church or pub
● Gain insights into the social and economic conditions of Edwardian Wiltshire
● Cross-reference information with other historical records for a more complete family history.

There’s more information about the 1910 Lloyd George Domesday records at
https://www.thegenealogist.co.uk/lloyd-george-domesday/.

For a limited time, you can claim a Diamond Subscription for £94.95, a saving of £45. Claim the offer at:
https://www.thegenealogist.co.uk/MGBLGD924

Sources for exploring historical weather

The following are resources referred to in the presentation “Twas a Dark and Stormy Night: Connecting Weather and Personal Histories” by John D Reid for the Ottawa Branch of the Ontario Genealogical Society, 14 September 2024.

Reconstructed temperature records for the St. Lawrence Valley

Historical climate observations in Canada: 18th and 19th century daily temperature from the St. Lawrence Valley, Quebec, by Victoria Slonosky
https://rmets.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/gdj3.11

NOAA/WDS Paleoclimatology – St. Lawrence Valley, Quebec 18th and 19th Century Daily Temperature Data
https://www.ncei.noaa.gov/access/paleo-search/study/15654

Fort Colonge Records 1824-1831
Liveright J. 1833. Fonds McCord Family, P001-838 “John Liveright’s Thermometrical Journals”. McCord Museum: Montreal, QC, Canada.

Ottawa Storm Film December 1942.
https://recherche-collection-search.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/Home/Record?app=filvidandsou&IdNumber=27583&q=1942%20ottawa%20video&ecopy=27583

Canada
Meteorological Service of Canada
http://weather.gc.ca
Scroll to Past Weather and then Historic Data
https://climate.weather.gc.ca/historical_data/search_historic_data_e.html

Ottawa Weather Stats
https://ottawa.weatherstats.ca/

UK
British Meteorological Office.
http:.//www,metoffice.gov.uk
Scroll to National Meteorological Library & Archive
and find Daily Weather Report

Weather in History: 11,000BC to present
https://premium.weatherweb.net/weather-in-history-11000bc-to-present

USA
US Weather Bureau Historic Weather Records
https://www.weather.gov/
Click on Past Weather

Daily Global Synoptic Weather Maps: 1900 to 1971
https://libguides.library.noaa.gov/weather-climate/synoptic-map

Bonus Items

Northern Tornadoes Project
https://www.uwo.ca/ntp/index.html

The Michael Newark Digitized Tornado Archive
A collection of source and analysis materials related to tornadoes and other damaging wind events dating back to the late 1700s.
https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/ntp_mndta/

The Climate Trends and Variations Bulletin
A quarterly summary of how Canada’s climate has changed over the recent past and longer through maps of current and past departures from the mean.
https://www.canada.ca/en/environment-climate-change/services/climate-change/science-research-data/climate-trends-variability/trends-variations.html

Canadian Meteorological and Oceanographic Society Archives
See the publications
Climatological Bulletin (1967 – 1993)
The Canadian Weather Trivia Calendar (1988 – 2019)
Canada’s Top Ten Weather Stories (1996 to date)
Chinook (1978 – 1989)
https://cmosarchives.ca/index_publications.html

Copernicus ECMWF
X (Twitter) has news of the latest climate developments at @CopernicusECMWF

More Yorkshire BMBs from Ancestry

A staggering 6.2 million records for Sheffield and Rotherham, Yorkshire, have been added to Ancestry. They are for the Established Church of England, the original records from the Archdeaconry of Sheffield and under the care of Sheffield City Archives.

Title Records
Baptisms, 1813-1923 2,764,405
Marriages and Banns, 1754-1948 1,849,381
Baptisms, Marriages and Burials, 1538-1812 1,167,123
Burials, 1813-1998 488,050

You can browse by parish and date range at Ancestry.

Findmypast Weekly Update

Lincolnshire, Workhouse Guardians’ Minutes
This week’s biggest update consists of 11,213 workhouse records from Lincolnshire for the years 1837 to 1901. The collection has records for the Boston (3,731 records), Bourne (5,623) and Caistor (11,213) Unions. Find name, birth year, year of the entry,  status, residence, and Poor Law Union. There’s a link to a document which may have more detail.

Leicestershire baptism, marriage and death records
9,595 new Leicestershire parish records are augmenting the 11 titles in the FMP Leicestershire collection. The three BMD titles now total over 2.7 million records.

Rutland baptism, marriage and burial records
For England’s smallest county, Rutland, find 395 new baptism, marriage, and burial records available as images and transcriptions.

Newspapers
The Blackpool title – the West Lancashire Evening Gazette for 1983, 1985-1986, 1993-1998, 2001-2003 has joined the newspaper archive this week. The 20 papers with updates include the following with pre-1950 content.

