Birth, Marriage and Death Certificates, or Vital Statistics, in Saskatchewan provide invaluable information to the family historian. Where are these records located?
Learn MoreThe Digitizing of books online is well established. Books are invaluable in tracing family history, and the history of the province.
Learn MoreSaskatchewan cemeteries number in the thousands, over 3,400! A number of genealogical, ethnic, and historical societies are actively engaged in digitizing and transcribing cemeteries across the vast province of Saskatchewan.
Learn MoreA listing of those cemeteries which have name transcriptions online at the Saskatchewan Cemetery Project.
Learn MoreLand grants, metis scrip, soldier settlement grants, pre-emptions were land holdings in Saskatchewan.
Learn MoreSaskatchewan is fortunate to have a vast selection of libraries for public use, with most excellent resources at the provincial level, university, and regional.
Learn MoreNewspapers may have announcements about military service, marriages, obituaries, birth announcements, church or school events, sporting tournaments, and results, political or cultural happenings. Before 1920, it was not a common occurrence to utilize the newspaper for obituaries, marriages or birth announcements, that being said, these columns did exist historically
Learn MoreThe regions of Saskatchewan Gen Web are provided in order to locate local fellow researchers on query boards and mailing lists.
Learn MoreHistorical one room schoolhouses dotted Saskatchewan in the late 1800s and early 1900s.
Learn MoreWorld War II, World War I, First World War, Second World War, Korean War, Vietnam War, military, soldier, supreme sacrifice, genealogy
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