ORIGINS ITALY

ORIGINS ITALY Guest Blogger: Louise Coakley

Italian-Americans with relatives in Australia may have utilised the resources and tips in Italian Genealogy Research in Australia – Part 1 – which outlined two of Australia’s key national online information resources available – to help start their search for information on their extended families from Italy who migrated to Australia.  In addition to these national resources, Australia’s state-based online information resources can provide vital records to help you grow your family tree or relocate lost relatives.

States & Territories

Australia consists of six states and two main territories, with each administering their own government information resources and providing different levels of coverage and online access to historical records.  Some online offerings are very generous, and some quite limited.  For early periods, note the evolution of the states and territories, as it may impact your research (eg. Victorian records prior to 1851 and Queensland records prior to 1859 may be included in NSW).

Search Strategy

The timeframe for searching will be different for every family, and in every state, but the starting point for state-based family research in Australia is generally the state registries of births, deaths and marriages, and state archives/records offices and libraries.

To trace Italian-Australian families backwards, you will need to follow the BDM certificate trail combined with clues from other records, to locate the family’s place of origin in Italy.  Utilise immigration records, naturalisation records, obituaries, wills and probate documents, cemetery and headstone records, land records, employment and education details, newspaper articles and family notices, children’s birth/marriage records, and photo collections online.

To locate your living Italian relatives or their descendants in Australia, start tracing forwards from clues in their immigration records.  BDM certificates will most likely be restricted, although some states publish marriages indexes up to 1965, deaths indexes up to 1988, and will & probate records to more recent years.   Electoral rolls are available online at Ancestry and FindMyPast for most states up to 1980, so Italian-Australian children born up to 1962 may be included, possibly even with their parents.  The electoral rolls include full names and occupations, and addresses that can be cross-checked with current telephone directories to see if the family still resides at the same address.

Search Tips

Search online family trees (eg. Ancestry, WorldConnect, GenesReunited, FamilySearch) for clues and connections, combined with searches on Google, Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn, Google+ and FriendsReunited.   Ensure you use www.google.com.au to search for Australian information, as Google Australia gives preference to Australian results which may not be found using international Google sites.

State-based Resources

Queensland

New South Wales

Victoria

Western Australia

South Australia

Tasmania

Northern Territory

Australian Capital Territory

Indexes

Note that some of the indexes listed above are included in Ancestry, FindMyPast and FamilySearch, and also accessible at many libraries (online, CD or microfilm/fiche).  If you can’t locate a record in one particular index, try another, as their different search criteria and algorithms can produce or prioritise different results.

Additional Resources

Supplementary to the state-based government records are resources provided by genealogy, family history, local history and historical groups and societies.  Genealogy portals such as Cyndi’s List Australia and Cora Num’s Websites for Genealogists provide further links to Local History Resources , Family History Societies & Groups, cemetery indexes (useful for monumental inscriptions), the Ryerson Index (death, funeral and obituaries index from recent newspapers), and numerous other useful sources.

Reconstruct & Connect

Every family history is unique, so there is no ‘one formula’ that works for everyone in tracing either their ancestors or their living relatives.  Link all the information and clues found using the above state-based resources, together with the national resources, the non-government sources and subscription databases to reconstruct your families.

Strategic use of the above resources – particularly immigration, naturalisation, birth, death and marriage indexes and certificates, electoral rolls and newspaper announcements – can often rebuild the family tree enough to relocate and reconnect with living relatives, through the use of current telephone directories, online searches and current electoral roll searches.

About the ORIGINS ITALY Guest Blogger:
Louise Coakley is a genealogist from Cairns, Queensland, who specialises in Australian and UK family history research.   Find Louise at www.genie1.com.au or follow her on TwitterFacebookLinkedIn or Google+.

Photo information:
-From the collection of the State Library of Queensland, Australia via Flickr Commons.
-Location: Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
-Link to photo on Flickr: http://www.flickr.com/photos/statelibraryqueensland/8755808041
-No known photo copyright restrictions.

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