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Saturday, November 10, 2007

Remembrance Day - Lest We Forget

This is a reprint of an article that was in the Looking 4 Kin newsletter in 2004 ... How time flies!

REMEMBRANCE DAY

Whether you have Remembrance Day, Veterans Day, Memorial Day or you have some other name in your part of the world, this week is a time when we look back and think of those who gave their lives for us in various conflicts over the years. Some of those reading this will have lost a parent, grandparent or other close relative in such a conflict. To them this may be a particularly difficult time, and our thoughts are with you.

In England, as well as the large service/ceremony at the Cenotaph in London and numerous smaller services at war memorials countrywide, we have an annual Festival of Remembrance at the Royal Albert Hall. Towards the end of the ceremony, poppy petals fall from the roof - one petal for each life lost in conflict - very moving for anyone who has watched on TV and, I am sure, a life long memory for those who have been fortunate enough to attend the event.

We can be forgiven for thinking that Remembrance Day relates to the more major conflicts of the 20th century but this is not the case. Remembrance Day is for the fallen of all conflicts and, as I watch the petals fall this year, I will be conscious of the fact that a few more petals have been added - for those servicemen who have died in Iraq and elsewhere in the past 12 months.

If you want to see the history of the various forms of remembrance throughout the world take a look at these sites …

Australia - Remembrance Day Tradition

Canada - Canada Remembers - Veterans Affairs Canada

New Zealand - Remembrance - History of Armistice Day

UK - Remembrance Day - Poppy Day

USA - Veterans Day Home Page

USA - Memorial Day History

There will be others, I apologise if I have left anyone out.

As genealogists, this time of year should also remind us of the wealth of information available in the military records of our own ancestors - some of whom are still living. Did your father, grandfather, or even great grandfather, serve in any of the conflicts of the 20th century? If so, have you looked for the papers that are available in relation to their service? One word of warning though - I have the attestation records of some ancestors, but in one case I have two sets of records for the same man, each showing a different birth date. Always check the information you are presented with - it is not always correct!!

Often, people view genealogy as the collection names and dates to arrive at a 'family tree'. But genealogy should also encompass family history - the research of where our ancestors lived, what schooling they had (if any), what they did for a living and what part they played in important events of the past.

Not many of us will find an ancestor that was famous, like Churchill or Patton, but I am sure we all have reasonably recent ancestors who took part in conflicts. It is surprising how easy it is to find information to answer an often unasked question - 'What did you do in the war granddad?'

For starters, take a look at the Military/War War links at Looking 4 Kin. After that, why not try a search in Google or a similar search engine. If you come across any good links that are not on the Looking 4 Kin site, let Just_M know (a contact e mail is available on each page of the site) and they will be added on the next occassion the page is updated.

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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.

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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

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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

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