Monday, February 29, 2016

Canadian Week in Review 29 February 2016



I have come across the following Canadian genealogy, history and heritage websites, social media, and newspaper articles this past week that were of interest to me, and I thought you might be interested in them, too. 

This Week in Canadian History  

Canada's oldest candy company  

Ganong Bros., Limited is Canada's oldest candy company. It was founded by James and Gilbert Ganong in 1873 in St. Stephen, New Brunswick. It is a producer of boxed chocolates,  

Gilbert W. Ganong patented a process for imprinting the bottom of individual chocolates with a wordmark. Each hand-dipped chocolate bears the initials “GB”. 

For more information, go to https://ganong.com/our-sweet-story/  



Japanese men sent to work camps 

All Japanese men between 18 and 45 were to be temporarily moved from Canada's west coast to further inland to work on road camps in British Columbia's interior, or to agricultural projects in the prairies. 

Each adult was permitted to take 150 pounds of clothing, bedding and utensils. Other property, including homes, businesses, fishing boats, cars, and personal possessions, was sold.  


Social Media 

(Photos) Hants History: Feb. 25, 2016 edition 


Here's a look at what was making the news 25 and 50 years ago in the Hants Journal, 25 years ago (Feb. 27, 1991 edition) The 25 years ago segment is temporarily unavailable. 

Upcoming Canadian Events 

Conferences 

NEW! Kelowna and District Genealogical Society's (KDGS) Conference 2016 

Sine 1996, every second year, the Kelowna and Distinct Society of Kelowna, British Columbia, has a large conference entitled Harvest Your Family Tree

This conference is a three-day event which will be held this year from Sept. 26 to 28 in Kelowna, and the speakers will be from eight keynote speakers are coming from as far as Australia, Rhode Island, Salt Lake City, Regina, and Victoria, including Dave Obee from British Columbia, Maureen Taylor from the United States, and Helen V. Smith from Brisbane, Australia. 

Registration forms will be available from the kelowna & District Genealogical Society website at www.kdgs.ca, printed forms at the KDGS Genealogical Reference Library, located on the second floor of the downtown branch of the Kelowna Library on Ellis Street, and you can contact them by email at conference@kdgs.ca, or call 250-763-7159. 

Ontario Genealogical Society Conference 

Word has reached us that the OGS has accepted a bid to host the 2018 OGS Conference in Guelph, Ontario put forward by the Scottish Special Interest Group [SIG]. Christine Woodcock will be conference chair. 

So stay tuned for further developments. 

32nd Gene-O-Rama of the Ottawa Genealogical Society 

The conference will be held from April 1–2, 2016 at the Confederation Education Centre, 1645 Woodroffe Avenue, Ottawa, Ontario which is at the corner of Hunt Club Road & Woodroffe Avenue. 



If you need further information, go to http://ogsottawa.on.ca/Gene-O-Rama/ 

UNLOCKING THE PAST 2016 

International Genealogy ConferInternational Genealogy Conference UNLOCKING THE PAST 2016 will be held on Saturday, April 23, 2016 at the The Beach Club Resort, Parksville, British Columbia of the Qualicum Beach Family History Society in British Columbia. 

The featured speakers will be Colleen Fitzpatrick and Chris Paton, and registration is now open athttp://www.eventbrite.ca/e/international-genealogy-conference-unlocking-the-past-2016-tickets-18765135024. It includes an early bird price. 

The website is located at http://www.qbfhs.ca/ 


Genealogy on the Cutting Edge 2016

The Ontario Genealogical Society will be holding its annual conference from June 3rd to 5th at the Toronto’s International Plaza Hotel, Toronto. 

Speakers and agenda has been announced this past week. Registration will open in January. Registration is now open athttp://www.ogs.on.ca/conference/registration/, Keep up-to-date with the latest news by following their website athttp://www.ogs.on.ca/conference/, or their Facebook page athttps://www.facebook.com/events/171812826485725/  


Our Canada – Your Family: Building a Nation 2017 

The Ottawa Branch of the Ontario Genealogical Society will host the 2017 annual conference, and they have a call out for presentations. 

The conference will be held in Ottawa on June 16-18, 2017 at Algonquin College. The theme of the conference is Our Canada – Your Family: Building a Nation. 

DEADLINE FOR PROPOSALS IS FEBRUARY 15, 2016. 

To submit proposals or ask questions, please contact the Conference 2017 Program Committee at:program.conference2017@ogs.on.ca. For more information about OGS or Ottawa Branch respectively, please visit: www.ogs.on.ca or www.ogsottawa.on.ca

Great Canadian Genealogy Summit

The summit will be held in Brampton, Ontario from October 21 to the 23, 2016 at the Courtyard Marriott. 

