Marriage registers for all 15 volumes of Phillimore's parish record transcripts. * Alfreton 1706-1837 * Allestree 1595-1812 * Alsop en le Dale 1701-1837 * Alvaston 1614-1812 * Aston upon Trent 1667-1812 * Barrow on Trent and Twyford 1657-1812 * Beauchief 1696-1837 * Beighton 1653-1837 * Boulton 1756-1812 * Brailsford 1653-1812 * Breadsall 1573-1837 * Breaston 1719-1810 * Buxton 1718-1837 * Chaddesden 1718-1812 * Chapel en le Frith 1621-1837 * Chellaston 1570-1812 * Church Brough More Info
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The record of government, church and private estates contain a great deal of information likely to be of interest to genealogists. Deeds, for example, can be very useufl in tracing the descent of properties. Church records enable local clergy to be traced, and provide much information on parishioners. For Surrey and Sussex, much relevant material is in print, and readily available in libraries. Th...More Info
By Jeremy Gibson. The records of poor law unions of the 19th and early 20th centuries constitute a major, but under-used, source of genealogical data - partly because, prior to the publication of these books, it was difficult to know what was available. They set that right, and provide a detailed listing, county by county, of the extensive resources which may include information on your ancestors.
Registers of births and baptisms are vital sources for family historians. They have been kept by the Church of England, various nonconformist churches, the General Register Office, and various other bodies. There are also a variety of other records in which births and baptisms can be traced. This book gives an overview of all the sources worth searching, telling you where to look and how to unders...More Info
It is impossible to construct pedigrees without using marriage registers and other records. Marriages have been registered by a wide range of different bodies. This book describes these and other sources, and tells you where to look.
Transcriptions of burial records of St Paul's in central Sheffield and the common burial ground at Norfolk Park that was created especially for mass burials in the year of the great cholera epidemic.