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Archive for January, 2010

26 Jan 2010

BMD browse facility temporarily unavailable

The browse facility for BMDs will be unavailable from the ‘search BMD’ index for a short time. We would like to apologise for any inconvenience this has caused our users. The facility should be back in action very soon but in the meantime can be found here:

http://www.findmypast.co.uk/Pre84BrowseStartSearch.jsp

UPDATE 25/02/10 - this feature is now restored and can be found at the bottom of the search page for BMDs

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21 Jan 2010

Wakefield and district parish records updated

We’ve added a large collection of baptism, burial and marriage records for Wakefield and surrounding areas. Have a look at the tables below for full details:

Baptisms

Place, dedication
No. of entries
Year range
ALVERTHORPE, ST PAUL
2410
1871-1901
CHICKENLEY, WESLEYAN
257

1844,​1846-47,​1851,​1854,​1858,​1860,18​62-79,​1881,​1883-1903,​1905-07

HORBURY, ST PETER
3113
1860-1880
OSSETT, DEWSBURY RD WESLEYAN
310
1847-1893,​1895-1900,​1902-1907
OSSETT, STREETSIDE PRIMITIVE
138
1875-85,​1887,​1889-92,​1894,​1898,​1901,​1903-07,​1930
THORNHILL, ST MICHAEL
5168
1742-1812
WAKEFIELD, ST JOHN
2016
1830-1843
WAKEFIELD, ST MICHAEL
3171
1862-1892
WOOLLEY, ST PETER
1198
1737-1812,​1877
WRENTHORPE, ST ANNE
1650
1874-1908
Total (10)
19431
1737-1930

Marriages

Place, dedication
No. of entries
Year range
SANDAL, ST HELEN
498
1837-1847
THORNHILL, ST MICHAEL
646
1754-1787
WOOLLEY, ST PETER
29
1737-44,​1746-47,​1749-50,​1752-53
Total (3)
1173
1737-1847

Burials

Place, dedication
No. of entries
Year range
WAKEFIELD, ALL SAINTS
3156
1796-1811,​1902
WAKEFIELD, ST JOHN
2395
1845-1865
WOOLLEY, ST PETER
1459
1737-1885
Total (3)
7010
1737-1902

21 Jan 2010

Vote in the Your Family Tree Magazine Annual Awards

Renowned publication Your Family Tree is holding its annual awards ceremony, and findmypast.co.uk is in the running! We’ve been shortlisted for two awards, including ’Best Census / BMD Website (paid for)’ and ’Best Advanced Records Website (paid for)’, with our sister sites ScotlandsPeople and 1911census.co.uk also included in multiple categories.

The winners are decided by public vote, so if you want to show support for your favourite family history company, head on over to http://www.yourfamilytreemag.co.uk/awards and get voting.

20 Jan 2010

Ask the Expert – Bournemouth Blues

Our expert Stephen Rigden answers your questions:

After receiving a copy of my great-grandmother’s death certificate I thought it would be an easy thing to find her burial place so that I can visit from Australia next year. However, I have come up against a problem I have no idea how to tackle – I am unfamiliar with the areas around Bournemouth and with the changes to Hampshire and Dorset boundaries so do not know where to begin.

She died in Winton, Hampshire in 1903 from the effects of TB at aged 32 – her name was Ellen Dean (nee Boyt), wife of Charles. I have made enquiries with libraries but there is no record of her burial in the Bournemouth area and I am at a loss to know where to try – surely there must be a register which would record all burials for the County? Any advice would be gratefully received.’ Kris

Steve says:”Unfortunately, no! There are no such things as countywide burial registers in England and Wales.

Registration of deaths occurs locally at district register offices, with records then being collated centrally into a nationwide index. It is true that in civil registration there is an ongoing move towards unitary authorities sited at county level: for example, Kent County Council has a single countywide Registration Services portal. However, this does not apply to burials and cremations.

Unlike deaths, burials have never been regarded by the state as a vital event requiring systematic registration of date and place. Therefore, once a death has been registered, and assuming certain regulations are followed, burial can take place in a cemetery (or other approved location) of one’s choice.

Back in 1903, therefore, your late great grandmother’s death was registered in Christchurch registration district, which covered both Winton and Bournemouth. This is the only guide to place of burial that you have: most burials take place close to the locality of residence and death where these are the same. However, it is not hard to imagine situations where these general guidelines are broken. For example, if a person died far from their usual place of abode (for instance, while on holiday, or travelling), they may have been buried not near the place of death but back in their home district. Similarly, it is not unusual for a person who left their home town to be buried back there, especially if all other family remained in that location. Of course, neither of these scenarios may apply in your case, but do check on the death certificate for any addresses given for the deceased and/or the informant.

