Archive for the ‘Interesting records’ Category

1851 census update - 13 counties go live

Friday, November 6th, 2009

We’ve added 13 complete counties the England and Wales 1851 census, which brings us tantalisingly close to completion.

You can now search for your ancestors in the below counties, which are all newly transcribed from a fresh set of images:

•Caernarvonshire
•Carmarthenshire
•Cardiganshire
•Monmouthshire
•Northamptonshire
•Denbighshire
•Pembrokeshire
•Montgomeryshire
•Herefordshire
•Brecknockshire
•Merionethshire
•Anglesey
•Radnorshire

What were your ancestors up to in 1851? Find out now.

New Welsh parish records dating from 1615

Thursday, November 5th, 2009

This morning we added 43,000 parish records for Montgomeryshire in Wales, which include baptisms, marriages and burials. They date from as early as 1615.

Combined with our existing records for Montgomeryshire and Wales, these new additions give you more chance than ever of tracing your Welsh ancestors from the early nineteenth century and beyond.

Find your Welsh forebears in our Parish Records Collection today

New parish records – trace your Wakefield ancestry back to the 1600s

Wednesday, November 4th, 2009

We’ve just added 276,000 new parish records for Wakefield in Yorkshire. These include baptisms, marriages and burials, and date back to the 1600s.

If you have gaps in your Wakefield ancestry or have been unable to get back beyond the 1837 cut-off for births, marriages and deaths, you may just find what you’re looking for in the new records.

Find your ancestors among millions of parish records today

Eight new 1851 census counties now live

Friday, October 30th, 2009

We’re only weeks away from completing the 1851 England and Wales census. We’ve just scanned, transcribed and added eight complete counties:

* Worcestershire
* Devonshire
* Bedfordshire
* Essex
* Cambridgeshire
* Gloucestershire
* Suffolk
* Cumberland

Locate your missing ancestors for the first time

We’re confident our transcription is the best you’ll find online. If you’ve struggled to find your ancestors on other versions of the 1851 census, the findmypast.com edition could for the first time lead you to them.

Find your ancestors in the 1851 census today

Halloween exclusive - spirits stalk UK homes

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

With Halloween just around the corner, findmypast.com has commissioned some spooky research to find out just how haunted Britain’s homes are. The results reveal that a staggering one in five Brits has felt some kind of ghostly or otherworldly presence in their home.

Spooky Scotland

Scotland seems to be Britain’s ghost capital – 23 per cent of those we spoke to admitted they’d felt a spooky presence in their home. London, it seems, is the safest place to spend Halloween, as just 17 per cent confessed to feeling a paranormal presence.

Discover who’s haunting your house

With ghosts apparently widespread in UK homes, more and more people are turning to the internet for an explanation. It’s estimated that two in five homes in England date back over 90 years. If your house was built before 1911, you can find out who lived there and perhaps uncover a skeleton or two with our 1841-1911 census collection.

If you’re staying in this weekend, why not get into the Halloween spirit and find out who could be haunting your home?

Find the root of your ghostly presence in the only complete online census collection (1841-1911).

1911 census subscription launched on findmypast.com

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009

We’ve just officially launched the first and only 1911 census subscription available anywhere online, making us the only site to offer a complete 1841-1911 census collection. You can now access the England and Wales 1911 census for a fixed fee and without the worry of spending PayAsYouGo credits.

Find out more about our full subscription

Special offer – Save 20% on a full subscription (offer ends in 10 days)

Our full subscription can be bought at the following special discounted rates, but only until 31 October:

12 month full subscription – £119.95 (includes 20% discount)
6 month full subscription – £74.95 (includes 20% discount)

Existing subscribers don’t lose out

If you’ve got an existing subscription, we’ll automatically discount the price to reimburse you for any time left on your old subscription, plus you’ll also get the 20% special discount. The refund on your old subscription will be calculated at a pro-rata daily rate to ensure you don’t lose out. The precise price you’ll pay is shown on our payments page.

Claim your special 20% discount, buy our full subscription today.

What’s so good about 1911?

1911 is the most recent available England and Wales census – it holds the key to your nineteenth and twentieth-century ancestors. The 1911 census contains information you simply can’t find elsewhere and without it your family history is incomplete.

See your ancestors’ handwriting in crisp full colour

For the first time you’ll see scans of the actual forms filled in by your ancestors. These can reveal the quirks of your ancestors’ handwriting, as well as any mistakes or extra comments they made, in crisp high-quality colour.

New, in-depth information

The 1911 census holds more information on your ancestors than any census before it. You can discover:

  • how long a couple had been married.
  • how many children were born to that marriage (and how many of them had died).
  • details of nationality.
  • more detailed occupational information.

