Wednesday, April 25, 2012

Dumb Questions

Dumb questions:  I would like to find my grandmother's death certificate in Kankakee, where she passed away in 1949. Anyone know where I would go? Also, her medical records. How long are those kept?

My grandfather died two months later in Chicago in 1949. Would his medical records be anywhere after all this time?

Friday, April 13, 2012

Peek You to find your friends - from Vince


A smart way to find people online

 
Whether you want to connect with old friends or just find more information about someone you know, a Google search might not be the best method. PeekYou is a more useful way to find people online. It crawls dozens of sites - including social media and news sites - to gather information for your search. It will even search Wikipedia and fan sites.


PeekYou does a great job of cataloging well-known people, too. It finds tons of resources on newsmakers and celebrities and assigns them a "peek score," which tells you how notable they are. Search your friends - or for yourself - by full name or username. You'll be surprised at what you find! Just a note:

PeekYou's free search will give you basic information, but will offer you more results for a fee. You don't have to pay for more if you don't want to.

Cost: Free

Linkwww.peekyou.com

System: Windows XP, Vista, 7; OS X

Ancestry.ca Offers Free Access to French-Canadian Collection


Please note the following:


April 12, 2012



Ancestry.ca Offers Free Access to French-Canadian Collection



The following announcement was written by Ancestry.ca:



   MONTREAL (April 12, 2012) Ancestry.ca, Canada’s leading family history website, is giving Francophones a reason to stay close to their computers this weekend with unprecedented access to its vast collection of French historical records.



   The collection contains more than 14.5 million historical documents outlining the histories of millions of people in Quebec and France, and will be available free from April 17-22.



   Among the free collections is the Drouin database, the pre-eminent collection of French-Canadian historical records available anywhere in the world.  The records span 346 years from 1621 to 1967 and include 37 million names in baptism, marriage and burial records, plus a compilation of church records from Ontario, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and various New England states.



   From the early 1600s, the Catholic parishes of Quebec kept meticulous records of their members’ baptisms, marriages and burials. The Quebec Government soon required the Catholic Church to provide it with copies of all its records and in doing so became the central holder for Quebec’s vital records.



   Also included in this promotion is the Tanguay collection, the premier genealogical dictionary of French-Canadian families. This large, seven-volume collection was published by the French-Canadian priest and genealogist Father Cyprien Tanguay from 1871 to 1890.



   Father Tanguay devoted much of his life to researching archives and parochial records throughout Quebec, the Maritimes, Ontario and old French settlements in the United States and France. Through his original research, he successfully traced ancestors of many early French-Canadian colonists back to Normandy and other parts of France.



   Entries in this collection detail family pedigrees with baptism, marriage and burial dates and places.



   Together the Drouin and Tanguay collections encompass much of the history of French-Canadians. But those interested in their French roots will also be able to discover their ties to France with documents found in France, la Collection de la Haute-Bretagne (1501-1907) which contains 350 years of marine history, and more than 4 million names.



   “French-Canadian historical records are some of the oldest and most comprehensive in the world, painting the lives of people in vivid detail and proving a massive resource for those with French-Canadians roots,” said Roger Dunbar, Managing Director, Ancestry.ca. “We’re thrilled to offer these records to all Canadians with Francophone and French heritage and hope it helps them on their way to discovering more about themselves and their past.”



Also note:



Nancy Jones said...



Please note that the Drouin Collection isn't only French-Canadian Records nor is it only Catholic. All available parish records of the Province of Quebec are included: Anglican, Presbyterian, Methodist, United Church, English Catholic etc. Also records from English parishes are in English.


It is a misnomer to call it an only French-Canadian collection. Areas of Quebec, esp. Montreal and areas towards the US and Ontario borders were strongly English; and some areas still are. There was also a vibrant English community in Quebec City. We might now be in a minority but we anglophone Quebecers are still here!



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I have used both of these collections and they are excellent - please note, however, that there are some errors in the Fr. Tanguay's compilation...  MAKE SURE TO CHECK AND VERIFY ALL FINDS before you commit them to your gen program.



Thanks,

Les