Alan
E. Mann, AG
alan.familyhistory@gmail.com
Accredited
Genealogist
BYU 2008 Annual Family History and Genealogy conference www.alanmann.com/articles
Friday, 1 August
8:30-9:30 am
A New
Look at English research
on the Internet
English
research has changed dramatically since the turn of the century. The Internet
now plays a role in nearly every aspect of British research. The Internet is exceptionally
useful in the areas of research coordination, finding aids, & published
genealogy. The web also gives access to compiled genealogy, extracted or
transcribed records, indexes, or local help. Even if you need to consult
records not available electronically, a web page or an archive email address
can help you get more information about the records and how you can access
them. Many libraries offer online searchable catalogs. A lookup service could
provide a contact that would actually look at the record and email you the
results. A "how to" web page could describe the records and help you
determine whether the record will meet your research goal.
The
most exciting news is the recent release of English records on FamilySearch’s digitized
record search at http://pilot.familysearch.org.
This site allows you to view digitized microfilms from English records,
including parish registers and bishops transcripts. At the time of preparation
of this syllabus, the pilot site had
I’d
like to give special notice to an underutilized function of the web—putting
living relatives in touch with each other. Those with English ancestry should
sign up and explore the best site for
this purpose I’ve seen anywhere in the world—www.genesreunited.com.
Nearly everyone I’ve helped use it has found living relatives they never knew
about--who then share information about the family.
Basic English web
sites
The
most important site for locating British websites is GENUKI (GENealogy of the
One small inconsistency is that from the first
selection page, the geographical divisions are listed for your selection. Thus,
from the first page, you select from a list of countries (
The
British government web site (www.nationalarchives.gov.uk)
offers an ever-expanding collection of documents you can view in your home
(NOTE: click on categories at top rather than picking from “pull-down” list to
get description/explanation of choices). Documents Online includes indexed
images of over 1 million wills proved in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury.
The Catalogue searches through
millions of British Navy seamen and all British Army soldiers discharged from
1760 through 1871. The National Archive has leaflets, guides, research aids,
and even a podcast of guest speakers on a variety of topics of interest.
A
more thorough treatment of English web sites with detailed examples can be
found on my website at www.alanmann.com/England.htm.
This webpage explains eight different types of websites and gives examples of
each category in an outline form. It is far easier to refer you to that site
than to try to list all the URLs (web addresses) here.
Major Genealogical
Record Sites
Free:
·
FreeBMD–
Search civil registration births, marriages, deaths from 1866 to 1919 at http://freebmd.rootsweb.com.
·
Access
to Archives - Helps you find documents
in many archives by name or key word. www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/a2a/
–
·
Online
parish clerk –
Fee-based:
There
are several projects and fee-based web sites coming available for
·
Find
My Past - www.findmypast.com, is now
available at the Family History Library and some
·
FamilyHistoryOnline
sponsored by Federation of Family History Societies - www.familyhistoryonline.net has
many databases (click on databases to see the full list, sorted by county).
·
Origins
Network - www.origins.net has several
smaller databases that are unique to this site.
·
Family
Relatives - www.familyrelatives.org
– the only civil registration search that really works except freebmd (above).
·
The
Genealogist - www.thegenealogist.co.uk
lists all their databases, but I find it
difficult to follow.
·
www.BMDRegister.uk.org – census and
other records. What’s unique is non-conformist registers. (see www.bmdregisters.co.uk/help/guide.htm)
·
Any discussion of British records online would be
lacking without mention of Ancestry.com. I caution you that many of the records
listed are readily available elsewhere, for free—particularly those that are
listed as parish records. Most of these have already been extracted and are
available in the IGI (and can be separated from other IGI entries using Hugh
Wallis’ site, see below). Having pointed this out, however, I must say that
even when data may be available elsewhere at no charge, by bringing several
things together in one index, the time saved may be worth the cost. Ancestry
also has an complete collection of English census records., While all of the
census records are available on other commercial sites, no other single site
has the complete collection. If you are going to be doing many searches in
British 1901 census records, the cost of Ancestry would be less than that of
the British government 1901 census site. You can view many of the things
available in the Ancestry UK collection by going to www.ancestry.com/search/locality/dbpage.aspx?tp=3257&p=3251.
A
good list of English websites is maintained by Price & Associates, at http://www.pricegen.com/english_genealogy.html.
A far more extensive collection of many thousands of British websites arranged
in FHLC-like categories is used at the Family History Library. The Family
History Library’s Information Services Team maintains this list of websites for
use on the Library’s computers, and has made this list available in the library
to export for personal use. The self-extracting zip file and the instructions
for importing are available in the library. The favorites should be available
on http://wiki.familysearch.org.
An excellent help for British research is Hugh
Wallis’ IGI Batch number page. The purpose of this page is to allow you to
search the millions of extracted parish register entries from the
Don’t miss the Lookup Exchange (http://aztecrose.tripod.com/LookupExchange.htm)
and
ARCHON - (www.archon.nationalarchives.gov.uk/archon/).
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