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  • 29 Sep 2021 10:35 AM | Anonymous

    The following announcement was written by FamilySearch:

    FamilySearch Family History Library free webinars for October 2021 offer something for everyone. Mark your calendar for classes on the FamilySearch CatalogWiki, and Mobile Apps, plus two timely classes on Organizing Your Genealogy, and What's New at FamilySearch

    Check out specialized sessions on A Glimpse into the Societies of the Mid-Atlantic States, Jewish Genealogy (The Knowles Collection)and one session for Spanish speakers entitled: Buscando a los ancestros italianos [Looking for the Italian ancestors] and one for Chinese speakers entitled: 在FamilySearch 獲得中文尋根幫助的几种方法 [Several ways to get Chinese root-finding help in FamilySearch].

    No registration is required. See the table of classes below for more details. To view a webinar on the date and time listed, click the 'Yes' to the right of the class title. The 'Yes' link will take you to the webinar.

    If you cannot attend a live event, most sessions are recorded and can be viewed later at your convenience at Family History Library classes and webinars

    All class times are in Mountain Daylight Time (MDT).

    DATE / TIME WEBINAR TITLE (Level) REGISTRATION LINK
    Thu, Oct 4, 10:00 AM MDT Using the FamilySearch Catalog (Beginner) Yes
    Tue, Oct 5, 10:00 AM MDT Using the FamilySearch Mobile Apps (Beginner) Yes
    Thu, Oct 7, 10:00 AM MDT A Glimpse into the Societies of the Mid-Atlantic States (Beginner) Yes
    Tue, Oct 12, 10:00 AM MDT Using the FamilySearch Wiki (Beginner) Yes
    Thu, Oct 14, 10:00 AM MDT The Knowles Collection, What Is It and How Do I Use It? (Beginner) Yes
    Thu, Oct 14, 1:00 PM MDT Buscando a los ancestros italianos (Beginner)
     [Looking for the Italian ancestors (Spanish)]
    Yes
    Tue, Oct 19, 10:00 AM MDT What's New at FamilySearch (Beginner) Yes
    Thu, Oct 21, 10:00 AM MDT Organizing Your Genelaogy (Beginner) Yes
    Fri, Oct 22, 7:00 PM MDT 在FamilySearch 獲得中文尋根幫助的几种方法 (Beginner)
     [Several ways to get Chinese root finding help in FamilySearch]
    Yes

    Want more? Peruse over 1,000 free, on-demand sessions from RootsTech Connect 2021.

    Visit Classes and Online Webinars for more information.

    About FamilySearch

    FamilySearch International is the largest genealogy organization in the world. FamilySearch is a nonprofit, volunteer-driven organization sponsored by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Millions of people use FamilySearch records, resources, and services to learn more about their family history. To help in this great pursuit, FamilySearch and its predecessors have been actively gathering, preserving, and sharing genealogical records worldwide for over 100 years. Patrons may access FamilySearch services and resources free online at FamilySearch.org or through over 5,000 family history centers in 129 countries, including the main Family History Library in Salt Lake City, Utah.

  • 28 Sep 2021 5:29 PM | Anonymous

    The following was written by the Southern California Genealogical Society:

    REMINDER: FREE WEBINAR from SCGS on Saturday, October 2, 2021 at 10:00 AM

    Posted: 25 Sep 2021 06:00 AM PDT

    Community Research Using the National Register of Historic Places

    Peggy Clemens Lauritzen, AG®, FOGS

    Free Webinar from SCGS

    Saturday, October 2, 2021,
    10:00 AM (Pacific Time)

    Register here:

    https://attendee.gotowebinar.com/register/4611131176144427279

    ABOUT THE PRESENTATION

    The National Park Service provides valuable information on historic places, tribal lands, homes, or even an area. Coupled with the “The Historical Marker Database”, these two sites can take you to your ancestors’ area of residence from the comfort of your home.

    ABOUT THE SPEAKER

    Peggy Clemens Lauritzen, AG®, FOGS, has become a favorite speaker at conferences and webinars.  She serves as a Family History Center director and is an instructor and author at Legacy Family Tree Webinars, Ancestry Academy, Family Tree University, and a columnist for Reminisce Magazine.  She received the 2018 Laura G. Prescott Award for Exemplary Service to Professional Genealogy.

