Friday, 13 April 2012

Rethinking the Stewardship of Newspapers in the Digital Age - 2

The previous post summarized a November 21, 2009 draft discussion paper with the above title, focusing on a subsection on the current state of newspaper stewardship.

The follow is an extract from 21 April 2010, a draft of the newspaper "Pathfinder" co-authored by Susan Haigh and Samuel Generoux.

4.3 Stewardship and Growth of the Retrospective a Digital Collection

While the above strategies for microforms are recommended, the group recognized that continuing to build the microform collection does not extend online access to historical newspapers, which is what users clearly want.

There are three approaches to extend access to and digital preservation of the Canadian retrospective newspaper collection. The first two would seek to build LAC's collection through the digitization of existing retrospective holdings – by us or by others – and by increasing acquisition of retrospective newspapers digitized by others. A third approach that would strengthen the overall national collection is facilitating better long-term preservation practices by others and the provision of federated access to digitized newspapers.

The first two approaches are discussed below while the third falls into discussions in section 6, the section on National Collaboration.

Digitization of Holdings

There are a range of decisions to be made before LAC would be in a position to launch a substantial newspaper digitization project or program. The decisions related to priority, purpose, content, and approach include:


  • Whether to digitized newspapers as a priority, giving them precedence over other parts of the LAC collection as necessary;
  • The goal of the digitization. Options include: to extend access by providing microfilm-like image-only online access; to provide new forms of access through OCR and indexing; or to create high-quality digital masters with full structural analysis (using e.g. METS/ALTO XML standard) to serve preservation, presentation, and enhanced access;
  • The part(s) of the newspaper collection, and the specific titles, to digitize. For example, the program could aim to digitize selected major daily newspaper titles from microform, or instead, multicultural and aboriginal titles from print. Notably, digitization from print is approximately 10 times more costly;
  • Whether the project is broader than just LAC digitizing from its own holdings; and if so, with whom to collaborate;
  • How to deal with rights issues. For example, a project could target pre-1920 material as it would be effectively rights clear; or target pre-1960 material, as producers' rights have expired; or seek permissions from rights holders to digitize complete runs;
  • Who would undertake the digitization. Options include in-house, outsourced, or collaborative arrangements, and each carries pros and cons;
  • The standards and methods that will be employed. Choices related to grayscale/bi-tonal, resolution, processing, output quality and output format are tied to the project's goals. Each carries cost implications, resulting in the fact that newspaper digitization costs can range from about $.10 per page to $1.70 per page;
  • How to resource the undertaking, and ultimately, what budget will be available.

The working group looked a bit more closely at the possibility of digitizing some of the daily newspapers, because that option would allow stewardship decisions to be taken on the corresponding print collection. It obtained some sobering scale and cost indicators that ranged from $.10 per page all the way up to $1.70 per page depending on the quality of the output, the type of post production and indexing, and who does the digitization.

The following are three examples of content and cost scenarios. These should not be considered as recommendations from the working group and are only meant to illustrate the range of cost options and price points associated with newspaper digitization.
1. For digital scanning of the 12 major dailies in-house:
Number of reels: 21,482 (entire backruns for all 12 titles)
Cost per reel (includes duplicating the real, scanning the duplicated reel, no OCR, no indexing, no zoning, etc.) including labor, materials and hardware: $86.02 (about $.10 per image)
Total cost: $1,847,881.64.
Number of weeks it would take (one microfilm scanner): 286.4 weeks (5.5 years) 
The estimate should be seen as illustrative only as not all 12 titles would need to be digitized, and permissions from rights owners cannot be assumed. 
2. If LAC were to collaborate with the microfilming/digitization company, higher quality imaging could result by being able to digitize from the microfilm master, but the cost per page would increase to perhaps $.20 per page (and that is imaging only).
It is notable that converting images to searchable text through automated and uncorrected optical character recognition (OCR) processing and indexing constitutes a relatively minor additional cost. However, reaching an acceptable level of OCR accuracy to support optimal retrieval introduces substantial human labor costs for quality assurance and OCR correction. Australia has undertaken the interesting approach of enabling volunteer end-users to correct OCR errors. 
3. A more sophisticated preservation and access project, such as that being undertaken for selected Western Canadian historical newspapers at University of Alberta, produces high-quality digital image files with full structural and content analysis using METS/ALTO XML for enhanced search and retrieval. It costs much more (up to $1.70 per image), but provides the most comprehensive access for users.
Clearly any digitization project would have to be scoped carefully with a view to balancing cost factors with the desired outcomes in terms of improved public access to newspapers and their digital preservation.

Collecting Digitized Newspapers

It is unclear that newspapers digitized by others are subject to legal deposit, and owing to the potential scale of that type of ingest, and the fact that LAC's TDR is just now being implemented, LAC has not endeavored to exercise that provision. It is possible, however, that some of the memory institutions and other organizations that are digitizing newspapers would be willing to deposit digital files with LAC for long-term safekeeping and appropriate redundancy. As their project funding and use model (i.e. business model) is likely based on providing access from their own website, and they would most likely seek for LAC to be a "dark archive".

It is important to note that newspaper files tend to be large and the number of files that could be massive. There will be significant ingest and storage implications for LAC's TDR if LAC endeavors to take on a large scale digitization digital preservation role for digitized as well as born digital newspapers.

As there are significant digitization projects currently in play at University of Alberta and at BAnQ in partnership with SOCAMI, exploratory discussion should begin with both of these.

In summary, the working group recommends that LAC:
  • Determine whether newspapers are one of its top priorities for digitization, and if so, develop a mass digitization project plan that will meet its identified preservation and access goals and is scaled to the resources that can be obtained or allocated to it.
  • Explore the feasibility of LAC obtaining files from others digitization projects on deposit or by agreement on a preservation basis, and initially through discussions with University of Alberta and BAnQ.