Registration has opened at http://www.qbfhs.ca/  

2018 Ontario Genealogical Society Conference  

Word has reached us that the OGS has accepted a bid to host the 2018 OGS Conference in Guelph, Ontario put forward by the Scottish Special Interest Group [SIG]. Christine Woodcock will be conference chair. 

So stay tuned for further developments. 

Newspaper Articles 

Newfoundland

Heritage Awards recognize Saint John restoration projects 


In the 25 years since he bought a farmhouse on Manawagonish Road in Saint John that was destined for demolition, Petr Smit has learned to do whatever it takes to restore the 200-year-old property. 

Nova Scotia 

Rebirth of razed Mi'kmaq village part of ambitious plan for aboriginal band

A Nova Scotia aboriginal band is drafting ambitious plans to rebuild a community on the site of a Mi'kmaq village that was obliterated by the Halifax Explosion nearly a century ago.

The Mi'kmaq called it Turtle Grove.

History: First flight in British Commonwealth, Feb. 23 1909 


He’s more known for the telephone, but on February 9th, 1909, inventor Alexander Graham Bell was a driving force behind the first powered flight of a heavier-than-air plane in the British Commonwealth.

Dal student tour to shine a light on history of Africville 


Dalhousie professor Barb Hamilton-Hinch has been taking her students to visit the lands of the former community of Africville on the northernmost tip of the Halifax peninsula for about five years now. 

'We know our history:' New Halifax ferry to be named Viola Desmond following public vote

http://www.metronews.ca/news/halifax/2016/02/25/halifax-ferry-to-be-named-after-viola-desmond.html

Seventy years after Viola Desmond took a stand by taking a seat in the whites-only section of a Nova Scotia movie theatre, it was announced on Thursday her name will be plastered on the newest Halifax Transit ferry. 

Nova Scotia island's historic school down to final student, faces closure 


One of Canada's last remaining one-room schools is down to its last remaining student on Big Tancook Island. 

Prince Edward Island 

P.E.I. museum makeover aims to maximize storage space 


Call it a museum makeover. 

The textile collection of the P.E.I. Museum and Heritage Foundation is getting a makeover thanks to RE-ORG Canada, a program that aims to help maximize storage space and make artifacts easier to find.  

New Brunswick 

Saint John heritage fair shares stories of region's history 


New stories of New Brunswick's history are uncovered each year at the Saint John Heritage Fair said organizer and historian David Goss. 

The annual fair to share information about the region's heritage and history was held in Market Square Feb. 20. 

St. Martins raising money to retrieve ship figurehead from England 

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/new-brunswick/st-martins-ship-figurehead-1.3462820 

The village of St. Martins is trying to raise the money to buy back a significant piece of its history. 

They have obtained the first right of refusal on an original figurehead from the Prince Victor, one of roughly 700 ships built in St. Martins in the late 1800s. 

Quebec 

Black history in limbo at several Quebec sites 


Rachel Zellars, a Phd candidate in McGill University‘s Faculty of Education, launched a campaign last summer, to have 11 locations in Quebec that have the word “Nigger” or the French word “Negre” in the title, changed. 

Ontario 

Black History: Excavation Uncovers Remains of Church Founded by Black Refugees Escaping Slavery ‘Down South’ in America 


The recent discovery of the British Methodist Episcopal Church — once the center of Black religious and political life in Toronto for over 100 years — is a reminder that Black history in Canada is also Black history in the United States. 


Bringing the past into the present and sharing it one tale, talk or tour at a time – for area historian and author Chris Carter, this is his passion. 

Gananoque residents paint piece of history 

http://www.thewhig.com/2016/02/23/gananoque-residents-paint-piece-of-history 

Four hundred Gananoque residents made a little bit of history. 

They each painted a four-inch-square tile that was pieced together with the others to form an eight-foot mural representing Gananoque in the Canada 150 Mosaic Mural project to celebrate the nation’s 150th birthday. 

Saskatchewan 

Workshop makes family history into digital stories 

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/saskatoon/workshop-makes-family-history-digital-1.3457692 

The Saskatchewan Genealogical Society has been putting on the Preserving Your Family History: Digital Storytelling Workshop across the province for the past few weeks. They are led by freelance journalist and facilitator Evie Ruddy. 

Group hopes to make Saskatoon park a United Nations World Heritage Site 


A group hopes to have the Wanuskewin Heritage Park in Saskatoon designated as a United Nations World Heritage site. 

Chief Felix Thomas of the Saskatoon Tribal Council says to achieve that goal the park will need to expand and be improved. 

Alberta 

Family history unveils surprises 


Two Grande Prairie residents have had the question, "Who do you think you are?" answered. 

Radio personality Paul Ouellette and Archbishop Gerard Pettipas of the Archdiocese of Grouard-MacLennan each received thick binders detailing the history of their respective families Saturday. 