    HANDOUT


    A handout will be available shortly before the presentation. A link will be included in a reminder that will be sent the day before the session.

    2020 Webinar Times

    1st Saturdays                                   3rd Wednesdays

    10:00 AM Pacific                             6:00 PM Pacific

    11:00 AM Mountain                        7:00 PM Mountain

    12:00 PM Central                            8:00 PM Central

    1:00 PM Eastern                              9:00 PM Eastern

    ABOUT THE SCGS
    JAMBOREE EXTENSION SERIES WEBINARS
    A goal of the Southern California Genealogical Society is to offer educational opportunities to genealogists and family history enthusiasts everywhere. The Jamboree Extension Webinar Series helps delivers those opportunities.

    COST
    The initial webcast of each session is offered to the public free of charge. 

    Webinars are archived and available only to SCGS members as a benefit of membership in the society. The webinar archive can be found at http://www.scgsgenealogy.com/webinar/archive-index.html.

    UPCOMING WEBINARS
    The list of upcoming webinars can be found at http://scgsgenealogy.com/webinar/jes-index.html.

    JOIN SCGS TODAY
    Learn about all the SCGS member benefits at http://www.scgsgenealogy.com/about/benefit-memb.html.

    After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar.

    View System Requirements

    Please direct any questions to the SCGS Webinar Committee at Webinar@scgsgenealogy.com

  • 28 Sep 2021 4:47 PM | Anonymous

    I would love to try this on some of my ancestors' DNA! Imagine the thrill of seeing their faces.

    OK, so collecting DNA samples might be "unpleasant" at this late date but I still think the end results would be a thrill

    The following was written by Tom Yun and published in the CTVNews.ca web site:

    Thanks to DNA analysis, researchers have been able to generate 3D facial reconstructions of three Ancient Egyptian mummies -- named JK2911, JK2134 and JK2888 from left to right. (Parabon NanoLabs)

    TORONTO -- DNA researchers have given us a glimpse of what Ancient Egyptians may have looked like. Researchers from Parabon NanoLabs, a Virginia-based DNA technology company, have created 3D reconstructions of the faces of three men after processing DNA samples from mummies.

    The mummified men -- named JK2134, JK2888 and JK2911 -- are estimated to be between 2,000 and 2,800- years-old. They come from Abusir el-Meleq, an ancient Nile River community in Egypt. JK2134 is thought to date back from 776 to 569 BC and JK2888 is estimated to be from 97 to 2 BC, while JK2911 is from approximately 769 to 560 BC.

    The researchers shared their findings at the 32nd International Symposium on Human Identification earlier this month.

    Using a process called DNA phenotyping, they were able to extract genetic information about the men's physical characteristics and ancestry to generate 3D models of what they may have looked like when they were around 25 years of age.

    The researchers found that the three men were primarily of Middle Eastern ancestry, with some Southern European ancestry mixed in. Their ancestry turned out to be more similar to modern Mediterranean and Middle Eastern people rather than present-day Egyptians.

    Because the DNA samples were so old, some key genetic information was missing or damaged, so the researchers had to make a few predictions to fill in the gaps. The samples were missing the genetic information associated with eye colour and hair colour, so researchers applied dark brown hair and eyes -- the most common hair and eye colors in the Middle Eastern population.

    Much of the genetic information for skin colour was also missing, so the researchers similarly predicted that the men had light brown complexions.

    "It's great to see how genome sequencing and advanced bioinformatics can be applied to ancient DNA samples," said Ellen Greytak, Parabon's bioinformatics director, said in a news release.

    Many police departments around the world use this technology to generate reconstructions when unidentified remains are found. Parabon researchers say it's the first time that such DNA analysis has been done on specimens that are this old.

    My thanks to newsletter reader Terry Mulcahy for telling me about this story.

