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Free Ancestry access to Australian and NZ military records

  • Therese Lynch
  • Apr 23, 2019
  • 1 min read

To honour our Anzac Day commemoration, Ancestry is providing access to their Australian and New Zealand military records free of charge between now and Sunday, 28 April 2019.

Image of Ancestry.com.au's advertisement regarding free access to all Australian and NZ military records for Anzac week commemorations

If you don't already have an account with Ancestry, you will need to provide your email address and establish a password to access the records. You will be prompted for this information when you search for a name. As far as I can tell, you won't need to provide any credit card details for this purpose.

If you can't find what you are looking for, then perhaps the records have yet to be digitized. I am always available to help in this regard. Don't hesitate to contact me for a free 20 minute consultation.

Happy military ancestor hunting.

Therese

Your Family Genealogist

Picture: Ancestry.com.au

 
 
 

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Unknown member
Aug 13

James Arthur also published Time and its Measurement in 1909, a book reprinted from a series link of articles he wrote for the magazine Popular Mechanics. The heavily illustrated volume is brief (only 64 pages) but wide-ranging, covering such topics as Chinese and Japanese methods of telling time, how link pendulums work, the Zodiac, and Arthur's modest proposal to "throw local time out totally link and establish one, invariable, universal time." We have the book in our library at HSNY.

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