Thursday, 12 April 2012

LAC in the twittersphere

"Library and Archives Canada (@LibraryArchives) uses its twitter feed primarily as a discovery tool, posting frequent “#collection fishing” tweets with links to images pulled from the archives. They are often thematically linked to timely events ..."

That's the start of a comment post on the Libraries in Space blog on Library and Archives Canada in the twittersphere. http://librariesinspace.wordpress.com/2012/04/09/library-and-archives-canada/

There's a constructive comment on an aspect which the author finds confusing.

The overall summary is:

"I like the collection discovery aspect of this feed, which is enjoyable in a way that has little connection to being a user of the physical space or even the digital collections themselves."
This is especially high praise given that the Vancouver-based blogger is naturally more interested in nearby library facilities.


The free exchange of ideas at LAC


“The free exchange of ideas and information and the opportunity for people to connect with each other lie at the heart of a civil society.”

That's a quote from Paul LeClerc of the New York Public Library in a document  "Setting the Course for Information Resources" posted on the "Towards a Pan-Canadian Documentary Heritage Network" section of the LAC website.

When LAC does so little to facilitate that connection with the bulk of its clients, is it any wonder they are so alienated from the organization they are not up in arms about the budget cuts recently announced?

WDYTYA Australia: Melissa George

Continuing my global perambulations, the latest Australian WDYTYA episode saw actress Melissa George investigate her ancestor who was a benevolent gaoler in Western Australia.

More touching was the story of her great-grandparents who as children went to Australia under the auspices of Fairbridge Homes. One was the 13 year old son of a Church of England Minister who died leaving the mother unable to cope. The other sad tale was revealed by Nick Barrett in a series of death certificates in Taunton, Somerset; both parents died, one in the 1918 flu epidemic, the other of heart disease, leaving three children in care of a step-mother, sister of the first wife, unable to cope.

It was mentioned in passing in the Fairbridge documentation that the step-mother, Florence Victoria Tames, intended to go to Canada which she did in 1921, on the Metagama to join her sister and brother-in-law, named Hopkins, living in Dartford, Ontario.  A query on Rootschat in February 2011, perhaps when the research for the episode was in progress, found her marrying in Toronto.

Does anyone have anything more recent on Florence Victoria Tames who married Edwin Pett?

Findmypast.co.uk adds 1901 Scottish census transcriptions


With the addition of the 1901 census findmypast.co.uk now has full transcription Scottish censuses from 1841 to 1901.

Original census images are not available due to the General Register Office for Scotland's licensing regulations. They can be viewed through scotlandspeople.gov.uk

Access to Information Act improvements promised

The Canadian Press reports on a plan to make the Canada government more transparent http://www.winnipegfreepress.com/arts-and-life/life/sci_tech/feds-promise-online-access-requests-virtual-library-in-open-government-plan-147073505.html.

"Critics have complained that Canada's open government initiatives to date have largely been limited to repacking existing information in new formats.
Access laws have also been widely disparaged for being antiquated and too easy for the government to circumvent."

The plan, described as a blueprint, is long on promises and rhetoric, short on specific near term deliverables. It mentions "The multi-year plan also includes efforts to make material held by Library and Archives Canada more accessible by removing restrictions wherever possible."

Based on past experience that's realistic .. a multi-year timeframe and efforts, not deliverables, from LAC.

BIFHSGO April meeting


April 14, 2012
 
9:00-9:30 am  Before BIFSGO Educational Talk
 
Digital Images for your Family Tree
by Brian Glenn
Taking, filing, imroving and repairing digital images for your family tree (program) using Photoshop Elements 9 and Legacy Family Tree 7.5. Resizing image and changing resolution; cropping; basic photo enhancement; adding images to your family tree program.
 
9:30-10:00 am Browse the Discovery Tables and New Computer (ask questions)
 
10:00-11:30 Monthly Meeting Speaker
 
A Brickwall Chisel - The Cluster Research Project
by Ruth Blair PLCGS
 
You have an ancestor and you know he should be found in that particular parish but he is nowhere to be found in the registers – now what?  You have two people with the same name, age and living to adulthood, how do you distinguish the two? Are they related? This is where a cluster research project can be useful. This lecture will describe how to organize and start a cluster research project to help you breakdown a brickwall in your family history. A case study that is based in England will be used to describe the process.
 
About the Speaker
Ruth Blair is a Professional Genealogist and lecturer based in Oakville Ontario. She has been conducting family history research for over 25 years and has researched her family history from Canada to Ireland, England, Scotland, United States, Australia and New Zealand. She holds a Professional Learning Certificate for Genealogical Studies for Canada, England and Ireland from the National Institute for Genealogical Studies. In addition to being an Instructor at the National Institute for Genealogical Studies she has lectured extensively for the Ontario Genealogical Society and its branches as well as historical societies and public libraries. She is the author of the Passionate Genealogist blog and has written two books “Planning a Genealogical Research Trip to Ireland: The Research Trail in Dublin” and “Remembering Trafalgar Township”.
 
 
Location: Library and Archives Canada, 395 Wellington Street, Ottawa, Ontario, Canada.
 
Come early and browse our Discovery Tables on England, Ireland & Scotland. Meet with family history experts. Free parking is available in the lots east of the building only on Saturdays. Do not use the lot west of the building.

Wednesday, 11 April 2012

Ancestry adds Dorset Crew Lists


Now on Ancestry, Dorset, England, Crew Lists, 1863-1914. This database, with 58,368 indexed records and original images, is based on those found at the Dorset History Centre.

"This database contains three record types—lists, agreements, and log books—each of which lists details about crew members and their service onboard. Port information can be searched through the Lived In field. Typically, the records will include the following information:

name
age
birthplace
birth year
nationality
date signed on and off the ship
ship name, port, registry date, master’s name"
The Dorset ports included are Bridport, Lyme, Poole and Weymouth.

If you find yourself puzzled by the seemingly random dispersal of crew lists there's an explanation at the site for the Crew List Indexing Project which may help you locate the ones you seek.