We hope you enjoy the new subscription,

The findmypast.com team

Three more 1851 census counties – over three million new records

Friday, October 16th, 2009

We’ve just added three more complete counties to the 1851 census. You can now search for your ancestors in Middlesex, Hampshire and Surrey. As ever, these records are newly transcribed from a set of crisp new images. We’re confident our transcription is the best you’ll find online.

Find your ancestors in the 1851 census today

1851 census almost complete

Two thirds of the 1851 census are now available for you to search, and we’re just weeks away from completion. Bookmark this page and return regularly to hear about new developments first.

Seven complete 1851 census counties added

Friday, October 9th, 2009

Hot on the heels of our recent five-county 1851 census update, we’ve added seven more complete counties.

These newly-transcribed records give you the chance to search for those ancestors you can’t find on other versions of the census. And all the ancestors you’ve already discovered can be viewed again on our new high-quality images – probably the clearest and most faithful online reproductions available.

The new counties are:

  • Kent
  • Shropshire
  • Staffordshire
  • Cornwall
  • Lincolnshire
  • Leicestershire
  • Westmorland

Discover your ancestor’s precise age

1851 was the first census to reveal the precise age of each householder – on the 1841 census everyone over 15 had their age rounded down. This ‘rounding down’ policy has proven a perpetual source of frustration for family historians the world over. If an ancestor was alive in 1851 but had perished by 1861, our new records could well be the only way you’ll track down their birth record.

Find your forebears on our high-quality 1851 census images

More counties coming soon.

Five new 1851 census counties launched

Monday, September 28th, 2009

We’ve added five complete counties to the 1851 census, bringing it a crucial step closer to completion. That’s over 3.2 million new census records that are ready for you to search. The following new counties have been added:

* Yorkshire
* Warwickshire
* Cheshire
* Sussex
* Hertfordshire

Crisp new images and accurate transcriptions

As with our newly-completed 1881 census, the 1851 census has been freshly transcribed from a crisp set of high-quality images. If you’ve struggled to find your ancestors on other versions of the census, there’s a good chance that you’ll find them by searching the findmypast.com transcription.

Find your ancestors in the new 1851 census records now

More counties coming soon.

The 1881 census reveals the stories of Jack the Ripper’s victims

Tuesday, September 15th, 2009

The gruesome ‘Jack the Ripper’ slayings of 1888 sparked a pandemic of panic and fear, unlike any London had seen before. The identity of the killer still perplexes and fascinates history buffs today. But despite a wealth of conspiracy theories and numerous investigative books, it seems we’re still no closer to discovering who was responsible.

To mark the 121-year anniversary of the murders, and to separate the myths from the facts, findmypast.com has turned to the newly-completed 1881 census, which offers a snapshot of the victims’ lives just seven years before they met their tragic end.   

Modern cinema has portrayed the victims as young, lifelong prostitutes, struck down in the prime of their lives. But the 1881 census shows that by the time of their deaths they were mostly in their 40s, and had previously been living – at least on paper – respectable family lives.

Catherine Eddowes, who appears on the 1881 census as ‘Kate Conway’, is listed as a ‘charwoman’ and was living in Chelsea with her common-law husband, Thomas Conway (a ‘hawker’), plus their two children:

Catherine Eddowes on the 1881 census

Elizabeth Stride, who is believed to be the third victim, had worked as a prostitute in her 20s. But by 1881 (then aged 37), it seems she had escaped that life, and was living in Bow with her husband John stride, a carpenter:   

Elizabeth Stride on the 1881 census

Annie Chapman – whose story is perhaps the most tragic – was staying with her parents on the night of the 1881 census with her three children. She is listed as a ‘stud groom’s wife’. (Her husband, John Chapman, was living above stables in Berkshire, where Annie and the children later joined him):

Annie Chapman on the 1881 census

Annie and John Chapman’s eldest child, Emily Ruth Chapman, died in 1882 of meningitis, aged just 12. In the wake of the tragedy, both parents took to drink, which probably precipitated their separation, and started Annie Chapman’s descent into prostitution.

Mary Ann ‘Polly’ Nichols, and Mary Jane Kelly (the only victim in her 20s), are not found on the 1881 census, so they may have been walking the streets on the night it was taken. But Nichols, at any rate, was married with three children at the time of the 1871 census, so the reality, once again, has not been faithfully depicted by Hollywood.

According to contemporary newspapers, by the time of their deaths, none of the three victims we found on the 1881 census were living with their husbands. Poverty was rife in the East End of London, so it’s likely, following the breakup of their marriages, that these women turned to prostitution simply to survive – a decision which, ironically, led to their untimely deaths.