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  • 25 Mar 2022 2:36 PM | Anonymous

    The following announcement was written by Findmypast:

    And with 169 new and updated newspaper titles, there are more stories than ever before.

    This week, we have two additions to existing record sets and one entirely new collection, so if you've been struggling to locate an ancestor in our indexes before today, make sure to take a look.

    Middlesex Monumental Inscriptions

    Nearly 4,000 new records have been added to this existing collection covering seven parishes across the country. These include biographical details for an ancestor. Some families were buried together, so more relatives can be found by exploring one record. Some records include original images, and the collection as a whole ranges from 1485 to 2019. 

    Military Nurses 1856-1994 

     Another 9,000 transcripts have been added to this existing collection, which mainly focuses on the nurses who served in the Queen Alexandra’s Imperial Military Nursing Service, the Queen Alexandra’s Imperial Military Nursing Service (Reserve), and the Territorial Force Nursing Service during the First World War. The available detail varies, possibly including an ancestor’s rank, qualifications and training. 

    Indian Navy Records of Service 1840-1947 

    Find an ancestor’s name rank, regiment, and time served with over 1,800 new transcriptions, published in partnership with The British Library.

    Newspapers 

    A staggering 22 new titles arrive in Findmypast’s historical newspaper collection this week, plus 147 existing titles have been updated with new pages. 

    New titles:

    • Bebington News, 1987-1988
    • Brentwood Gazette, 1988-1989
    • Carlisle Examiner and North Western Advertiser, 1857-1870
    • Caterham Mirror, 1988
    • Clevedon Mercury, 1872
    • Dumfries & Galloway Courier and Herald, 1884-1894, 1896
    • East Cleveland Herald & Post, 1987-1988
    • Grantown Supplement, 1894-1912
    • Ilfracombe Chronicle, 1882, 1888
    • Isle of Thanet Gazette and Thanet Times, 1877
    • Kent Times, 1875-1889, 1891-1912
    • McPhun’s Australian News, 1853-1855
    • Middlesbrough Herald & Post, 1987
    • Newmarket Weekly News, 1889
    • Radnorshire Standard, 1898-1909
    • Royston Weekly News, 1907, 1910
    • Rugeley Mercury, 1889
    • Ruislip & Northwood Gazette, 1988
    • Salford Advertiser, 1987-1988
    • Uttoxeter Newsletter, 1987
    • Wembley Leader, 1988
    • Woodford and District Advertiser, 1906-1915

    Updated titles:

    • Abergele & Pensarn Visitor, 1987
    • Acton Gazette, 1986
    • Aldershot News, 1986
    • Annandale Herald and Moffat News, 1886-1888
    • Annandale Observer and Advertiser, 1891
    • Ashbourne News Telegraph, 1989
    • Atherstone News and Herald, 1886, 1891, 1893
    • Bacup Times and Rossendale Advertiser, 1873
    • Banbury Beacon, 1897
    • Barnsley Chronicle, etc., 1897
    • Beckenham Journal, 1912
    • Bedfordshire Mercury, 1911
    • Bedfordshire on Sunday, 1991
    • Bexhill-on-Sea Chronicle, 1899-1905, 1907-1910
    • Birkenhead News, 1987
    • Birmingham Daily Post, 1992
    • Birmingham Mail, 1898, 1991
    • Birmingham Weekly Mercury, 1989, 1992
    • Birmingham Weekly Post, 1910
    • Blackburn Times, 1888
    • Blackpool Gazette & Herald, 1897
    • Bournemouth Daily Echo, 1911
    • Bridge of Allan Reporter, 1875, 1877
    • Bridport News, 1870
    • Brighton Guardian, 1876
    • Brighton Herald, 1870
    • Buckinghamshire Examiner, 1987
    • Burton Daily Mail, 1912, 1989, 1992
    • Burton Trader, 1987
    • Bury Times, 1856, 1871, 1880
    • Caernarvon & Denbigh Herald, 1834, 1836
    • Cambria Daily Leader, 1908
    • Cambridge Daily News, 1987-1988
    • Canterbury Journal, Kentish Times and Farmers’ Gazette, 1859
    • Cardiff Shipping and Mercantile Gazette, 1890-1891
    • Carmarthen Journal, 1985
    • Central Somerset Gazette, 1986
    • Chatham News, 1988
    • Cheddar Valley Gazette, 1986
    • Chepstow Weekly Advertiser, 1855-1856, 1863
    • Chester Chronicle, 1960, 1991-1992
    • Clerkenwell Dial and Finsbury Advertiser, 1863
    • Croydon Times, 1879, 1889, 1900, 1911
    • Daily Record, 1991
    • Deal, Walmer & Sandwich Mercury, 1897
    • Derby Express, 1992
    • Dewsbury Reporter, 1871
    • Dorking and Leatherhead Advertiser, 1987
    • Dover Chronicle, 1894
    • Dumfries and Galloway Standard, 1987
    • Dundalk Examiner and Louth Advertiser., 1930
    • Dunfermline Saturday Press, 1891
    • Durham Chronicle, 1856, 1897
    • East Anglian Daily Times, 1889
    • East Grinstead Observer, 1897, 1987
    • Edinburgh Evening Dispatch, 1893, 1896
    • Edinburgh Evening News, 1913, 1922
    • Ellesmere Port Pioneer, 1992
    • Essex Standard, 1873
    • Essex Times, 1871, 1889
    • Essex Weekly News, 1886, 1897
    • Evesham Journal, 1865
    • Express and Echo, 1898
    • Faringdon Advertiser and Vale of the White Horse Gazette, 1871
    • Faversham News, 1889, 1899
    • Fenland Citizen, 1980
    • Glamorgan Gazette, 1897, 1980, 1983
    • Glasgow Evening Times, 1894
    • Gloucester Citizen, 1962
    • Gloucester News, 1987-1988
    • Gloucestershire Echo, 1895-1896
    • Grimsby Daily Telegraph, 1991
    • Hampstead & Highgate Express, 1892
    • Harlow Star, 1987, 1989
    • Harrow Observer, 1964, 1991-1992
    • Hertford Mercury and Reformer, 1991-1992
    • Herts and Essex Observer, 1983, 1990-1991
    • Hinckley News, 1888
    • Hinckley Times, 1898
    • Hoddesdon and Broxbourne Mercury, 1991-1992
    • Horley & Gatwick Mirror, 1988
    • Hounslow & Chiswick Informer, 1987
    • Huddersfield and Holmfirth Examiner, 1911
    • Huddersfield Daily Examiner, 1911-1913, 1992
    • Hull Advertiser and Exchange Gazette, 1862
    • Illustrated Malvern Advertiser, Visitors’ List, and General Weekly Newspaper, 1858, 1892
    • Irvine Herald, 1987
    • Islington Times, 1863
    • Kelso Mail, 1891
    • Kent & Sussex Courier, 1987, 1992
    • Kentish Gazette, 1887-1891
    • Kilmarnock Standard, 1991
    • Kinross-shire Advertiser.,1891
    • Lancaster Gazette, 1886
    • Lancaster Guardian, 1880, 1910
    • Leek Times, 1871-1872, 1912
    • Liverpool Evening Express, 1874, 1897-1898, 1910
    • London & Provincial News and General Advertiser, 1867
    • London and China Express, 1918, 1920
    • London Chronicle, 1809
    • Long Eaton Advertiser, 1898
    • Louth and North Lincolnshire Advertiser, 1872
    • Lowestoft Journal, 1873
    • Ludlow Advertiser, 1889
    • Lynn Advertiser, 1946-1949, 1958-1962, 1964-1966
    • Man of Ross, and General Advertiser, 1861
    • Merthyr Express, 1987
    • Middlesex County Times, 1942, 1983
    • Montgomeryshire Echo, 1890
    • Morning Herald (London), 1831
    • New Times (London), 1830
    • Newcastle Daily Chronicle, 1926
    • Newport Gazette, 1888
    • North Devon Herald, 1873, 1889
    • North Star (Darlington), 1909, 1912, 1923
    • North Wales Chronicle, 1874
    • Northern Advertiser (Aberdeen), 1885-1887
    • Northern Weekly Gazette, 1868
    • Nottingham Evening Post, 1985, 1989-1991
    • Nuneaton Chronicle, 1911-1912, 1921-1943
    • Oldham Advertiser, 1988
    • Ossett Observer, 1886
    • Paddington Advertiser, 1861
    • Paisley Daily Express, 1987, 1990, 1992
    • Pulman’s Weekly News and Advertiser, 1896
    • Retford, Gainsborough & Worksop Times, 1896, 1983-1984
    • Richmond Informer, 1987
    • Rossendale Free Press, 1912
    • Runcorn Guardian, 1912
    • Saffron Walden Weekly News, 1911
    • Sevenoaks Chronicle and Kentish Advertiser, 1911
    • Southall Gazette, 1983
    • Spalding Guardian, 1938
    • Stockport County Express, 1911
    • Sunbury & Shepperton Herald, 1988
    • Sunday Gazette, 1866
    • Sunday Sun (Newcastle), 1926, 1934
    • Surrey Advertiser, 1911
    • Surrey Mirror, 1988
    • Uxbridge & W. Drayton Gazette, 1897
    • Walsall Observer, and South Staffordshire Chronicle, 1913, 1920, 1923, 1936, 1947, 1950, 1954, 1956-1957
    • West Lothian Courier, 1989
    • West Surrey Times, 1897-1898
    • Widnes Examiner, 1878-1879
    • Winsford Chronicle, 1976, 1978, 1988-1989
    • Wishaw Press, 1991, 1993
    • Wokingham Times, 1988-1989