Note that the Dorset History Centre will be closed for 3 weeks later on in 2012. Check the website at http://www.dorsetforyou.com/dorsethistorycentre before setting the dates for a visit.

Rethinking the Stewardship of Newspapers in the Digital Age - 1

The package I recently received as a result of my ATIP request to Library and Archives Canada included a draft discussion paper, one of LAC's pathfinder projects, by the above title which is worth a look. Draft 1.0, dated November 20, 2009, was in five sections. Here's the subsection from section 3 on the current state of newspaper stewardship.

3.3. Digitized newspapers


In Canada, projects to digitized historical newspapers began to emerge as memory institutions and some private companies recognized the access opportunities of the web. Since the late 1990s, there have been numerous retrospective newspaper digitization projects in Canada, of which some major ones include: Paper of Record, Pages of the Past, the Alberta Heritage Digitization Project, multicultural Canada and the digitization work of Bibliotheque et Archives nationales du Québec (BAnQ).


The following is a summary of observations of the state of Canadian newspaper digitization based on LAC's own newspaper digitization experience as well as an examination of select major initiatives in Canada.

  • while LAC has digitized some special editions of aboriginal and French language newspapers, as well as Canada's first newspaper, the Halifax Gazette and the Canadian Illustrated News, LAC has not pursued a program of mass digitization of newspapers to date. Available funding levels have supported only exhibition scale digitization, not the digitization of full back runs of numerous titles.
  • among Canadian projects geographic coverage is uneven with the most digitization taking place in Alberta and Québec.
  • access models vary based on copyright and business models. Most copyright cleared historical content that has been digitized is freely available, but there are a few business models like the Toronto Star and the Winnipeg Free Press that charge for access to archived content.
  • LAC has not attempted to acquire on legal deposit Canadian newspapers that have been digitized by other organizations. Depending on the digital capacity of the host institution, long-term access to some of this content could be at risk.
  • When the Cold North wind corporation's extensive collection of digitized newspapers was made available for sale the new legal deposit regulations were not in place and LAC was not able to afford its purchase price. It subsequently sold to Google. As of June 2009, it is reported that Google has made 522 titles (4.9 million articles) freely available.
The level of Canadian activity and investment to date does not compare favorably with the newspaper digitization of other countries. International efforts reveal certain trends, emerging best practices, and some key knowledge about the methods, technologies, costs, and comparative merits of various approaches to newspaper digitized nation. Key observations of these international initiatives are:
  1. There is a clear shift from boutique to large-scale digitization.
  2. Funding comes mainly from governments and grant programs.
  3. Most organizations are digitizing out of copyright, historical newspapers.
  4. Most organizations are outsourcing newspaper digitization, and are digitizing from microfilm where possible.
  5. The scaling of output ranges significantly, but in each case it is substantial ranging from 1 to 8 million pages.
  6. There are significant differences in costs depending on the type of post processing undertaken (i.e., whether fulltext search is offered or only browsing access).
  7. There is a mix of collaboration models including private, government, nonprofit, and university partners.
Given the current state of newspaper digitization, what actions should LAC and other memory institutions take to advance the digitization and access to a coherent, pan Canadian retrospective collection of Canadian newspapers?

That's a good question. 

The proposal in section four of the discussion paper "Going Forward: toward a new stewardship model", proposed under the heading Resource Discovery  "to maximize access to current and historical Canadian newspaper content for the current and future benefit of Canadians." It recommended these Strategic Directions
  • seek to increase the body of retrospective Canadian newspapers online through collaborative arrangements
  • develop an access strategy for Canadian newspapers subject to legal deposit that is acceptable to user groups and newspaper publishers
  • seek ways to increase the visibility of online Canadian newspapers
and as Next Steps:

Consult with newspaper publishers, user groups and memory institutions on:
  • the digitization of historic newspaper content
  • the need for a registry of all available digital Canadian newspapers
collections, the digitization of Canadian newspaper content, the preservation of online news, and new directions in online access.

In March 2010 the project issued a report from which I'll abstract the section regarding newspaper digitization tomorrow. 

Guild of One-Name Studies conference online


The 2012 Guild Conference and AGM will be streamed online from the evening of Friday, 13 April to Sunday, 15 April. There are some interesting looking presentations. It's a first time ever the Guild is attempting this live, via http://www.livestream.com/onename, so and glitches shouldn't be unexpected.

Find out more at http://www.one-name.org/LivestreamConference2012.html. In planning to tune in don't forget the time zone difference.

Thanks to Mick Southwick for mentioning this on his British & Irish Genealogy blog at http://bi-gen.blogspot.com/

Dead Money

A quick trip to Ireland, frequent flyer miles are stacking up, allowed me to view the Irish television network RTÉ1 show "Dead Money." Legal genealogists Steven and Kit Smyrl trace heirs of those who died intestate.

For those who've seen the similar British series "Heir Hunters" the big contrast is that the Irish investigations seem not be under the time and competitive pressures that exist in England.

The episode on Tuesday had them researching for heirs of a former Scottish entertainer, Anna of the novelty act Fran and Anna Watt.

One of the breakthroughs came when the mother's parents names were found on her death certificate, something I did know before.

It turned out that Anna's mother was born out of wedlock in Ireland at a time and in a community which ostracized both mother and child. It was suggested that this contributed to significant emigration.

The researchers were able to find descendants of Anna's mother's half-sibling, but were then informed that Scottish law on inheritance is different from Irish law in that half-blood relatives are not eligible to inherit.

There were brief scenes filmed inside GRO Ireland which seemed remarkably quiet. I wonder if that's typical?

