Looking 4 Kin Genealogy Blog

Looking 4 Kin Genealogy Chat | Looking 4 Kin Genealogy Links | Subscribe to Our Blog

Saturday, June 30, 2007

Ancestry.com Launches 150 Years of Native American Family History, Online for the First Time

PRNewswire
PROVO, Utah

PROVO, Utah, June 26 /PRNewswire/ -- Ancestry.com, the world's leading online family history resource, today launched more than 7.5 million names in U.S. Indian Censuses, the largest online collection of Native American family history records. Taken by the Bureau of Indian affairs, the censuses document some 150 years of Native American family history. These censuses create an intimate portrait of individuals living on all registered Indian reservations between 1885 and the 1940s.

The U.S. Indian Censuses are among the most important documents for tracing Native American family history -- as well as the place to for anyone with Native American ancestry to begin searching for their heritage. Representing more than 250 tribes from some 275 reservations, schools and hospitals across the United States, the censuses typically recorded names, including Indian names, ages, birthdates, tribe, reservation and more.

Details of children born in the 1940s combined with information about individuals born in the early 1800s enable researchers to find parents and grandparents as children in 20th century censuses and trace their family to earlier generations. Clues in the census show where ancestors lived and how families changed over the years.

"The stories contained in these censuses will help Native Americans preserve their tradition-rich personal and cultural identity," says Megan Smolenyak, chief family historian for Ancestry.com. "Crossing tribal and reservation boundaries, these censuses tell personal stories of Native Americans living on reservations across the United States. In them we find influential Native Americans who led their people along side those whose stories are still waiting to be told."

Among the well-known names in the Native American censuses include:
-- Celebrated Iwo Jima flag raiser Ira Hayes was counted on Arizona's Gila
River reservation in censuses from 1930 to 1936.
-- Legendary Jim Thorpe appears 15 times in the censuses -- first as a
three-year-old named Jimmie living in Indian Territory, finally as a 50
year old in 1937.


The census also tells countless personal stories, such as:
-- Jesse Cornplanter of New York's Cattaraugus reservation appears in 16
censuses -- first as a child with his parents, then as a father with a
wife and child
-- Gabe Gobin, a logger on the Tulalip Reservation in Washington, who
appears in 33 years of censuses.
-- Seminole Mary Parker appears as a young teenage in three censuses taken
in the 1930s.

Because the Native American censuses were taken so often, they are among the best censuses worldwide for tracing family history. The U.S. federal census is taken only once every ten years. In addition, because Native Americans were not granted full U.S. citizenship until 1924, the U.S. federal censuses before 1930 are sporadic at best for counting Native Americans. The yearly counts and updates reflected in the Indian censuses offer Native American family historians a more complete and accurate picture of their ancestors than the federal census.


Indian Census Collection

Be sure to visit Looking 4 Kin Genealogy Links and Chat.

While there stop into Looking 4 Kin Genealogy Chat.

Try a new Ancestry.com Membership! No Credit Card Required

Labels: ,

Friday, June 29, 2007

GeneAlogy or GeneOlogy

OK, this is a geneAlogy blog so you will know that the correct spelling is GeneAlogy.

However, take a look at Geneology, the common misspelling of the word genealogy, can bring very interesting on-line rewards
by Robert Ragan.

Then next time you are in Google or another search engine, try mispelling the word to see what comes up!!

Labels: ,

Thursday, June 28, 2007

Glasgow, Scotland - Old Pictures at Virtual Mitchell

Information from the site ......

Researching your family history? Fancy a trip down memory lane? This site will bring Glasgow's past to life for you.

Virtual Mitchell

The photographs feature Glasgow's buildings and streets as well as people going about their daily lives. They will be of great interest to local historians, people researching their family history and anyone who would like a glimpse of Glasgow in days gone by. Most of the photographs are from Archives and Special Collections housed in the Mitchell Library. There are also images from Glasgow Museums and some have been kindly lent by private owners.

You can search by area, street, subject or browse through all the photographs

Labels: , ,

Wednesday, June 27, 2007

Recent Military Records at NARA

Time is passing and more and more inormation is appearing online about people who were in the military during the mid/late 20th century.

The US National Archives Access to Archival Databases have information concerning a number of 20th century wars/conflicts -

World War II

Korean War

Vietnam War

Cold War

Labels: , , , ,

Monday, June 25, 2007

Cemeteries in Stockholm, Sweden

Do you have ancestors in Sweden who may have been buried in Stockholm?