  • 25 Mar 2022 2:20 PM | Anonymous

    The following announcement was written by TheGenealogist:

    With a release of the records of over 35,000 individuals by TheGenealogist, family historians will now have the ability to discover valuable particulars about ancestors’ homes from the following parts of London in 1910: Cowley, Cranford (Bedfont), Great Stanmore, Harefield, Harlington, Harmondsworth, Harrow, Harrow Weald Hayes, Hillingdon East, Hillingdon West, Ickenham, Little Stanmore, Pinner, Ruislip, Uxbridge, West Drayton, Yiewsley and Wealdstone.

    Lloyd George Domesday Map of Ruislip, London

    These latest residential records have been linked to detailed OS maps which allows the researcher to pinpoint an ancestors’ property on maps that go down to plot level. These land tax records were originally collected by the Inland Revenue’s Valuation Office and are sourced from The National Archives IR58 records. Searchable by name or keywords using TheGenealogist’s Master Search, or by selecting a pin from the map displayed inside the powerful Map Explorer™, this tool allows family historians the ability to switch between georeferenced modern and historic maps and so to gain a better understanding of the neighbourhood in which ancestors from 1910 had lived or worked and to see how it may have changed in the intervening period. With contemporary maps you can see where the nearest churches, public houses and railway stations to your forebears' homes were, along with other places that may have featured in your ancestors’ daily life in the area.

    St Martin’s Church Ruislip from TheGenealogist's Image Archive

    Property records, such as these that were uniquely digitised by TheGenealogist from the originals at The National Archives, allow house and family history researchers the ability to unearth information that had been recorded by the authorities about the owners and occupiers of the homes, land, outbuildings and property at the time.

    Read TheGenealogist’s article: Landowner and Occupiers records for Harrow reveal the school, homes and other properties details

    https://www.thegenealogist.co.uk/featuredarticles/2022/landowner-and-occupier-records-for-harrow-reveal-the-school-homes-and-other-properties-1524/

    About TheGenealogist

    TheGenealogist is an award-winning online family history website, who put a wealth of information at the fingertips of family historians. Their approach is to bring hard to use physical records to life online with easy to use interfaces such as their Tithe and newly released Lloyd George Domesday collections.

    TheGenealogist’s innovative SmartSearch technology links records together to help you find your ancestors more easily. TheGenealogist is one of the leading providers of online family history records. Along with the standard Birth, Marriage, Death and Census records, they also have significant collections of Parish and Nonconformist records, PCC Will Records, Irish Records, Military records, Occupations, Newspaper record collections amongst many others.

    TheGenealogist uses the latest technology to help you bring your family history to life. Use TheGenealogist to find your ancestors today!

  • 25 Mar 2022 8:50 AM | Anonymous

    COVID-19 drove the largest death spike in a century, with 535,000 more deaths in 2020 than in 2019, according to newly released U.S. Census Bureau data.

    Why it matters: The new data shows how profoundly the pandemic has impacted the U.S. population, as Americans died or fled cities for the sanctuary of cheaper or less populous areas.

    By the numbers: There was a 19% jump in the number of U.S. deaths between 2019 and 2020. Before then, the largest increase of the decade had been just 3.3% in 2015.

    • The U.S. death toll remained high in 2021, according to the latest provisional data for the year, and the pandemic has disrupted what were once predictable, seasonal mortality trends.

    The overall rise in mortality contributed to deaths outpacing births in more than 73% of U.S. counties between mid-2020 and mid-2021 — a record high and up from 56% the year before and 46% in 2019.

