I don't think it's complete. I can find my maternal grandparents but none of my paternal family. Will keep checking.Susan
Hi,I received an email from Ancestry today saying that the 1931 census is now searchable by name. That certainly was fast! I found a few people by name, but it is a bit hit and miss at the moment. I am still extremely happy about the finding aids posted by Melba...I have bookmarked those and will be using them to find the "hard to find" people. Unclear handwriting, mistranscriptions etc happen!! Nobody's fault. Wonderful to have tools to help! Thanks again Melba RK
Couple of tips:1. You can use this pdf to try and find the district you need to look in, comparing to the where the address shows on a modern digital map like Google Mapshttp://data2.archives.ca/pdf/pdf002/31-80_5744023_1931Census_MAPS_DivisionsLinkedTo1924RedistributionMaps_open.pdf2. Here, under finding aidshttps://recherche-collection-search.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/home/record?app=fonandcol&IdNumber=5744023are pdf files with street indexes for the major cities of Canada. The first number corresponds to a district number, which you should be able to guess from the maps in the first link, the numbers then refer to the sub district numbers where that street occurs, as you can find in the link belowhttps://recherche-collection-search.bac-lac.gc.ca/eng/census2/index1931When you select a province, then district and a sub-district, it will confirm what that district's number is in the details recorded underneath 'Record Information – Details'
I don’t have Ancestry Worldwide, just UK.Is the 1931 Canadian Census available on Family Search, does anyone know?Romilly.