Canadian nonfiction

  • Researching Your Irish Ancestors at Home and Abroad

    Creator

    Elliott, David R.

    Abstract

    A one-stop guide for people seeking information about their ancestors in Ireland. This book will help all those, no matter where they live, who are searching for ancestors in Ireland. David R. Elliott has taken eight research trips to Ireland on behalf of his clients and has worked in most archival repositories in the Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland. Dr. Elliott gives clues to finding your ancestral county, then the parish and townland within the county.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    ONTARIO GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY

    Not specified
  • Education and Ontario Family History A Guide to the Resources for Genealogists and Historians

    Creator

    Press, Marian

    Abstract

    Many family researchers with Ontario roots discover they have ancestors who were teachers. Those with no teachers in the family may have ancestors who were part of the Ontario education system as students. Today there are numerous varied resources available to find information on teachers, pupils, schools, textbooks, and curricula in historical Ontario. Education and Ontario Family History outlines the resources available for education from about 1785 to the early twentieth century, not only for genealogists, but also for other historians with an interest in educational records.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    ONTARIO GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY

    Not specified
  • A Better Place Death and Burial in Nineteenth-Century Ontario

    Creator

    Smart, Susan

    Abstract

    A Better Place describes the practices around death and burial in 19th-century Ontario. Funeral rituals, strong religious beliefs, and a firm conviction that death was a beginning not an end helped the bereaved through their times of loss in a century where death was always close at hand.The book describes the pioneer funeral in detail as well as the factors that changed this simple funeral into the elaborate etiquette-driven Victorian funeral at the end of the century.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    ONTARIO GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY

    Not specified
  • Genealogical Standards of Evidence A Guide for Family Historians

    Creator

    Merriman, Brenda Dougall

    Abstract

    Genealogical evidence is the information that allows us to identify an individual, an event in his or her life, or the relationship between individuals. In such a process, we often hear or use words such as evidence, proof, or documentation. Brenda Dougall Merriman takes readers through the genealogical process of research and identification, along the way examining how the genealogical community has developed standards of evidence and documentation, what those standards are, and how they can be applied.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    ONTARIO GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY

    Not specified
  • Genealogy and the Law in Canada

    Creator

    Wilkinson, Margaret Ann

    Abstract

    Digital records and broad access to the Internet have made it easier for genealogists to gather relevant information from distant sources and to share the information they have gathered. The law, however, remains tied to particular geographic locations. This book discusses how specific laws – access to information, personal data protection, libel, copyright, and regulation of cemeteries – apply to anyone involved in genealogical research in Canada.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    ONTARIO GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY

    Not specified
  • Conserving, Preserving, and Restoring Your Heritage A Professional's Advice

    Creator

    Kim, Kennis

    Abstract

    Artifacts, whether found in museums, our community, or our homes, offer glimpses into the past. Be they documents, photographs, books, or clothing, as custodians of our history, we’re faced with how to maintain these items. Professional conservator Kennis Kim tells us how. Topics discussed include: creating an accession list; the nature of conservation, restoration, and preservation; deciding on display, storage, or using the artifact; common threats such as light, humidity, insects, and rodents; and when to call a professional.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    ONTARIO GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY

    Not specified
  • Publish Your Family History Preserving Your Heritage in a Book

    Creator

    Yates, Susan

    Ioannou, Greg

    Abstract

    Many people want to write a family history, but few ever take on the job of publishing one. If you've done the research, and you want to make a book from it, then Publish Your Family History is for you. It will tell you all the fundamentals of book production, together with the important details that distinguish a home-published book from a homemade one.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    ONTARIO GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY

    Not specified
  • Crime and Punishment in Upper Canada A Researcher's Guide

    Creator

    Nickerson, Janice

    Abstract

    Crime and Punishment in Upper Canada provides genealogists and social historians with context and tools to understand the criminal justice system and locate sources on criminal activity and its consequences for the Upper Canada period (1791–1841) of Ontario’s history. Illustrative examples further aid researchers in this era of the province’s past, which is notoriously difficult to investigate due to paucity of records and indexes.

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    ONTARIO GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY

    Not specified
  • Time Traveller's Handbook A Guide to the Past

    Creator

    Douglas, Althea

    Abstract

    Do you know how long it took to sail across the Atlantic Ocean? Was it faster from east to west or west to east? Imagine sailing to India, a five-month trip around the Cape of Good Hope! No wonder late Victorians valued the steamship and the Suez Canal. What difference did the inventions of the telephone or steam engine make to our ancestors lives? Do you know what a rod or a chain is and what they measured?

    Publisher (Source)

    Toronto

    ONTARIO GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY

    Not specified
  • Hot, Wet, and Shaking: How I Learned to Talk About Sex

    Creator

    Trace, Kaleigh

    Abstract

    Winner of the 2015 Evelyn Richardson Non-fiction Award This is a sex book. It’s a book about having sex by yourself, with one person, or with twenty people if everyone is down. It’s about saying words like cunt, fuck, and come. But it’s also about the things we don’t talk about—the mystery, the expectations, and the bullshit that can go along with sex.

    Publisher (Source)

    Halifax

    Invisible Publishing

    Not specified