British Columbia 

Canadian Stories this Week 

Ontario Genealogical Office is moving 

The Ontario Genealogical Office (OGS) will be moving in less than two week from downtown Toronto to the northend of the city. The moving date will be March the 10th.
They have always been in downtown Toronto ever since I have been a member, so this will be something new for everyone. The site is near the Archives of Ontario, which is an added plus. 
To help with the move, the OGS has two people from the Halton-Peel Branch to help out with the move - Fran Murphy, the past Chair of the Halton-Peel Branch, will be the "cull team leader" who will prepare the OGS deposit library collection for its move from the North York Central Library to the Toronto Reference Library, and Coral Harkies, the Branch Secretary of the Halton-Peel Branch, will be the new Administrative Coordinator at OGS when they move to their new offices at 2100 Steeles Avenue in early March. 
As of March 10th, the address will be 2100 Steeles Ave., Unit #202, Concord, ON L4K 2V1 
RootsTech in Canada 

Why don't more LDS churches put this type of thing on in Canada?
The Halton-Peel OGS is invited to attend the viewing of their favourite workshops from the 2016 RootsTech Conference in Salt Lake City. 
It will be held on Saturday, March 19, 10 am to 3 pm. 10062 Bramalea Road, Brampton, Ontario. There’s no charge, but please register since we’ll be providing a light lunch. 
You can register at FHW2016.eventbrite.ca, or you can call Helen Warner, Public Affairs Director--Brampton, Mississauga & Toronto West, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints at 905-793-3675. 
And the Family Search Library in Salt Lake City has released their March programme of Webinars that you can watch – for free of charge. To view Webinars, you can be viewed online through FamilySearch.org. 
They have Webinars cover everything from Spanish, English, Portuguese, Italians, and the United States Records. 
I watch them on a regular basis, and find them quite good. 
Webinars can be accessed by going to FamilySearch.org; click on Search; select Wiki. Type Webinars and choose the top entry. Click on 1.1 Monthly Class Schedule, then the name of the month; scroll to find the desired class. 
And that was the week in Canadian news! 
This e-newspaper has been published since April 2012! 
Be sure to tell your friends about us. 
If you would like to subscribe, please send your email to genealogycanada@aol.com 
Publishers Elizabeth and Mario Lapointe 
Sponsored by Elizabeth Lapointe Research Services. To learn more about the research services offered by ELRS, go to www.elrs.biz

(c)2016 All rights reserved.

Monday, February 22, 2016

Canadian Week in Review 22 February 2016


I have come across the following Canadian genealogy, history and heritage websites, social media, and newspaper articles this past week that were of interest to me, and I thought you might be interested in them, too.

This Week in Canadian History 

Explosion in a coal mine at Springhill, Nova Scotia

In 1891, an explosion in a coal mine at Springhill, Nova Scotia killed 125 miners. The accident was the first of several that occurred over the years in Springhill. The mines were shut forever after a rock surge on 23 October 1958, in which 74 miners died. 

To read more about Springhill, go to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Springhill,_Nova_Scotia  


Sgt.-Major Fred Hall won the Victoria Cross 

In 1915, Sgt.-Major Fred Hall won the Victoria Cross during the First World War battle of Ypres in Belgium. He died trying to rescue a wounded friend. Hall was one of three V.C. winners from the war who lived on the same Winnipeg street - Cpl. Leo Clarke and Lt. Robert Shankland. Only Shankland survived the war. 

To read more about Sgt.-Major Fred Hall, go to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frederick_William_Hall  



Social Media 

(Website) Welcome to the Elgin OGS  

Tracing Ancestors along the Talbot Trail 


They have a new website, and it is chock-a-block full of research resources. 

(Photos) Oakville council votes to designate Kaitting House remains under Ontario Heritage Act 


Oakville’s Planning and Development Council made what Mayor Rob Burton called “the best of a bad situation” Tuesday by voting to designate the remains of the historic Kaitting House under the Ontario Heritage Act. 

Upcoming Canadian Events 

Conferences 

New! 2018 Ontario Genealogical Society Conference 

Word has reached us that the OGS has accepted a bid to host the 2018 OGS Conference in Guelph, Ontario put forward by the Scottish Special Interest Group [SIG]. Christine Woodcock will be conference chair. 

So stay tuned for further developments. 

NEW! 32nd Gene-O-Rama of the Ottawa Genealogical Society 

The conference will be held from April 1–2, 2016 at the Confederation Education Centre, 1645 Woodroffe Avenue, Ottawa, Ontario which is at the corner of Hunt Club Road & Woodroffe Avenue. 



If you need further information, go to http://ogsottawa.on.ca/Gene-O-Rama/ 

UNLOCKING THE PAST 2016 

International Genealogy Conference UNLOCKING THE PAST 2016 will be held on Saturday, April 23, 2016 at the The Beach Club Resort, Parksville, British Columbia of the Qualicum Beach Family History Society in British Columbia. 

