Some of the bijoux I discovered this week.
Blogs
FamilySearch Adds 1871 Census of Canada, Schedule 2 and CEF Infantry Battalions by John D. Reid on Anglo-Celtic Connections.
Locating Records with MemoryNS by Candice McDonald on Finding Your Canadian Story.
Over 100 Million Online Obituary Records Available from FamilySearch by Kenneth R. Marks on The Ancestor Hunt.
Vermont: Digitized County Histories by Linda Stufflebean on Empty Branches on the Family Tree.
What’s Open for Genealogy Research in New England by Heather Wilkinson Rojo on Nutfield Genealogy.
“Lost” Essex County Massachusetts 1810 census rolls discovered by Paula Stuart-Warren on Genealogy by Paula.
Connecticut opens OBCs and Case closed by Judy G. Russell on The Legal Genealogist.
Scottish 1921 census release delayed until latter half of 2022 by Chris Paton on Scottish GENES.
The Art of Avoiding Scams in Ukrainian and Russian Genealogy by Vera Miller on Find Lost Russian & Ukrainian Family.
Don’t Overlook Academic Libraries on Genealogy in Action.
An early morning zoom with Ancestry by Jill Ball on GeniAus.
Starting Research: Analyzing a Diary by Gena Philibert-Ortega on Legacy News.
Why Isn’t It Online? by Dick Eastman on Eastman’s Online Genealogy Newsletter.
Articles
Exploring her family’s history exposed its unsettling legacy of slavery in NH by Shawne K. Wickham, Union Leader, Manchester, New Hampshire.
Mysterious Davidsonville grave cleaner discovered as BillionGraves.com amateur genealogist by Lilly Price, Capital Gazette, Annapolis, Maryland.
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.