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October 09, 2005

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Jackie Hostage

Hi Dick,

The ACGS is a wonderful resource to the Drouin records for people who can travel to access that wonderful resource. But, I would like to add that many of the parish records are available on microfilm through the LDS Family History Centers and can be ordered for local viewing. For my part I think that the best investment anyone can make is a subscription to the University of Montreal's PRDH (http://www.genealogie.umontreal.ca/en/). There you will find the BMDs from all the Catholic registers from 1621-1800 and can print out a "certificate" validating the data.

Bet we share some Quebecois genes! Hope you'll do more on this area of genealogical research.

Jackie

Dick Eastman

---> Bet we share some Quebecois genes!

I have never met a French-Canadian that I wasn't related to! (smile)

- Dick Eastman

Beth Davies

I have never used the Drouin microfilm, but most of the original parish records on microfilm at the Family History Library have indexes, making it easy to find the names in the records. Most often there are separate indexes, but sometimes the index are found at the end of each year's records.

Kathy Moore

Hello,

I agree with Jackie that a subscription to the University of Montreal's PRDH ( http://www.genealogie.umontreal.ca/en/ ) database is a great investment, but it is a secondary source and IMHO best used while you are doing your homework. This is how I have been using the PRDH, the French Genealogy of North America database ( http://www.francogene.com/quebec-genealogy/998/ ), the Fichier Origine ( http://www.fichierorigine.com/ ), and the Drouin Collection of ACGS to document my family’s French Canadian ancestry.

I started with a copy of “The French Canadian Ancestry of Cyprine Asselin, 1837-1905 and Celina Henry 1836-1905”, by Sister Loretta Penchi, 1978. I was lucky the 19th century was done for me, and has served as an excellent road map. However, this ancestry contained zero source citations, and the abbreviations b, d, and m were used without distinction between birth and baptism, or death and burial, or marriage contract and marriage dates. Also, the errors of Tanguay, and some other secondary sources are duplicated in the above ancestry.

The PRDH is used to verify and/or obtain dates, locations, and standard spellings of surnames. The certificates available from the PRDH I use to record name variations, and serve as a partial translation of the original record.

I use the French Genealogy of North America database to obtain the ancestry past the Quebec immigrant, name variations, and the parents of a sibling’s spouse. Fichier Origine is used to get a copy (if available) of the baptism of the Quebec immigrant, and of course more name variations.

Armed with the information from the PRDH certificate (date, names as they appear on the original record and location) I request a copy of the original record from ACGS.

I suggest anyone wanting to obtain copies of a large number of original records from ACGS become a member, and use The Drouin Assistants and Collectors Committee ( http://www.acgs.org/research/drouin-team.html ) rather then the Research Department ( http://www.acgs.org/research/ ) of ACGS. Becoming a member and using the committee will save you a considerable amount of money. For example member requesting copies of 80 events (name, dates and location supplied) through the Research Department would cost $81.00, but a member requesting copies of 80 event through the committee could be as little as $30.00 depending on how many coupons are purchased and how many images the volunteer computer operator can pull per hour.

Kathy

Denis Beauregard

Hi DIck,

The original microfilming by Drouin Institute was made in the 1940s, using the
war as a good reason to get the permission to microfilm the records. This is why
most parishes are covered to 1940 or 1941. The LDS microfilming was taken in 1976
from the parish copy while the Drouin collection has usually both copies for early
years and the court house copy for recent years (a copy made yearly at the church and
that was sent to the court house). This means some records that can't be read from the
LDS copy because of binding may be readable from the Drouin copy. Also, some records
stolen from the court houses (they were opened to everybody until 1993) may survive
in the Drouin collection while missing from the court house copy.

You can now purchase the images in different packages. You can purchase the hard disk
complete dataset for $CAN 125 000, CD-ROM or DVD-ROM with one or many parishes on them
from the Drouin web site http://www.drouininstitute.com/ (and when not yet available,
you may ask other parishes), one year of records for one parish for $7 from Marigot
society http://stores.ebay.ca/Histoire-Quebec-Genealogie-Marigot, one record if you
know the date from SGCF http://www.sgcf.com for $3 ($2 for more records in the same letter).

The Marigot historical society published a DVD-ROM where the records about early
families of Longueuil are linked to the images. The Drouin Institute is cooperating
with many genealogical societies to index the record, i.e. to attach the record
details (like names and date) to the image.

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