Quebec Cemeteries: Difference between revisions

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''[[Canada Genealogy|Canada]]  [[Image:Gotoarrow.png]]  [[Quebec Genealogy|Quebec]]  [[Image:Gotoarrow.png]]  [[Quebec_Cemeteries|Cemeteries]]''
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| link2=[[Quebec Genealogy|Quebec]]
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==Online Resources==
=== Cemetery Transcripts  ===
*[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/search?cemetery-name=&cemetery-loc=Quebec%2C+Canada&only-with-cemeteries=cemOnly&locationId=state_832 Find a Grave: Quebec Cemeteries]<br>
*[https://www.findagrave.com/cemetery/search?cemetery-name=&cemetery-loc=Quebec%2C+Canada&only-with-cemeteries=cemOnly&locationId=state_832 BillionGraves: Quebec Cemeteries]<br>
*[http://www.interment.net/can/qc/index.htm Quebec Cemetery Records]<br>
*[http://cemetery.canadagenweb.org/QC/ Canada GenWeb's Cemetery Project: Quebec page]<br>
*[https://www.quebec-cite.com/en/quebec-city/cemeteries Quebec City Cemeteries]<br>
*[http://www.cimetieresduquebec.ca/ Les Cimetières du Québec] index of cemetery transcriptions
*[https://www.genealogiequebec.com/en/tools/obituaries-headstones Obituary Section on Genealogy Quebec], index and photos of Quebec and Ontario cemeteries ($)<br>
*[https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/70602/ Montréal, Québec, Notre-Dame-des-Neiges Cemetery Index, 1849-2011] at Ancestry ($)
*[https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/70606/ Quebec City, Quebec, Mount Hermon Cemetery Index, 1846-1904] at Ancestry ($)
*[https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liste_des_cimeti%C3%A8res_de_Qu%C3%A9bec List of Cemeteries in Quebec] at Wikipedia
*[https://www.genealogiequebec.com/sources/listeCimetieres.aspx List of Cemeteries] at Généalogie Quebec- Drouin Institute ($)
*[https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/70477/ Canadian Headstone Index, 1840-2017] at Ancestry ($)<br>
*[https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/70668/ Canada, GenWeb Cemetery Index] at Ancestry ($)<br>
*[https://www.ancestry.com/search/collections/70775/ Canada, Virtual War Memorial Index, 1900-20014]<br>
*[https://www.familysearch.org/research/places/?includeIsParent=true&primaryText=Quebec,%20Canada&reqParents=5788&reqParentsLabel=Province&reqParentsType=323&searchTypeaheadInputText=Search%20Within:Quebec,%20Canada&reqTypes=20&reqTypeLabel=Cemetery FamilySearch Places]
* [https://www.americanancestors.org/search/databasesearch/2814/canadian-headstones-cemetery-heritage-records-of-canada Canadian Headstones: Cemetery Heritage Records of Canada] at American Ancestors — index & images ($)


== Jewish Cemeteries ==
In the wet of spring, the heat of summer, or the chill of autumn, dedicated genealogists get down on their knees and push aside prickly shrubs, pull up grass, and scrape away moss or even earth, to decipher and transcribe the inscriptions on gravestones. They have been doing this throughout much of the 20th century: hand-written on foolscap, mimeographed typescripts, and now sophisticated computerized databases.  
*[https://www.jewishgen.org/databases/cemetery/ JewishGen Online Worldwide Burial Registry]
*[https://www.jewishgen.org/databases/Cemetery/tree/CemList.htm JewishGen] has an inventory you can check. Click on Canada and then Quebec.
*[https://www.historicplaces.ca/en/rep-reg/place-lieu.aspx?id=16204 Beth Israel Cemetery National Historic Site of Canada]
*[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Jewish_cemeteries_in_Quebec Jewish Cemeteries in Quebec] at Wikipedia
*[http://iajgscemetery.org/canada/quebec-qc/montreal International Jewish Cemetery Project for Montreal]