  • 27 Sep 2021 8:42 PM | Anonymous

    The following was written by FamilySearch:

    SALT LAKE CITY, UT--Accelerate family disoveries this week at FamilySearch in 8M new records added to collections for Canada (Ontario Tax Assessments 1834–1899), England (Yorkshire Bishop's Transcripts 1547–1957 and Middlesex Parish Registers 1539–1988), France (Mayenne Parish and Civil Registrations 1427–1897), New Zealand (Electoral Rolls 1865–1957), Switzerland (Catholic and Lutheran Church Records 1418–1996), and still more Catholic Records for Argentina, Bolivia, El Salvador, Mexico, Peru, and Venezuela.

    Find new facts about US ancestors in Georgia Tax Digests 1787–1900, Hawaii Voter Registrations 1920–1966 and Montana County Voting Records 1884–1992. 

    (The full list of newly-added records is lengthy, too long to fit here. However, you can find the original article, including a full list of all newly-added records, at: https://media.familysearch.org/new-free-historical-records-on-familysearch-week-of-27-september-2021/)

    About FamilySearch

    FamilySearch International is the largest genealogy organization in the world. FamilySearch is a nonprofit, volunteer-driven organization sponsored by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Millions of people use FamilySearch records, resources, and services to learn more about their family history. To help in this great pursuit, FamilySearch and its predecessors have been actively gathering, preserving, and sharing genealogical records worldwide for over 100 years. Patrons may access FamilySearch services and resources free online at FamilySearch.org or through over 5,000 family history centers in 129 countries, including the main Family History Library in Salt Lake City, Utah.


  • 27 Sep 2021 8:35 PM | Anonymous

    According to a submission filed late last week, plaintiffs in the personal information misappropriation case have asked the trial court to take another look at whether they sufficiently alleged standing. The motion asserts that the Supreme Court’s TransUnion LLC v. Ramirez decision, issued 10 days after the plaintiffs’ case was dismissed with prejudice, constitutes an “intervening change in controlling law.”

    In their complaint, the plaintiffs alleged that the Ancestry.com defendants operate a network of genealogical and historical record websites and sued them for misappropriating personal information without consent and using it for advertising and other promotional purposes. In its June opinion, the Northern District of California court overseeing the case found that the plaintiffs failed to show that the usage caused harm to those searchable on the defendants’ websites.

    You can read a lot more details of this case in an article by Christina Tabacco published in the Law Street Media web site at: https://lawstreetmedia.com/tech/post-appeal-motion-for-indicative-ruling-filed-in-ancestry-com-right-to-publicity-case/.

  • 27 Sep 2021 1:56 PM | Anonymous

    A turned-over gravestone served as the perfect surface to make fudge for a woman living in Michigan.

    How the gravestone got inside the home in Okemos, Michigan, outside Lansing? Now that's a mystery, according to Friends of Lansing's Historic Cemeteries (FOLHC) President Loretta S. Stanaway.

    The monument was discovered in August on an estate auction site after the matriarch of the family was placed in a care facility for Alzheimer's, Stanaway said. A former citizen of Lansing recognized it was probably from a city cemetery and got in touch with the FOLHC, and they started investigating.

    "The family hired an auctioneer to take care of the items," Stanaway told CNN. "As he was going through things, he saw this slab of marble in the kitchen and turned it around and discovered it was gravestone. The family told him they used it to make fudge. The family could not say how or when the gravestone got there."

    You can read more of the story on CNN at: https://www.cnn.com/2021/09/24/us/gravestone-returned-after-missing-150-years-trnd/index.html.


  • 24 Sep 2021 2:44 PM | Anonymous

    The Niagara Falls Library has announced the completion of the digitization of the Niagara Gazette from May 1854 to February 1916. This digitization was performed by the Local History Department and funded under the Access and Innovation Grant through a member project grant from the Regional Bibliographic Data Bases and Interlibrary Resources Sharing Program (RBDB). This grant was awarded to the Western New York Library Resources Council (WNYLRC) by the New York State Education Department.

    For researchers, this project allows for greater access to Niagara Falls historical information from that time period. Access to the digitized files is free and available online to all users, regardless of location.

    The completed digital collection is available on NYS Historic Newspapers at https://nyshistoricnewspapers.org/.


  • 24 Sep 2021 2:20 PM | Anonymous

    Between 1854-1929, more than 250,000 children were placed on “orphan trains” from the east coast and placed with unfamiliar adoptive families across America..

