This week’s crème de la crème — May 29, 2021

Some of the bijoux I discovered this week.

Crème de la crème of genealogy blogs

Blogs
Protestant Churches in Northern Quebec by Jacques Gagné on Genealogy Ensemble.

Manitoba Ancestors: Was Your Ancestor Memorable? by Candice McDonald on Finding Your Canadian Story.

Scottish Indexes adds 100,000 prison register entries and Delay to the 1921 Scottish census release? by Chris Paton on Scottish GENES.

Five Ways to Save ScotlandsPeople Credits by Emma Maxwell on The Scottish Genealogy Blog.

MilitaryArchives.ie releases 10th instalment from MSPC (1916-23) and Tipperary Studies digitises its Board of Guardians Minute Books by Claire Santry on Irish Genealogy News.

Parish boundary maps by Melanie McComb on Vita Brevis.

A Baker’s Dozen of Tips: Searching for Digitized Books, 8 Ways Tax Records Can Help Your Genealogy Research and Blogger Research Toolboxes: 2021 Edition by Linda Stufflebean on Empty Branches on the Family Tree.

How to Find Your Family History on YouTube by Lisa Cooke on Lisa Louise Cooke.

Ukrainian Birth Records from Archives Take Down Brick Wall on Great-Grandparents by Vera Miller on Find Lost Russian & Ukrainian Family.

The Pitfalls of Census Records by Lorine McGinnis Schulze on Olive Tree Genealogy.

Meanwhile, at Library and Archives Canada … neglect by John D. Reid on Canada’s Anglo-Celtic Connections.

Transcribing history by Judy G. Russell on The Legal Genealogist.

The Gift of Connection by Jacqui Stevens on A Family Tapestry.

Be Sure Your DNA Tests Are Connected to Trees at MyHeritage by Roberta Estes on DNAeXplained.

Add Specific Relationship, AncestryDNA’s Latest Feature on Genealogical Musings.

Articles
Remains of 215 children found buried at former B.C. residential school, First Nation says, CBC, Kamloops, British Columbia.

New interpretive panels give people ‘a feel for life in Africville’ by Noushin Ziafati, Saltwire, Halifax, Nova Scotia.

Free website launches with 80,000 Oregon and Washington historical, cultural documents by Brian Bull, OPB, Oregan.

‘Inconceivable’: why has Australia’s history been left to rot? by Elias Visontay, The Guardian, London, England.

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 quick questions about your family history research.

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