rowid,dataset_title,publisher,author,dataset_issued,dataset_modified,dataset_description,source,info_url,start_date,end_date,file_title,download_url,format,file_description,file_created,file_modified,file_size,licence 950,Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI),State Library of Western Australia,Author Not Specified,2016-07-28T05:59:15.171170,2022-05-25T18:46:13.320421,"The Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI) is a highly used resource at the State Library of Western Australia. A recent generous contribution by the Friends of Battye Library (FOBS) has enabled SLWA to have the original handwritten index cards scanned and later transcribed. The dataset contains: several csv files with data describing card number, card text and url link to image of the original handwritten card. The transcription was crowd-sourced and we are aware that there are some data quality issues including: * Some cards are missing * Transcripts are crowdsourced so may contain spelling errors and possibly missing information * Some cards are crossed out. Some of these are included in the collection and some are not * Some of the cards contain relevant information on the back (usually children of the person mentioned). This info should be on the next consecutive card * As the information is an index, collected in the 1970s from print material, it is incomplete. It is also unreferenced. It is still a very valuable dataset as it contains a wealth of information about early settlers in Western Australia. It is of particular interest to genealogists and historians Work began on WABI in the early 1970s when information was sought on people who lived in Western Australian prior to 1914. Publicity was sent out through local libraries, historical groups and in publication such as the West Australian. Western Australians were asked to provide genealogical information, not only on prominent identities, but also from their family records including the arrival in Western Australia, occupations, dates of birth, marriages and deaths of their ancestors. Historical material such as diaries, letters, business records, minute books, maps, family trees and photographs, were also sought for copying. Entries for the index closed in December 1979, and were filed at the Battye Library for reference. We were recently delighted to discover that the WA Genealogical Society has made use of this dataset. You can view their use here: http://membership.wags.org.au/members-data/public-data/wabi-wa-biographical-index.",data.wa.gov.au,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47,,,Index entries beginning with A,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47/resource/2ef7484c-0268-420f-abab-bbfc33036bf1/download/a-final.csv,CSV,,2016-07-28T06:03:00.211332,2016-07-28T06:03:00.174121,,Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 951,Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI),State Library of Western Australia,Author Not Specified,2016-07-28T05:59:15.171170,2022-05-25T18:46:13.320421,"The Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI) is a highly used resource at the State Library of Western Australia. A recent generous contribution by the Friends of Battye Library (FOBS) has enabled SLWA to have the original handwritten index cards scanned and later transcribed. The dataset contains: several csv files with data describing card number, card text and url link to image of the original handwritten card. The transcription was crowd-sourced and we are aware that there are some data quality issues including: * Some cards are missing * Transcripts are crowdsourced so may contain spelling errors and possibly missing information * Some cards are crossed out. Some of these are included in the collection and some are not * Some of the cards contain relevant information on the back (usually children of the person mentioned). This info should be on the next consecutive card * As the information is an index, collected in the 1970s from print material, it is incomplete. It is also unreferenced. It is still a very valuable dataset as it contains a wealth of information about early settlers in Western Australia. It is of particular interest to genealogists and historians Work began on WABI in the early 1970s when information was sought on people who lived in Western Australian prior to 1914. Publicity was sent out through local libraries, historical groups and in publication such as the West Australian. Western Australians were asked to provide genealogical information, not only on prominent identities, but also from their family records including the arrival in Western Australia, occupations, dates of birth, marriages and deaths of their ancestors. Historical material such as diaries, letters, business records, minute books, maps, family trees and photographs, were also sought for copying. Entries for the index closed in December 1979, and were filed at the Battye Library for reference. We were recently delighted to discover that the WA Genealogical Society has made use of this dataset. You can view their use here: http://membership.wags.org.au/members-data/public-data/wabi-wa-biographical-index.",data.wa.gov.au,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47,,,Index entries beginning with B,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47/resource/b26eb893-19c8-4d78-ba0c-dcf3ab1f386d/download/b-final.csv,CSV,,2016-07-28T06:03:18.730159,2016-07-28T06:03:18.690282,,Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 952,Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI),State Library of Western Australia,Author Not Specified,2016-07-28T05:59:15.171170,2022-05-25T18:46:13.320421,"The Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI) is a highly used resource at the State Library of Western Australia. A recent generous contribution by the Friends of Battye Library (FOBS) has enabled SLWA to have the original handwritten index cards scanned and later transcribed. The dataset contains: several csv files with data describing card number, card text and url link to image of the original handwritten card. The transcription was crowd-sourced and we are aware that there are some data quality issues including: * Some cards are missing * Transcripts are crowdsourced so may contain spelling errors and possibly missing information * Some cards are crossed out. Some of these are included in the collection and some are not * Some of the cards contain relevant information on the back (usually children of the person mentioned). This info should be on the next consecutive card * As the information is an index, collected in the 1970s from print material, it is incomplete. It is also unreferenced. It is still a very valuable dataset as it contains a wealth of information about early settlers in Western Australia. It is of particular interest to genealogists and historians