Canadian Great War Project Blog Page

Email and the Canadian Great War Project

clock January 25, 2012 03:20 by author marc

I was thinking about eMail quite a bit over the last few weeks, mainly because it takes up a lot of my time on a daily basis (here’s where peals of laughter erupt from people that haven’t heard from me for very long time). But it is true. I get about 8,000 email’s a year to my CGWP address, which is about 20% of what I get at work, so in total I’m going through about 120 eMails on a daily basis. Granted a lot of them don’t take a lot of time … I have decided that I don’t want to get rich by helping someone who has secreted money out of <insert name of 3rd world country here>, so click those are gone. The same for the complaints I get from the Better Business Bureau. The ones I’m referring to are those written by someone who speaks English as a 14th language and that tell me I really need to click on a very suspicious link to find out what the complaint is. Click – those are gone. They take a bit linger, because I find it humourous to read them. Then there are the ads from various services that want me to buy their products, so they don’t take long to select and delete.

The remaining ones fall into several categories:

  1. Problems with the web site. I try to address these pretty quickly (OK, the problem with uploading images dragged on for much too long), and thankfully they are fairly few.
  2. People tracing family members. These are pretty common, most are looking for information on how to trace an ancestor’s war experience, but occasionally they want to know a bit more than what is on the attestation papers. One was along the lines of “You say that my great-uncle 4 times removed was married to Jane, but her name was Margaret Jane, and they divorced in 1922. Do you know why?” Sorry, but no I don’t know why. One of my favourites from this category was “I’d like to know more about my great-grandfather. Can you tell me what he did in the war?” That was it, no name provided. The follow up was “Oh, sorry, his name was John Smith, but maybe he used Smythe. I think he may have lived in Ontario.” Humm, not much there to go on.
  3. People complaining about the accuracy of the information. Actually most aren’t complaining, they are really helping us build up the accuracy of the data and providing corrections, which are always very much appreciated, but it’s the ones that are somewhat belligerent that stand out. “My great uncle was born in Glyndyfrdwy, not Glyndyford! Everyone knows that there is no town called Glyndyford!” Well, I’m not sure that either the clerk that was trying to write it down on the attestation form knew that, and apparently the person who tried to decipher his handwriting to enter it knew that either.
  4. And my favourite, the ones who don’t find a name they are looking for. Most politely provide the information or ask how they can enter it, but a few get quite animated: “How can you say that you have a database when my wife’s 14th cousin 6 times removed isn’t in it? I’m very, very disappointed.” Knowing how hard everyone that volunteers time is working to get names added, I find these hard to answer, or at least answer politely. Occasionally, I get one that ends with something like “… and I know this because my grandmother has a picture of him that was taken in uniform. There is a date of 1944 on it!” Ummm, wrong war.
  5.  And then the ones that make it all worthwhile. “Thank you for helping me find more information about my grandfather. My mother knew he was in World War 1, but that was all. Thanks to this wonderful resource we know a bit more. Thank you for commemorating all the men that served, not just the ones that died.”

And that’s really what this is all about: having a place to remember the men and women that served. And thanks to everyone who volunteers and helps the database grow by about 500 new entries, and 300 updated entries every week. Through your efforts this great resource keeps getting better.



Thank you!

clock January 5, 2010 07:56 by author marc

It seems that I am always late in getting things done around the Canadian Great War Project. External influences seem to crop up that I can’t avoid … I’ve used up more gas in my snow plow in the past week than in the past year (it seldom snows in Columbus, Ohio).

But I wanted to take the opportunity to thank everyone that has contributed to this site. The magnitude of what we set out to do in 2005 seemed daunting at the time … identify and profile over 650,000 Canadians that served in the First World War.

Over the past year we have added almost 17,000 names to the database, and over 1,300 War Diary entries. Special thanks to the following for contributing the bulk of the entries:

Individual Entries
Tom CEF 5,459
Don Dunbar 1,344
M Pirie 1,232
M Norton 1,016
poppaholdfast 935
Dion Loach 770
160th Battalion 460
RNWMP 350
Pat & Dave 237
Gary Thomson 161


These include complete nominal rolls based on embarkation lists for some of the overseas battalions, and the database holds what is probably the most complete list of Canadian Nursing Sisters.

