All Surrey Libraries branches will be closed Friday, April 18 for Good Friday and Monday, April 21 for Easter Monday. All branches are open Saturday, April 19, and all branches, except Port Kells, are open on Sunday, April 20.
All Surrey Libraries branches will be closed Friday, April 18 for Good Friday and Monday, April 21 for Easter Monday. All branches are open Saturday, April 19, and all branches, except Port Kells, are open on Sunday, April 20.
Since the establishment of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission, new information about residential schools in Canada continues to be made available.
The key resource for viewing available records is The National Centre for Truth & Reconciliation (NCTR). Of interest to most family history researchers will be the Quarterly Returns for the residential school attendance records. There is an excellent tutorial video for locating these records.
Instructions from that video are:
The NCTR website also provides an interactive map of residential schools in Canada, with links to each school’s archival records. If using this tool to locate records, locate the school and then continue from step 3 above.
Other sources for residential schools’ locations are:
The NCTR website also has a memorial register of children who died while at residential schools. This register is searchable by name and is updated as new information is available.
Church organizations often operated residential schools, and they are also making many their records available for researchers by submitting them to the NCTR. For information about these records, other available records, and to contact the churches regarding records that were not submitted to the NCTR, see the following:
Residential schools are included in most census records. Because Indigenous names were changed, anglicized, limited to first names only, or misspelled in different ways, searching for someone by name is difficult if not impossible. Searching for the school by name (e.g. keyword in Ancestry) is rarely successful. However, census records were conducted by electoral enumeration districts, so it may be necessary to first determine in which electoral enumeration district the residential school is included, and then scroll through that district’s records to find the school. Electoral districts changed from one census to another.
Census Records - To find the electoral districts by province for each census, then select which census year from the column on the left. Once at the page for that census year, select “Districts and Subdistricts” from the list on the left for a list of district names.
While this Library and Archives Canada site provides microfilm numbers (available in our Family History Department) the census can be searched through Ancestry. In Ancestry, select “Search Census” from the main page, then select the census year from the bottom part of the next page. Once on the census search page, go to the column on the right “Browse this Collection”, select the province, then the district name from the list.
Another approach would be to find the school information and obtain the name of a teacher, minister, or priest that worked at the school, then try a census search for that name.