Belper News, 1912, 1990, 1997-1998, 2000-2003
Bexhill-on-Sea Observer, 1936-1938, 1970-1971, 1996-1997, 1999
Buxton Advertiser, 1858, 1860, 1894, 1968, 1990, 1997-1998, 2000-2003
Cycling, 1920
Eastwood & Kimberley Advertiser, 1897
Melton Mowbray Times and Vale of Belvoir Gazette, 1897, 1966-1968, 1970
Morecambe Visitor, 1896, 1899
Ripley and Heanor News and Ilkeston Division Free Press, 1889, 1970-1971, 1974, 1992, 1999, 2002-2003

The Baronies of Ireland

The latest post on John Grenham’s Irish Roots blog is the All-singing, all-dancing barony maps.

It links to interactive maps. Pick a county, see the barony boundaries, zoom in to see the civil parishes in each barony, zoom in further to see townlands. No clicking through barony names to the wonders of related Irish records.

The post explains the history of the baronies, which were largely irrelevant by 1860.

Weather and Personal Histories

This is shameless self-promotion.
I don’t often give presentations. The last was a mini one at the OGS Conference AI Day in June. Starting at 1 pm on Saturday, I’ll make an online presentation for the OGS Ottawa Branch.

I’m pleased to have the opportunity to speak on a topic that combines my professional background, meteorology, and family history.
Find out about our and our ancestors’ vulnerability to weather, some notable events in Ottawa area history with a weather connection, and how to find out about the weather on a special day in your family history. Finally, we’ll peek at Ottawa’s future weather by looking at trends over the past century.

Please attend—it’s free, you supply your refreshments. Register in the right-hand column at https://ottawa.ogs.on.ca/, where you can also find out about other Ottawa Branch activities.

 

 

The End of the Drought

In Ottawa, the genealogy scene is quiet during the summer months. We’re into September, and the drought is over. Starting with a two-fer at the BIFHSGO monthly meeting — two feature presentations.

At 9 am Patricia Roberts-Pichette and Glenn Wright will give a revised version of Middlemore Children: In Their Own Words.

For many years, extensive research and writing have focused on home children in Canada, but we have rarely heard the children themselves. Drawing on the records of Middlemore‘s Children’s Emigration Homes, Patricia Roberts-Pichette and Glenn Wright let the children speak of their hopes, fears, and experiences in coming to Canada as young immigrants.

Patricia Roberts-Pichette and Glenn Wright are long-time BIFSHGO members and have been inducted into the Hall of Fame. Patricia began her work on the Middlemore project in 2001, and Glenn Wright is looking forward to bringing to life the experiences of home children in their own words.

At 10:15 am, Laurie Fyffe recounts her journey in Exciting Cause: an investigation into women confined in the 1890s to the Kingston Asylum for the Insane (Rockwood) in Kingston, Ontario. Her great-great-grandmother, Sarah Ann Gerrard, died in that institution in 1901. How did Sarah Ann, a mother of four and a devout Anglican, come to spend the last eighteen months of her life in an asylum for the insane? Tracing Sarah’s surprising personal history led Laurie to the medical case history files of Rockwood’s female patients, where she found compelling stories and tragic outcomes for women who fell short of the ideal for female behaviour in late 19th-century Victorian Canada.

An Ottawa-based playwright and dramaturge, Laurie Fyffe has written and produced multiple theatrical presentations at the Ottawa Fringe Festival. In the spring of 2023, Laurie’s play Exciting Cause, created with choreographer Allison Burns, premiered at Arts Court Theatre, eventually receiving multiple Prix Rideau Award nominations. In the fall of 2022, Beowulf In Afghanistan was selected for development through the Great Canadian Theatre Company’s Tributary Project. A Playwrights Guild of Canada and the Canadian Authors Association member, Laurie was Artistic Manager of Ottawa StoryTellers from 2014 to 2017, and now teaches at the Algonquin College School of Media and Design. Laurie is the sister-in-law of a BIFHSGO Hall of Fame member.

Join the meeting in person or online. Details at https://www.bifhsgo.ca/events

AI and Genealogy Update

The Family History AI Show
In the latest episode of this podcast, co-hosts Steve Little and Mark Thompson discuss the latest AI advancements revolutionizing genealogy.

A highlight is a deep dive into the world of AI image generators, exploring tools like DALL-E, Midjourney, and Adobe Firefly and discussing their potential to breathe new life into family history narratives. Find the complete content at https://blubrry.com/3738800/136034321/ep12-hollywood-ai-blunder-ai-image-generator-roundup-google-lens-saves-you-time-researching-use-ai-for-translation.

AI and Family History: Extending Beyond the Basics
On Wednesday evening, I caught this  Legacy Family Tree Webinars presentation by Andrew Redfern. It builds on his April presentation Artificial Intelligence & Family History: An Introduction still available to webinar subscribers.

I strongly recommend this new presentation if you are interested in using AI in family history. He shows various applications in a live demonstration. It should be available for free viewing at www.familytreewebinars.com starting sometime on Thursday morning.

