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Showing posts from May, 2021

Born on St Patrick's Day: Happy 115th Mary

They say that its good luck to be Irish, and that the luckiest of all are those who are born on St Patrick's Day. No doubt this is what was said the day that my great grandmother was born. However, her life was not necessarily filled with the good luck that the superstition had predicted. As much as she had a hard life, her life was also an "ordinary" one of a young British immigrant to Canada. Despite that, the simple life she led in youth was filled with fun. She embrace the changing times, new found freedoms, and innovations. Its the heirlooms from that chapter of her life that fascinate me the most because they show aside to her that none of my relatives knew - a woman who was happy. So today, I am going to share the side of her that one of those heirlooms tells. I have a small black autograph book that was hers.  At almost 100 years old, the book binding has all but disintegrated yet the leather cover is in near pristine condition and the partially bound pages are al

Case Study: How to Locate Extinct Addresses

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 In my previous post I wrote about how to locate an address and determine what the historic living conditions were like. In this post I will explain how to apply these techniques when researching a small town.  When I first began research I found myself glossing over my ancestors that lived in cities and focusing on the ones that lived in small towns. What I quickly learned is that there is less socio-economic data and maps available for smaller localities. Just because less resources are available does not mean that it is impossible to find the answers to your questions.  In this example we will be looking at where my great-grandmother and her family were living during the 1911 census. This census was of particular interest to me as it was the last known record of her family's life in England prior to their immigration to Canada. I wanted to understand how hard it would have been to live on Speakman St in Leigh, Lancashire, England. I knew that the house was crowded (11 people li

Researching Addresses that no Longer Exist

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Ever since I was young I have said that I wanted to see the place where my ancestor's lived. I never cared if it was a castle or if it was a broken down shack in the woods. What I cared about was that feeling I get when I am able to stand somewhere that one of my ancestor's did many years ago. I spent the past four years researching where in England my ancestors lived with the hope that one day I will be able to go there and experience this feeling. Like many people, COVID had other plans. Its been a year since I initially was planning to take that trip and it seems like it might be at least one more before it can happen. In the mean time I have been revising my route and furthering my research. One of the first things that I do when I get an address for where one of my ancestor's lived, is search for it on Google Maps. Depending on where you are researching, the area may have changed so much that it is almost unrecognizable when compared to when your ancestor lived. For ex

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