The featured speakers will be Colleen Fitzpatrick and Chris Paton, and registration is now open at http://www.eventbrite.ca/e/international-genealogy-conference-unlocking-the-past-2016-tickets-18765135024. It includes an early bird price. 

The website is located at http://www.qbfhs.ca/   

Genealogy on the Cutting Edge 2016  

The Ontario Genealogical Society will be holding its annual conference from June 3rd to 5th at the Toronto’s International Plaza Hotel, Toronto. 

Speakers and agenda has been announced this past week. Registration will open in January. Registration is now open at http://www.ogs.on.ca/conference/registration/, Keep up-to-date with the latest news by following their website at http://www.ogs.on.ca/conference/, or their Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/events/171812826485725/ 


Our Canada – Your Family: Building a Nation 2017 

The Ottawa Branch of the Ontario Genealogical Society will host the 2017 annual conference, and they have a call out for presentations. 

The conference will be held in Ottawa on June 16-18, 2017 at Algonquin College. The theme of the conference is Our Canada – Your Family: Building a Nation. 

DEADLINE FOR PROPOSALS IS FEBRUARY 15, 2016 

To submit proposals or ask questions, please contact the Conference 2017 Program Committee at: program.conference2017@ogs.on.ca. For more information about OGS or Ottawa Branch respectively, please visit: www.ogs.on.ca or www.ogsottawa.on.ca

Great Canadian Genealogy Summit 

The summit will be held in Brampton, Ontario from October 21 to the 23, 2016 at the 
Courtyard Marriott. 

Registration has opened at http://www.qbfhs.ca/ 


Newspaper Articles 

Nova Scotia 

Halifax's Young Avenue mansions 'endangered' by development 


It's known as Halifax's grand boulevard: a street filled with large estates that once housed the who's who of the city. 

But now some people are worried that Young Avenue's mansions could face a wrecking ball from developers eyeing the expensive properties. 

Prince Edward Island 

All Souls' Chapel: its hidden history highlighted for Heritage Week  


Islanders are getting a chance to enjoy a hidden gem of Charlottetown's history, with public tours on offer of All Souls' Chapel, attached to the Anglican St. Peter's Cathedral.

Quebec 

Quebec City gives Montreal bronze statues for 375th anniversary 


Quebec City is offering Montreal a one-of-a-kind gift for its 375th anniversary: four aluminum columns topped by bronze statues of teenagers wearing T-shirts. 

Ontario 

Dear Diary: Read what our ancestors wrote in the 1980s 


History books provide details on wars, explorations, discoveries and every other type of large-scale, life-altering event that occurred in the world. 

But it’s the diaries of young girls, men and anybody else who ever dared to put pen to paper with their innermost thoughts that give us a glimpse into what daily life was really like, whether it be the 1600s, 1800s or today.  

To visit the Whitchurch-Stouffville Museum, go to http://www.townofws.ca/en/explore/museum.asp?_mid_=11446 

The Case of the Missing Plaque: Behrends Group Returns Ontario Heritage Plaque to Its Rightful Owners 


An unusual set of circumstances put Behrends Group of Companies at the forefront of recovering a valuable Ontario Heritage plaque that had gone missing from its original installed location.  

British Columbia 

Heritage Week celebrates Revelstoke's 'built heritage' 


February 15 to 21 is Heritage Week in British Columbia and the theme for this year is Distinctive Destinations: Experience Historic Places in Revelstoke.

Canadian Stories this Week 

It has been a rather quiet week in Canadian history, heritage and genealogy news. Maybe it was because of our crazy winter weather last week that many of us decided to stay home because of the record breaking amount of snow (at least in Ottawa), or maybe we are just catching our second breath as we wait for spring to come to us in a few weeks time. 

More thoughts on RootsTech 2016

Christine Woodcock has more thoughts on RootTech on her blog Scottish Genealogy Tips and Tidbits at http://scottishgenealogytipsntricks.blogspot.com/. She had added six more blog posts, and they should be read for a Canadians take on an American conference. 

Ruth Blair has added her thoughts on Rootstech, too, on her blog on The Passionate Genealogist at http://blog.familyhistorysearches.com/. She didn't go to RootsTech 2016 in person, but she still tells us how she kept in touch with the conference goers, and offers her opinion on the conference.

Eastern Townships historical archives go online for new database project

The Archives Department of the Eastern Townships Resource Centre is going digital! They announced this week that they expect to go online by mid-April of this year.

The website will allow users to search people and places, and browse through the materials that come up.

Five historical organizations from around the Townships are uploading portions of their collections, including historical societies in Lennoxville, Stanstead East, Brome, and Eaton Corner.

To read the newspaper report of it, go to http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/montreal/eastern-townships-archives-portal-project-resource-centre-1.3451521 

And that was the week in Canadian news! 