If it does seem that your great grandmother both lived and died in the Christchurch registration district area, you find yourself in a position shared by many genealogists: you know where an ancestor died but you will have to search speculatively to try to identify the place of burial. It was precisely to help out researchers in your predicament that the Federation of Family History Societies embarked upon its ongoing National Burial Index (NBI) project. A version of the NBI is online, containing 13 million entries, at Find My Past and can be found at http://www.findmypast.co.uk/parish-records-collection-search-start.action?redef=0&event=D. Currently, however, there are only limited records for Hampshire and, unfortunately, none of relevance to you.

This leaves you with only one option: to identify all the municipal and church burial grounds in the area active in 1903 and to eliminate them one by one, working out from the centre to more distant locations. As you are based in Australia and do not benefit from local knowledge, I suggest that your best step would be to contact the relevant family history society, in this instance Hampshire Genealogical Society for advice. Their contact page http://www.hgs-online.org.uk/contacts.htm includes email addresses for local organisers. They may also be able to recommend a local expert willing to undertake enquiries upon your behalf; such searches may be necessary at the County Record Office and could take in funeral notices in local newspapers for the two weeks after death, as well as burial registers.

Finally, as a word of caution, it is worth noting that if and when you successfully identify the place of burial, it is possible that you will find no surviving headstone in situ – one may not have been raised in the first place, or it may have become weathered and damaged over time. In this regard, those local authorities most mindful of health and safety regulations often lay down headstones which they deem to be dangerous.”

We hope this is useful to your research. If you would like to pose a question for Steve, please register or opt to receive newsletters in My Account.

20 Jan 2010

Ask the Expert – Too Many Cooks

Our expert Stephen Rigden answers your questions:

‘Is it possible for a person to appear in more than one census return? In other words, does a census recorder check that all the people named on a census are actually present in the house?

My problem is that I have just recently obtained a copy of a marriage certificate for Norton Dryden Hutchinson showing that he married Maria Cook aged 20 in Southwark in 1870, and her father was Edward Cook, a stationer. Fine, there is a Maria Jane Cook born in 1850, father Edward who in the 1861 census is shown to be a stationer. I cannot find any other Maria Cook with father Edward who is a stationer. The trouble is that the 1871 census has a Maria Cook living with Norton Hutchinson but also a Maria Cook living with her father Edward the stationer.

The situation is not helped by Norton Hutchinson claiming to be a widower in 1881, but I cannot find any death of Maria Hutchinson, nor any 1881 census for father Edward and his wife.’ Mike

Steve says:”Yes! Many family historians come across the situation during their research. As alluded to in your question, each census is a snapshot in time intended to record not who was customarily resident in a given property, but who was actually resident overnight on census night. However, this objective will not have been entirely achieved in any census.

There are many reasons for this. The first is simply that people are not very good at filling in forms. If you are familiar with the 1911 census for England and Wales, you will have seen for the first time the household schedules completed by householders themselves (these were destroyed for the earlier censuses). And you will almost certainly have seen mistakes in filling out the form – for example, the so-called fertility information entered against the man and not the woman, or Nationality completed by English and Welsh natives even though it clearly says that this is to be filled in only by persons born overseas. I have also seen several 1911 census returns where the householder has dutifully but erroneously entered the names and details of all their deceased children: usually, struck out in angry red ink by a Census Office clerk.

So we can expect householders to have made many errors of other types on the household schedules for earlier census years from 1841 to 1901 and for many of these to have been copied across by enumerators into the census returns we see today.

Secondly, the form may have been completed a day or two before the actual census night and then a person usually resident turns out to be away temporarily on census night and is recorded elsewhere as well.

In short, I believe there are reasonable grounds for you to accept that both 1871 census returns refer to the same Maria Cook. The fact that she is recorded under her maiden name Cook rather than her married name Hutchinson in the parental home is not unprecedented and may simply be householder or enumerator error. However, before proceeding further, I would strongly recommend that you conduct further searches and obtain supporting documents, especially the 1850 birth certificate of Maria (to check the name of her mother). Bear in mind that the surname Cook is of course common, London is a populous city, and the occupation of stationer may be expressed in other ways, or may change over time (for instance, between 1871 and 1881), so you do need to proceed with caution so as not to accidentally attach an incorrect but coincidentally similar-looking branch to your family tree.

Finally, although it is premature to leap to any conclusions, it would not have been unheard of for a man to claim to be widowed, and to re-marry, after separation from his first wife. In the mid- and late 19th century, divorce was an expensive and intimidating process and there are many known instances of men, and women, dispensing with the formality of divorce and re-marrying bigamously.”

We hope this is useful to your research. If you would like to pose a question for Steve, please register or opt to receive newsletters in My Account.