There's a summary of the other episodes in the series at http://www.rte.ie/tv/programmes/dead_money.html

Tuesday, 10 April 2012

Browsing an Image-Only Collection

From The Ancestry Insider, a nice step by step lesson in browsing digital microfilm of alphabetically ordered records.

http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/AncestryInsider/~3/g3zTKCBNfBA/browsing-image-only-collection.html


www.anglo-celtic-connections.blogspot.com

US National Archives annual genealogy fair

I notice that not all national archives take genealogists as much for granted as Library and Archives Canada.

http://www.archives.gov/dc-metro/know-your-records/genealogy-fair/

4,223 bound newspaper volumes LAC hopes you won't miss

Earlier this year I made an Access to Information Act request regarding Library and Archives Canada's intentions for its newspaper collection. Newspapers appeared to be neglected with no digitization program comparable to similar institutions internationally. There were rumours of mass deaccessions.

Last Thursday in response I received in the mail a DVD containing images of documents. The files revealed that no newspaper digitization had been done since the French Canadian Newspapers project in 2008-2009 and there are no newspaper digitization projects as of February 2012.

The files also contained a statement that as of early February 2012 there have been no changes to the access individuals have to newspapers held at 395 Wellington resulting from de-selection or any other developments since January 2010.

That's about to change.

A survey in the summer of 2010 found 4,223 bound volumes, 275 titles from 75 municipalities, of Canadian newspapers in poor condition. That constitutes 25% of the bound newspaper holdings. 99% are available in other formats at LAC or elsewhere.


Various options on how to proceed were proposed, evaluated and costed.


A communication to Daniel Caron, Librarian and Archivist of Canada, recommended:
 "deselection of newspapers based on the condition where the content is available in another format from LAC thus ensuring access to our collection for the benefit of present and future generations, or where the content is available from a source outside LAC and where we can collaborate with others to promote and facilitate access. Retain the 1% of collections that are unavailable in another format or from another source to ensure a fair and equitable access to the content."
In plain language the LAC philosophy is, if someone else has it we don't need to keep it!


The proposal was approved by Daniel Caron on 21 December 2011.


While we should have no objection to deaccession of newspapers where there is excessive duplication, LAC routinely deaccesses over 2,000 paper format newspapers annually, I have the following concerns:


1. There is no evidence that the quality of the existing microfilm which duplicates material to be delisted has been evaluated. Microfilming that occurred decades ago or was made from poorer quality hardcopy may not meet current standards and digitization projects have sometimes had to have recourse to hardcopy to provide a satisfactory source for digitization.
2. Relying on other's holdings of newspapers leaves the national collection vulnerable. Maintaining multiple copies in diverse locations is a common preservation strategy. In some cases the "national" collection could now be dependent on a single copy held elsewhere.
3. In the absence of any digitization initiative researchers will be disadvantaged by not having a single central location to consult a national newspaper collection.
4. Previous experience with 1985 federal-provincial agreements, the Decentralized Program for Canadian Newspapers, was that several provinces failed to live up to their commitment. 
5. A communication strategy to inform clients has not been implemented. It appears no comprehensive effort will be made to advertise the availability of the deaccessioned volumes to potential organizations that may be interested in acquiring them, including provincial archives, university and local libraries, local archives and heritage centres, historical and genealogical societies and the like.


The complete list of newspapers to be deselected is here. the first page is below.
I'd especially encourage those working in the library and archival community to examine the list and get in touch with their contact at LAC if they see volumes they would like to acquire for their institution, recognizing that these are volumes judged to be in poor condition.

Finally, the covering letter I received with the DVD stated some material was not supplied; "certain records or portions thereof withheld pursuant to section 21(1)(b)." Under those provisions the head of an organization has discretionary authority; it reads:
21. (1) The head of a government institution may refuse to disclose any record requested under this Act that contains 
(b) an account of consultations or deliberations in which directors, officers or employees of a government institution, a minister of the Crown or the staff of a minister participate,
I didn't get the whole story. Something is being kept back that is not required by law to be withheld.

Monday, 9 April 2012

OGS conference 2013 call for speakers


A reminder that OGS Conference 2013 will be held in Oshawa on May 31–June 2, 2013 with theme Pulling Up Stakes – Putting Down Roots, covering migration from all over the world to Ontario.

The call for speakers is now available at http://www.ogs.on.ca/seminar/2013-OGS-call-for-speakers.pdf. There's still plenty of time to send in proposals, the deadline is 31 July, 2012, but it's not too soon to start thinking about making a proposal.

Look again LAC

"Family history now figures on the agendas of Government departments in a way that was scarcely imaginable then. All ***** record-holding institutions—local and national archives, libraries and private institutions—have now recognised that genealogists are one of their largest constituencies, and they are providing dedicated research rooms, personalised consultations, expanded finding aids and, above all, digitised records."
Nobody would write those words in praise of Library and Archives Canada.

They are written about Ireland, ***** stands for Irish, and "then" refer to twenty years ago and the first edition of John Grenham's book Tracing Your Irish Ancestors, the fourth edition of which has just been published.

Those words are from an item Twenty-year stocktaking on Grenham's blog for the Irish Times. The article ends:
Even in the last four years, profound changes have taken place in the link between Irish research and the internet. Before then, any online transcripts of records were piecemeal and amateur—very welcome, but afterthoughts to the main business of hands-on research in Irish repositories. Now the internet is at the heart of any Irish family history.
It's time Library and Archives Canada looked again at it's approach to genealogy and how it serves this largest and important sector of it's clientele.

Sunday, 8 April 2012

Indexed Norfolk records at familysearch.org

Family Search has added to their collection of Norfolk, England, parish records with a start on name indexed records connected to images.

England, Norfolk Parish Registers, 1538-1900 has 188,222 records

For marriages from July 1837 the images are certificates with all the information, including signatures, which would cost about $15 from the GRO.

Don't overlook the other Norfolk unindexed image records at familysearch.org.