==Military Cemeteries==
Not many people realize that the Archives of Canada has a large holding of such work, both the published booklets and some original typescripts and manuscripts, some original documents, some only available on microfilm. As well, almost anything officially “published” by a Society is held by the Library, though perhaps only a single “preservation copy” to be consulted in their reading room. At the Library, use a Subject search and enter the actual town or township. Cemetery transcripts and indexes usually come up under “Genealogy”. The Archives tends to hide their material in “Manuscript Groups”, but enquire about a card file index that used to be beside the Genealogy Desk.
*[https://www.veterans.gc.ca/eng/remembrance/memorials/canadian-virtual-war-memorial Canadian Virtual War Memorial]. This is a worldwide registry of military Canadian burials.
*[https://www.cwgc.org/find-a-cemetery/cemetery/4007437 The Quebec Memorial, Pointe Claire Field of Honour] at Commonwealth War Graves Commission


==Individual Cemeteries==
==== Cemeteries ====
*[https://www.rsfa.ca/ Le Repos Saint-François D'Assise]
*[https://www.bvfc.ca/en/services/cemetery Belvedere Cemetery and Funeral Complex]
*[https://www.cfdt.ca/en/services/des-trembles-cemetery Des Trembles Cemetery and Funeral Complex]
*[https://www.mountroyalcem.com/index.php/en/our-cemeteries/mount-royal-cemetery.html Mount royal Cemetery]
*[http://sites.rootsweb.com/~qcchatea/cemeteries/riverfield/rivfield.htm Riverfield Cemetery Records] at RootsWeb
*[http://qahn.org/cemetery/st-john-baptist-wilderness-anglican St. John the Baptist in the Wilderness Anglican Cemetery] at Quebec Anglophone Heritage Network
*[http://www.mackayhouse.com/Cemeteries/prkhrst.htm Parkhurst Cemetery]


== Additional Resources at the FamilySearch Library ==
The Québec Family History Society, Pointe Claire has published ''A Directory of Monumental Inscription Lists: In and Near the Province of Québec,<ref>''A directory of monumental inscription lists:  cemeteries in and near the Province of Quebec'' (Pointe-Claire:  QFHS, 1997).</ref> which lists transcripts and where they are located. Many are held in the Society Library and you should check their website, or write to them directly for the price and availability of the latest issue. The Society has also published a number of transcripts, and those lists are also on the website.<ref>Among their publications are:  Lancaster, Shirley E., ''Cote St. Charles United Church Cemetery (formerly Wesleyan Methodist), Cote St. Charles, Hudson, Quebec'' (Pointe-Claire:  QFHS, c. 1996). Pope, Douglas, and Gary Schroder, ''The Philipsburg Protestant Cemetery, Philipsburg, Missisquoi County, Quebec:  memorial inscriptions'' (Pointe-Claire:  QFHS, c. 1995). Schroder, Gary, and Carol Truesdell, ''The Sorel Anglican Cemetery, Sorel, Richelieu County, Quebec, Canada  memorial inscriptions'' (Pointe-Claire:  QFHS, c. 1995).  Simmons, Marlene, ''Sutton, Quebec area Cemeteries:  an index to gravestones ...'' (Pointe-Claire:  QFHS, 1996). Woods, Raymond, ''St. George's Anglican Church and cemetery, Drummondville, Quebec:  grave stone transcriptions'' (Pointe-Claire:  QFHS, 1994). The compilers names above are hard workers, so check your library catalogue for other and newer work by the same people.  Look also for work by:  Broadhurst, Ralph Neil, ''Shefford County cemeteries:  tombstone inscriptions from the Protestant burial grounds'' (Calgary:  Kintracers, c. 1991), ''Tombstone inscriptions, Rawdon, Quebec'' (Calgary: Kintracers, c. 1993).</ref> ''
To find cemetery records for ''Quebec'' in the FamilySearch Catalog follow these steps:<br>


#Go to the [https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog '''FamilySearch Catalog''']
=== Cemetery Records  ===
#Enter: '''Quebec''' in the Place box
#Click on: '''Search'''
#Click on: '''Cemeteries'''