18 Jan 2010

Major update to Parish Records; Middlesex Baptisms and Burials added, Halifax St John records extended

This month sees an inpressive update to the already extensive range of parish records on offer. We’ve just added an incredible 30,000 baptisms and almost 27,000 burials for the following Middlesex parishes:

Parish Baptism years Burial years
Ashford 1699-1710, 1760-1876 1699-1870
Bethnal Green Virginia Chapel 1825-1837
Christchurch Greyfriars 1639-1640 1639-1640
Covent Garden St Paul late baptisms
Cowley 1562-1812 1562-1767
Cranford 1565-1812 1560-1812
East Bedfont 1695-1851
Edgware 1717-1840 1717-1841
Edmonton St Paul 1834-1840
Enfield Jesus Church 1835-1840
Enfield St James 1834-1841 1834-1841
Finsbury St Barnabas 1842-1854
Finsbury St Thomas C’house 1846-1854
Greenford 1539-1841 1539-1843
Hampton Wick 1831-1840
Harrow All Saints 1838-1841
Harrow 1558-1653
Hounslow 1708-1724 1721-1739
Kingsbury 1732-1841 1732-1841
Laleham 1538-1876
Little Stanmore 1559-1812 1558-1840
Littleton 1579-1876
Mill Hill St Paul 1836-1840
New Brentford 1570-1805
Northolt 1562-1812 1583-1812
Paddington St John 1833-1854
Perivale 1708-1855 1720-1900
St Andrew Ashley Place late baptisms
St John Gt M’borough Street late baptisms
St John Westminster late baptisms
St John Zachary 1665-1666 1665-1666
St Katherine Creechurch 1639-1640 1639-1640
St Leonard Foster Lane 1639-40,1800-02, 08 1639-40,1800-02, 08
St Luke Berwick Street late baptisms
St Mary Vincent Square late baptisms
St Michael Burleigh Street late baptisms
St Michael Queenhithe 1639-1640 1639-1640
St Mildred Bread Street 1838-1840
St Peter Great Windmill Street late baptisms
St Philip Regent Street late baptisms
St Stephen Westminster late baptisms
St Vedast 1838-1840
Shepperton 1574-1876
Staines 1696-1710
Staines workhouse 1848-1880
Teddington 1558-1671 1558-1725
Twickenham 1813-1831
Uxbridge Moor 1839-1840
Uxbridge Moor St John 1838-1840
West Drayton 1701-1812 1707-1812
West Twyford 1722-1834 1722-1848

We’ve also increased the amount of records on offer for Halifax St John. The number of baptism records has grown from 16,715 to 72,295 and the number of burial records from 11,176 to 54,210. These new records provide greater coverage for the Halifax District.

08 Jan 2010

New baptism records for East End London; London and Kent probate records added

We’ve just added over 50,000 new baptisms for Stepney and Spitalfields. The records are broken down by church making them easier for you to pinpoint your ancestors. We’ve added almost 20,000 records for Spitalfields and over 30,000 for Stepney with the breakdown by church as follows:

Stepney Churches
St Dunstan 1835 – 1848   –  11,967 new records
St George in the East 1861-1877  -  15,848 new records

Spitalfields
Christ Church 1729-1795  -  19,481 – new records

We’ve also added the London probate indexes for names A-F, and a complete dataset for Kent. Records that we have include:

  • Over 15,000 records added for London for the years 1750 – 1858
  • 6,300 records for West Kent for the years 1750 – 1858
  • 128,000 records for East Kent for the years 1831 – 1841

You can find these currently listed within Parish Burials.

05 Jan 2010

Who Do You Think You Are? Live 2010 – Special 2 for 1 ticket offer

The UK’s biggest family history event returns to London’s Olympia on 26-28 February for its fourth fascinating year, and findmypast.co.uk would like to welcome you into 2010 with an exclusive 2 for 1 ticket offer.

Celebrities from the TV show, including Kate Humble, will be taking to the stage to recount their fascinating family stories and sharing backstage gossip from the show with you, and there is a host of other show features to explore. With expertise available in an extensive workshop programme and one-to-one sessions, special features dedicated to identifying your photographs and military memorabilia, and around 200 specialist exhibitors, Who Do You Think You Are? LIVE has everything you need to find out who you really are.

TICKETS ON SALE NOW – 2 FOR 1 TICKET OFFER!

We’re giving you the chance to buy two adult tickets for £22 – that’s a saving of £22*! To claim this special offer and get your tickets to the country’s biggest and most comprehensive family history event, simply call the ticket hotline on 0871 230 5596 or visit www.whodoyouthinkyouarelive.co.uk and quote FMP241 today!

*£2 transaction fee applies. 2 for 1 offer ends 19th February 2010. On-door standard entry tickets priced at £22 each. Workshop tickets available free on-site, or in advance at a cost of £2. This is not a BBC event.