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Showing posts from June, 2023

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

3 Tips to get the Most out of a Canadian WW1 Service File

 Recently I contacted a regimental museum to see if they could provide me with more information about one of my ancestors who served and died with the regiment during WW1. They put me in touch with one of their veteran volunteers and he was able to provide me with some tips on how I could extract even more information from the small service file I had found on Library and Archives Canada .  #1: Make a timeline  Anybody who knows me knows that I LOVE to make timelines of my ancestor's lives, yet this idea had never occurred to me before. In general the service files contain a very high level description of a soldier's movement. By solely looking at a service file, it is near impossible to tell when a soldier was moved behind lines for a break or determine the exact battles that they fought in. By constructing a timeline of what battalion they were with and the approximate location that an event occurred it is possible to gain a basic idea of their service. Cross referencing the

Tips for Finding Your Family in the 1931 Canadian Census

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The 1931 Canadian census was  released on June 1 2023. At the time of its release,  Library and Archives Canada  (BAC-LAC) had digitalized the collection but had not transcribed, consolidated, and made it searchable by name. This means that the only way to find an ancestor was by searching using districts and subdistricts. Within the past week,  Ancestry  has applied their AI transcription technology and managed to make some of the census searchable by name, however this is not without its own imperfections.  When trying to find your ancestor in the 1931 census, its best to start with Ancestry to see if their page has been accurately transcribed by the AI technology. If your unable to find who your looking for, all is not lost. By the applying the following strategy (and a little patience), it is possible to find them! I used a combination of historical maps, city directories, and modern maps to find the street that I am looking for. I developed this strategy when the census was first

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