• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Research
    • Family Trees
      • Charts
      • Book
      • Photobook
      • Website
    • Records
      • Colonial Secretary’s Correspondence
      • Convicts
      • Electoral Rolls
      • Gazettes and Directories
      • Immigration
      • Inquests
      • Land and Property
      • Newspapers
      • Occupations
      • Probate and Death Duties
  • Case Studies
  • My Books
  • Blog
  • Fiji
  • Resources
    • Books
    • FamilySearch Microfilms
      • Family History Library
    • Government Gazettes
    • Maps
    • Newspapers
      • Newspapers
    • Pictures
    • Unpublished Manuscripts
    • Links
  • About
    • Privacy Policy
  • Contact

Heritage Genealogy

What do you really know about your family?

You are here: Home / Family History Library / Ordering films in the new FamilySearch

Ordering films in the new FamilySearch

12 July 2012 by Carole Riley

FamilySearch, or what we used to know as the Family History Library, has an enormous number of resources for family historians in their library in Salt Lake City. They have travelled the world collecting original material by microfilming it, and these microfilms can be ‘borrowed’. If you have a FamilSearch Center nearby, or a society library designated for lending films, you can borrow the films and research them without having to travel to Salt Lake City. In most cases the microfilms were also donated back to the archive or repository, protecting the original records from wear and tear.

Go to FamilySearch and click on the word Catalog under the main heading.

The new catalog search looks like this:

FamilySearch catalog

When I’ve typed in ‘Fiji’ I get a long list of possible places. I think it’s best to just use ‘Fiji’ to start with, without getting too specific.

FamilySearch results for Fiji

Birth, marriage and death records are held under Civil registration. If you click on any of these entries you will see what records they hold. For example, if I click on Land and property – indexes I can see:

Fiji land and property indexes

If I click on the last of these I can see the individual film entries. The film numbers are what I need to order the film:

Fiji land records card index

To order a film, you can click on the film number, which takes you to another page: https://familysearch.org/films/. You need to be signed in to do this; signing up is easy and free. You can order a film on short-term loan for 90 days or long-term loan for extended periods.

Just enter the film number:Film ordering

My most convenient library is the Society of Australian Genealogists and the website remembers that setting for me. You can change it at any time.

You can then go on to find more films, or checkout and pay by credit card or PayPal.

Once you’ve placed your order and paid for it you can track the status of your order at any time. You’ll get an email when the film has been received by your library, and you can go there and look at the film. Some libraries charge an extra fee for handling the film on top of what FamilySearch charges.

Bear in mind that the 90 days starts on the day the film is sent, not the day it arrives in your library. So get in and look at it as soon as you can.

Filed Under: Family History Library, Fiji, Government Tagged With: births, deaths, FHL, Fiji, government, land, marriages, probate

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Ili.Satoqi says

    15 September 2012 at 11:13 am

    Bula Carole, I have this gentleman Daryl Ross who has been trying to trace the great grandfather’s grave……..he died in 1871 a Swiss national by the name of Louis Ernst Leuba….he started the Sugar Plantation at Makodraga trading as Pacific Island owned by the German, Henning Brothers. We have tried everywhere in Levuka and yet no result………..need help plsssssssssss!

  2. Ili.Satoqi says

    17 September 2012 at 10:01 am

    Bula Carole, Any news on the my previous post….vinaka Ili

Primary Sidebar

Topics

Recent posts

  • Land Research for Family Historians 2nd edition
  • Griffith’s Valuation of Ireland
  • A WWI soldier’s death is explained
  • A WWI soldier’s letter from France
  • NSW land name indexes online
  • Genealogy research in Fiji
  • Did your ancestor follow the gold?
  • Do you know who is in these photographs?

I am Carole Riley of Sydney, Australia and this is my genealogy research business. I can help you to find out who your Australian ancestors are and I can usually trace them back to their country of origin. I can also help you find out their stories and mysteries - who they were, what they did for a living, where they lived and died.

I am the author of Land Research for Family Historians in Australia and New Zealand (2023) and Evernote for Family Historians (2015). I am a Fellow and past Vice President of the Society of Australian Genealogists and former editor of their journal, Descent. I am also a past Director of the Association of Professional Genealogists. Read More…

Get updates by email

Enter your email address:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Copyright © 2026 ·Magazine Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in