Issue 3 features: * Thinking outside the pox: Sue Wilkes researches smallpox and how vaccination registers can help family historians * Get your research on track: New railway staff records online * Far from home: Emma Jolly explains how to trace British Home Children in both UK and Canadian records * Take to your pen!: We talk to writing expert Lynn Palermo * The public fumes: Early reactions to the London Underground * Books: A round up of recent publications * Lucky dip: An eclectic collection of indexes is now online * Place in focus: Explore and research Dorset roots * Break the brick walls: Civil registration marriage records More Info
Product Code: DYAP003
Issue 14 features: * Going the extra mile: Jenny Jones explains the history and advantages of ‘Dade registers’ * Warriors in your DNA?: DNA research into Bannockburn * PoW records go online: A major new WW1 resource * It’s all in the cards: The history and etiquette of calling cards * Not a happy lot?: Police life and work in Victorian Cheshire * A life on (or behind) stage: Theatrical records explored * History in the details: Jayne Shrimpton on canes and sticks * Place in focus: Northampton More Info
Product Code: DYAP014
How should you approach researching your ancestors? In this wide ranging but succinct guidebook, professional writer, lecturer and genealogist Celia Heritage offers expert advice on how to get started using the main online and offline records, and then take research further using a variety of lesser-known resources. In it you will find guidance on subjects including: *Research methodology and how to record what you find *Key Victorian records: birth, marriage and death certificates, and census... More Info
Product Code: BK6450
* I do... or I sue: Almost 50 years after this law was dropped, Denise Bates looks at breach of promise to marry legislation * Family sporting photos: Photo expert Jayne Shrimpton looks at how photography has encompassed people's enthusiasm for leisure pursuits * A stained character? Nick Thorne roots out the hidden past of an expert on stained glass windows * The healing waters: Daniel Hewitt investigates the records and registers left by spas and hydrotherapy hospitals * A life on both sides of the tracks: Investigating the lives of private detectives can be a challenge: especially when they adopted different guises. Nell Darby reports * History in the details: Street vendors and deliverers More Info
Product Code: DYAP088
Keep up to date with the genealogy world and learn more about your hobby with the critically acclaimed Discover Your Ancestors online periodical. Whether you are just starting out or have reached a brick wall in your research, this will help and inspire you on your family history journey. Receive guidance from experts, tips on the best sources for records, explore connections around the world and bring your ancestors to life. Issue 108 features: The changing face of death: Simon Wills looks ... More Info
Product Code: DYAP108
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Complementing RA8 by providing a guide to the streets, courts and alleyways which comprised the City of London in the Victorian era.
Abstracted and indexed by Cliff Webb, who writes in the introduction; "St. Botolph Aldgate is a large but poor parish with a highly transient population. There are only a few Huguenots in the records but quite a few Jewish people, Irish, Scots and other early immigrants. For civil purposes St. Botolph was divided into two parts, each with seperate civil jurisdiction. The two parts were St. Botolph...More Info
An index showing names, ages and parishes for a large number of City of London burial registers - virtually impossible to search individually (36242 entries). Comprises parts 1 and 2 merged into one index.New edition (1997). 4 fiche.
Volume I - St Botolph Aldgate abstracted and indexed by Cliff Webb, who writes in the introduction: "St Botolph Aldgate is a large but poor parish with a highly transient population. There are only a few Huguenots in the records but quite a few Jewish people, Irish, Scots and other early immigrants. For civil purposes St Botolph was divided into two parts, each with separate civil jurisdiction. Th...More Info
AN INDEX OF BURIALS IN LONDON & MIDDLESEX, covering 52 parishes. Nearly 58,000 burials (NOT INCLUDED IN THE National Burial Index) .Parishes, dates and number of records as follows: Ashford 1700 –06/7, 1760 –1870 (666); Christ Church Greyfriars, (City) 1639-39/40 (98); Clerkenwell: St Barnabas, 1842-54 (82); Clerkenwell: St Thomas Charterhouse 1846-54 (472); Cowley 1562–1876 (1617); Cranford...More Info