Work began on WABI in the early 1970s when information was sought on people who lived in Western Australian prior to 1914. Publicity was sent out through local libraries, historical groups and in publication such as the West Australian. Western Australians were asked to provide genealogical information, not only on prominent identities, but also from their family records including the arrival in Western Australia, occupations, dates of birth, marriages and deaths of their ancestors. Historical material such as diaries, letters, business records, minute books, maps, family trees and photographs, were also sought for copying. Entries for the index closed in December 1979, and were filed at the Battye Library for reference. We were recently delighted to discover that the WA Genealogical Society has made use of this dataset. You can view their use here: http://membership.wags.org.au/members-data/public-data/wabi-wa-biographical-index.",data.wa.gov.au,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47,,,Index entries beginning with C,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47/resource/b81a521a-911d-488a-a6f7-cc385bce68d9/download/c-final.csv,CSV,,2016-07-28T06:03:39.555964,2016-07-28T06:03:39.516312,,Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 953,Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI),State Library of Western Australia,Author Not Specified,2016-07-28T05:59:15.171170,2022-05-25T18:46:13.320421,"The Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI) is a highly used resource at the State Library of Western Australia. A recent generous contribution by the Friends of Battye Library (FOBS) has enabled SLWA to have the original handwritten index cards scanned and later transcribed. The dataset contains: several csv files with data describing card number, card text and url link to image of the original handwritten card. The transcription was crowd-sourced and we are aware that there are some data quality issues including: * Some cards are missing * Transcripts are crowdsourced so may contain spelling errors and possibly missing information * Some cards are crossed out. Some of these are included in the collection and some are not * Some of the cards contain relevant information on the back (usually children of the person mentioned). This info should be on the next consecutive card * As the information is an index, collected in the 1970s from print material, it is incomplete. It is also unreferenced. It is still a very valuable dataset as it contains a wealth of information about early settlers in Western Australia. It is of particular interest to genealogists and historians Work began on WABI in the early 1970s when information was sought on people who lived in Western Australian prior to 1914. Publicity was sent out through local libraries, historical groups and in publication such as the West Australian. Western Australians were asked to provide genealogical information, not only on prominent identities, but also from their family records including the arrival in Western Australia, occupations, dates of birth, marriages and deaths of their ancestors. Historical material such as diaries, letters, business records, minute books, maps, family trees and photographs, were also sought for copying. Entries for the index closed in December 1979, and were filed at the Battye Library for reference. We were recently delighted to discover that the WA Genealogical Society has made use of this dataset. You can view their use here: http://membership.wags.org.au/members-data/public-data/wabi-wa-biographical-index.",data.wa.gov.au,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47,,,Index entries beginning with D and E,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47/resource/d413d101-7cf0-44f3-9a07-dae57e8c4cc0/download/de-final.csv,CSV,,2016-07-28T06:03:57.318987,2016-07-28T06:03:57.275531,,Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 954,Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI),State Library of Western Australia,Author Not Specified,2016-07-28T05:59:15.171170,2022-05-25T18:46:13.320421,"The Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI) is a highly used resource at the State Library of Western Australia. A recent generous contribution by the Friends of Battye Library (FOBS) has enabled SLWA to have the original handwritten index cards scanned and later transcribed. The dataset contains: several csv files with data describing card number, card text and url link to image of the original handwritten card. The transcription was crowd-sourced and we are aware that there are some data quality issues including: * Some cards are missing * Transcripts are crowdsourced so may contain spelling errors and possibly missing information * Some cards are crossed out. Some of these are included in the collection and some are not * Some of the cards contain relevant information on the back (usually children of the person mentioned). This info should be on the next consecutive card * As the information is an index, collected in the 1970s from print material, it is incomplete. It is also unreferenced. It is still a very valuable dataset as it contains a wealth of information about early settlers in Western Australia. It is of particular interest to genealogists and historians Work began on WABI in the early 1970s when information was sought on people who lived in Western Australian prior to 1914. Publicity was sent out through local libraries, historical groups and in publication such as the West Australian. Western Australians were asked to provide genealogical information, not only on prominent identities, but also from their family records including the arrival in Western Australia, occupations, dates of birth, marriages and deaths of their ancestors. Historical material such as diaries, letters, business records, minute books, maps, family trees and photographs, were also sought for copying. Entries for the index closed in December 1979, and were filed at the Battye Library for reference. We were recently delighted to discover that the WA Genealogical Society has made use of this dataset. You can view their use here: http://membership.wags.org.au/members-data/public-data/wabi-wa-biographical-index.",data.wa.gov.au,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47,,,Index entries beginning with F,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47/resource/6ec9b7c7-9c2a-4fd1-8631-fa08abc14bb2/download/f-final.csv,CSV,,2016-07-28T06:04:17.256344,2016-07-28T06:04:17.212943,,Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 955,Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI),State Library of Western Australia,Author Not Specified,2016-07-28T05:59:15.171170,2022-05-25T18:46:13.320421,"The Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI) is a highly used resource at the State Library of Western Australia. A