England, Norfolk Archdeacon's Transcripts, 1600-1812
England, Norfolk Bishop's Transcripts, 1685-1941
England, Norfolk Marriage Bonds, 1557-1915
England, Norfolk Monumental Inscriptions, 1600-1900's
England, Norfolk Non-conformist Records, 1613-1901
England, Norfolk Poor Law Union Records, 1796-1900
England, Norfolk Register of Electors, 1844-1952



























News from QFHS

Gail Dever, webmaster for the Quebec Family History Society, contacted me with some nice comments on the blog and mentioning additional free Titanic resources posted on the QFHS website. See the second and third posts on the QFHS Bulletin Board: http://www.qfhs.ca/cpage.php?pt=53

The QFHS Home page and Bulletin Board are updated almost daily to keep members and visitors aware of what's new on the website, and in the genealogy world. That's likely one reason why the Alexa traffic rank for www.qfhs.ca has now climbed to 1,527,988.

Saturday, 7 April 2012

Daily Telegraph history

One convenient source for developments, and opinion, on British history is The Daily Telegraph online history section at www.telegraph.co.uk/history/

Lost Cousins newsletter

A new issue of the Lost Cousins newsletter arrived on Friday. The newsletter is one I recommend. Read the latest issue, and find out more about Lost Cousins, at http://www.lostcousins.com/newsletters/apr12news.htm 

Friday, 6 April 2012

WDYTYA: Edie Falco survey

WDYTYA: Edie Falco

Friday's US Who Do You Think You Are? episode at 8pm EDT on NBC and CITY TV features film and stage actress Edie Falco, "known for her roles in Oz as Diane Wittlesey, as Carmela Soprano on the HBO series The Sopranos, and as the titular character on the Showtime series Nurse Jackie."
Google finds 2.09 million hits for the name, less than Blair Underwood who attracted 4.99 million viewers, more than Rita Wilson's 5.08 million.

Findmypast.co.uk adds to maritime collection

The following is a press release from findmypast.co.uk:

·         Over a million Maritime birth, marriage and death records published in association with The National Archives
·         White Star Line Officers’ books that were due to be destroyed made available online for the first time

Leading family history website findmypast.co.uk has published two new fascinating sets of records, which include information about the passengers and crew aboard the Titanic’s ill-fated maiden voyage. TheMaritime birth, marriage and death records and White Star Line Officers' books are both available from today.

Debra Chatfield, family historian at findmypast.co.uk, said: “These fantastic new additions to findmypast.co.uk will be of immense value not only to people with ancestors who were employed at sea, but also to anyone who has been struggling to find a record of an ancestor’s birth, marriage or death. There has never been a single centralised register of births, marriages and deaths at sea, so many of the names listed in these records will not appear in the information already available online.”

Maritime births, marriages and deaths Search for your ancestors in vivid full colour scans of the original documents recording births, marriages and deaths at sea. In addition to these, births, marriages and deaths associated with seafaring occupations are recorded – not just events that took place at sea. The Maritime death records include a list of the Titanic crew members and passengers who died at sea.

Our new online collection is published in association with The National Archives and brings together 30 different record types from 10 different record series held at The National Archives.

Types of records, number and date range:
Births – 38,990 records covering the years 1867-1960
Marriages – 37,538 records covering the years 1854-1972
Deaths – 949,890 records covering the years 1794-1964

The information the records contain will vary, but they will usually include a combination of the following:

Births: Child’s name, date of birth, place of birth (could be a ship name), father’s name, father’s rank,  father’s place of birth, father’s last address, mother’s name, mother’s place of birth, mother’s last address.

Marriages: Name, rank, age, last address, spouse’s name, father’s name, date of marriage, place of marriage (could be a ship name), names of children.

Deaths: Name, rank, age, date of death, place of death (could be a ship name), cause of death, last address, place of birth.

White Star Line Officers' books
View full colour scans of the original service records of White Star Line officers and commanders, including all the officers on board the Titanic.
The collection comprises 1,042 records covering the years 1868 – 1934. Ron Warwick, a now-retired former employee (and former ship's captain) of White Star Line, rescued the books when they were being thrown out by the company.

The information for each officer includes date and place of birth, address, details of his apprenticeship, the names and dates of the ships served upon and the date he left the company.

The White Star Line Officers’ books include an original colour scan of the Titanic’s Captain Edward Smith's employment record, listing all the ships he served on and when. You can also see the note in red ink which tells us he was 'Lost in "Titanic" Apl 15th, 1912'.



QFHS Lecture: Researching Family History in Vermont

The following is a notice from Susan Gingras Calcagni about a forthcoming Quebec Family History Society public lecture.

Researching Family History in Vermont (Free Lecture)
Date         Saturday, April 14, 2012
Time         10:30 a.m.
Location   Briarwood Presbyterian Church Hall, 70 Beaconsfield Blvd, Beaconsfield, QC, H9W 3Z3
Visit         www.qfhs.ca
Presented by  Ed Maquire, President of the Vermont French-Canadian Genealogy Society
Ed Maquire  will discuss the long history shared by Quebec and Vermont. In the 1860s, about almost half of Vermont’s residents were French-Canadian, and many Lower Canada (Quebec) residents, living close to the US border, married in Vermont. Mr. Maguire will talk about the type of records available, such as church, immigration, naturalization, court, and military records, and explain where to find them.
Members and guests are welcome to join us! 

Thursday, 5 April 2012

WDYTYA Australia: Kerry O'Brien

Another quick trip to Australia to view the second in their series of WDYTYA featuring investigative TV journalist Kerry O'Brien. Again he's not someone I'd heard of before.

Unsurprisingly the episode was about his Irish ancestry of which he had more than he was aware. His O'Brien line, headed by Charles, migrated in the barque "Emigrant" arriving in August 1850, via the quarantine station at Stradbroke Island as the ship had many typhus cases. He became a successful hotel proprietor, managed to go bankrupt three times in hard times, finally ended his days as caretaker for the state high court thanks to connections with other more successful "Emigrant" passengers.

On his maternal father's side it was a classic convict story, the father transported for stealing a cow, the mother for stealing a pig. They left the arduous life of a farm labourer after release and moved to Sydney setting into an urban slum and frequent trouble with the law.

