Collins Tracing Your Family History. Anthony Adolph

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Название Collins Tracing Your Family History
Автор произведения Anthony Adolph
Жанр Справочная литература: прочее
Серия
Издательство Справочная литература: прочее
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9780007373567



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alt=""/> The resulting marriage certificate should provide your grandparents’ ages and your father’s names and occupations. You can then calculate the rough time when they would have been born. If your grandfather said he was 23 when he married on 2 May 1923, then you can calculate that he would have been born between 2 May 1900 and 3 May 1899.

      Birth record of Mary Ann Collingwood Paterson, 1854. Her father was then a railway agent.

      QUICK REFERENCE

      GENERAL REGISTER OFFICE (GRO)

      www.gro.gov.uk/gro/content

      BIRTHS

      There is no point seeking records unless you knowin advance that they are likely to provide you with information you actually want. Here is a summary of what is on General Registration records. The indexes give:

       The name (with initials instead of middle names)

       The registration district where the birth was registered

       A reference number

       From September 1911, the mother’s maiden name

      While births had to be registered, parents sometimes waited until later to decide their baby’s names. If you cannot find a birth you are sure should be there, try looking at the end of the list of people of the same surname for children entered simply as ‘male’ or ‘female’.

      An original birth certificate of my grandmother Beryl Ivy Waters, 1912.

      Birth certificates record the following:

       Date and place of birth. If the exact time of birth is given, the child probably belonged to a set of twins. Look in the General Registration index for other children born in the same quarter and district who could be your ancestor’s twin.

       Child’s name. Names can be added to or altered on birth certificates for up to a year after registration, unless a baptism has occurred. The child will appear in the indexes under both the original name (or lack of it) and changed or added one, so this is unlikely to cause problems for the searcher.

       Name and occupation of father. Be cautious of occupational status: there are many instances of tailors’ clerks saying they were tailors, cottagers claiming to be farmers and so on.

       Name and maiden name of mother. Former married names are usually given in the form; for example, ‘Rose Smith late Jones formerly Evans’. This means that Rose was born Rose Evans, married Mr Jones, was widowed or divorced and then married Mr Smith.

       Signature or mark and address of informant. This was usually a parent. Signing with a mark usually indicated illiteracy but, of course, the signatory might merely have injured their hand. Sometimes registrars incorrectly assumed that poor people could not sign their own names and invited them to make their marks instead, and the signatories were simply too deferential to speak up.

      SEARCHING FOR A BIRTH CERTIFICATE

       First calculate your ancestor’s birth date:

       EXAMPLE: MY ANCESTOR’S AGE WAS GIVEN AS 23 ON 2 MAY 1923. DEDUCT AGE FROM YEAR: 1923 – 23 = 1900 THEREFORE, THAT ANCESTOR WAS BORN BETWEEN 2 MAY 1900 AND 3 MAY 1899

       This means that his birth should appear in the indexes covering the June, September and December quarters of 1899, or the March, June and (remembering that births could be registered up to six weeks after the event, taking us into the month of July) September quarters of 1900.

       Write down the period you have searched and the possibilities encountered. If you are searching for a very popular combination of names, like Mary Smith, it is sensible to limit yourself at first to entries in the registration districts surrounding the area where the birth might have taken place.

       If your search fails, widen the geographical area. Do not under any circumstances stop at the first possibility you find, but cover the period fully. There are plenty of instances of two children being born into the same family with the same forenames. For example, a child might die very young and its name be given to the next child born into the family. Alternatively, two children might be born to very close relations and each given the same ‘family’ names. You can work out the most likely entries from the geographical locations of the registration districts: ask for a check to be made for the right father’s name.

       If the birth certificate does not appear in the period, assume that the age at marriage was slightly inaccurate and widen the search to cover a year or two either side.

       The birth certificate will provide you with the full names of your great-grandparents, enabling you to search back for their marriage – and an earlier generation of your family tree.

       It is often useful to know the registration district in which your ancestors lived. These originally corresponded to the old Poor Law Unions. a trade directory (see Chapter Eight) provides this date for each parish. The IHGS publishes two maps showing the location of the registration districts for 1837–51 and 1852–1946. For details after 1946 you can consult J. A. Newport’s An Index to the Civil Registration Districts of England&Wales, 1837 to date (Pledger, 1989).

      A page from a General Registration index.

      LIFETIMES: MARGARET DUNCAN WILSON

      EDINBURGH PHYSIOTHERAPIST Lorna Barbour’s ancestor has an interesting birth record. Margaret Duncan Wilson was the first child to be registered in Lerwick once General Registration began in 1855. The exceptionally detailed birth certificate (of the type issued in the year alone) states she was born at Chromate Lane, Lerwick at 5.30am on 6 January, 7th child of James McAllum Wilson, a superintendent of police at Lerwick, aged 34 and born in Fraserburgh, and his wife Jane Wilson formerly Smart. The couple had married in Stonehaven in June 1840 and had two other girls and four boys, of whom one had died.

      The 19th-century Shetlands may conjure up images of weather-beaten crofters knitting chunky sweaters, the warm glow of their cosy peat fires flicking across the picturesque wrinkles of their weather-beaten faces. Far from it. Plunged into semi-darkness half the year and with little to warm them save whisky the islanders, whose Viking blood has recently been confirmed through extensive DNA testing, seem to have been an exceptionally unruly mob. The local papers report almost continuous drunken disorder, not least at their drinking extravaganza, Upheliar, including running gun battles and once the nail bombing of the chief magistrate’s house. And when the American whaling boats put in and drunken