It is the interaction between humans and the AI tools that makes a difference. Anyone can chat with a bot, but the true power is in refining what to say, how to say it, critically analysing output and reiterating details in a dance of manipulation.   
Andrew Redfern

FamilySearch
In just a few days, the number of British records full-text searchable through the Experimental Labs initiative has more than doubled. Most additions are for vital, religious, and government records.

 

Canada in the Battle of Britian Event

This Friday evening at 6 pm Canadian author and Order of Canada recipient Ted Barris will be speaking about his new book Canadians in the Battle of Britian in the Vintage Wings hanger at the Gatineau Airport.

The event is being organized by Vintage Wings Canada, a not-for-profit organization that runs educational events, acquires, restores, maintains, and flies classic aircraft significant to the early history of powered flight in Canada.

The Gatineau Ottawa Executive Airport  is at 1699 rue Arthur Fecteau in Gatineau.

The event itself costs 15 dollars a person which includes beverages, pizza, an evening to hear Ted speak about his novel as well as being able to tour the hanger which includes various planes from the World War Two era. All welcome.

 

WDYTYA Magazine: October 2024

The October 2024 issue has four feature articles.

In I0 Easy Steps to Grow Your Own Family Tree, Laura Berry from Who Do You Think You Are? shares the elementary steps genealogy newbies need to follow to uncover ancestors’ stories,

Mike Esbester writes in Blood on the Tracks about the Railway Work, Life & Death project and explains how to find out if, like Rose Ayling-Ellis, you have a forebear who was injured on the railways.

Else Churchill previews the 27 September – 6 October online event All About That Place, and reveals why focusing on location can give family historians a different perspective. It’s a free event of short presentations. Find out more at subscribepage.com/allaboutthatplace

In Politics for the People Caroline Roope celebrates the Chartists’ hard-fought campaign to extend the vote in the 19th century. I’ve wondered if my 2xgreat-grandfather’s move from Cumberland to London around 1848, when the movement was at its height, was a coincidence.

Those are just the feature articles — a bit more than the tip of the iceberg.

While I usually read the magazine on PressReader through free Ottawa Public Library access, it misbehaved this month. OPL delivered a perfectly readable copy on Libby.

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, at Conference Keeper.

Tuesday, 10 September

2:30 pm: A Case Study: Combining FAN Club Research and DNA to Break Through Brick Walls, by Alicia Lowry for Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center.
https://acpl.libnet.info/event/11547682

7 pm: The Detroit Shoemaker, by Barbara Reaume Sandre for OGS Essex Branch.
https://essex.ogs.on.ca/meetings/essex-branch-september-webinar/

7 pm: Childhood Interrupted: A Child Migrant’s Journey, by her daughter Kathryn Adams for OGS Lambton County Branch
https://lambton.ogs.on.ca/events/lambton-county-my-moms-life-as-a-british-child-migrant-by-kathryn-adam/

Wednesday, 11 September

6:30 pm: AGM Annual General Meeting for the Lakeshore Genealogical Society followed by an open session for participants who would like to share their Discoveries and/or Challenges over the past year.

8 pm: AI and Family History: Extending Beyond the Basics, by Andrew Redfern for Legacy Family Tree Webinars.

AI and Family History: Extending Beyond the Basics

Thursday, 12 September

6:30 pm: Hidden Treasures: Unleashing the Full Potential of
FamilySearch’s Catalog, by Jamie Lee McManus Mayhew for Allen County Public Library Genealogy Center.
https://acpl.libnet.info/event/11548425

7 pm: Really and Truly The Father, by Linda Corupe for OGS Perth & Elgin Branches.
https://perth.ogs.on.ca/events/perth-elgin-branches-really-and-truly-the-father-linda-corupe/

Friday, 13 September

Webtember presentations from Legacy Family Tree Webinars.

10:15 am: Luff In The Devon Cottages: Exploring A One-Place Study, by Kirsty Gray
11:30 am: The Neighbors Knew: Strategies for Finding YOUR Ancestral Details in THEIR Records. by Paula Stuart-Warren
12:45 pm: Translating German Newspapers – As Easy as Eins, Zwei, Drei, by Mary Kircher Roddy,
2:00 pm: Finding John Lee: The Saga Continues, by Nicka Smith
3:30 pm: Explore Millions of Norwegian Historical Records, by Vidar Øverlie

Saturday, 14 September

9 am: Middlemore Children: In Their Own Words, by Patricia Roberts-Pichette and Glenn Wright for BIFHSGO.
https://www.bifhsgo.ca/events

10:15 am: Exciting Cause: an investigation into women confined in the 1890s to the Kingston Asylum for the Insane (Rockwood) in Kingston, by Laurie Fyffe for BIFHSGO.
https://www.bifhsgo.ca/events

1 pm: ‘Twas a Dark and Stormy Night: Connecting Weather and Personal Histories, by John D Reid for OGS Ottawa Branch.
https://ottawa.ogs.on.ca/events/twas-a-dark-and-stormy-night-connecting-weather-and-personal-histories-ottawa