Wednesday, 28 August 2019
50% off RootsTech tickets
Wednesday, 21 August 2019
My Top Family History Discoveries
For this week’s blog post I want to share some of my
latest online genealogy discoveries.
They’re all free, searchable websites, and hopefully at least one of
them will be of interest and/or use to you in your research. Do bear in mind, though, that while they’re new to me, they
may not be new to you!
So here, in no order of preference at all, they are:
Liverpool as a Trading Port This site has collected the names of residents of the city from
1704-1860, plus ships sailing from the port between 1759 and 1809.
Scottish Court of Session Digital Archive Hosted by the University of Virginia Law
Library, this covers the late 1750s to late 1830s. People mentioned in these
documents include Scottish women, Virginia merchants, aristocratic Highland proprietors, famous authors, enslaved labourers, soldiers, American Loyalists, and many more individuals who sought justice before the Scottish Court of Session. Many Scots were merchants and slave owners in Britain and the American colonies.
Berlin Central Library Collections These include telephone directories which I
used recently to help with relative tracing.
The website is accessible in English (although the records are of course in German).
New Jersey Death Index Get access to a searchable database of 1,275,833 deaths in the Garden State between
2001 and 2017, and more than half a million digitized death index images for
1901-1903, 1920-1929 and 1949-2000.
This last one isn’t exactly new to me, but I had forgotten
it was available online, and was recently reminded about it by a more
on-the-ball frugal friend. The Scottish
poor law records are excellent resources for tracing people who moved about
both in and out of the country. It’s
always worth putting in a few of your difficult-to-find ancestors to see what
pops.
Index to Paisley Poor Law records 1839-1942 The site gives more information about what to expect from the
records and how to access those you find in the index.
Tuesday, 13 August 2019
Free Office software - no strings attached
This is the first in an occasional series of posts about computer software which you can download and use at absolutely no cost to yourself. I’ll kick off with one of my own personal favourites, Apache OpenOffice.
Family historians use office software, such as spreadsheets for organising ancestral information, or creating lists or research logs to work with. Word processing packages are infinitely useful for any form of written work, ranging from basic letters to full-scale biographies. And if you are sharing your know-how with your fellow genealogists, a presentation package can help get your message across to a group. You may be familiar with Microsoft's Office programs like Excel, Word, and PowerPoint.
OpenOffice is a suite of programs much like Microsoft Office.
However, unlike its Microsoft counterpart, OpenOffice is an open source product, which means it has been made freely available for anyone to use as
they wish. There will never be any cost
involved in downloading or using any element of the package. It contains word processing, spreadsheet,
presentation, database, and drawing software, plus a maths function creator
(you probably didn’t know you needed one!).
It also runs on computers using all the main operating systems, including Macs.
I used it for several years before acquiring Microsoft Office 365 as a student, and may yet go back to it again. The
look and function of OpenOffice is quite similar to Microsoft, although there
are differences, for example in the way you go about formatting word processing
documents. But it’s pretty straightforward
and like any technology you're new to, it takes a little time to adapt to. There are occasional glitches, which is true
of any software package!
If all this
technical stuff is making you switch off, just take it from me: try
OpenOffice before you shell out megabucks for a big-brand product that you might
only use half of. You can check out more
information about the package here.
Another very similar open source product, which I haven’t
used, is LibreOffice. What’s the difference between this one
and OpenOffice? Read this journalist’s
take on it.
Wishing you happy free downloading 😃
Wednesday, 7 August 2019
Mad, bad, or dangerous to know?
Edinburgh Castle |
I’m always up for a free
day out, especially when it involves a trip to the festival capital
Edinburgh. Today my friend Pauline and I
had the chance to go there to learn more about an aspect of Scottish social
history we were both interested in.
Dome Room, New Register House |
The venue was a place we were both very familiar with but which no longer serves as a research office, as it did when we were fledgling family historians. Today, New Register House’s Dome room (my
natural habitat for many years) serves as a meeting and conference centre, and the
topic of today’s event* was “Prisoners or Patients? Criminal Insanity in
Victorian Scotland”. Fun, eh? That’s how we genealogists roll. First up was a visit to the small exhibition, in next-door General Register
House, which introduced us to the sad stories of some “criminal lunatics” and how their lives unfolded.
The curator of this
exhibition, Dr Rab Houston of St Andrews University, then addressed the subject
in more detail in his presentation in the Dome (his area of expertise is the
history of psychiatry; see his podcast page here). I was surprised to learn that
before the 19th century, imprisonment itself wasn’t used as a penalty;
rather, it was just a short-term holding arrangement before trial or
punishment - usually fines or transportation (or worse).
Dr Houston explained who would
have been likely to be committed to the Criminal Lunatic Department of the
oldest prison in Scotland, at Perth, and how they would have been dealt with. He talked about some of the cases from the
exhibition and it was sobering to compare how those individuals would have been
treated nowadays. What was considered madness then would be seen as mental illness in our times, and while some of the causes aren't common now, there were some conditions described which were all too familiar.
Were some of your ancestors mad, bad, or just simply dangerous to know? Honestly, if they were any of the above, you're much more likely to find them in court documents, newspaper reports, and prison records, so don't knock it. And reading about their struggles will probably give you a greater appreciation for them.
* New
Register House regularly hosts talks and exhibitions on a variety of subjects,
and they’re free to attend. I’ve already booked for one of the
future talks!
Thursday, 1 August 2019
Discount code for RootsTech London
Discount alert! As one of the presenters at RootsTech London, I've been allocated a special discount code for you (yes, you) to use to
save 20% on a 3-day pass
or
save 10% on a 1-day pass
The show takes place on 24-26 October in the ExCeL Centre in London’s
Docklands, so if you haven’t already bought your ticket, bag a bargain by clicking on this link
https://rootstech2019london.smarteventscloud.com/portal/registration/SPKRPAL
save 20% on a 3-day pass
or
save 10% on a 1-day pass
The show takes place on 24-26 October in the ExCeL Centre in London’s
Docklands, so if you haven’t already bought your ticket, bag a bargain by clicking on this link
https://rootstech2019london.smarteventscloud.com/portal/registration/SPKRPAL
or use the code SPKRPAL at the checkout.
And feel free to share this code with anyone you know who’d be interested.
What’s on offer at RootsTech? More than 150 different presentations; attend as many of them as you can fit in to your time there. Check out the presentation schedule - every one of these sessions is included in the price of your pass.
And if your research in Scotland has hit a brick wall, come along to my Saturday morning presentation where I'll be talking about how to overcome some of the barriers commonly encountered in Scottish genealogical research.
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