Thanks largely to Marika Pirie and Anne Hales we’ve added 78 new newspaper and letter transcriptions which go a long way to giving us a glimpse into the life of the men and women that served.  Almost 650 images were added to the site as well.

I’m sure that, at times, we wonder if the effort that we put into this is worthwhile. In 2009 there were 43,134 unique visitors to the site, with over 1,400 on November 11th. Both of those are huge numbers! Many were looking for ancestors, but in the past year I’ve had schoolteachers expressing their gratitude for making the information available, and the database served as a primary resource for a very creative project by the Toronto Star.

The bulk of my time with this site is in answering eMail from visitors (several hundred in 2009) and in maintaining the integrity of the data on the site. Thanks to TomCEF and RNWMP for your help in doing this.

Every week I get a few eMails from people expressing their gratitude for the content that we have in the Canadian Great War Project. I want to pass these on to all of you, and to thank you for all of your efforts. Together we’ve established a pretty site that helps preserve the memory of the Men and Women that served in the conflict, and at the same time provides a pretty good little research tool.

Thanks!

marc



System Outage – Sept. 24

clock September 17, 2009 03:47 by author marc

The servers that host the Canadian Great War Project are going to be undergoing an upgrade sometime between Midnight and 5:00 AM US Eastern time on September 24. During this period, the Canadian Great War Project will be unavailable for a period of approximately 15 minutes.

 

We apologize for the inconvenience, but this is a necessary upgrade that our hosting company is implementing.



Where’s my CWGC Link? Back On-Line!

clock September 8, 2009 06:08 by author marc

Perhaps you’ve noticed, but the link to the entries in the Commonwealth War Graves Commission (CWGC) database is no longer displayed at the bottom of the soldier display forms.

Sometime over the Labour Day Weekend, the CWGC updated their web site, and the result is that it is no longer possible for me to automatically generate a link to the CWGC pages. I’m not sure why CWGC made this change, but it is likely to cause problems for many people who have links to specific entries on  many different web sites.

I’ll continue to look at this, but in the interim you can go to the main CGWC search engine(link here) and search for the name yo are looking for.

Update 12 September.  It seems that the CWGC has seen the error of their ways, and the old link format is back working again, so it is once again available from the Canadian Great War Project.



Some statistics about this site

clock August 10, 2009 06:42 by author marc

I'm always amazed when I look at how much content is in the Canadian Great War Project site, but today I was looking at the amount of web traffic that we get. By comparison with major sites like yahoo, we are just a small blip in overall traffic, but if you compare it to small, sites dedicated to a very focused purpose, this site does quite well.

Since this site is dynamic, the number of entries in any one category changes daily and the updated counts can be seen by going to the Site Statistics page, which is accessible from the Site Information page.

Content
As of today (August 10, 2009), there are 99,130 men and women defined in the database. There are 13,186 War Diary pages transcribed, 670 letters or newspaper entries transcribed, and 2,823 images on the site. By anyone’s definition, this is a lot of content. At the current rate, we will hit the 100,000 entry mark for men and women that served sometime in September.

Internet Traffic
In the past month we had 2,750 distinct visitors to the site, or more than 90 first time visitors every day. The average person spends 7 minutes on the site, which is quite a significant amount of time, and looks at more than 10 different pages of information. While the majority of people visiting the site are from Canada, we have had visitors from 64 different countries in the past month. The bottom line is that this site is becoming very popular, and it is largely because of the content that is available. The content comes from all of you who spend the time to add information to the site.

So, to all of you who spend the time to add to the information on the site, be it updating a single record, or those who add in 100 new records every week … thank you!



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About this Blog

The latest news and happenings from the Canadian Great War Project

I'll keep this updated with the latest news and happenings from the Canadian Great War Project. Check back here to see what major new items have been added.

I'll also interject some personal notes, from time to time.

Marc Leroux

Blacklick, Ohio

Go back to the Canadian Great War Project by clicking here.

 

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