This e-newspaper has been published since April 2012! 

Be sure to tell your friends about us. 

If you would like to subscribe, please send your email to genealogycanada@aol.com 

Publishers Elizabeth and Mario Lapointe 

Sponsored by Elizabeth Lapointe Research Services. To learn more about the research services offered by ELRS, go to www.elrs.biz 

(c) 2016 All rights reserved.

Monday, February 15, 2016

Canadian Week in Review 15 February 2016

I have come across the following Canadian genealogy, history and heritage websites, social media, and newspaper articles this past week that were of interest to me, and I thought you might be interested in them, too.

This Week in Canadian History 

Louis Riel provisional government

In 1870, Louis Riel established a provisional government at Red River, Manitoba. 

His first resistance was the Red River Rebellion of 1869–1870. The provisional government established by Riel ultimately negotiated the terms under which the modern province of Manitoba entered the Canadian Confederation. 

He is frequently referred to as the "Father of Manitoba".


First free public library opened in Guelph

In 1883, Ontario's first free public library opened in Guelph. 

In 1832, the first Guelph circulating library began operation in the backroom of a store on Wyndam Street. Eighteen years later, on January 14, 1850, the Farmers' and Mechanics' Institute in Guelph was established, with a small book collection and a reading room for the use of the members. 

In 1882, the Free Libraries Act was passed, allowing municipalities to establish libraries supported by local taxes. The Mechanics' Institute handed over its assets to the Guelph Free Public Library on February 10, 1883, and Library's services were made available to all residents.


Social Media 

(Photos) HANTS HISTORY: Feb. 11, 2016 


Here's a look at what was making the news 25 and 50 years ago in the Hants Journal 

Upcoming Canadian Events 

Conferences 

New! 2018 Ontario Genealogical Society Conference 

Word has reached us that the OGS has accepted a bid put forward by the Scottish Special Interest Group [SIG] to host the 2018 OGS Conference in Guelph, Ontario. Christine Woodcock will be the conference chair.  

Stay tuned for further developments. 

NEW! 32nd Gene-O-Rama of the Ottawa Genealogical Society  

This year's Gene-O-Rama will be held April 1–2, 2016 at the Confederation Education Centre, 1645 Woodroffe Avenue, Ottawa, Ontario (at the corner of Hunt Club Raod & Woodroffe Avenue. 


If you need further information, go to http://ogsottawa.on.ca/Gene-O-Rama/ 

UNLOCKING THE PAST 2016 

The international genealogy conference, UNLOCKING THE PAST 2016, will be held on Saturday, April 23, 2016 at the The Beach Club Resort, Parksville, British Columbia, and is sponsored by the Qualicum Beach Family History Society in British Columbia. 

The featured speakers will be Colleen Fitzpatrick and Chris Paton. Registration is now open at http://www.eventbrite.ca/e/international-genealogy-conference-unlocking-the-past-2016-tickets-18765135024, and includes an early bird price.

The website is located at http://www.qbfhs.ca/  

Genealogy on the Cutting Edge 2016  

The Ontario Genealogical Society will be holding its annual conference from June 3rd to 5th at the Toronto’s International Plaza Hotel, Toronto. 

Speakers and agenda have been announced this past week.

Registration is at http://www.ogs.on.ca/conference/registration/,

Keep up-to-date with the latest news by following their website at http://www.ogs.on.ca/conference/, or their Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/events/171812826485725/ 

Our Canada – Your Family: Building a Nation 2017 

The Ottawa Branch of the Ontario Genealogical Society will host the 2017 annual conference, and they have a call out for presentations. 

The conference will be held in Ottawa on June 16-18, 2017 at Algonquin College. The theme of the conference is Our Canada – Your Family: Building a Nation. 

DEADLINE FOR PROPOSALS IS FEBRUARY 15, 2016 

To submit proposals or ask questions, please contact the Conference 2017 Program Committee at: program.conference2017@ogs.on.ca. For more information about OGS or Ottawa Branch respectively, please visit: www.ogs.on.ca or www.ogsottawa.on.ca

Great Canadian Genealogy Summit 

The summit will be held in Brampton, Ontario from October 21 to the 23, 2016 at the Courtyard Marriott. 



Newspaper Articles 

Nova Scotia 

Amherst Bank of Montreal building to be torn 

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/nova-scotia/heritage-building-bank-montreal-demolition-1.3442710

The Bank of Montreal building in downtown Amherst will be coming down after all.

Town council had given it a three week reprieve in January so the Heritage Trust of Nova Scotia could come up with an alternative proposal.

Colchester Historeum continues to make history

http://www.trurodaily.com/News/Local/2016-02-11/article-4433922/Colchester-Historeum-continues-to-make-history/1

The Colchester Historical Society is celebrating Nova Scotia Heritage Day during the grand reopening of the Historeum on Monday. 