I suspect for Australia the research was fairly routine. BMD registrations appear to have pride of place in the absence of census records, with court records and newspapers taking on more prominence than I am accustomed to. Very little seemed to be digitized, although you can never tell whether maybe they're showing you original records as it makes for better television.

The episode held my attention, likely helped by my ignorance of Australian history.

Ancestry updates Liverpool parish records

It's been nearly a year since Ancestry first made Liverpool parish records available. An update is now announced with 199,696 records available for the period from
1659-1812, prior to George Rose's Marriage Act. The records are indexed with links to images of the original record.

The parishes available are:
Garston St Michael (1777-1812)
Liverpool Christ Church (1797-1812)
Liverpool Derby Square (1783-1804)
Liverpool Holy Trinity (1792-1812)
Liverpool St George (1734-1812)
Liverpool St Mary Cemetery (1806-1812)
Liverpool St Nicholas (1659-1812)
Liverpool St Paul (1765-1812)
Liverpool St Peter (1754-1812)
Liverpool St Thomas (1750-1812)
Old Haymarket St John (1805)
Richmond St Anne (1773-1812)
Toxteth Park St James (1774-1812) 
Toxteth Park St James with St Matthew and Holy Trinity (1801-1807)
Wavertree Holy Trinity (1794-1812)

OGS taps provincial funding

Congratulations to the Ontario Genealogical Society who have once again found the key that opens provincial coffers. The Society website has a news post on the latest award dated 4 April.

The Trillium Fund website shows the grant, of $156,000, awarded on 1 November 2011 "to support the preservation of heritage materials through digitization, developing a user-friendly indexing system, and developing new revenue streams to sustain activities and strengthen access to historical documents in Ontario."


The OGS provincial office and several branches have had significant success in obtaining Trillium grants over the years. Here is a list of all "genealogical" grants listed on the Trillium Fund website.

Bruce County Genealogical Society
3/1/2005
$19,000 to give local community members, tourists and professionals access to historical and genealogical information that is stored on microfilm at the recently renovated and expanded Bruce County Museum and Archives.

Ontario Genealogical Society, Leeds & Grenville Branch c/o Ontario Genealogical Society
7/1/2005
$34,100 over six months to replace outdated research equipment, which will improve access to historical information, the number of requests that are processed and the speed of service to the client community.
Ontario Genealogical Society
11/1/2005
$185,000 over two years to improve IT infrastructure that will build the society's capacity to increase and sustain volunteer engagement in researching family histories.

West Elgin Genealogical and Historical Society
11/1/2005
$16,200 over one year to produce a second volume on the history of Dunwich Township. This will cover the years from 1803 to 1903, helping to increase knowledge of local community history.

Ontario Genealogical Society, Halton-Peel Branch c/o Ontario Genealogical Society
3/1/2007
$16,600 over six months to catalogue the library collection of the Halton-Peel Genealogical Society. This exercise will make information more accessible and encourage the public to learn more about their community and family history.
|
Quinte Branch of The Ontario Genealogical Society c/o The Ontario Genealogical Society
7/1/2007
$12,700 over one year to purchase a digital microfilm reader-scanner and related equipment to better store and provide access to Quinte-area community and family history.
Nipissing District Branch, Ontario Genealogical Society c/o Ontario Genealogical Society
11/1/2007
$14,000 over one year to support the work of the North Bay branch's volunteers through the acquisition of a microfilm reader, printer, laptop and projector.

Ontario Genealogical Society
7/1/2008
$179,400 over 2 years to build online capacity and preserve genealogical materials and provide training for volunteers in digitalizing archives in Ontario communities.

Ontario Genealogical Society, Kent Branch c/o Ontario Genealogical Society
11/1/2009
$9,600 over six months to purchase computer and multimedia equipment to modernize the Family History Library collection, which will help to expand membership and the library's volunteer base.

Ontario Genealogical Society
11/1/2011
$156,000 to support the preservation of heritage materials through digitization, developing a user-friendly indexing system, and developing new revenue streams to sustain activities and strengthen access to historical documents in Ontario.

Wednesday, 4 April 2012

US 1940 census survey results

Follow the genealogy social media in the past few days and you've been inundated with items about the 1940 US census release. It reminds of the teenagers so anxious to be the first to get their hands on the newest hyped video game they line up to buy. The extreme was the statement that "genealogists around the world are going nuts over the April 2nd release."

What's the reality?

I saw an opportunity for a survey. Thank you to the 68 people who responded, 49 from Canada, 19 from the US.  Tellingly the survey failed to attract the interest of any of the visitors to my site from other countries, and there were plenty. As in the well known Sherlock Holmes story revolving around the dog that didn't bark, they saw nothing to get excited about.

Or perhaps they'd gone nuts enough that they couldn't respond!

What did those that did respond have to say?

Asked who they expected to find in the 1940 US census  95%(US)/14%(Canada) indicated immediate ancestors (self, parents, grandparents, great-grandparents);  5%(US)/61%(Canada) only extended ancestral family; and  0%(US)/24%(Canada) none.
The survey also asked about others that the respondent might be seeking in the census. More than one answer was allowed.  The majority would look for friends or spouses relatives, the next most common response being nobody, followed by people who lived in a particular house or community. Trailing with a single response was celebrities.
Asked "How interested are you in finding information from this census?" the responses were  39%(US)/14%(Canada) for passionate;  50%/43% for very interested; 11%/24% for somewhat interested; and 0%/18% for neutral - not interested.
A large majority 100%/90% were interested in the success of this census release and indexing as a model for how it might be done in the future and elsewhere?

For those of us with US connections in 1940 this census is an important newly available, or becoming available, database. If you know the community where the person you seek is living, and many do, additional resources available make finding them practicable if rather labourious.
If you don't have a shrewd idea of location you're best to ignore the hype. Organizations doing name indexing will get the job done and let us know about progress thanks to the competition underway. Having waited years for the data to become available I can wait another few extra days or weeks to find my 3rd cousin in New York.