recent generous contribution by the Friends of Battye Library (FOBS) has enabled SLWA to have the original handwritten index cards scanned and later transcribed. The dataset contains: several csv files with data describing card number, card text and url link to image of the original handwritten card. The transcription was crowd-sourced and we are aware that there are some data quality issues including: * Some cards are missing * Transcripts are crowdsourced so may contain spelling errors and possibly missing information * Some cards are crossed out. Some of these are included in the collection and some are not * Some of the cards contain relevant information on the back (usually children of the person mentioned). This info should be on the next consecutive card * As the information is an index, collected in the 1970s from print material, it is incomplete. It is also unreferenced. It is still a very valuable dataset as it contains a wealth of information about early settlers in Western Australia. It is of particular interest to genealogists and historians Work began on WABI in the early 1970s when information was sought on people who lived in Western Australian prior to 1914. Publicity was sent out through local libraries, historical groups and in publication such as the West Australian. Western Australians were asked to provide genealogical information, not only on prominent identities, but also from their family records including the arrival in Western Australia, occupations, dates of birth, marriages and deaths of their ancestors. Historical material such as diaries, letters, business records, minute books, maps, family trees and photographs, were also sought for copying. Entries for the index closed in December 1979, and were filed at the Battye Library for reference. We were recently delighted to discover that the WA Genealogical Society has made use of this dataset. You can view their use here: http://membership.wags.org.au/members-data/public-data/wabi-wa-biographical-index.",data.wa.gov.au,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47,,,Index entries beginning with G,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47/resource/88771e32-dcb1-464a-bc53-bd83dd9dba15/download/g-final.csv,CSV,,2016-07-28T06:04:36.334181,2016-07-28T06:04:36.287897,,Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 956,Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI),State Library of Western Australia,Author Not Specified,2016-07-28T05:59:15.171170,2022-05-25T18:46:13.320421,"The Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI) is a highly used resource at the State Library of Western Australia. A recent generous contribution by the Friends of Battye Library (FOBS) has enabled SLWA to have the original handwritten index cards scanned and later transcribed. The dataset contains: several csv files with data describing card number, card text and url link to image of the original handwritten card. The transcription was crowd-sourced and we are aware that there are some data quality issues including: * Some cards are missing * Transcripts are crowdsourced so may contain spelling errors and possibly missing information * Some cards are crossed out. Some of these are included in the collection and some are not * Some of the cards contain relevant information on the back (usually children of the person mentioned). This info should be on the next consecutive card * As the information is an index, collected in the 1970s from print material, it is incomplete. It is also unreferenced. It is still a very valuable dataset as it contains a wealth of information about early settlers in Western Australia. It is of particular interest to genealogists and historians Work began on WABI in the early 1970s when information was sought on people who lived in Western Australian prior to 1914. Publicity was sent out through local libraries, historical groups and in publication such as the West Australian. Western Australians were asked to provide genealogical information, not only on prominent identities, but also from their family records including the arrival in Western Australia, occupations, dates of birth, marriages and deaths of their ancestors. Historical material such as diaries, letters, business records, minute books, maps, family trees and photographs, were also sought for copying. Entries for the index closed in December 1979, and were filed at the Battye Library for reference. We were recently delighted to discover that the WA Genealogical Society has made use of this dataset. You can view their use here: http://membership.wags.org.au/members-data/public-data/wabi-wa-biographical-index.",data.wa.gov.au,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47,,,Index entries beginning with H,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47/resource/a9e328e9-8222-4156-b2eb-3192759791a5/download/h-final.csv,CSV,,2016-07-28T06:04:51.985994,2016-07-28T06:04:51.904063,,Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 957,Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI),State Library of Western Australia,Author Not Specified,2016-07-28T05:59:15.171170,2022-05-25T18:46:13.320421,"The Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI) is a highly used resource at the State Library of Western Australia. A recent generous contribution by the Friends of Battye Library (FOBS) has enabled SLWA to have the original handwritten index cards scanned and later transcribed. The dataset contains: several csv files with data describing card number, card text and url link to image of the original handwritten card. The transcription was crowd-sourced and we are aware that there are some data quality issues including: * Some cards are missing * Transcripts are crowdsourced so may contain spelling errors and possibly missing information * Some cards are crossed out. Some of these are included in the collection and some are not * Some of the cards contain relevant information on the back (usually children of the person mentioned). This info should be on the next consecutive card * As the information is an index, collected in the 1970s from print material, it is incomplete. It is also unreferenced. It is still a very valuable dataset as it contains a wealth of information about early settlers in Western Australia. It is of particular interest to genealogists and historians Work began on WABI in the early 1970s when information was sought on people who lived in Western Australian prior to 1914. Publicity was sent out through local libraries, historical groups and in publication such as the West Australian. Western Australians were asked to provide genealogical information, not only on prominent identities, but also from their family records including the arrival in Western Australia, occupations, dates of birth, marriages and deaths of their ancestors. Historical material such