At Sök på gravsatta i Stockholm you can search among around 185,000 graves and around 525,000 buried in Stockholm's 11 general cemeteries.

Don't worry about the foreign sounding name to the site - the above link takes you to the English version.

Labels: , ,

Saturday, June 23, 2007

Australian sources for family history

Being an Australian myself and always wanting to find more sources for my research, I am forever surfing the web and coming across some great websites. Here is one such site managed by Cora Num. She has been building up her links since 1998 and covers hundreds of topics including:

  • convicts
  • shipping
  • immigration
  • wills
  • adoption
  • child migration
  • Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islanders
  • cemeteries
  • naturalization
  • newspapers
These links all have a bias towards Australia but she also includes information from other countries. As she is always updating the site, it is a good idea to bookmark it, and check on it every few months for new links.

Labels: , , , , , , ,

Friday, June 22, 2007

Old Maps - Baedeker's Old Guide Books

If you have ancestors in the UK, Spain, Portugal or the USA you will be interested in Baedeker's Old Guide Books which is a site containing old maps of the following -

Great Britain, 1910

London and its Environs, 1905

Spain and Portugal, 1901

The United States, 1909

The webmaster advises .....

This web-site has a collection of old maps that will be an aid to Genealogists and Local Historians. The maps are scanned from various Baedeker Guidebooks which were published before 1939.

Published at the time before the automobile was commonplace, the maps appearing on this web-site, gives a view of parts of Europe and America before the urban spread of the 20th century. Each map of a town shows details such as major buildings, major roads and streets (some named) and railways. The environs maps show less detail.

Labels: , , , , ,

Middlesex England Parish Records

Their Page states:

"The database you are about to access contains parish marriage records in Middlesex County, England between 1563 and 1895. The data came from books at the Gainesville (FL) University Library West, which were arranged by parish, and then by date"

Middlesex England Parish Records

Be sure to visit Looking 4 Kin Genealogy Links and Chat.

While there stop into Looking 4 Kin Genealogy Chat.

Try a new Ancestry.com Membership! No Credit Card Required

Labels: , ,

Thursday, June 21, 2007

Online Database of U.S. WW II Missing in Action and POWs

A blog from Gary in BC ...

The Defense POW/Missing Personnel Office (DPMO) has created the first electronic listing of missing personnel from the Second World War. The records came from two historical sources:

Rosters of Military Personnel Whose Remains Were Not Recovered, 1951-1954
and
The World War II Rosters of the Dead (All Services).

POWs and MIAs are listed as well as those buried at sea. Entries on this website were created by corroborating names and service numbers that appear in both sources.

You can access the "Service Personnel Not Recovered Following World War II" database at Defense POW/Missing Personnel Office

Use of the database is simple:

Go to the site's web page, and then look for the first letter of the person's last name. There you will find separate listing for Army, Army Air Forces, Navy, Marine Corps, and Others. The Others listings appear to all be civilians, including Merchant Marine. Service personnel who were buried at sea are listed in a separate section of the same web site.

Again, this web site contains lists only for those persons whose bodies were not recovered and those who were buried at sea.

Labels: , , , ,

Wednesday, June 20, 2007

The Historic Value of Money

I was looking at the will of an ancestor recently and saw that he left his sister-in-law a sum of £5 (five UK pounds).

It is not a particularly old will as the gentleman in question died in December 1927, but it got me to thinking what that £5 would be worth now.

There are lots of ways of valuing the current worth of historical sums, but I found a couple of sites that make the job easy ....

If you are in the UK then The National Archives Currency Convertor site will give a comparison at 5 yearly intervals.

With the help of the site, I found that £5 in 1930 (the nearest 5 year rounding) would would have the spending worth of approximately £167 in today's money.

If you are in the US then I found The Inflation Calculator which does the same task.

I took US$5 and did the conversion from 1927 and found that the relative worth in today's money is approximately $55

It would seem that inflation has been a lot higher in the UK - or perhaps they used a different basis for comparison.

I feel sure that there are similar convertors online for other countries of the world.

Whilst looking at my problem over the £5 legacy I also came across the Measuring Worth site.

