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The UK's Blue Plaque Scheme
The National Blue Plaque Scheme celebrates people from all walks of life who have made a significant contribution to human welfare or happiness, and/or have made an exceptional impact in their field, community or wider society. Designed to spark curiosity in people of all ages and backgrounds, each plaque is a tangible, physical link connecting people to place through a building that was part of their history and is still standing. Run by Historic England on behalf of the Department for Culture, Media and Sport, the national scheme expands on the value and success of the London scheme (which continues to be led by English Heritage) and local schemes across the country. Key Aspects of Blue Plaque Schemes: - London Scheme (English Heritage): Founded in 1866, it is the oldest in the world, featuring over 1,000 plaques honoring diverse figures. - National Scheme (Historic England): Launched to expand the success of the London scheme across England, allowing public nominations to highlight diverse contributions to national heritage. - Other Schemes: Local councils (e.g., St Helens) and societies (e.g., British Plaque Trust) run independent, regional, or specific theme-based schemes. Eligibility and Nomination Criteria (National Scheme): - Time Passed: Nominees must have been deceased for at least 20 years. - Significance: The person should have made a significant contribution to human welfare or happiness, or had an exceptional impact in their field. - Buildings: A surviving building linked to the person must exist, which they would have recognized. - Visibility: The plaque must be visible from a public highway. I've attached the local Gateshead Blue Plaque walking guide for people of historical importance here in Newcastle & Gateshead.
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The UK's Blue Plaque Scheme
Saw this on a Facebook group…..
I think I have a family tree stalker! Over the past 2 years I’ve had hints leafs) about my family that lead to another ancestry (.com) member’s family tree. She makes lots of mistakes: wrong photos, bad facts, even used a photo of a house fire to represent my grandfather (who died as the result of a fire) I have messaged her, asked to make corrections, offered her legit photos and she never responds. And weirdly, I can’t figure out who she is! She has added things to both my maternal side and paternal side so it seems like it would be someone close to me but I’ve gone back 6 generations and can’t find the connection! At first I decided her bad records don’t really matter as my tree is correct and that the one my children, nieces and nephews will see. But last night my sister did a google search on a cousin, and found an incorrect photo - posted by this same person! How alarming is this? How would you handle it? What can I do about it? **what would YOU do in this instance?**
Keeping your research together
I seen a couple of posts recently on social media that some people are considering going back to keeping all their family research in paper format, and it got me wondering how people within our group store all their research, do you use an online website, computer desktop software or paper and files. I use Family Tree Maker and sync it to Ancestry, as I find it very user friendly.
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