    • Half of states saw more deaths than births, a phenomenon called "natural decrease." The trend was particularly clear in the Northeast and the South, according to the census bureau.
    • Every county in Delaware, Maine, New Hampshire and Rhode Island experienced a natural decrease.

    You can read more in an article by Stef W. Kight published in the Axios.com web site at: https://bit.ly/3tCVT1O

  • 24 Mar 2022 11:53 AM | Anonymous

    Researchers, historians, and genealogy enthusiasts now have an expanded resource to explore the history of the whaling industry and the individuals who were part of the global enterprise, with recent additions to the Whaling History website (WhalingHistory.org), a joint project of Mystic Seaport Museum and the New Bedford Whaling Museum.

    William Bradford, The Port of New Bedford from Crow Island, 1854, oil painting. New Bedford Whaling Museum, 1975.18

    The data presented combines many sources including logbooks, journals, ship registers, newspapers, business papers, and custom house records. Users can find and trace whaling voyages and ships to specific logbooks, as well as the list of crew members aboard many of the voyages.

    A popular feature of the site is a dialog where users can search crew lists to discover if they have a relative who shipped out on a whaling voyage.

    The foundational fabric of Whaling History features three databases that have been stitched together – the American Offshore Whaling Voyage (AOWV) database, the American Offshore Whaling Log database, and an extensive whaling crew list database. All data is open to the public and is downloadable for any researcher to use with other tools and systems.

    At the heart of the current site are seven interconnected databases. Three of them relate to American offshore whaling: one describing every known voyage from the 1700s through the 1920s, another transcribing location information from whaling logbooks, and the third containing crew lists for these voyages. Two of the databases relate to the British Southern Whale Fishery (1775–1859): one describing every known voyage, whaling or sealing, to the south of Britain, and one containing the corresponding crew lists. The sixth database describes whaling voyages from British North America, including Nova Scotia and New Brunswick from 1779–1845. And the seventh describes voyages from France.

    Details may be found at: https://bit.ly/3tAs81C.


  • 24 Mar 2022 11:43 AM | Anonymous

    The Caribbean Genealogy Library has opened a window into history for U.S. Virgin Islands students of all ages with the launch this week of the TeachVIHistory.com website.

    The website was developed to assist educators in teaching U.S. Virgin Islands history, and to encourage the use of digitized primary source material in the classroom, according to a press release announcing the launch.

    “A primary source is a first-hand account of an event or topic. It’s something created by people who were present at the time in history you want to study. A primary source has not been modified by interpretation,” the release explained.

    Primary sources included in the project include artifacts such as a stone ax and a St. John Market Basket. There are historical maps of St. Thomas and St. Croix. Posters advertising a meeting about the sale of the Danish West Indies for use in teaching about the 1917 Transfer of the islands from Denmark to the United States, and a political campaign poster of Lorraine Berry for research about elections and voting, according to the release.

    You can read more at: https://bit.ly/3usMqcz.

    The TeachVIHistory.com website can be found at: www.TeachVIHistory.com.


  • 24 Mar 2022 10:05 AM | Anonymous

    I suspect this seminar will interest many readers of this newsletter:

    Sunday, April 3, 12-4:30 PM eastern (virtual) 
    Does the invasion of Ukraine have you thinking about your Jewish roots there? Are you wondering how to learn the specifics of your family’s Jewish Ukrainian story? Are you hoping to better understand your own identity as a way of connecting more meaningfully to the current situation?
    In this one-day, four-part workshop, we aim to show you how to reconstruct your family’s history in Ukraine and interpret it within the larger context of Ukraine’s history. Although the workshop is designed for newer researchers, there will be content for people with all levels of genealogy experience, taught by leading Jewish genealogists.

    100% of all proceeds will benefit the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee and Razom for Ukraine, two leading non-profits providing extensive, on-the-ground support to Ukrainians affected by the current humanitarian crisis. Donations are tax-deductible where allowed by law.


  • 24 Mar 2022 9:43 AM | Anonymous

    The following is a press release written by Ancestry, Inc.:

    Highlights corporate responsibility commitment to building more connected, sustainable and resilient communities for future generations

    LEHI, Utah--Ancestry®, the global leader in family history and consumer genomics, today published its first Impact Report, outlining the company’s approach to corporate responsibility and detailing key initiatives in three core corporate citizenship areas: ethical business practices; diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI); and community impact.

