News for February 2018

News for February 2018

Over 5m US passenger lists released & 19th century newspapers

News, Discover Your Ancestors

News

Discover Your Ancestors


Over 5m US passenger lists released

‘From the Old to the New World’ shows German emigrants boarding a steamer in Hamburg, Germany, to come to America, 1874
‘From the Old to the New World’ shows German emigrants boarding a steamer in Hamburg, Germany, to come to America, 1874

TheGenealogist has added over 5 Million passenger records to its US records, featuring people who migrated to the USA between 1834 to 1900.

The mass movement of people from one country to another isn’t a new thing. The motivation can be economic, political upheaval or religious persecution. The data covers:

  • 3,956,780 German passengers who arrived in the United States between 1850 and 1897
  • 836,122 Italians immigrating into the USA between 1855 – 1900
  • 522,638 Russians who emigrated to America from 1834 to 1897

Most were drawn to the USA by the attractions of land and religious freedom, after being forced to leave Europe by shortages of land and religious or political oppression.

This release joins the millions of US census, death records, trade directories, wills and poll books already available on TheGenealogist.

News from the 19th century!

TheGenealogist has added more than 500 further editions of the weekly publication The Illustrated London News to its Newspaper and Magazine collection. The latest collection is of newspapers which were published in the 1890s and offers a fascinating insight into your ancestors lives.

The Illustrated London News is one of a number of newspapers and magazines that are fully searchable by name or keywords by Diamond subscribers of TheGenealogist. Not only can this extensive resource add context to your ancestors’ lives and times, these newspapers can be used to find out more about people who were mentioned in reports from the time. As well as notices for baptisms, marriages and deaths, there are also wills, crimes and court cases, plus the political stories of the time.

Queen Victoria had been on the throne for more than 50 years by the dawning of the 1890s. Britain’s Prime Minister would be Lord Salisbury for a good part of the decade, only being out of office between 1892 and 1895. Mauve became a popular colour for silks and our ancestors’ clothes in the 1890s.

In 1894 international terrorism came to Britain for the first time when, at Greenwich, an anarchist bomb attack was made at the Royal Observatory. An article in The Illustrated London News for 24 February tells us that a 26-year-old Frenchman, who had earned a living as a tailor in America before joining his brother at the trade in London, accidentally blew himself up in the park. The motive for his failed attack was not clear and the bomber was the only person to die.

In The Illustrated London News for 8 November 1890 we can also read about an addition to the public transport system in the city, when the first electric underground railway was opened by the Prince of Wales. An underground railway hauled by steam engines had opened in London during 1863, as the Metropolitan Railway. It was not, however, until 1890 that the first electrified line opened in November when the City & South London Railway ran a line from Stockwell to King William Street in the City.

It is, however, not just the great and the good that we can read about in the pages of these new releases on

Intriguing article?

Subscribe to our newsletter, filled with more captivating articles, expert tips, and special offers.

TheGenealogist. There are many articles dealing with a wide range of stories, and you can fully search the Newspapers & Magazines collection by name and keywords. If your ancestor was involved in a newsworthy event then it is worth searching the collection to see if they got a mention in the paper. As well as baptisms there were death notices, wills, marriages, crimes and court cases, plus the political stories of the time.

There are also feature articles which can give you an insight into all sorts of your ancestors’ occupations. As an example we can read about the regimental sports taking place in India, or find out about London Cabs and the cabmen who drove the iconic two-wheel horse drawn taxis perched high above and behind the passengers.

At the back of The Illustrated London News you can find all types of advertisements – some of the brands we would still recognise today such as Hovis Bread and Cuticura soap, while other products and companies have not survived the test of time.

More than 360,000 more Warks parish records released online

Baddesley Clinton church, Warwickshire, covered in the new data
Baddesley Clinton church, Warwickshire, covered in the new data

TheGenealogist has added more than 366,000 individuals to its collection of parish records for Warwickshire to increase the coverage of this county in the heart of England.

Released in association with Warwickshire County Record Office, this collection brings high quality transcripts as well as images to family historians researching for ancestors in this area.

With 366,260 individuals included in this Warwickshire release, these new records will help family historians to find their ancestors’ baptisms, marriages and burials, in fully searchable records that cover various parishes from this part of England. The records stretch back to the mid-16th century.

These new records are available as part of the Diamond Subscription at TheGenealogist, bringing the total to 934,495 searchable individuals for the county of Warwickshire.

A case study exploring the new records, revealing the last resting place of a murderous lord of the manor, can be found here .

WW2 PoW records

The National Archives has announced it is opening its World War 2 prisoner of war archives. These documents were transferred TNA in December 2014. There are approximately 190,000 records of people captured in Germanoccupied territory during WW2, primarily Allied service men. The records further include Canadians, South Africans, Australians, New Zealanders, British and Allied civilians (many in the merchant navy) and some nurses. There are also cards for people of American, Norwegian, Chinese, Arab and Cypriot origins.

The new collection (held in series WO 416) includes several thousand records of deceased Allied airmen whose bodies were found near their downed aircraft. While these airmen were never prisoners of war, these documents act as records of death. For further details see here .

Discover Your Ancestors Periodical is published by Discover Your Ancestors Publishing, UK. All rights in the material belong to Discover Your Ancestors Publishing and may not be reproduced, whether in whole or in part, without their prior written consent. The publisher makes every effort to ensure the magazine's contents are correct. All articles are copyright© of Discover Your Ancestors Publishing and unauthorised reproduction is forbidden. Please refer to full Terms and Conditions at www.discoveryourancestors.co.uk. The editors and publishers of this publication give no warranties,
guarantees or assurances and make no representations regarding any goods or services advertised.