as diaries, letters, business records, minute books, maps, family trees and photographs, were also sought for copying. Entries for the index closed in December 1979, and were filed at the Battye Library for reference. We were recently delighted to discover that the WA Genealogical Society has made use of this dataset. You can view their use here: http://membership.wags.org.au/members-data/public-data/wabi-wa-biographical-index.",data.wa.gov.au,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47,,,Index entries beginning with I and J,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47/resource/8b8f13b3-8e73-4d4e-9618-232567165f01/download/ij-final.csv,CSV,,2016-07-28T06:05:09.412886,2016-07-28T06:05:09.367284,,Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 958,Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI),State Library of Western Australia,Author Not Specified,2016-07-28T05:59:15.171170,2022-05-25T18:46:13.320421,"The Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI) is a highly used resource at the State Library of Western Australia. A recent generous contribution by the Friends of Battye Library (FOBS) has enabled SLWA to have the original handwritten index cards scanned and later transcribed. The dataset contains: several csv files with data describing card number, card text and url link to image of the original handwritten card. The transcription was crowd-sourced and we are aware that there are some data quality issues including: * Some cards are missing * Transcripts are crowdsourced so may contain spelling errors and possibly missing information * Some cards are crossed out. Some of these are included in the collection and some are not * Some of the cards contain relevant information on the back (usually children of the person mentioned). This info should be on the next consecutive card * As the information is an index, collected in the 1970s from print material, it is incomplete. It is also unreferenced. It is still a very valuable dataset as it contains a wealth of information about early settlers in Western Australia. It is of particular interest to genealogists and historians Work began on WABI in the early 1970s when information was sought on people who lived in Western Australian prior to 1914. Publicity was sent out through local libraries, historical groups and in publication such as the West Australian. Western Australians were asked to provide genealogical information, not only on prominent identities, but also from their family records including the arrival in Western Australia, occupations, dates of birth, marriages and deaths of their ancestors. Historical material such as diaries, letters, business records, minute books, maps, family trees and photographs, were also sought for copying. Entries for the index closed in December 1979, and were filed at the Battye Library for reference. We were recently delighted to discover that the WA Genealogical Society has made use of this dataset. You can view their use here: http://membership.wags.org.au/members-data/public-data/wabi-wa-biographical-index.",data.wa.gov.au,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47,,,Index entries beginning with K,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47/resource/1afb96f5-1d4e-45b6-a1b9-65d99b8172d5/download/k-final.csv,CSV,,2016-07-28T06:05:26.023545,2016-07-28T06:05:25.976410,,Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 959,Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI),State Library of Western Australia,Author Not Specified,2016-07-28T05:59:15.171170,2022-05-25T18:46:13.320421,"The Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI) is a highly used resource at the State Library of Western Australia. A recent generous contribution by the Friends of Battye Library (FOBS) has enabled SLWA to have the original handwritten index cards scanned and later transcribed. The dataset contains: several csv files with data describing card number, card text and url link to image of the original handwritten card. The transcription was crowd-sourced and we are aware that there are some data quality issues including: * Some cards are missing * Transcripts are crowdsourced so may contain spelling errors and possibly missing information * Some cards are crossed out. Some of these are included in the collection and some are not * Some of the cards contain relevant information on the back (usually children of the person mentioned). This info should be on the next consecutive card * As the information is an index, collected in the 1970s from print material, it is incomplete. It is also unreferenced. It is still a very valuable dataset as it contains a wealth of information about early settlers in Western Australia. It is of particular interest to genealogists and historians Work began on WABI in the early 1970s when information was sought on people who lived in Western Australian prior to 1914. Publicity was sent out through local libraries, historical groups and in publication such as the West Australian. Western Australians were asked to provide genealogical information, not only on prominent identities, but also from their family records including the arrival in Western Australia, occupations, dates of birth, marriages and deaths of their ancestors. Historical material such as diaries, letters, business records, minute books, maps, family trees and photographs, were also sought for copying. Entries for the index closed in December 1979, and were filed at the Battye Library for reference. We were recently delighted to discover that the WA Genealogical Society has made use of this dataset. You can view their use here: http://membership.wags.org.au/members-data/public-data/wabi-wa-biographical-index.",data.wa.gov.au,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47,,,Index entries beginning with L,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47/resource/66c82a82-d52f-4651-9a78-17cd6b86e64a/download/l-final_edited.csv,CSV,Replacement file prepared 10/10/19 after reports that there were errors in file. Thanks for reporting!,2016-07-28T06:05:41.571851,2019-10-10T03:07:54.528021,866621.0,Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 960,Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI),State Library of Western Australia,Author Not Specified,2016-07-28T05:59:15.171170,2022-05-25T18:46:13.320421,"The Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI) is a highly used resource at the State Library of Western Australia. A recent generous contribution by the Friends of Battye Library (FOBS) has enabled SLWA to have the original handwritten index cards scanned and later transcribed. The dataset contains: several csv files with data describing card number, card text and url link to image of the original handwritten card. The transcription was crowd-sourced and we are aware that there are some data quality