Imagine that our ancestors, those once living,
breathing individuals from whose collectiveness we come, had a way,
nowadays, to talk to us in some degree at least. With the advent of the
camcorder and all other means of recording human presence, preserving the
personalities and some life footage of our ancestors has become a reality,
more so for our descendants a generation or two down the line. But what
about our great—grandparents and beyond, those around when multi—media as
a way of life was a thing of the future. Well — we can actually get a good
picture of their lives from a whole host of surviving record sources from
the basic births, marriages, deaths and census records through wills,
inheritance papers to old photographs of places and people among much
else.
More and more this material is being linked to computer
indexing and preserved on microfiche cards for ease of access for our
technological minds.
At The Family Records Centre, 1 Myddelton Street,
London EC1R 1UW you can find all English and Welsh births, deaths and
marriages from 1837 onwards plus the census records (as the name suggests,
every 10 years) from 1841—1901, later returns being closed for reasons of
privacy. These materials hold lots of detail — names, ages, occupations,
specific addresses and will be built up in a series of finds involving
cross— referencing. For Scotland, from 1855 onwards we find a similar
situation at New Register House, Princes Street, Edinburgh EH1 3YT. Before
the respective dates of 1837 (England/Wales) and 1855 (Scotland) it was
not actually law to register a birth, death or marriage but many of these
events were recorded — in Old Parish Records, created in a church—based
parish system and so technically they are really baptisms, proclamations
of banns and burials.
Most of us know names and dates for our grandparents
and sometimes a generation beyond this. Following one line at a time will
get you back in time more swiftly than had you branched out although
ultimately all branches, maternal and paternal, are of equal importance
certainly in terms of our physical existence. You can expect to trace back
to a point between 1750—1770 and many lines can go beyond this point, with
careful research methods.
You can begin with your own birth record if you have
nothing else. Take a 1901 birth: ‘18th September 1901 at Ratehaugh Quarry,
Longhaughton, born Robert Edward, son of Dixon Egdell and Annie Egdell
formerly Warner; father’s occupation: Whinstone Quarryman’. We can now
look for the marriage of Dixon Egdell and Annie Warner either by searching
the indexes pre—1901 or trying to locate the family
on the 1901 census to find if any other children existed at this time to
the couple, giving an idea of when they might have begun their family.
Scottish records are fortunate in giving a little more
detail than those in England/Wales in that the date of parents’ marriage
along with place is found on a birth record after 1855 to the present day
(with an exception of 1856—61). A Scottish death record from 1921 tells
us:
‘John Sharpe, Engineer’s Machineman, married to
Elizabeth McElroy, died 1921 April 18th at the Royal Infirmary, Glasgow,
usual residence: 282 Castle Street, Glasgow, aged 50, son of Jason Sharpe,
Slater and Mary Jane Sharpe rn.s. (maiden surname) Campbell (both
deceased) — Scottish deaths always provide a
person’s parentage, by word of mouth of the ‘informant’, usually a
relative — be the deceased 9 or 90 : English and
Welsh equivalents unfortunately don’t supply this useful cross—
referencing detail although a Scottish marriage record
will provide the father’s name of bride and groom.
From John Sharpe’s death record we can search for his
birth circa 1871 (he was 50 in 1921): always allow a couple years either
side of a suspected birthdate in making the search: our ancestors were not
so specific with ages as we are and surnames often altered, back and
forth, an ‘e’ being added or dropped, for example —
many unusual sounding names were written down phonetically. Beyond
these basic sources and taking the John Sharpe example, we could locate
archives for the hospital where he died. In this case the ward journal
provides this: ‘patient states that a valve full of compressed steam burst
and struck him on the ankle. There is a compound fracture
....‘ Such an entry hints at an accident at work
and in fact further research in another source reveals an 8—page Fatal
Accident Inquiry. Report relating to industrial deaths, and from this we
find the most minute detail of his last day at work. His birth was found
in 1870 in Glasgow and his parents’ marriage in 1858 also at Glasgow and
this in turn provides his grandparents’ names —
Robert Sharpe, a Labourer (deceased) and Dorothea Sharpe m.s. Ingram
(deceased). John appears on the 1871 1881 and 1891 census returns with his
family. From 1881 we find: ‘7 Garngad Road, Glasgow: Jason Sharpe, Head of
house, married, age 45, Slater by trade, born Ireland; wife Mary Jane, age
40, born Ireland, son Jason, single, 18, apprentice Slater, born Glasgow,
Jane, daughter, 16, Pottery Work Painter, Margaret, John, Mary Ann, aged
13, 11 and 8 respectively and all scholars (at school) and four—year old
Alison,’ the youngest of the family. You will often find other children
not listed, having been among the very many infant deaths of the times.