Jottings from SW Surrey. This used to be mainly about energy but now I've retired it's just an old man's rant. From 23 June 2016 'til 12 December 2019 Brexit dominated but that is now a lost cause. So, I will continue to point out the stupidities of government when I'm so minded; but you may also find the odd post on climate change, on popular science or on genealogy - particularly my own family.
Monday, 24 August 2015
Get Someone Else To Do It
I've just come across a report of a survey purporting to show that 30% of interviewees want schools to educate kids about recycling, energy efficiency and waste prevention. Come on! Is this really something to palm off onto schools? Everyone (including that 30%) should be doing the job themselves. I'm fed up with the general expectation that it's always someone else's job. It isn't. It's yours.
Wednesday, 19 August 2015
Thank You Dorset History Centre
Sometimes a little reminder is all you need.
I have Dorset ancestors and have been making very good use of the Dorset parish records, provided by the Dorset History Centre to Ancestry. One of the key activities in compiling any family tree is to make sure that you "kill off" your forebears (i.e. find death and/or burial records). I was having great difficulty in doing this with families from Dorchester as the parochial burial records petered out from about 1856. What, I wondered, was the problem? Lost material? Poor storage? Failed microfilming?
Stupid me! A query to DHC elicited a very rapid response from Ed, an assistant at the Centre, who pointed out that the local municipal cemetery opened in 1856. Not only did he do that, but he reminded me of the existence of Dorset Online Parish Clerk, and pointed me to their page of transcribed records from the cemetery! Now, that's service. So, many thanks to DHC, and to Ed in particular. I've "killed off" several relatives and found one (who lasted only 1 year) of whom I knew nothing.
I have Dorset ancestors and have been making very good use of the Dorset parish records, provided by the Dorset History Centre to Ancestry. One of the key activities in compiling any family tree is to make sure that you "kill off" your forebears (i.e. find death and/or burial records). I was having great difficulty in doing this with families from Dorchester as the parochial burial records petered out from about 1856. What, I wondered, was the problem? Lost material? Poor storage? Failed microfilming?
Stupid me! A query to DHC elicited a very rapid response from Ed, an assistant at the Centre, who pointed out that the local municipal cemetery opened in 1856. Not only did he do that, but he reminded me of the existence of Dorset Online Parish Clerk, and pointed me to their page of transcribed records from the cemetery! Now, that's service. So, many thanks to DHC, and to Ed in particular. I've "killed off" several relatives and found one (who lasted only 1 year) of whom I knew nothing.
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