    When they arrived at their new homes, some children joined kind and loving families, while others became indentured servants bound to hard labor. This was the largest mass migration of children ever to take place on American soil and our country’s first child welfare system.

    Minnesota was the first state to set in motion a meeting of orphan train riders in 1960. Three women discovered they were orphans from New York and had traveled west by train to find new homes. The three ladies thought, “If there are three of us, how many more orphan train riders like us are there?”

    Celebration of orphan train riders

    All orphan train riders and their descendants are invited to join the Orphan Train Riders of New York - Minnesota Organization’s 61st Anniversary Celebration on Saturday, Oct. 2 in Little Falls, Minnesota.

    The celebration is open to family, friends, interested persons and walk-ins. The cost is $30, and includes coffee, rolls, a roast beef dinner served by the St. Francis Center Sisters and a program of events.

    The program features speaker and author Greg Markway. Markway is a psychologist and orphan train descendant who has been featured on the Today Show, on PBS and in The New York Times.

    The day’s events also includes a performance by Adam Linquist. Linquist impersonates Theodore Roosevelt sharing his story as a young boy when he spent time with the orphan children of New York.

    In the afternoon, orphan train rider descendants will have the opportunity to tell their rider’s story. Attendees may network with others to find out more.

    The celebration will be held in the St Francis Center at 116 Eighth Avenue East in Little Falls, Minnesota, and will be held from 9 a.m. - 2 p.m.

    Those interested in joining the celebration are asked to reach out to sblehner@centurylink.net. For more information on the orphan train riders, visit www.orphantrainridersofminnesota.com.

    The Orphan Train Riders of New York - Minnesota Organization supports, educates, and preserves the historical epoch of the orphan trains to share with groups of all ages.


  • 24 Sep 2021 2:03 PM | Anonymous

    The following announcement was written by Findmypast:

      • 1910 to 1919 Electoral Registers from England & Wales now available to search online with greater accuracy than ever before
      • New and improved collection bridges the vital gap between the 1911 Census and 1939 register
      • Containing 32 million names and 14 million addresses, the new Registers form a vital resource for anyone searching for ancestors or exploring the history of a home in early 20th Century Britain ahead of the launch of 1921 Census

    Leading family history website Findmypast have today announced the publication of a significant update to their collection of. These new additions have been added to Findmypast’s existing collection of indexed 1920 to 1932 registers to create a vast new resource containing 150 million records spanning over two decades.

    Ahead of Findmypast’s widely anticipated release of the 1921 Census of England & Wales in January 2022, improved access to these important British Library documents will enable family historians to locate their ancestors between the 1911 Census and 1939 Register with greater ease and accuracy than ever before.

    As well as adding a staggering 32 million names, Findmypast’s new and improved England & Wales, Electoral Registers 1910-1932 collection now contains over 14 million additional addresses making it a valuable resource for anyone looking to explore the history of their home.

    Electoral Registers are listings of all those registered to vote in a particular area. The lists were created annually to record the names of eligible voters and their reason for eligibility, such as their residence or ownership of a property. Registration for voters in England and Wales has been required since 1832 and registers were typically published annually, making them particularly useful for tracking ancestors between censuses, uncovering previous occupants of a property or exploring the history of a local area.

    Thanks to a new technique known as “Structured Data Extract”, England & Wales Electoral Registers 1910-1932 has been fully indexed, allowing users to search millions of images by name, date, location and keyword. As well as images, each search result provides a transcript recording the individual’s name, registration year, address or abode, the nature of their qualification to vote or a description of their property, and occasionally their occupation or age.

    This new method has not only enabled Findmypast to extract large volumes of meaningful information from so many original documents, it has also allowed for this data to be structured and organised to a greater degree than traditional Optical Character Recognition. This not only enables more precise searches but also the use of name variants which will catch a huge assortment of miss-spelled names.

    RICHARD JACKSON, Findmypast’s Data Development Manager said: To extract meaningful data from images, the documents go through three distinct steps. Firstly, Findmypast process the images, de-skewing to align wonky text. Then the images are enhanced to amplify the text on the page for better character recognition. Once the text on each image has been captured, the Structured Data Extract process analyses and identifies the contents and structure of each image based on a variety of expectations.