It is a somewhat complicated site that explains lots of ways in which monetary values can be compared, and it is surprising how the results can vary. It was much too difficult for me to take in but perhaps it will be more helpful to some.

Be sure to visit Looking 4 Kin Genealogy Links & Chat

Labels: , , ,

Tuesday, June 19, 2007

Ireland - Australia Transportation Database

A searchable database of convicts who were transcported from Ireland to Australia together with some of their families who travelled as free settlers.

Rather than try to explain the site, as I am sure I could not do it justice, I show the information quoted on the main page of the Ireland-Australia transportation database

The National Archives of Ireland holds a wide range of records relating to the transportation of convicts from Ireland to Australia covering the period 1788 to 1868. In some cases these include records of members of convicts' families transported as free settlers

To mark the Australian Bicentenary in 1988, the Taoiseach presented microfilms of the most important of these records to the Government and People of Australia as a gift from the Government and People of Ireland. A computerised index to the records was prepared with the help of IBM and is available for use at various locations in Australia.

While the collection of convict petitions dates from the beginning of transportation from Ireland to Australia in 1791, all transportation registers compiled before 1836 were destroyed in the Four Courts fire of June 1922. Therefore, if the person you are researching was convicted before 1836, but was not the subject of a petition, he or she will not appear on this database. In other words, the records from which the transportation database was compiled such as the transportation registers, convict reference files and petitions to government for pardon or commutation of sentence, are incomplete.

Online search

To search the transportation database, please click on the following link: Ireland-Australia transportation database

For more on the history and historical sources of transportation, consult the brief outline and the comprehensive article by Rena Lohan


Be sure to visit Looking 4 Kin Genealogy Links & Chat

Labels: , ,

Monday, June 18, 2007

Papers Past - New Zealand Newspapers

If you are in New Zealand, or have ancestors that went there, then the Papers Past website, provided by The National Library of New Zealand, will be of interest to you.

Papers Past showcases selected 19th century New Zealand newspapers and periodicals. The site currently contains digital images of over one million pages from 41 publications.

If you have not been to the site before, make sure you read the 'getting started' section before you wade in - there are some very large files on the site and this section explains how to get the most from the site.

Labels: ,

Sunday, June 17, 2007

The Genealogy of Father's Day

In May we posted a blog in honour of Mother's Day in the US.

I am not sure about the US and other parts of the world, but in the UK today it is Father's Day. So, in honour of all you Dads out there, a small piece on how Fathers Day originated.

According to an article from the Dallas Morning News on 13 June 1963, Sonora Dodd is the person responsible for Father's Day.

Spokane in Washington State became the first place to observe Father's Day when Senora Dodd wanted show appreciation to her father, William Smart, who was a Civil War veteran. That was almost 100 years ago in 1910. In 1924 the President of the United States at the time, Calvin Coolidge, recommended national observance of the day.

You can read the article about Father's Day at The Genealogy Bank

Labels: ,

Friday, June 15, 2007

US Department of Veterans Affairs - Nationwide Graveyard Locator

For those of you that are researching US Veterans ...

Search for burial locations of veterans and their family members in VA National Cemeteries, state veterans cemeteries, various other military and Department of Interior cemeteries, and for veterans buried in private cemeteries when the grave is marked with a government grave marker at Nationwide Graveyard Locator

Labels: , ,

Thursday, June 14, 2007

Vancouver BC - Free Event

I hope those in the rest of the world will excuse an advertisement for a local event in Vancouver, British Columbia which was received from Gary.

Discover Your Past: Local History in Special Collections
Thursday June 21
7:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m.

Level 7 Computer Lab
Central Library
350 West Georgia Street
Vancouver, B.C.
V6B 6B1

Explore the unique resources of the Special Collections Department at the Vancouver Public Library. Using the the history of Stanley Park as an example, participants will shown how to find historical information and use research tools such as indexes, maps, and directories. Slides of historical images of the Park will also be shown.

Although this is not a genealogy workshop, many of the tools -- such as city directories -- are of interest to genealogists, especially those with family roots in B.C. Genealogists researching in other cities can also gain insights about the kinds of resources that may be available for other urban areas.

Admission is free, but registration is required as space is limited. To register or for more information, please call (604) 331-3778.

