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Improve your palaeography skills

Your transcription chall enge

This is a page from the Admissions and Discharges book of the Liverpool Road Workhouse in Islington. It shows details of the paupers admitted on Thursday, 18 April 1867. Have a go at transcribing the details from columns 2, 3, 5, 6, 8 & 10 and 11.

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Family Tree
Family Tree October 2018
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Check out our bumper guide to your 101 must-search family history sites!
INSIDE THIS ISSUE…
Spanish flu pandemic explored 100 years on
Karen Clare reports on the latest genealogy news. If you have a story to share, email it to editorial@family-tree.co.uk
New RAF Stories digital resource
Minnie Driver at the RAF Stories launch event. Watch
Free Great War centenary coin
The London Mint Office is offering a free coin to commemorate
Discover your DNA story at Family Tree Live
Pioneering DNA company Family Tree DNA is sponsoring
Stories from the crypt
Some 5,00 0 free events are taking place over two weekends
YOUR FREE RECORDS
WO RTH £30! At Family Tree we’ve teamed up with UK
To tell or not to tell ?
Whenever and however family secrets come to light, there’s always the dilemma of whether to tell all, or to hold some secrets back. As a professional researcher Kim Cook has had to deal with such dilemmas first hand. Here she shares her solutions to handling sensitive issues
The mother line
After his granddaughter was born, Bernard Barker decided to research two centuries of women on her family tree so she can know about her female British ancestry in the years to come. In doing so he realised just how far these incredible women have come from their humble roots…
A tailor’s life for me
From bespoke garment-making in London’s well-to-do West End to the poor clothing sweatshops of the East End, Melody Amsel- Arieli investigates the working lives of tailor ancestors
RESEARCH ZONE
How did you do?
Read on to find out the answers to last issue’s Family Tree Academy challenges. Our Academy tutor David Annal explains all.
Join the Family Tree Academy & become a skilled family historian
Running all through 2018, the Academy learning experience will help you discover more about the records, resources and research skills you need to become the best genealogist you can be. We have case studies for you to pit your wits against, documents for you to decipher, old handwriting for you to tackle, and more…
Document know-how
For most people, particularly those living in rural
Research thinking skills
Your case study chall enge
Dig deeper online!
Chris Paton explores how to find advanced resources on the web that can help to push your research beyond the basics using a mixture of free and paid-for resources
Twiglets
Diarist Gill Shaw charts the rollercoaster ride of researching her family history
Your ancestors & the Black Death
How did the Plague affect our families in London? Simon Wills interviews a historian who examines its impact and all the new evidence in his latest book
Pinpoint your ancestors’ property
Explore the details found in the Valuation Office survey records and maps with Nick Thorne – and consider how you can use this new online map collection for your own research too
Taken a DNA test? Now what?
DNA tests are becoming ever more popular but the results can seem bewildering can’t they? Help is at hand, however, with family historian Karen Evans’s practical advice for making sense of your DNA test results for your family history research
Books
Karen Clare reviews a new book offering insight into how climate change, disease and natural disasters impacted on the lives of our British ancestors in centuries past
TECHY TIPS for family historians
Make the most of digital devices, websites, apps and gadgets, with genealogical web guru Paul Carter
Your questions answered
With our panel of experts Jayne Shrimpton, Mary Evans, Simon Fowler, Christine Wibberley and Anthony Marr
The lunch hour genealogist
Being busy doesn’t mean you have to neglect your favourite hobby, you can still learn in your lunch break! Squeeze just 60 minutes of family history into your daily routine and you’ll soon start to see your tree blossom. It’s time to tuck into Rachel Bellerby’s genealogy treats
Remembering Arctic Convoy veterans
Each issue Julie Goucher spotlights an unusual website to help you take your research in a new direction
DIARY DATES
Find or post diary dates at www.family-tree.co.uk/Events
Your LETTERS
Tracing Edwardian triplets, thoughts on BMDs from around the globe, and memories of ‘Dad’
When I was maybe six
Diane Lindsay recalls the day as a young girl when she learned a valuable lesson or two about life – and horses – from her WW1-veteran grandfather
TOP TIPS & ADVICE
Stuck ? Why not join your local family histor y society?
You know how it is. You’ve been gradually piecing together
Losing the land of our ancestors
The lands inhabited by our forebears were physically and environmentally very different places than they are today. Wayne Shepheard looks at the impact of Mother Nature on our landscape over time
Hillingdon Family History Society
John Symons introduces a family history society for those with ancestors from the north west of Greater London
THE FAMILY HISTORY WEBSITE DIRECTORY
Packed with a handpicked selection of 101 top genealogy
How to create a better website
Show off your family history findings in style and make new connections across the globe. Paul Carter shows you how to build an awesome online home for your research
Investigating murder
Patricia O’Sullivan’s family could be a family historian’s dream… apart from one dark chapter involving a murder on the other side of the world