    In the case of Electoral Registers, names are expected to appear on the left-hand side of each image with address information on the right. In time, we hope to revisit this dataset to extract even more value for our customers and hope that they enjoy the results of this first stage of extraction.

    Findmypast is now able provide users with unrivalled record coverage for early 20th century Britain, allowing them to trace their family story across a period of history that has traditionally been difficult for many researchers.

    Other records available to search this Findmypast Friday

    Scotland Monumental Inscriptions

    Discover your relatives' final resting places in Scotland with a unique resource that has just been updated with thousands of new records.

    Check Findmypast’s burial ground list for the date ranges and number of records included for each location.

    Newspapers

    Hot off the press, what family stories will you uncover in Findmypast’s latest newspaper update? Brand new publications include:

    While thousands of additional pages have been added to:

  • 24 Sep 2021 1:43 PM | Anonymous

    The following announcement was written by TheGenealogist:

    St Mary Magdalene, Sandringham

    TheGenealogist has significantly increased their Norfolk Parish Records coverage by releasing 1,445,523 new individuals into their growing Parish Record Collection. These records, which are released in association with the Norfolk Record Office, are fully searchable and transcribed while also being linked to high quality images making them an extremely valuable resource for researchers of this eastern part of England.

    This latest addition brings the total number of individuals in the parish records for Norfolk on TheGenealogist to over 12 million. These new parish records are available as part of the Diamond Subscription at TheGenealogist and allows family historians to find the names of forebears, their parents’ forenames, the father’s occupation (where noted), and the parish that the event had taken place within. Parish records can cover from the mid 16th century up to much more recent times, as TheGenealogist’s latest feature article discovers when it finds Royals sandwiched on the Parish Register page between Carpenters and Production Operatives.

    Announcing the Domesday Book records on Map Explorer™

    The Map Explorer™ now also allows researchers to search for Domesday book entries from the period twenty years after the Norman Conquest. Pins on the map indicate where a record exists in 1086 and links to records that show holdings before and after the conquest. Discover the name of the Overlord, Tenant in Chief and Lord of areas across England. Find out the numbers of villagers – and even slaves that were the lord’s property – for places at the time of William the Conqueror’s rule. Researchers can click the link to read the transcripts of the records that give details of the land, see who held it in 1066 and then in 1086, as well as see images of the actual pages from the 1086 Domesday Book.

    Sandringham Domesday records on the Map Explorer™

    Read TheGenealogist’s article: Parish Registers – egalitarian records where royalty and ordinary folk share the same page.

    https://www.thegenealogist.co.uk/featuredarticles/2021/parish-registers--egalitarian-records-where-royalty-and-ordinary-folk-share-the-same-page-1455/

    This new release of Norfolk Parish records cover the following parishes:

    Acle, Alby, Aldborough, Aldeby, Alderford, Antingham, Antingham St Mary, Arminghall, Ashby St Mary, Ashby with Oby and Thurne, Ashill, Ashmanhaugh, Ashwellthorpe, Aslacton, Attlebridge, Aylmerton, Aylsham, Babingley, Baconsthorpe, Bacton and Edingthorpe, Bale, Banham, Barford, Barmer, Barney, Barton Bendish St Andrew, Barton St Mary, Barton Turf, Beachamwell, Bedingham, Beechamwell, Beeston next Mileham, Beeston Regis, Beeston St Lawrence, Beetley, Beighton, Belaugh, Bergh Apton, Bexwell, Billingford, Billingford with Thorpe Parva, Bingham, Binham, Bittering Parva, Bixley, Blakeney, Blickling, Blofield, Bodham, Bodney, Booton, Boughton, Bracon Ash, Brampton, Brancaster, Brandon Parva, Braydeston, Breckles, Bressingham, Bridgham with Roudham, Briningham, Brisley, Briston, Brooke, Brundall, Burgh Parva, Burgh St Margaret, Burgh St Peter, Burlingham St Andrew, Burlingham St Edmund, Burnham Deepdale, Burnham Overy, Burnham Thorpe, Burston, Buxton, Bylaugh, Caister next Yarmouth, Caistor St Edmund with Markshall, Calthorpe, Cantley, Carbrooke, Carleton Forehoe, Carleton Rode, Castle Acre, Castle Rising, Caston, Catfield, Cawston, Chedgrave, Clippesby, Cockley Cley, Colby, Colkirk and Colkirk with Oxwick, Colney, Coltishall, Corpusty, Costessey, Cranwich, Cranworth, Cranworth with Letton, Cringleford, Cromer, Crostwick, Croxton, Denver, Deopham with Hackford, Dersingham, Dickleburgh With Langmere, Didlington, Dilham, Diss, Ditchingham, Docking, Downham Market, Drayton, Dunston, Dunton with Doughton, Earlham St Anne with St Elizabeth, Earlham St Mary, East Beckham with West Beckham, East Bradenham, East Dereham, East Harling, East Raynham, East Rudham, East Ruston, East Tuddenham, East Walton, East Wretham with West Wretham, Easton, Eaton St Andrew And Christchurch, Edgefield, Edingthorpe, Ellingham, Erpingham, Fakenham, Felbrigg, Felmingham, Felthorpe, Feltwell, Fersfield, Field Dalling, Filby, Fincham, Flitcham, Flordon, Fordham, Forncett St Mary, Forncett St Peter, Foulden, Foxley, Framingham Earl, Framingham Pigot, Freethorpe, Frettenham, Fring, Fritton, Fulmodestone, Fundenhall, Garveston, Gayton, Gaywood with Bawsey and Mintlyn, Geldeston, Gillingham, Gimingham, Glandford, Great Bircham with Bircham Newton and Bircham Tofts, Great Cressingham, Great Ellingham, Great Hockham with Little Hockham, Great Massingham, Great Moulton St Michael with Little Moulton, Great Plumstead, Great Ryburgh, Great Snoring, Great Witchingham, Great Yarmouth, Grimston, Griston, Guist, Gunthorpe, Hackford, Hackford With Whitwell, Haddiscoe, Hainford, Hales, Halvergate, Hanworth, Happisburgh, Hapton, Hardley, Hardwick, Hautbois Magna, Heacham, Heartsease, Heckingham, Hedenham, Heigham Holy Trinity, Heigham St Barnabas with St Bartholomew, Heigham St Philip, Heigham St Thomas, Helhoughton, Hellesden, Hellesdon, Hemblington, Hempnall, Hempstead, Hempstead By Holt, Hempstead With Eccles, Hempton, Hemsby, Hethel, Hethersett, Hevingham, Heydon with Irmingland, Hickling, Hilborough, Hillington, Hindringham, Hingham, Hockering, Hockwold Cum Wilton, Holme Hale, Holme Next the Sea, Holt, Honingham, Horning, Horsford, Horstead, Hoveton St John, Hoveton St Peter, Howe with Little Poringland, Hunstanton (old), Hunstanton St Edmund, Hunworth, Ickburgh, Ingham, Ingoldisthorpe, Ingworth, Itteringham, Kelling, Kempston, Kenninghall, Kilverstone, Kimberley, Kings Lynn St Margaret with St Nicholas, Kirby Bedon, Knapton, Lakenham St Alban, Lammas with Little Hautbois, Langham, Langley, Limpenhoe, Lingwood, Litcham, Little Barningham, Little Cressingham, Little Dunham, Little Ellingham, Little Massingham, Little Plumstead, Little Snoring, Little Walsingham, Little Witchingham, Loddon, Ludham, Marham, Marlingford, Marsham, Martham, Matlaske, Mattishall, Mattishall