Labels: ,

Wednesday, June 13, 2007

The Scotsman Newspaper - Digital Archive

The Scotsman is primarily a pay site but various parts can be accessed by free registration

View the first ever edition of The Scotsman for free

You can view articles illustrating key dates from the archive via the Scotsman Timeline

In recognition of the links between Scotland and North America and in celebration of Tartan Week 2007, The Scotsman has identified and made available a variety of articles from the archive

You can also search the Archive for free by using the search function at the top of the homepage - but this shows you the article headlines only

In its free form, The Scotsman is probably more of a 'history' rather than a 'family history' site but - if like me - you want to know what the world was like when your ancestors were alive, then you will find the site interesting

Labels: ,

Tuesday, June 12, 2007

Nanaimo Family History Society - Transcription Project

Another contribution from Gary in BC Canada ......

The Nanaimo Family History Society is transcribing passenger lists. So far they have been working on Montreal port. There is a lot of work involved obviously, but they have quite a list going already!!!

Have a look at their site and feel free to volunteer if you want - more hands make less work!!

Labels: , ,

Monday, June 11, 2007

Research in Ireland

An article entitled Research in Ireland was published in the Looking 4 Kin newsletter on 11 March 2005. Prior to that, back in 2003 or 2004 it was in the old JustGen Newsletter.

I have revisited that article and picked out some of the sources that are available for Irish research. As the original article was an overview, I have increased the information on each source and, where possible, included links to sites of interest.

This has made the original item much too long for a blog, so I will be posting some separate pieces as and when each section is updated.

But first, the introducton and basics of research in Ireland.

AVAILABILITY OF RECORDS

Many of you reading this item will have ancestors who originated from Ireland. The usual comment is – ‘Oh, searching in Ireland is difficult, a lot of records no longer exist’. I must admit that, when I first started searching for my husband’s ‘lost’ Irish Grandfather, that was my first reaction. I rapidly became fed up with encountering the notation – ‘Records no longer exist – destroyed in fire’. On enquiring further, however, I found that there is a great deal of information available to the researcher.

The LDS Family History Centres hold extensive collections of microfilm copies of Irish records – check to see if they can be ordered from the Family History Library.

A search at Family History Centers will show you where there is a centre near you. A further search at the Family History Library Catalog will show you exactly what is available.

The Registration of Births, Marriages and Deaths

The general registration of births, marriages and deaths started in Ireland in 1864 – much later than the rest of the British Isles. The one exception to this is Protestant Marriages, where registration took effect in 1845. I may be wrong, but it would seem from searching the pre 1864 marriages at the General Register Office (Northern Ireland), that not all Protestant marriages have made it onto the indexes prior to 1864. Perhaps not all the ministers were diligent and omitted to forward records for indexing.

Census Returns

The first modern style census in Ireland took place in 1821. Unfortunately, most of the census returns for the 19th century were destroyed in the early part of the 20th century, although there are some snippets around. The first full census available is that for 1901. In view of the difficulties encountered due to the lack of information available from earlier censuses, the normal 100-year closure period was reduced and the 1901 census records have been available for public inspection for some years. The 1911 census is now available for inspection at the Dublin Record Office.

Currently, there is no full version of tbe 1901 or 1911 censuses of Ireland online, but there are a number of sites that provide links to the extracts that are available. One such site is Online Irish Census Indexes & Records

On 6 December 2005 it was announced that agreement had been reached between the National Archives of Ireland and Library and Archives Canada to digitise Irish Census Records for 1901 and 1911.

According to the The National Archives of Ireland site, the first phase of the project, Dublin City and County 1911, is to be launched in Autumn 2007.

In the absence of earlier census returns, the following substitutes are available – and these will be reviewed in detail in later blogs -

17th Century

Muster Rolls (1630)
Books of Survey and Distribution (1680)
Civil Survey of Ireland (1665-1667) and Census of Ireland (1659)
Hearth Money Rolls (1660s)
Subsidy Rolls (1660s)
Poll Tax Returns (1660s)

18th Century

Return of Householders (1766)
Free Looms (1796)

19th Century

Tythe Appointment Books (1824-1838)
Grifiths Valuation of Ireland (1848-1864)
Landowners in Ireland (1876)
School Records (mid 19th century)

Regional Records

In addition to the main countrywide records, over the centuries a number of parishes had their own censuses. For example, in 1770 a census was carried out for the town of Armagh. It was arranged street by street and gave individual names, occupations, size of family and religion.