To search for cemeteries at the town level, follow directions below.
Burial Registers or Cemetery Records maintained by local burial grounds are often helpful. In the larger cities these are sometimes available, even computerized, but you must know which religion—for this determines which cemetery—and be precise as to names and dates. In Montréal, for example, though records for the huge cemetery complex on Mount Royal are computerized, they are divided by denomination: ''Cimetière Notre- Dame-des-Neiges'' (Roman Catholic) and Mount Royal Cemetery for all the ‘Others’. (It includes a Jewish section.) The separate Cemetery offices will search for one or two names but will charge for further work. Both have websites. Gerry Schroder, speaking at the OGS Seminar 2000, made an important point; '''Always find out who else is buried in the same plot'''. There may not be a stone for everyone, but they are usually related. If I had remembered to do this, it would have saved me both time and trouble for several clients - when they wanted information on another branch or generation, I would have had it instead of having to process another query. The two on the Mountain are not the only cemeteries on the Island of Montréal. Where small communities have grown together, in the areas surrounding the city, cemeteries may remain beside local churches. There are cemeteries in the west island suburbs as well as in the eastern end, and in Laval there is the large St-Laurent Roman Catholic cemetery, whose records can be accessed.<ref>Douglas, Althea. "Québec Cemeteries and Obituaries (National Institute)," ''National Institute for Genealogical Studies'' (2012), https://familysearch.org/learn/wiki/en/Qu%C3%A9bec_Cemeteries_and_Obituaries_%28National_Institute%29.</ref>


#Go to the [https://www.familysearch.org/search/catalog '''FamilySearch Catalog''']
=== Family History Library Collection ===
#Enter: '''Quebec''' in the Place box
#Click on: '''Search'''
#Click on: '''Cemeteries'''
#Click on: '''Places within Quebec'''
#Click on the town you want to search
#Click on: '''Cemeteries'''


== Additional Resources ==
The Family History Library has copies of some Protestant cemetery records from Québec, especially for areas settled by English-speaking people. These areas include Argenteuil County and the Eastern Townships. Since Catholic church records of burials are extensive and detailed, very few Catholic cemetery records have been published. A major exception is the sexton records for the cathedral church Notre-Dame de Hull, 1890–1940, in:
*[https://www.worldcat.org/ Worldcat.org]- Do a search for Quebec Cemetery.


*Cimetière Notre-Dame de Hull (Cemetery of Notre-Dame de Hull). Four Volumes in Five. Vanier, Ontario, Canada: Albert Quesnel, [1984?]. (Family History Library Q {{FHL|464018|title-id|disp=book 971.4221/H1 V39c; film 1698133 items 1–5.}}) Text in French. Indexed.
[http://www3.sympatico.ca/scott.naylor/Graves/NewIndex/GraveMarker1.HTM GraveMarkers] site has photographs of some cemeteries.&nbsp; They are listed by County and Town.
== References ==
{{reflist}}


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[[Category:Quebec Cemeteries]] [[Category:Canada Cemeteries]]
[[Category:Quebec]] [[Category:Cemeteries_in_Canada]]

Revision as of 16:32, 30 January 2015

Canada  Gotoarrow.png  Quebec  Gotoarrow.png  Cemeteries

Cemetery Transcripts[edit | edit source]

In the wet of spring, the heat of summer, or the chill of autumn, dedicated genealogists get down on their knees and push aside prickly shrubs, pull up grass, and scrape away moss or even earth, to decipher and transcribe the inscriptions on gravestones. They have been doing this throughout much of the 20th century: hand-written on foolscap, mimeographed typescripts, and now sophisticated computerized databases.

Not many people realize that the Archives of Canada has a large holding of such work, both the published booklets and some original typescripts and manuscripts, some original documents, some only available on microfilm. As well, almost anything officially “published” by a Society is held by the Library, though perhaps only a single “preservation copy” to be consulted in their reading room. At the Library, use a Subject search and enter the actual town or township. Cemetery transcripts and indexes usually come up under “Genealogy”. The Archives tends to hide their material in “Manuscript Groups”, but enquire about a card file index that used to be beside the Genealogy Desk.