UK "Find a Library"

Government funding cuts have forced UK county councils to look at changes to the library status quo. According to a recent High Court decision regarding Surrey's plan the implications of proposals have not always been well thought through, but changes to locations or hours of operation or staffing, in some combination, seem likely if not already in place.
The UK has 4,040 public library branches. One way to support the library systems is to ask for service. While not all of them are staffed to deal with queries, and will refer them to a major local library in the system, being able to show the system is of service provides ammunition to keep them supported. It's something I've done twice so far this year in a quest for obituaries of WW1 soldiers in my family tree killed in action.
While you can likely find a library using a simple Google search another easy option is the ‘Find a Library’ website, smartphone friendly. It's at www.findalibrary.org.uk.

Enter a community name and it returns a list of hits. Click on one and you get a map showing the location of the nearest libraries and contact details. A surprise was to find it recognized not only community names but other names, so, for example, entering Gorleston found not only the community, part of Great Yarmouth, but also streets including the name such as Gorleston Road in London.

Find out more about this service at http://www.culturegrid.org.uk/use/uk-public-library-dataset/


Ancestry adds Titanic records

Ancestry has placed in their collection the RMS Titanic, Outward Passenger List, 1062 records; Titanic Crew Records, 5605 records; Halifax, Nova Scotia, Titanic Fatality Reports, 328 records; and Halifax, Nova Scotia, Titanic Graves, 114 records; UK, Titanic, Deaths at Sea, 1507 records.

Tuesday, 3 April 2012

Halifax Titanic resources


Thanks to Joanne McCarthy, a regular reader and Local History and Genealogy Librarian at the Halifax Public Library, for letting us know about the Titanic 100: The Halifax Connection mobile tour at:
http://www.halifaxpubliclibraries.ca/research/topics/titanictour.html

There's also a recently updated resource list for anyone wishing to read more about the Titanic:
http://www.halifaxpubliclibraries.ca/assets/files/research/roots/titanic/titanic.pdf

London captured on camera in the 1870s

The Daily Mail publishes a collection of 23 photographs by John Thompson showing the reality of existence in London in the last quarter of the 19th century. The pictures, now stored at the Bishopsgate Institute, capture the lives of street beggars, chimney sweeps, street doctors and market sellers among many others.

The website of the Bishopsgate Institute has podcasts. I selected Hackney, that Rose-Red Empire. That London borough has been "persistently revived, reinvented and betrayed."  It was also home of my great grandparents prior to and during the first years of WW1. The podcast is about an hour in length. If you're tempted, but lack time, try the first segment with poetry by Michael Rosen.

UK online maps and grid references

A blog posting from the University of East Anglia (Landscape History) provides links to:

Norfolk Historic Map Explorer which allows you to view and compare Tithe Award maps, Enclosure maps, the Six Inch OS map and aerial photographs from 1946 and 1988 for Norfolk.

Flash Earth "a quick and uncluttered site that’s great for viewing aerial photography of anywhere in the world."

Grab a Grid Reference provides an easy way of working out grid references in multiple formats. Note the daily limit of how many OS tiles you can use

Fielden Maps Coordinate Converter for those times when you need to convert between from lat/long to OS grid references and more obscure geographic reference systems.

Monday, 2 April 2012

News of the BIFHSGO conference

BIFHSGO isn't quite ready to release the program for the Society September conference, it's close. The pre-conference program is set and the out-of-town speakers will also be presenting during the regular session on Saturday and Sunday, September 15-16 at Library and Archives Canada.

On Friday, 14 September 2012
In the morning the pre-conference sessions, you can only attend one as they overlap, are:
Scottish Civil Records, Censuses and Marriages
by Chris Paton
or
Digital Descendants: Where to Find Them and How to Connect
by Susan Davis

In the afternoon
Scottish Archival and Lesser Known Resources Online
by Patricia Whatley
or
Tablets, Netbooks, e-Readers and Apps for Genealogy
by Tony Bandy

The presenters

Chris Paton writes regular columns and articles for several British genealogy magazines, teaches Scottish genealogy courses through Pharos Teaching and Tutoring Ltd (www.pharostutors.com), and writes the daily British GENES genealogy news and events blog (www.BritishGENES.blogspot.com)
Susan Davis is well to BIFHSGO members as the current Director of Communications for the Society. She uses social media to document the giant family tree poster that hung in her grandfather's home and to share the stories she finds with her family and long-lost relatives.
Patricia Whatley is University Archivist & Head of Archive, Records Management and Museum Services, Director of the Centre for Information Studies, (which offers master’s degrees in family and local history by distance learning) and Honorary Lecturer, Archives and Records Management at the University of Dundee.
Tony Bandy is a professional librarian with 14 years plus of experience. Tony currently consults with libraries and other types of organizations through his company, Library Knowledge, helping them with training and leading-edge information technology. He is a frequent writer for Moorshead Magazines.

National Maritime Museum featured on The Family History Show


If you have British mariners in your ancestry the latest episode of The Family History Show, episode five, will be of interest.

Hosts Nick Barrett and Laura Berry speak with Eleanor Gowne, Head of Archive and Library at the Caird Library, National Maritime Museum, Greenwich, who shows examples and explains some of the records in the collection.

They also have a collection of company records from P&O, and, of personal interest to me, the New Zealand Shipping Company.

At this time you can hardly cover this topic without mention of the Titanic, and the last segment delivers with a display of artifacts from the NMM's Titanic collection.

You can watch either the whole show or select a segment or segments. Start here.

Notice the high quality of the video.


http://www.familyhistoryshow.net/episode-5-full-show

Titanic Canadian connection

Ask who the captain of the Titanic was and you'll likely get the answer Smith. While that was true on the fateful voyage Edward Smith was not Titanic's first captain.

A century ago today, 2 April 1912, following six hours of sea trials the Titanic sailed from Belfast for Southampton. The captain on that voyage, Herbert James Haddock, had Canadian connections.

