Reminder: Check out Canadian Week in Review every Monday
for the latest in Genealogy, Heritage, and History news in Canada. It’s the
ONLY news blog of its kind in country!
Sunday, August 4, 2013
New workshop at Toronto
They are planning a full day of lectures on
Saturday, 26 October on Tracing Forward – Searching for Relatives in Recent
Times – a day designed to provide researchers with new ideas, strategies
and tools to help them trace members of their expanded family trees, people who
might still be alive or recently deceased.
This is a brand-new workshop topic for Toronto
Branch and we’re quite excited about it – we expect to have program and
registration details available on our website in the very near future.
Saturday, August 3, 2013
BIFHSGO Conference next month
Conference
time (Sept 20 - 22) is nearly here, and are you ready to attend a full-day of
workshops, and two days of lectures by people from Ireland, and local
genealogical experts on Irish roots?
One
thing which BIFHSGO does, and has done for the past two years, is to present
interviews with the conference speakers.
This
year, some of the interviews are -
Lesley Anderson Previews her Pre-conference Seminar Lesley
talks about her lecture on Ancestry.ca and how it can help you with your Irish
family history research.
Interview with Linda Reid Toronto
genealogist Linda Reid will be presenting "Around the Brick Wall: Tracing
Back an Irish Family through Collateral Lines" and "Are They Really My
Ancestors? Using Autosomal DNA Tests to Confirm (or Deny) Relationships and
Ancestors."
and
Success through One Name Studies Sandra
Adams, Bill Arthurs and Elizabeth Kipp along with John D Reid talk about the
successes they have had by pursuing their one-name studies and what you can
expect to learn if you attend the Saturday afternoon session "Success
through One Name Studies"
If you want to listen to
these interviews, go to www.bifhsgo.ca/cpage.php?pt=62
If you still haven’t
registered, you can register online at http://www.bifhsgo.ca/cpage.php?pt=109
The website for BIFHSGO is
www.bifhsgo.ca
Friday, August 2, 2013
LAC Update: 1861 Canada Census available online
Once
again, the Library and Archives Canada has released a census – this time, its
the 1861 census. Information was collected for people living in Canada East,
Canada West, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island.
You can search
this new database by nominal information, such as the surname,
given name(s) and age of an individual, as
well as by geographical information such as district and sub-district names.
This wasn’t a uniform census – the questionnaires
were different in Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and in the Canadas
(Canada West – Ontario and Canada East – Quebec).
Also, the enumeration day in the Canadas was January
the 14th, March 30th in Nova Scotia, and August the 15th
in Prince Edward Island.
The census was also divided among rural and
urban centres of the country.
So if an ancestor lived in Toronto (an urban
centre), the enumerator would drop off the form for the inhabitants to fill out
themselves, and then they would stop by a couple of days later to pick up the
form, or if your ancestor lived in a rural area, the enumerator would fill out
the form.
Districts and sub-districts did not all survive.
To see which district survived, go to www.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/census/1861/Pages/census-districts-sub-districts.aspx
To search the census, go to www.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/census/1861/Pages/about-census.aspx
Sword family pioneer cemetery, Gatineau, Quebec
A meeting will be
held in Gatineau, Quebec, sponsored by the City of Gatineau, Saturday, Aug. 17,
2013, 2 pm at the Alonzo-Wright House (College Saint-Alexandre), 2425 rue St-Louis,
Gatineau, on the Sword family pioneer cemetery.
The speakers will be Suzanne Bigras and Jean-Guy Ouimet’
At least 46 members of a family are buried in the heart of a residential area of modern day Gatineau. The oldest family cemetery lies in the undergrowth, wedged between two single family homes! So far, a total of eight headstones have been found of the Barber, Davidson and Langford families in the Sword family pioneer cemetery.
The speakers will be Suzanne Bigras and Jean-Guy Ouimet’
At least 46 members of a family are buried in the heart of a residential area of modern day Gatineau. The oldest family cemetery lies in the undergrowth, wedged between two single family homes! So far, a total of eight headstones have been found of the Barber, Davidson and Langford families in the Sword family pioneer cemetery.
The web site of the Société de généalogie de l'Outaouais is at http://genealogieoutaouais.com
Thursday, August 1, 2013
First Ever Video Streaming IAJGS Confernce LIVE!
Mark the date August 4 – 9th on your calendar! It will be the live streaming of 50 sessions at the International
Association of Jewish Genealogical Society Conference (IAJGS) in Boston, Massachusetts.
The International Association of Jewish Genealogy Society (IAJGS) brings the best minds and knowledge in the field of Jewish genealogy to
its conference. More than 1,000 attendees from 17 countries will attend.
Anyone in any location with the desire to learn
more about their Jewish family history will be able to tap into this knowledge
and attend the event via the Internet.
To learn more, go to web site at www.live.iajgs2013.org
Wednesday, July 31, 2013
350th anniversary of “Filles du roi”
Arrival of the Brides Library and Archives Canada, Acc. no 1996-371-1
The Library
and Archives Canada released this blog post yesterday -
"Summer
2013 marks the 350th anniversary of the arrival in New France of the first
contingent of the “Filles du roi” (“King's daughters”), young women who became
the ancestors of numerous French-Canadian families. A variety of celebrations are
planned throughout Quebec, culminating in the New France Festival in Quebec City
from August 7 to 11, 2013. The website is
at www.nouvellefrance.qc.ca/index.php/en
Between
1663 and 1673, King Louis XIV supported the emigration of these young women,
many of them orphans. Their passage to the colony was paid and they received an
average dowry of 50 livres, along with a small hope chest containing clothing
and sewing materials. In exchange, the women agreed to marry on their arrival
in New France, to start a family and to help their husbands work the land.
These women were instrumental in helping to populate and develop the colony.
The first
contingent of 36 “Filles du roi” landed in 1663. Over the next ten years, an
estimated 800 young women settled in New France under the same program.
If you
would like to know whether one of your ancestors was a “Fille du roi,” there
are many genealogical publications and reviews you can consult".
You can visit
the website http://lesfillesduroy-quebec.org
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