Update

This item was originally written a few years ago. At the beginning I mentioned my husband’s ‘lost’ Irish Grandfather. I am pleased to say that I have since found him. In fact, Samuel Alexander Brown was not born in Ireland as the family (including Saumuel's children)said - he was born in Glasgow, Scotland. It was great grandfather Hugh Brown who, according to Scottish censuses, was born in Ireland.

It goes to prove once again that you should not believe everything you are told - even if the informants appear to be the most reliable people!

Be sure to visit Looking 4 Kin Genealogy Links & Chat

Labels: ,

Sunday, June 10, 2007

The Genealogist's Resource for Interpreting Causes of Death

The following item was forwarded by Gary in BC Canada ...

Antiquus Morbus is a fascinating web site that provides definitions of archaic medical terms, along with their old and modern definitions. The primary focus of this web site is to help decipher the causes of death found on mortality lists, certificates of death, and church death records from the 19th century and earlier. It often can give insights to understanding your ancestor's life style and last days.

The site is more than a simple dictionary. It not only provides modern-day equivalents of old terminology, but also provides supplemental information on many of the terms found, such as when and where such terminology was found. Many terms include descriptions of the causes of the medical condition. Even better, the web site provides lists of archaic medical terms, diseases, and causes of death in English, German, French and a few other languages.

As an example, on this site you learn that "Gall Sickness" is a popular name for the remitting fever occasioned by marsh miasmata in the Netherlands, which proved so fatal to thousands of the English soldiers after the capture of Walcheren in the year 1809.

This and several thousand more archaic medical terms can be found on Rudy's List of Archaic Medical Terms at Antiquus Morbus

Labels: ,

Saturday, June 09, 2007

Channel Island History & Genealogy

A varied site for showing details of Channel Island History & Genealogy

Be sure to visit Looking 4 Kin Genealogy Links & Chat

Labels: ,

Friday, June 08, 2007

World War 1 Research

At 03.10 hrs on Thursday 7th June, 1917 the British Second Army under General Sir Herbert Plumer started an attack which in three hours resulted in the capture of the whole of the Messines Ridge on the South side of the Ypres Salient.

That happened 90 years ago yesterday, so it has been all over the news in the UK and Ireland.

If you want to know about 'what happened when' during WW1 then WW1 Chronology is a good place to start.

Other pages on the site give details of the following -

How World War 1 Began
The Battles
and
Biographies

Be sure to visit Looking 4 Kin Genealogy Links & Chat

Labels: ,

Thursday, June 07, 2007

Dutch Research

If you have ancestors from the Netherlands (otherwise known as Holland) then you will find that Dutch Genealogy gives a good overview of research in the country.

You need to register to see all the site, but registration is free and very easily done.

Be sure to visit Looking 4 Kin Genealogy Links & Chat

Labels: ,

Wednesday, June 06, 2007

Canadian Civil Registration Information

Added to the Looking 4 Kin site by Just_M during this past week -

Canadian Civil Registration Information

Civil Registration of Canadian births, deaths and marriages varies greatly from one province to another. The information included on each certificate also varies from one province to the other, as it does with different years.

Alberta
British Columbia
Manitoba
New Brunswick
Newfoundland & Labrador
NorthWest Territories
Nova Scotia
Nunavut
Ontario
Prince Edward Island
Quebec
Saskatchewan

Be sure to visit Looking 4 Kin Genealogy Links & Chat

Labels: ,

Monday, June 04, 2007

Canada Research

Gary in BC forwarded the following ......

According to a notice in the Ottawa Citizen of 2007.06.02 Ancestry.ca
has signed a deal with Library and Archives Canada to digitize the passenger records of all people who passed through ports in Quebec City, Halifax, St. John's, North Sidney, Vancouver, and Victoria between 1865 and 1935.

In exchange for access to the paper records and the right to offer the material on its website, the company will give a copy of the digital information to the federal government for public use. The company said it will start by digitizing 750,000 passenger records from the port of Quebec City between 1870 and 1900.

Later this year it will also make available the records of border crossings between the Unites States and Canada from 1908 to 1935.

Labels: , , ,

Ulster Ancestry

Ulster Ancestry is primarily a pay site but don't be put off from going there.

Click the link to the Free Pages for a varied database of information available about Ulster Genealogy, including some passenger manifests.

Labels: ,