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Starting Your Family History - Where to
find information
Before you attack the
records, start with yourself and write down all the key dates and events
you know about yourself, your parents, your grandparents, etc.
Talk to relatives to fill in further information but remember to always
treat family stories with a 'pinch of salt'. Your research may
help to prove or disprove some commonly held beliefs about the origins
of your family.
- General Register Office
Indexes
to Births, Marriages and Deaths begin
in July 1837. Access to the indexes is free but you have to pay a
fee to get a copy of a certificate. There are
several websites offering access to the indexes online or you can visit
Sheffield Archives
where there is a microfiche copy of the complete indexes 1837-2002. Copies
of certificates may be ordered online but are usually cheaper if ordered
from the
Register Office
that holds the original records. Sheffield Register Office holds records
from a number of earlier local administrative districts including
Sheffield, Eccesall Bierlow and Wortley. Society volunteers have indexed
the local birth registers and these indexes are available for purchase on CD
(check the Publications pages).
- Parish Registers have
been kept since the first half of the
sixteenth century but many of the earliest registers do not survive.
Parish registers offer information about baptisms, marriages and burials
conducted by the Church of England. Sheffield Archives holds many
of the original registers of local parish churches, some of which have
been indexed, which makes finding an entry much easier. If you
cannot visit Sheffield Archives you can ask staff to make a specific
search for you but there is a charge for this service.
- International
Genealogical Index is a very
extensive index of entries of baptisms and marriages mainly from parish
registers but also including some non-conformist records. The index was
compiled by the
Mormon Church and can be
consulted online at their Family Search website. Sheffield Archives and
Sheffield Arts and Social Science Library hold copies of the index. It
is important to remember that this Index is not complete.
If you fail to find an entry for your
ancestor it doesn't necessarily mean that no record exists. Indexes also
contain errors so remember always to check the original entry to be
certain of the information.
- Census
records are a major source of information for family historians,
especially for the nineteenth century. A countrywide census has
been conducted since 1801 but only records after 1841 provide useful
personal detail. To preserve the confidentiality
of living people access to the records is restricted and only those
dated between 1841 and 1901 are currently available for, public
inspection. Census records are available on a pay-to-view basis on
several websites. You may consult microfilm copies of the census records
for Sheffield free of charge at Sheffield Archives and Sheffield Local
Studies Library, where you will find indexes to help you locate the
correct entry, compiled by Sheffield FHS volunteers. The Index to the
1861 Census for Sheffield and Rotherham (including Bradfield) is
available for purchase from the Society along with a complete
transcription of the 1891 Census for Sheffield and Bradfield (see
Publications pages). These CDs are a worthwhile investment if you have
several local families to research.
- Wills can help to fill out the information on your family tree and provide new
leads. From 1858 onwards wills have been proved in the Principal or
District Probate Registries. A national index is compiled on a year by
year basis. Copies of the national indexes 1858-1943 have been purchased
by Sheffield FHS and may be consulted free of charge at
Sheffield Archives. For
later years indexes may be viewed at the
Sheffield Probate Office.
Before 1858 responsibility for proving wills lay with the ecclesiastical
courts. Copies of many Yorkshire wills are held at the
Borthwick Institute in
York.
- Books
If you are just starting out, consider buying one of the many books
currently in print which explains how to set about your research, keep
your records, etc. Most books cover the same basic information and you
will be able to return to this source of information and help time after
time as you begin to start using different types of record. The
National Archives website has some useful guides for sale which may be
bought over the internet or ordered from a local bookseller.
- Family History Society Membership Join a local family history society.
You will meet other people with similar interests and problems and be
able to take advantage of regular talks on different aspects of research
and local and family history. This will help you to develop your
expertise. It is also worth joining a society that covers the area where
your ancestors lived. Even as an 'out of town' member you will find that
reading articles about local records and local history will help you to
develop your understanding of and familiarity with a place or part of
the country that you may never have visited, but which was once home to
your ancestors.
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