issues including: * Some cards are missing * Transcripts are crowdsourced so may contain spelling errors and possibly missing information * Some cards are crossed out. Some of these are included in the collection and some are not * Some of the cards contain relevant information on the back (usually children of the person mentioned). This info should be on the next consecutive card * As the information is an index, collected in the 1970s from print material, it is incomplete. It is also unreferenced. It is still a very valuable dataset as it contains a wealth of information about early settlers in Western Australia. It is of particular interest to genealogists and historians Work began on WABI in the early 1970s when information was sought on people who lived in Western Australian prior to 1914. Publicity was sent out through local libraries, historical groups and in publication such as the West Australian. Western Australians were asked to provide genealogical information, not only on prominent identities, but also from their family records including the arrival in Western Australia, occupations, dates of birth, marriages and deaths of their ancestors. Historical material such as diaries, letters, business records, minute books, maps, family trees and photographs, were also sought for copying. Entries for the index closed in December 1979, and were filed at the Battye Library for reference. We were recently delighted to discover that the WA Genealogical Society has made use of this dataset. You can view their use here: http://membership.wags.org.au/members-data/public-data/wabi-wa-biographical-index.",data.wa.gov.au,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47,,,Index entries beginning with M,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47/resource/e4de1eb3-86f3-46d5-b456-1601e67bb5ac/download/m-final.csv,CSV,,2016-07-28T06:06:03.043689,2016-07-28T06:06:02.958386,,Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 961,Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI),State Library of Western Australia,Author Not Specified,2016-07-28T05:59:15.171170,2022-05-25T18:46:13.320421,"The Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI) is a highly used resource at the State Library of Western Australia. A recent generous contribution by the Friends of Battye Library (FOBS) has enabled SLWA to have the original handwritten index cards scanned and later transcribed. The dataset contains: several csv files with data describing card number, card text and url link to image of the original handwritten card. The transcription was crowd-sourced and we are aware that there are some data quality issues including: * Some cards are missing * Transcripts are crowdsourced so may contain spelling errors and possibly missing information * Some cards are crossed out. Some of these are included in the collection and some are not * Some of the cards contain relevant information on the back (usually children of the person mentioned). This info should be on the next consecutive card * As the information is an index, collected in the 1970s from print material, it is incomplete. It is also unreferenced. It is still a very valuable dataset as it contains a wealth of information about early settlers in Western Australia. It is of particular interest to genealogists and historians Work began on WABI in the early 1970s when information was sought on people who lived in Western Australian prior to 1914. Publicity was sent out through local libraries, historical groups and in publication such as the West Australian. Western Australians were asked to provide genealogical information, not only on prominent identities, but also from their family records including the arrival in Western Australia, occupations, dates of birth, marriages and deaths of their ancestors. Historical material such as diaries, letters, business records, minute books, maps, family trees and photographs, were also sought for copying. Entries for the index closed in December 1979, and were filed at the Battye Library for reference. We were recently delighted to discover that the WA Genealogical Society has made use of this dataset. You can view their use here: http://membership.wags.org.au/members-data/public-data/wabi-wa-biographical-index.",data.wa.gov.au,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47,,,Index entries beginning with N,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47/resource/bf56fcdd-6422-4434-8223-d9fff2bad371/download/n-final.csv,CSV,,2016-07-28T06:06:19.569551,2016-07-28T06:06:19.518368,,Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 962,Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI),State Library of Western Australia,Author Not Specified,2016-07-28T05:59:15.171170,2022-05-25T18:46:13.320421,"The Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI) is a highly used resource at the State Library of Western Australia. A recent generous contribution by the Friends of Battye Library (FOBS) has enabled SLWA to have the original handwritten index cards scanned and later transcribed. The dataset contains: several csv files with data describing card number, card text and url link to image of the original handwritten card. The transcription was crowd-sourced and we are aware that there are some data quality issues including: * Some cards are missing * Transcripts are crowdsourced so may contain spelling errors and possibly missing information * Some cards are crossed out. Some of these are included in the collection and some are not * Some of the cards contain relevant information on the back (usually children of the person mentioned). This info should be on the next consecutive card * As the information is an index, collected in the 1970s from print material, it is incomplete. It is also unreferenced. It is still a very valuable dataset as it contains a wealth of information about early settlers in Western Australia. It is of particular interest to genealogists and historians Work began on WABI in the early 1970s when information was sought on people who lived in Western Australian prior to 1914. Publicity was sent out through local libraries, historical groups and in publication such as the West Australian. Western Australians were asked to provide genealogical information, not only on prominent identities, but also from their family records including the arrival in Western Australia, occupations, dates of birth, marriages and deaths of their ancestors. Historical material such as diaries, letters, business records, minute books, maps, family trees and photographs, were also sought for copying. Entries for the index closed in December 1979, and were filed at the Battye Library for reference. We were recently delighted to discover that the WA Genealogical Society has made use of this dataset. You can view their use here: http://membership.wags.org.au/members-data/public-data/wabi-wa-biographical-index.",data.wa.gov.au,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47,,,Index entries beginning with O,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47/resource/ec61deef-3200-4611-bbac-fe412ab59923/download/o-final.csv,CSV,,2016-07-28T06:06:39.758074,2016-07-28T06:06:39.703701,,Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 963,Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI),State Library of Western Australia,Author Not Specified,2016-07-28T05:59:15.171170,2022-05-25T18:46:13.320421,"The Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI) is a highly used resource at the State Library of Western Australia. A recent generous contribution by the Friends of Battye Library (FOBS) has enabled SLWA to have the original handwritten index cards scanned and later transcribed. The dataset contains: several csv files with data describing card number, card text and url link to image of the original handwritten card. The transcription was crowd-sourced and we are aware that there are some data quality issues including: * Some cards are missing * Transcripts are crowdsourced so may contain spelling errors and possibly missing information * Some cards are crossed out. Some of these are included in the collection and some are not * Some of the cards contain relevant information on the back (usually children of the person mentioned). This info should be on the next consecutive card * As the information is an index, collected in the 1970s from print material, it is incomplete. It is also unreferenced. It is still a very valuable dataset as it contains a wealth of information about early settlers in Western Australia. It is of particular interest to genealogists and historians Work began on WABI in the early 1970s when information was sought on people who lived in Western Australian prior to 1914. Publicity was sent out through local libraries, historical groups and in publication such as the West Australian. Western Australians were asked to provide genealogical information, not only on prominent identities, but also from their family records including the arrival in Western Australia, occupations, dates of birth, marriages and deaths of their ancestors. Historical material such as diaries, letters, business records, minute books, maps, family trees and photographs, were also sought for copying. Entries for the index closed in December 1979, and were filed at the Battye Library for reference. We were recently delighted to discover that the WA Genealogical Society has made use of this dataset. You can view their use here: http://membership.wags.org.au/members-data/public-data/wabi-wa-biographical-index.",data.wa.gov.au,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47,,,Index entries beginning with P and Q,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47/resource/7d635ab0-b656-4b36-967a-ea9ff62f5cac/download/pq-final.csv,CSV,,2016-07-28T06:07:00.326060,2016-07-28T06:07:00.272451,,Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 964,Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI),State Library of Western Australia,Author Not Specified,2016-07-28T05:59:15.171170,2022-05-25T18:46:13.320421,"The Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI) is a highly used resource at the State Library of Western Australia. A recent generous contribution by the Friends of Battye Library (FOBS) has enabled SLWA to have the original handwritten index cards scanned and later transcribed. The dataset contains: several csv files with data describing card number, card text and url link to image of the original handwritten card. The transcription was crowd-sourced and we are aware that there are some data quality issues including: * Some cards are missing * Transcripts are crowdsourced so may contain spelling errors and possibly missing information * Some cards are crossed out. Some of these are included in the collection and some are not * Some of the cards contain relevant information on the back (usually children of the person mentioned). This info should be on the next consecutive card * As the information is an index, collected in the 1970s from print material, it is incomplete. It is also unreferenced. It is still a very valuable dataset as it contains a wealth of information about early settlers in Western Australia. It is of particular interest to genealogists and historians Work began on WABI in the early 1970s when information was sought on people who lived in Western Australian prior to 1914. Publicity was sent out through local libraries, historical groups and in publication such as the West Australian. Western Australians were asked to provide genealogical information, not only on prominent identities, but also from their family records including the arrival in Western Australia, occupations, dates of birth, marriages and deaths of their ancestors. Historical material such as diaries, letters, business records, minute books, maps, family trees and photographs, were also sought for copying. Entries for the index closed in December 1979, and were filed at the Battye Library for reference. We were recently delighted to discover that the WA Genealogical Society has made use of this dataset. You can view their use here: http://membership.wags.org.au/members-data/public-data/wabi-wa-biographical-index.",data.wa.gov.au,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47,,,Index entries beginning with R,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47/resource/76ffb89f-2994-4aba-8cd9-d492ff325d1d/download/r-final.csv,CSV,,2016-07-28T06:07:36.211170,2016-07-28T06:07:36.156770,,Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 965,Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI),State Library of Western Australia,Author Not Specified,2016-07-28T05:59:15.171170,2022-05-25T18:46:13.320421,"The Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI) is a highly used resource at the State Library of Western Australia. A recent generous contribution by the Friends of Battye Library (FOBS) has enabled SLWA to have the original handwritten index cards scanned and later transcribed. The dataset contains: several csv files with data describing card number, card text and url link to image of the original handwritten card. The transcription was crowd-sourced and we are aware that there are some data quality issues including: * Some cards are missing * Transcripts are crowdsourced so may contain spelling errors and possibly missing information * Some cards are crossed out. Some of these are included in the collection and some are not * Some of the cards contain relevant information on the back (usually children of the person mentioned). This info should be on the next consecutive card * As the information is an index, collected in the 1970s from print material, it is incomplete. It is also unreferenced. It is still