    “As we strive to help everyone discover, craft and connect around their family story, we have a responsibility to set the bar for ethical industry innovation,” said Deborah Liu, Ancestry President and CEO. “Our report details our commitment to growing our impact in ways that embrace diversity in our organization and products, create more connected and resilient communities, and reduce our environmental footprint.”

    To ensure continued progress, Ancestry set measurable goals and commitments aligned to its corporate responsibility strategy at the beginning of 2021:

    Ethical Business Practices

      • Continue to publish a bi-annual Transparency Report detailing all government and law enforcement requests for data.
      • Move to use of recycled materials in all AncestryDNA kits by 2023 and minimize kit packaging size to reduce waste to landfill by 35% by 2025.
      • Cut Ancestry’s carbon emissions by 15% by 2025 across our real estate footprint and supply chain operations.

    Diversity, Equity & Inclusion

      • 45% of director-level and above employees, and 45% of employees in product, engineering, and science roles will be from diverse communities by 2025. Ancestry defines these communities as women, BIPOC, LGBTQ+, veterans, and people with disabilities.
      • Maintain parity and continue to conduct annual compensation fairness analyses for gender and ethnicity.

    Community Impact

      • Expand global access to AncestryClassroom, which provides classroom resources and Ancestry record collections to teachers at no cost, to reach 10 million students by 2025.
      • Commit $3 million to acquiring, digitizing, and making at-risk cultural records available for free by 2025.

    Ancestry measures progress towards its goals, and against industry peers, using the Sustainability Accounting Standards Board (SASB) framework. Baseline metrics aligned with the SASB Standards – and voluntarily reported for transparency and accountability – are included in the report for each of Ancestry’s focus areas.

    To read the full report, view Ancestry’s baseline metrics, and learn more about the key initiatives within each impact area, visit https://www.ancestry.com/corporate/annual-impact-report.

    About Ancestry

    Ancestry®, the global leader in family history and consumer genomics, empowers journeys of personal discovery to enrich lives. With our unparalleled collection of more than 30 billion records and over 20 million people in our growing consumer DNA network, customers can discover their family story and gain a new level of understanding about their lives. For over 30 years, we’ve built trusted relationships with millions of people who have chosen us as the platform for discovering, preserving and sharing the most important information about themselves and their families.

  • 23 Mar 2022 11:07 AM | Anonymous

    The following announcement was written by Vivid-Pix:

    Set to Open Late 2022 in Charleston, SC

  • 23 Mar 2022 10:53 AM | Anonymous

    Historic England has published more than 400,000 aerial photographs online for the first time, including hundreds of locations in the East.

    The pictures include historic landmarks and cropmarks showing hidden archaeology beneath the surface.

    Historic England hopes to add more than six million aerial images to its explorer tool in the coming years.

    Tony Calladine, from Historic England, said the pictures, dating back to 1919, would help "unlock the mysteries of England's past".


    One of the oldest photos in the archive is of Ipswich Town Hall and Corn Exchange, taken in 1921

    The remaining 100,000 images come from the Historic England Archive aerial photography collection, which includes interwar and post-war images from Aerofilms Ltd and the Royal Air Force.

    Mr Calladine said: "The remarkable pictures of the East of England give a fascinating insight into our local areas, allowing people to see how their street and their town centre looked when their great-grandparents lived there."

    You can read more and view multiple aerial photographs in the BBC web site at: https://www.bbc.com/news/uk-england-norfolk-60834666.


  • 23 Mar 2022 8:39 AM | Anonymous

    Researchers create massive genealogical network dating back 100,000 years.

    Researchers using modern and ancient genomes have created the largest human family tree ever made, reports Jack Guy of CNN.

    An international team of scientists combined genetic reports of 3,609 individual genome sequences from 215 populations around the globe to produce a massive family tree that identifies nearly 27 million ancestors and where they lived, per U.S. News and World Report.

    “We have a single genealogy that traces the ancestry of all of humanity and shows how we’re all related to each other today,” Anthony Wilder Wohns, leader of a new study published in the journal Science, tells CNN.

    Wohns, a postdoctoral researcher at the Broad Institute of MIT and Harvard University in Cambridge, Mass., states the study uses ancient genomes from samples dating from more than 100,000 years ago.

    “We can then estimate when and where these ancestors lived,” he says in a statement. “The power of our approach is that it makes very few assumptions about the underlying data and can also include both modern and ancient DNA samples.”

    You can learn more in an article by David Kindy and published in the Smithsonian Magazine web site at: https://bit.ly/3isreOD.

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