Burgh, Mautby, Melton Constable, Merton, Methwold, Metton, Middleton, Mile Cross St Catherine, Morningthorpe, Morston, Mulbarton, Mundesley, Mundford, Mundham, Narborough, Neatishead, Necton, Needham, New Buckenham, New Catton Christ Church, New Catton St Luke, New Lakenham St Mark, Newton Flotman, North Creake, North Elmham, North Lopham, North Tuddenham, North Walsham, North Wootton, Northrepps, Northwold, Norton Subcourse, "Norwich St Martin at Palace", Norwich St Andrew, Norwich St Augustine, Norwich St Benedict, Norwich St Clement and St Edmund, Norwich St Etheldreda, Norwich St George Colegate, Norwich St Giles, Norwich St Gregory, Norwich St James with Pockthorpe, Norwich St John at Maddermarket, Norwich St John de Sepulchre, Norwich St John Maddermarket, Norwich St Lawrence, Norwich St Margaret and St Swithin, Norwich St Martin at Palace, Norwich St Mary In The Marsh, Norwich St Mary Magdalene with St James the Great with Pockthorpe, Norwich St Michael at Plea, Norwich St Peter Mancroft, Norwich St Peter Parmentergate, Norwich St Saviour, Norwich St Stephen, Old Buckenham, Old Catton, Old Lakenham (St John with All Saints), Ormesby St Margaret with Scratby, Oulton, Overstrand, Ovington, Oxnead, Panxworth, Paston, Pentney, Plumstead by Holt, Poringland, Postwick, Potter Heigham, Pulham St Mary Magdalen, Pulham St Mary the Virgin, Rackheath, Raveningham, Redenhall with Harleston and Wortwell, Reedham, Reepham with Kerdiston, Repps with Bastwick, Reymerston, Ridlington, Ringstead St Andrew, Rockland All Saints with St Andrew, Rockland St Mary, Rockland St Peter, Rollesby, Roughton, Roydon (near Diss), Roydon (near Lynn), Runcton Holme with South Runcton and Wallington, Runham, Runton, Ryston with Roxham, Saham Toney, Salhouse, Salle, Sandringham, Saxlingham Nethergate And Saxlingham Thorpe, Saxthorpe, Scole, Scottow, Scoulton, Sculthorpe, Sea Palling, Sedgeford, Seething, Shelfanger, Shelton, Sheringham, Shimpling, Shingham, Shipdham, Shotesham St Mary And St Botolph With St Martin, Shouldham, Skeyton, Sloley, Smallburgh, Snettisham, South Burgh, South Creake, South Lynn, South Walsham St Lawrence, South Wootton, Southacre, Southburgh, Southery, Southrepps, Southwood, Spixworth, Sporle with Palgrave, Sprowston and Beeston St Andrew, Stalham, Starston, Stibbard, Stiffkey, Stockton, Stoke Ferry, Stoke Holy Cross, Stokesby With Herringby, Stow Bedon, Stratton St Mary, Stratton Strawless, Strumpshaw, Suffield, Surlingham, Sutton, Swaffham, Swanton Abbot, Swanton Morley, Swanton Novers, Swardeston, Syderstone, Tacolneston, Tasburgh, Taverham, Tharston, Themelthorpe, Thetford St Cuthbert, Thetford St Mary, Thetford St Peter, Thompson, Thornage, Thornham, Thorpe Abbotts, Thorpe Episcopi, Thorpe Hamlet St Matthew, Thorpe next Haddiscoe, Threxton, Thrigby, Thurgarton, Thurlton, Thursford, Thurton, Thuxton, Thwaite All Saints, Thwaite St Mary, Tibenham, Titchwell, Toft Monks, Toftrees, Topcroft, Tottenhill, Tottington, Trimingham, Trowse, Trunch, Tuckswood, Tunstall, Tunstead, Twyford, Upper Sheringham, Warham, Watlington, Watton, Waxham, Weasenham All Saints, Weasenham St Peter, Weeting, Welborne, Wells Next the Sea, Wendling, Wereham, West Bilney, West Bradenham, West Dereham, West Lynn, West Newton with Appleton, West Somerton, West Winch, Westacre, Westfield, Weston Longville, Westwick, Weybourne, Wheatacre, Whinburgh, Wickhampton, Wickmere with Wolterton, Wighton, Wilby, Winfarthing, Winterton with East Somerton, Witton, Wolferton, Wood Bastwick, Wood Dalling, Wood Norton, Woodbastwick, Woodton, Wormegay, Worstead, Worthing, Wramplingham, Wreningham, Wroxham, Wymondham, Yaxham and Yelverton


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