a very valuable dataset as it contains a wealth of information about early settlers in Western Australia. It is of particular interest to genealogists and historians Work began on WABI in the early 1970s when information was sought on people who lived in Western Australian prior to 1914. Publicity was sent out through local libraries, historical groups and in publication such as the West Australian. Western Australians were asked to provide genealogical information, not only on prominent identities, but also from their family records including the arrival in Western Australia, occupations, dates of birth, marriages and deaths of their ancestors. Historical material such as diaries, letters, business records, minute books, maps, family trees and photographs, were also sought for copying. Entries for the index closed in December 1979, and were filed at the Battye Library for reference. We were recently delighted to discover that the WA Genealogical Society has made use of this dataset. You can view their use here: http://membership.wags.org.au/members-data/public-data/wabi-wa-biographical-index.",data.wa.gov.au,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47,,,Index entries beginning with S,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47/resource/79899a5d-ecb8-4c01-8547-45a731131e29/download/s-final.csv,CSV,,2016-07-28T06:07:54.609825,2016-07-29T00:40:18.832860,,Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 966,Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI),State Library of Western Australia,Author Not Specified,2016-07-28T05:59:15.171170,2022-05-25T18:46:13.320421,"The Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI) is a highly used resource at the State Library of Western Australia. A recent generous contribution by the Friends of Battye Library (FOBS) has enabled SLWA to have the original handwritten index cards scanned and later transcribed. The dataset contains: several csv files with data describing card number, card text and url link to image of the original handwritten card. The transcription was crowd-sourced and we are aware that there are some data quality issues including: * Some cards are missing * Transcripts are crowdsourced so may contain spelling errors and possibly missing information * Some cards are crossed out. Some of these are included in the collection and some are not * Some of the cards contain relevant information on the back (usually children of the person mentioned). This info should be on the next consecutive card * As the information is an index, collected in the 1970s from print material, it is incomplete. It is also unreferenced. It is still a very valuable dataset as it contains a wealth of information about early settlers in Western Australia. It is of particular interest to genealogists and historians Work began on WABI in the early 1970s when information was sought on people who lived in Western Australian prior to 1914. Publicity was sent out through local libraries, historical groups and in publication such as the West Australian. Western Australians were asked to provide genealogical information, not only on prominent identities, but also from their family records including the arrival in Western Australia, occupations, dates of birth, marriages and deaths of their ancestors. Historical material such as diaries, letters, business records, minute books, maps, family trees and photographs, were also sought for copying. Entries for the index closed in December 1979, and were filed at the Battye Library for reference. We were recently delighted to discover that the WA Genealogical Society has made use of this dataset. You can view their use here: http://membership.wags.org.au/members-data/public-data/wabi-wa-biographical-index.",data.wa.gov.au,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47,,,Index entries beginning with T,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47/resource/704b4c28-a132-4008-9edd-e7ed1f89c4b8/download/t-final.csv,CSV,,2016-07-28T06:08:17.685992,2016-07-28T06:08:17.580970,,Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 967,Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI),State Library of Western Australia,Author Not Specified,2016-07-28T05:59:15.171170,2022-05-25T18:46:13.320421,"The Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI) is a highly used resource at the State Library of Western Australia. A recent generous contribution by the Friends of Battye Library (FOBS) has enabled SLWA to have the original handwritten index cards scanned and later transcribed. The dataset contains: several csv files with data describing card number, card text and url link to image of the original handwritten card. The transcription was crowd-sourced and we are aware that there are some data quality issues including: * Some cards are missing * Transcripts are crowdsourced so may contain spelling errors and possibly missing information * Some cards are crossed out. Some of these are included in the collection and some are not * Some of the cards contain relevant information on the back (usually children of the person mentioned). This info should be on the next consecutive card * As the information is an index, collected in the 1970s from print material, it is incomplete. It is also unreferenced. It is still a very valuable dataset as it contains a wealth of information about early settlers in Western Australia. It is of particular interest to genealogists and historians Work began on WABI in the early 1970s when information was sought on people who lived in Western Australian prior to 1914. Publicity was sent out through local libraries, historical groups and in publication such as the West Australian. Western Australians were asked to provide genealogical information, not only on prominent identities, but also from their family records including the arrival in Western Australia, occupations, dates of birth, marriages and deaths of their ancestors. Historical material such as diaries, letters, business records, minute books, maps, family trees and photographs, were also sought for copying. Entries for the index closed in December 1979, and were filed at the Battye Library for reference. We were recently delighted to discover that the WA Genealogical Society has made use of this dataset. You can view their use here: http://membership.wags.org.au/members-data/public-data/wabi-wa-biographical-index.",data.wa.gov.au,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47,,,Index entries beginning with U-Z,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/6c026ce8-8a18-4920-a7e2-f1719e0d8c47/resource/14403b96-b2b6-4985-a3b7-9932235ff62f/download/uvxyz-final.csv,CSV,,2016-07-28T06:09:02.798176,2016-07-28T06:09:02.739595,,Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 1005,WABI subset: Police,State Library of Western Australia,Author Not