Some of the bijoux I discovered this week.
Blogs
Taking the time to Browse Part 1: Family Search and Military Ancestors: Courts Martial Records of the First World War at LAC by Candice McDonald on Finding Your Canadian Story.
Finding Hidden Records on FamilySearch by Amy Johnson Crow on Amy Johnson Crow.
Breaking Down those Brickwalls: Designations by Emma Maxwell on The Scottish Genealogy Blog.
Oodles of Information in Newspapers for Family History by Patricia Greber on My Genealogy Life.
1813 census of Ireland by Bobby Forrest on Ulster Genealogy and Local History Blog.
Archives Recalls Fire That Claimed Millions of Military Personnel Files by Kerri Lawrence on National Archives News.
Record Rescue: Photographs of First World War Clacton Nurses Purchased for Essex Record Office by Hannah Salisbury on Friends of Historic Essex.
We have history by John Grenham on Irish Roots.
Now It’s Easy to Publish Your Family History in an Electronic Book with Gedcom Publisher by Dick Eastman on Eastman’s Online Genealogy Newsletter.
Planners, Notebooks & How it Came to be… by Julie Goucher on Guild of One-Name Studies.
YouTube: Software & Tools for Genetic Genealogy by John D. Reid on Canada’s Anglo-Celtic Connections.
Articles
New life among the tombstones by Gord Howard, Niagara Falls (Ontario) Review.
Call solved mystery of grandfather and a Canadian orphanage by Adam Gratton, Stoke Sentinel, Hanley, Stoke-on-Trent, England.
Indigenous family finds ancestors in spirit in General Synod archives by Tali Folkins, Anglican Journal, Toronto, Ontario.
Wounds that won’t heal, cars for the Kaiser and more reader stories from WW1, Globe and Mail, Toronto, Ontario.
‘Yearning breaks my heart’: Love letters lay bare struggle, joy of Ukrainian settlers by Trevor Pritchard, CBC, Ottawa, Ontario.
Research Your Armenian Roots—What You Need to Know (Part I) by George Aghjayan, The Armenian Weekly, Watertown, Massachusetts.
For more gems like these throughout the week, join the Genealogy à la carte Facebook group. When you submit your request to join, you will be asked to answer two questions about your family history research.