Prince Edward Island 

Stanley Bridge history sought from residents  


Have a story about life in Stanley Bridge, P.E.I.? The local historical society is holding a history circle Monday, Feb. 15, and will record stories about the area, preserving them for future generations. 

New Brunswick 

New Brunswick to celebrate Heritage Week Feb. 8-15 


New Brunswickers are encouraged to celebrate Heritage Week 2016, Feb. 8-15.  

Starting today, more than 100 community and school events have been organized throughout the province. 

Historic Saint John courthouse faces sale after city rejects offer  


The New Brunswick government is now free to put the historic Sydney Street courthouse up for sale after Saint John council rejected the possibility of acquiring the building. 

The courthouse, which was completed in 1829, has been vacant since the opening of Peel Plaza more than two years ago. It has received national, provincial and municipal heritage designations. 

Quebec 

New map shows how Montreal's 68 Metro stations got their names  


Taking a ride on the Montreal Metro also means taking a trip back through Quebec history. 

At least that's how it looks on a new map assembled by Gilles Laporte, a history professor at Cégep du Vieux-Montréal and lecturer at l'Université du Québec à Montréal. 

Ontario 

JOY OF GENEALOGY: Pursuing your ancestors’ amorous activities in time for Valentine’s Day 


Ah, February – the month of love. And the perfect time to find out more about your ancestors’ amorous activities 

Former home of Japanese Canadians interned during war could be torn down

http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/windsor/former-home-of-japanese-canadians-interned-during-war-could-be-torn-down-1.3442821

An old hotel building that once housed dozens of Japanese Canadian men working in an internment camp in southwestern Ontario during the Second World War could soon be demolished.

Local heritage experts say 55 men stayed at the old Eatonville Roadhouse in 1942 and 1943, after they were relocated by the Canadian government from British Columbia during the war. 

Manitoba  

Human rights museum launches outdoor exhibit at Festival du Voyageur 


The Canadian Museum for Human Rights unveiled its first outdoor exhibit at Festival du Voyageur on Thursday. 

The exhibit, Let Them Howl: 100 Years in the Women's Rights Struggle, features 12 portraits of Canadian women who helped break down gender barriers. 

Saskatchewan 

Annual Archives Week in Saskatchewan reminder history is important 


This week is annual Archives Week in the province and Carman Hart said archives are extremely important.

"What we keep in archives is primary sources; it's irreplaceable," he said.

British Columbia 

Tips for how to trace one's family history, from a genealogical expert 


Mapping one's family tree and discovering one's ancestors can be a thrilling experience, says a Surrey genealogical expert.

"You're on a path to discovery that doesn't stop — one thing leads to another and it's really hard to put that down. It can even be described as an addiction," said Laurie Cooke, the branch manager of the Cloverdale branch of the Surrey Public Library. 

Canadian Stories this Week 

Heritage Day and Family Day

February 15th is Family Day in some parts of Canada, and Heritage Day in other parts of Canada. They are provincial holidays, but they aren't federal holidays.

The following provinces – Ontario, Alberta, and Saskatchewan have Family Day, which is on the third Monday of February, and in the provinces of Manitoba, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island, the holiday is Louis Riel Day in Manitoba, Heritage Day in Nova Scotia, and Islander Day in Prince Edward Island. 

FindMyPast

News come to us from Christine Woodcock, who attended RootTech 2016 earlier this month in Salt Lake City, that FindMyPast has entered in a partnership with the Library and Archives Canada (LAC) to put on the census returns onto their site.

Please keep it in mind that the census is already on the LAC site free of charge. And for those who like to cite sources – all the information is there.

The LAC website is http://www.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/census/Pages/census.aspx

Festival du Voyageur releases program for 2016 winter celebration

Festival du Voyageur released its 2016 lineup of musical acts and performers last Tuesday morning. 

This annual winter celebration of Métis and voyageur culture runs started February 12 until February 21st. 

The festival is rolling out a new, themed-tent this year. The Université de Saint-Boniface Portage Tent will be open both weekends of the festival and will host a Karaoke Night, as well as a board game night.

Market Days will see merchants set up tables and sell their wares under a tent on February 20th.

There's an entire day of fiddling and jigging planned for Louis Riel Day (Feb. 15), and the usual snow and ice sculpting, traditional arts and trades and crafts demonstrations, snowshoe workshops, and tours will also be on offer.

The website is at http://festivalvoyageur.mb.ca/

And that was the week in Canadian news!


The Canadian Week in Review (CWR) is e-newspaper has been published since April 2012! 

Be sure to tell your friends about us. 

If you would like to subscribe, please send your email to genealogycanada@aol.com 

Publishers - Elizabeth and Mario Lapointe 

Sponsored by Elizabeth Lapointe Research Services. To learn more about the research services offered by ELRS, go to www.elrs.biz 

(c)2016 All rights reserved.