Specified,2016-07-28T07:50:40.119564,2022-05-25T18:46:19.469786,"This index was compiled by Miss Mollie Bentley from various records she has used relating to the police. These include: Almanac listings, Colonial Secretary's Office Records, Police Gazettes, various police department occurrence books and letter books, police journals, government gazettes, estimates, York police records etc. Entry is by name of policeman. Information given varies but is usually about appointments, promotions, retirements, transfers etc. The Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI) is a highly used resource at the State Library of Western Australia. A recent generous contribution by the Friends of Battye Library (FOBS) has enabled SLWA to have the original handwritten index cards scanned and later transcribed. The dataset contains: several csv files with data describing card number, card text and url link to image of the original handwritten card. The transcription was crowd-sourced and we are aware that there are some data quality issues including: * Some cards are missing * Transcripts are crowdsourced so may contain spelling errors and possibly missing information * Some cards are crossed out. Some of these are included in the collection and some are not * Some of the cards contain relevant information on the back (usually children of the person mentioned). This info should be on the next consecutive card * As the information is an index, collected in the 1970s from print material, it is incomplete. It is also unreferenced. It is still a very valuable dataset as it contains a wealth of information about early settlers in Western Australia. It is of particular interest to genealogists and historians. ",data.wa.gov.au,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/dd4ee469-0a8b-4da1-bdc3-962f9f515f5c,,,WABI police subset,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/dd4ee469-0a8b-4da1-bdc3-962f9f515f5c/resource/bdf8c00f-a77b-4f17-a0f4-106cac836010/download/police-final.csv,CSV,This CSV file has 3 columns with the headings: card number; card text and url.,2016-07-28T07:51:50.036671,2016-07-28T07:51:50.002517,,Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 1019,WABI Subset: Eastern Goldfields,State Library of Western Australia,Author Not Specified,2016-07-28T07:34:54.097244,2022-05-25T18:46:20.793885,"This index has been compiled by Mrs T. Thompson of Kalgoorlie from the following cemeteries and cemetery records: * Old Boulder - Anglican Section of the Cemetery Board Register 224 names * Headstones all denominations 41 names * Roman Catholic 189 names * Baptist 12 names * Presbyterian 69 names * Church of Christ 9 names * General 6 names * Methodist section 290 names * Bulong Headstones 19 names * Kanowna Cemetery Board Register * Ora Banda Cemetery * Siberia Cemetery. Entry into the index is by name of person being buried and information given is what appears on the headstone or what is transcribed in the burial register. This can include age; relatives eg: parents, wives, husbands, children; date of death, where lived (from headstone) plus denomination, Officiating clergyman, date of burial, name of Undertaker, residence of friends (if known), remarks (if any), grave number section and subsection (from Register). The Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI) is a highly used resource at the State Library of Western Australia. A recent generous contribution by the Friends of Battye Library (FOBS) has enabled SLWA to have the original handwritten index cards scanned and later transcribed. The dataset contains: a csv file with data describing card number, card text and url link to image of the original handwritten card. The transcription was crowd-sourced and we are aware that there are some data quality issues including: * Some cards are missing * Transcripts are crowdsourced so may contain spelling errors and possibly missing information * Some cards are crossed out. Some of these are included in the collection and some are not * Some of the cards contain relevant information on the back (usually children of the person mentioned). This info should be on the next consecutive card * As the information is an index, collected in the 1970s from print material, it is incomplete. It is also unreferenced. It is still a very valuable dataset as it contains a wealth of information about early settlers in Western Australia. It is of particular interest to genealogists and historians ",data.wa.gov.au,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/ce97329a-e406-4785-9e86-898e8e6ac1ef,,,Eastern Goldfields,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/ce97329a-e406-4785-9e86-898e8e6ac1ef/resource/a45ffdb7-e668-472c-825f-3589d3d4a6d1/download/eastern-goldfields-final.csv,CSV,CSV file with headings Card number; card text and URL.,2016-07-28T07:35:57.521334,2016-07-28T07:35:57.437990,,Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 1020,WABI subset: York,State Library of Western Australia,Author Not Specified,2016-07-28T07:56:37.519742,2022-05-25T18:46:21.384260,"1859 York district Census. Entry is by name of person, Place of occupation, age, religion, occupation, literacy, arrival ship and date. Details of marriage, wife and children and employer are given. The Western Australian Biographical Index (WABI) is a highly used resource at the State Library of Western Australia. A recent generous contribution by the Friends of Battye Library (FOBS) has enabled SLWA to have the original handwritten index cards scanned and later transcribed. The dataset contains: several csv files with data describing card number, card text and url link to image of the original handwritten card. The transcription was crowd-sourced and we are aware that there are some data quality issues including: * Some cards are missing * Transcripts are crowdsourced so may contain spelling errors and possibly missing information * Some cards are crossed out. Some of these are included in the collection and some are not * Some of the cards contain relevant information on the back (usually children of the person mentioned). This info should be on the next consecutive card * As the information is an index, collected in the 1970s from print material, it is incomplete. It is also unreferenced. It is still a very valuable dataset as it contains a wealth of information about early settlers in Western Australia. It is of particular interest to genealogists and historians ",data.wa.gov.au,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/ff75fbbd-7b4d-4c1c-a946-2c5fe3073b8c,,,York and districts subset,https://catalogue.data.wa.gov.au/dataset/ff75fbbd-7b4d-4c1c-a946-2c5fe3073b8c/resource/908c0417-e1a4-4cb7-84ae-ad06466508bd/download/york-final.csv,CSV,"This csv has three columns with the headings card number, card text and url.",2016-07-28T07:58:03.144712,2016-07-28T07:58:03.094319,,Creative Commons Attribution 4.0