Born at Rugby, Warwickshire, England, 27 Jan 1861, the eldest of four sons of James Haddock and his wife Julia Isabella Wratislaw Haddock passed the exam to become a Mate (Steam) in September 1883, served in the Royal Naval Reserve and was  promoted to Lieutenant in 1890.

On 13 May 1893, by which time he was a master mariner, he married Mabel Eliza Bouchette, of a family with Quebec roots, at St. Peter's, Rock Ferry, Cheshire, England.

Their eldest son Geoffrey Haddock was born 10 January 1895 in Cheshire and christened on 14 March. He attended Birkenhed School and, like so many enterprising young men and women of the time, emigrated to Canada. That was in May 1912, just weeks after the Titanic disaster. According to the 1913-14 Montreal city directory he lived at 127 Drummond St. and was employed as a clerk. He served as private secretary to the president of the Grand Trunk Railway according to the memorial accessible here.

Shortly after the outbreak of war, on 24 October 1914, he enlisted in the Canadian Expeditionary Force. Promoted to Sergeant, then commissioned in the field to Lieutenant, he died on 17 September 1916 at Courcelette. The body was not recovered; his name is engraved on the Vimy Memorial.

Herbert James Haddock, first captain of the Titanic, survived his son by more than 30 years, his wife by 11 years, dying on 5 October 1946.

Sunday, 1 April 2012

US 1940 census survey

How interested are you in the US 1940 census release?

Find the survey here.

Benchmarks update

Here are some benchmarks as of 31 March 2012. Comparable figures a month ago are shown in brackets.

Familysearch.org has 1,116 (1,065) record collections: census & lists 99 (98); birth, marriage, & death 726 (690); probate & court 79 (75); military 82 (89); migration & naturalization 48 (45); other 72 (68). It has Alexa
rank 4,994 (5,527).

Ancestry.com has Alexa rank of 758; ancestry.co.uk ranks 9,545

Findmypast.co.uk has an Alexa rank of 27,331

Family Tree DNA has 368,023 (363,427) records in its database. It ranks 41,213 (43,483) on Alexa.

Britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk claims 4,899,436 (4,675,506) pages digitized, which is 7,223 per day and below the 8,000 target. Alexa rank 153,693.

Cyndislist.com claims 310,159 (309,796) total links in 188 categories, with 5,682 uncategorized. Alexa rank 94,728 (105,659).

FreeBMD has 214,279,072 (213,060,874) distinct records, Alexa rank 87,765 (94,416).

UKBMD provides 2,214 (2,199) links to web sites that offer on-line transcriptions of UK births, marriages, deaths and censuses. Alexa rank 289,554 (315,265).

CanadianHeadstones.com has over 380,000 (367,000) gravestone photo records from across Canada. It scores 878,717 (1,124,306) in Alexa traffic rank.

And in case you're curious:

Anglo-Celtic Connections has 3,418 (3,315) posts and Alexa rank 123,735 (134,418).

Did I miss something significant? If so please post a comment with statistics.

WDYTYA: Rita Wilson review

The first votes are in on the Rita Wilson episode of WDYTYA which aired on Friday 30 March in the US and Canada. What we see is a big contrast between appeal to the genealogical community and to the much larger TV viewing audience.

In my poll presently 46% are rating it well above average, the most favourable response in this series.

But the overnight TV audience ratings for the episode show 5.081 million viewers making it the third lowest viewership in the series, just above Jerome Bettis and Blair Underwood. That is very much in line with expectations from her Google profile.

What makes for a successful WDYTYA episode? Some people follow the series. Others are attracted by the personality. There's a natural inclination to appreciate the things for which you have a more personality affinity. In this instance there was a great appeal to those with an Eastern European background. I doubt it's a coincidence that the two lowest viewership episodes this season have had make and black subjects, not the typical viewer for this type of television.

All episodes need to tell a good story. The best delve into a secret going beyond discovering facts and people unknown and deliver a major surprise. It should move you emotionally.

In addition US audience can unite behind anything showing the oppression of a Communist regime, in Bulgaria or anywhere else. There was an appeal to patriotism in the letter read at the end of the show, and even to the spiritual.

From a research viewpoint it was interesting to learn about some of the records available in that part of the world.

The online episodes are behind national walls restricted by ISP address.

For those in Canada the program should become available online through CITY TV, at least for a short while at http://goo.gl/6RjEY. For some reason, perhaps interference from one of the plugins, it won't play for me on the Chrome browser but did on Firefox.

In the US NBC has it online at http://t.co/ESGyGgax

Dick Eastman has posted a summary of the Rita Wilson episode at http://goo.gl/BrOay


WDYTYA Australia: Shaun Micallef

I made a quick visit to Australia allowing me to view the first in the new Australia series of WDYTYA featuring comedian Shaun Micallef. Naturally he's not someone I knew. The episode again illustrates there's no real correlation between the person and how interesting is their family history or enjoyable the episode.

Micallef, who gives the impression of being a bit like Stephen Fry, has Irish ancestry on his mother's side. The ancestor explored joined the British Army around the time of the potato famine, was wounded at the Battle of Inkerman (November 5, 1854) , and nursed in the hospital just established by Florence Nightingale.
Although there was no direct evidence that he had been nursed by Nightingale a nice touch was a mention that a child born later had been named Florence.
That family wasn't the only one to show their gratitude in this way. From FreeBMD, Florence shot up the name popularity charts for birth registrations for girls, from 249 in 1850, to 2062 in 1860, to 7754 in 1870, to 17,444 in 1880 and 16,071 in 1890.

Micallef father's family was from Malta. Their home was bombed during WW2. The Micallef line was traced back to an ancestor, a steward serving on the Black Prince, who died in the Battle of Jutland in WW1. There were eight people with name Micallef who died while in the Navy in WW1, all either stewards or cooks, including three who died at the Battle of Jutland.

I'd rate this episode as one that best held my attention.

I'll plan on returning to Australia to view future episodes.