Monday, February 8, 2016

Canadian Week in Review 08 February 2016




I have come across the following Canadian genealogy, history and heritage websites, social media, and newspaper articles this past week that were of interest to me, and I thought you might be interested in them, too.

This Week in Canadian History 

Gold was discovered along British Columbia's Fraser River 

On 04 February 1858, gold was discovered along British Columbia's Fraser River, attracting thousands to Canada's West Coast. Hundreds of ships, jammed with gold-seekers, worked their way across the Strait of Georgia to the Fraser, then made the dangerous trip up the swift-running river. 




Winnipeg was incorporated as a city 

In 1873, Winnipeg, Manitoba was incorporated as a city. It had become the capital on Manitoba in 
1870, and he city is known as the "Gateway to the West". 

Lord Selkirk was involved with the first permanent settlement (known as the Red River Colony, the purchase of land from the Hudson's Bay Company, and a survey of river lots in the early 19th century. 

For more information, go to https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Winnipeg  

Social Media  

Black Vancouverites respond to question 'Where are you from?' 


This piece kicks off On The Coast's Black History Month series, "Race, Roots and Relocation: Delving into B.C.'s Black History. 

Upcoming Canadian Events 

Conferences 

New! 2018 Ontario Genealogical Society Conference 

Word has reached us that the OGS has accepted a bid to host the 2018 OGS Conference in Guelph, Ontario put forward by the Scottish Special Interest Group [SIG]. Christine Woodcock will be conference chair. 

So stay tuned for further developments. 

NEW! 32nd Gene-O-Rama of the Ottawa Genealogical Society 

The conference will be held from April 1 – 2, 2016 at the Confederation Education Centre, 1645 Woodroffe Avenue, Ottawa, Ontario which is at the corner of Hunt Club & Woodroffe Streets. 



If you need further information, go to http://ogsottawa.on.ca/Gene-O-Rama/ 

UNLOCKING THE PAST 2016 





International Genealogy Conference UNLOCKING THE PAST 2016 will be held on Saturday, April 23, 2016 at the The Beach Club Resort, Parksville, British Columbia of the Qualicum Beach Family History Society in British Columbia. 

The featured speakers will be Colleen Fitzpatrick and Chris Paton, and registration is now open at http://www.eventbrite.ca/e/international-genealogy-conference-unlocking-the-past-2016-tickets-18765135024. It includes an early bird price. 

The website is located at http://www.qbfhs.ca/ 

Genealogy on the Cutting Edge 2016 

The Ontario Genealogical Society will be holding its annual conference from June 3rd to 5th at the Toronto’s International Plaza Hotel, Toronto.  

Speakers and agenda has been announced this past week. Registration will open in January. Registration is now open at http://www.ogs.on.ca/conference/registration/, Keep up-to-date with the latest news by following their website at http://www.ogs.on.ca/conference/, or their Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/events/171812826485725/ 

Our Canada – Your Family: Building a Nation 2017 

The Ottawa Branch of the Ontario Genealogical Society will host the 2017 annual conference, and they have a call out for presentations. 

The conference will be held in Ottawa on June 16-18, 2017 at Algonquin College. The theme of the conference is Our Canada – Your Family: Building a Nation. 

DEADLINE FOR PROPOSALS IS FEBRUARY 15, 2016 

To submit proposals or ask questions, please contact the Conference 2017 Program Committee at: program.conference2017@ogs.on.ca. For more information about OGS or Ottawa Branch respectively, please visit: www.ogs.on.ca or www.ogsottawa.on.ca

Great Canadian Genealogy Summit 

The summit will be held in Brampton, Ontario from October 21 to the 23, 2016 at the 
Courtyard Marriott. 



Newspaper Articles 

Newfoundland 


You got to love Webster’s. A copy of their huge “encyclopedic” dictionary from just over 70 years ago is lying in front of me, sprawled on the desk with a broken spine. It contains well over 1,000 pages but it is dusty, shelf-worn and every time you pick it up (all four pounds of it — OK, OK, 800 grams) it leaves a little of itself behind.  

Nova Scotia 

More history unearthed at Fort Lawrence 


The ground at the border with New Brunswick continues to reveal significant archeological finds. 

Black History Month in 60 seconds: Canada’s Rosa Parks gets her due in new Heritage Minute 


Decades before we’d debate the absence of black Oscar nominees, Viola Desmond had a much more painful experience of racism at the movies. 

Amherst remembers No. 2 Battalion, launches African Heritage Month 


African Heritage Month was officially launched in the region Feb. 1, and with the focus of this year’s celebration being a World War I military unity, it was only fitting the kick-off took place at the armories in Amherst.