Cemeteries[edit | edit source]

The Québec Family History Society, Pointe Claire has published A Directory of Monumental Inscription Lists: In and Near the Province of Québec,[1] which lists transcripts and where they are located. Many are held in the Society Library and you should check their website, or write to them directly for the price and availability of the latest issue. The Society has also published a number of transcripts, and those lists are also on the website.[2]

Cemetery Records[edit | edit source]

Burial Registers or Cemetery Records maintained by local burial grounds are often helpful. In the larger cities these are sometimes available, even computerized, but you must know which religion—for this determines which cemetery—and be precise as to names and dates. In Montréal, for example, though records for the huge cemetery complex on Mount Royal are computerized, they are divided by denomination: Cimetière Notre- Dame-des-Neiges (Roman Catholic) and Mount Royal Cemetery for all the ‘Others’. (It includes a Jewish section.) The separate Cemetery offices will search for one or two names but will charge for further work. Both have websites. Gerry Schroder, speaking at the OGS Seminar 2000, made an important point; Always find out who else is buried in the same plot. There may not be a stone for everyone, but they are usually related. If I had remembered to do this, it would have saved me both time and trouble for several clients - when they wanted information on another branch or generation, I would have had it instead of having to process another query. The two on the Mountain are not the only cemeteries on the Island of Montréal. Where small communities have grown together, in the areas surrounding the city, cemeteries may remain beside local churches. There are cemeteries in the west island suburbs as well as in the eastern end, and in Laval there is the large St-Laurent Roman Catholic cemetery, whose records can be accessed.[3]

Family History Library Collection[edit | edit source]

The Family History Library has copies of some Protestant cemetery records from Québec, especially for areas settled by English-speaking people. These areas include Argenteuil County and the Eastern Townships. Since Catholic church records of burials are extensive and detailed, very few Catholic cemetery records have been published. A major exception is the sexton records for the cathedral church Notre-Dame de Hull, 1890–1940, in:

GraveMarkers site has photographs of some cemeteries.  They are listed by County and Town.

References[edit | edit source]

  1. A directory of monumental inscription lists: cemeteries in and near the Province of Quebec (Pointe-Claire: QFHS, 1997).
  2. Among their publications are: Lancaster, Shirley E., Cote St. Charles United Church Cemetery (formerly Wesleyan Methodist), Cote St. Charles, Hudson, Quebec (Pointe-Claire: QFHS, c. 1996). Pope, Douglas, and Gary Schroder, The Philipsburg Protestant Cemetery, Philipsburg, Missisquoi County, Quebec: memorial inscriptions (Pointe-Claire: QFHS, c. 1995). Schroder, Gary, and Carol Truesdell, The Sorel Anglican Cemetery, Sorel, Richelieu County, Quebec, Canada memorial inscriptions (Pointe-Claire: QFHS, c. 1995). Simmons, Marlene, Sutton, Quebec area Cemeteries: an index to gravestones ... (Pointe-Claire: QFHS, 1996). Woods, Raymond, St. George's Anglican Church and cemetery, Drummondville, Quebec: grave stone transcriptions (Pointe-Claire: QFHS, 1994). The compilers names above are hard workers, so check your library catalogue for other and newer work by the same people. Look also for work by: Broadhurst, Ralph Neil, Shefford County cemeteries: tombstone inscriptions from the Protestant burial grounds (Calgary: Kintracers, c. 1991), Tombstone inscriptions, Rawdon, Quebec (Calgary: Kintracers, c. 1993).
  3. Douglas, Althea. "Québec Cemeteries and Obituaries (National Institute)," National Institute for Genealogical Studies (2012), https://familysearch.org/learn/wiki/en/Qu%C3%A9bec_Cemeteries_and_Obituaries_%28National_Institute%29.