Black Battalion stamp celebrates heroic contributions 


Members of the African Nova Scotian community gathered at the Black Cultural Centre in Cherry Brook Tuesday for a stamp unveiling, and to celebrate the 100th anniversary of the No. 2 Construction Battalion 

Hockey heritage centre 


The Nova Scotia government has announced up to $3 million for the construction of a hockey heritage centre in Windsor N.S., which has long claimed to be the birthplace of hockey. 

Greg Kelley, president of the Long Pond Hockey Arena Society, said the Windsor Hockey Heritage Centre will celebrate Canadian hockey and bring the world to the small Nova Scotia town where the sport was born more than 200 years ago. 

Heritage Trust of Nova Scotia wants to turn Amherst building into a museum 


The Heritage Trust of Nova Scotia has stepped up to try to save an abandoned building in downtown Amherst from the wrecking ball by transforming it into a museum. 

Quebec 

Archaeology in Quebec Pointe-a-Calliere Museum 


About 350 pieces will be on display to mark fifty years of archaeological discoveries in the province 

Ontario 

County looks at options, including demolishing former archives building 



Perth County is looking into demolishing the former archives building on St. Andrew St. in Stratford as one possible answer to overcrowded office space at the courthouse next door. 

Government seeks feedback on memorial to victims of communism 


Heritage Minister Mélanie Joly is inviting Canadians to offer feedback online in the next two weeks about the design of the controversial victims of communism memorial 


Manitoba 

Cairn dedicated for gift of land 


Family, friends and neighbours of Frank Crew, along with representatives of the Manitoba Habitat Heritage Corporation (MHHC), came together last fall to recognize and thank the Birtle citizen and retired farmer for his contribution and donation of land that had been part of his family’s farm for half a century. 

Saskatchewan 

History Matters: Engineering Dean Mackenzie involved in bizarre war project 


Canada and the United States might have thrown their industrial muscle behind the European campaign, but supply ships were regularly knocked out by German torpedoes. Hundreds of seamen lost their lives to U-boats lurking below the ocean surface in “wolf packs.” 

Enter British inventor Geoffrey Pyke. 

British Columbia 

Northwestern B.C. cannery locations named for historical significance 


The former Arrandale, Mill Bay and Nass Harbour cannery locations in the area of the mouth of the Nass River on the north coast have been named by the B.C. government as among 21 pla north coast have been named by the B.C. government as among 21 places of historical significance to the Chinese Canadian community 

Chinese head tax reparations called for by surviving families 


One member of a Canadian family that was forced to pay the Chinese head tax says the hurt from this history cannot be undone without a meaningful gesture from the federal government, in the form of a letter and financial settlement. 

Piece of Burnaby history up for sale 


A rare piece of history with Burnaby connections is up for auction this weekend. In 1862, Robert Burnaby, the city’s namesake, penned a note to transfer his shares in a company to another person. That scrap of paper, dated June 3, 1862, is up for auction this weekend.  

Canadian Stories this Week 

RootsTech 2016 

RootsTech is over for another year, and expect for a mixup in the Saturday evening streaming videos of the classes, everything apparently went well. 

I especially enjoyed the Innovative Summit, and the classes this year. It seemed especially nice to see the companies who won prizes in the Innovative Summit, and they seemed to have something for everyone. 

There were Canadians there who blogged - 

Scottish Genealogy Tips And Tidbits blog by Christine Woodcock at http://scottishgenealogytipsntricks.blogspot.com/

and

Louis Kessler on the Behold Genealogy blog at http://www.beholdgenealogy.com/blog/

So watch the videos when you have time, and tell them that you want to receive the latest news by email at info@rootstech.org 

As you know, the newest hit of RootsTech is the stories about your family, and Western University graduate students is collecting stories from Americans who came to Canada. 

The Americans who came to Canada vary from the New England Planters of the 1760s and 1770s to the black migrants following the Underground Railroad between 1640 and 1860, and even Vietnam War draft dodgers in the 1960s and 1970s and liberal Americans leaving since 2000 because of right-wing politics. 

To read the whole “story", go to http://www.lfpress.com/2016/02/04/western-university-graduate-tudents-conduct-oral-history-interviews-with-americans-who-have-come-to-canada-since-the-1960s

And lastly, Dwayne Meisner tells us that the 1921 census for Richmond County, Nova Scotia is now fully transcribed on his site at http://www.dwaynemeisner.com/census/novascotia/richmond1921/index.php 

With this county completed, the entire province is now transcribed!

The 1921 pages have a special toolbar at the top so you can easily submit corrections, or volunteer to proofread the transcriptions.

As usual, if you are not already a member of my site, you will have to complete a free registration form.

And that was the week in Canadian news! 

This e-newspaper has been published since April 2012! 

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If you would like to subscribe, please send your email to genealogycanada@aol.com 

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Sponsored by Elizabeth Lapointe Research Services. To learn more about the research services offered by ELRS, go to www.elrs.biz 

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