The new index also includes age at death even pre-1866 Here's an example:
Name: Age at Death (in years): BENSON, WILLIAM THOMAS 2 Order GRO Reference: 1864 D Quarter in WIGAN Volume 08C Page 24
and the corresponding FreeBMD hits:
Births Jun 1862 (>99%) BENSON William Thomas Wigan 8c 52
Deaths Dec 1864 (>99%) Benson William Thomas Wigan 8c 24
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However, there is a quirk with deaths of children under 2 years old. In spite of the header "Age at Death (in years)", they seem to give Age at Death (in months) for children under 2. E.g.:
Name: Age at Death (in years): BENSON, ARTHUR 2 Order GRO Reference: 1909 D Quarter in WIGAN Volume 08C Page 24
and the corresponding FreeBMD hits:
Births Sep 1909 (>99%) Benson Arthur Wigan 8c 59
Deaths Dec 1909 (>99%) BENSON Arthur 0 Wigan 8c 24
There are also burial records online for these twp kids:
Surname Forename Age Place of Death Date Year Notes Grave Cremation Religion Benson William Thomas 2 ½ yrs 6 Shelmerdine St. 11-Nov 1864 H 450 C of E Benson Arthur 2 mo 13 Gordon St 01-Nov 1909 I 524 * R C http://www.wiganworld.co.uk/stuff/cemetery.php?opt=cemetery
NB My ma-i-l is buried at this cemetery, so I know the date given is date of burial, not date of death.
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The new GRO Index also shows the baby's names in full, where Freebmd only shows an initial for second and subsequent forenames.
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Note that the GRO index search now includes mother's maiden name for pre 1912 births.
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A typical FreeBMD hit is:
Surname First name(s) District Vol Page Births Sep 1837 (>99%) SMITH John Preston 21 420 [info] [spectacles]
Clicking on the Preston link, we learn that: The district Preston is in the county of Lancashire; information about it can be found "here" and clicking on the "here" link tells us the villages, etc in Preston Rego District, the sub-rego districts (which include Walton-le-Dale) and where the registers are now (Lancashire RO, which has its main office in Preston). Clicking on the page # shows all the people pn that page of the GRO register (so if this were a marriage, then barring transcription problems, it would also show the spouse, but not identify precisely who that was), Clicking on the info link allows you submit a correction, or else add a postem note to the entry e.g., if I'd bought this cert, I could post a transcription there to help others sort out their John Smiths. Clicking on the spectacles lets me view an image of the GRO index page containing this entry - if you're going to order this b.cert, you should always confirm it yourself. With the data from the index - name, year, quarter, district, vol#, page#, you can buy a cert from the GRO for 7 GBP - without this info it costs more.
The GRO is not the only place one can buy a BMD cert from. One can also buy it from the RO for the district where the event occurred - Preston here. Some local ROs have their own indices online - check out: http://www.ukbmd.org.uk/index.php?form_action=local Here we want http://www.lancashirebmd.org.uk/
It's worth checking them out here too - the local indices often contain different details.
Lancashire Birth indexes for the years: 1837 Surname Forename(s) Sub-District Registers At Mother's Maiden Name Reference SMITH John Walton-le-Dale Preston SLATER WLD/1/3
As we see here, Preston adds the mother's MS. We also learn the rego was in Walton-le-Dale sub-rego district. At the local level, each sub-RD has it's own B/D registers, so the local index will say which one it's in, in some guise, maybe just the reference. Sometimes, the site looks that up for you (although here one might have reasonably guessed WLD was Walton-le-Dale). Incidentally, the 10 names on this GRO page all have a local ref of WLD/1/3 or WLD/1/4, I would presume 3-4 were the local pages, but often the local index gives entry numbers as part of the ref. I think the usual practice was for local ROs to go thru their registers, one by one, listing out the stuff for that quarter, and then ship the list out to the GRO, who just bound the stuff from several ROs into giant volumes, and then the GRO compiled their index to these volumes.. The situation for marrs was similar, except the contributing registers would come from the churches, rather than the sub-RDs (augmented by the registrar's own register which contained register office marrs plus those RC and non-conformist marrs that the registrar attended. Since an RD typically contains a lot more churches than sub-RDs, local ROs don't like searching for marrs without knowing the church. Since the local RO's ref usually refers to an entry #, the local RO index will usually resolve the problem of who wed whom that the GRO index leaves open.
The GRO index added age at death in 1866q1, mother's MS for births in 1911q3, and spouses surname for marrs in 1912q1.. These were the only changes before 1969.
FreeBMD also has an essentially complete set of images of the GRO index thru 1983, so even if the quarter you're interested in is not (fully) transcribed, you can still check it out. The usual search hit gives, e.g.,: Births Sep 1837 (>99%) Here >99% is the fraction transcribed - essentially all of this register. One can access images via the "view images" link on FreeBMD's home page.
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Worth a nudge back up the board
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Hi Jonesey,
Thanks for the tip, I am desperate to find my gt grandfathers birth but as I've had help on here and it's not been found feel that it wasn't registered even though it was around 1884.
I'm now off to try again.
Chris
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Thanks, and yes, Janet, it IS satisfying (a bit obsessive though, don't you think!!!!) But I just do as I'm told...... and watch, listen and learn, AND don't forget all the help and encouragement from the great and good just to make we lesser mortals think we are getting on alright!!! cheers, Jill
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nudge - and to say well done Jillian! Much more satisfying to look for yourself don't you think? Jan
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Thanks a lot, Jonesey, One giant leap for my kind! love Jill
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Hi Jillian,
Yes it looks as if you are indeed doing it correctly.
The volume and page numbers are indicators as to the location of the record in the GRO index. It is quite common to see the same reference numbers relating to up to as many as 8 individuals whose marriages were recorded on the same page. Normally the total records are an even number, 2,4,6, 8 but occasionally you will find an odd number of people listed. This is because the original may have been mistranscribed for an individual or perhaps the original had been illegible making it impossible to transcribe.
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IT WORKS !!!!!! Was a bit put off when TWO matching numbers came up for the marriiage I was looking for.
What's with the SAME number for two marriages?
Found Mary Sophia WALKER (b 1860) West Derby 8b 1002 and Charles BENNETT AND James JONES Looked on 1901 census and found Mary and Charles Bennett in Liverpool and her Durham birthplace gave her away (although it was Gateshead)
AM I DOING IT RIGHT? Thanks loads and loads for the guidance Jill
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Jillian, that's good to know! have fun and good luck. Jan
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Thanks Jonesey and Janet. I have certainly not been using freebmd to its full potential. I'm off to try it out! Jill
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Jonesey, this is such a co-incidence! Just took it upon myself to start a thread re. using freebmd, popped back to board and saw this! Not trying to steal your ideas I swear, didn't even know about this thread. Jan
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I am currently transcribing Baptisms for Lan-OPC and to add to Jonesey's Thread , I have realised that the spelling of names is down to "The Scribe" who made the original Entry . The writing of such 'Scribes, Reverends & Curates, varied then as it does today so sometimes it is really difficult to read what is badly written
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Do not rule out a birth as you think it is in the wrong registration district as they have changed over the years.
Always worth checking out the registration districts http://www.ukbmd.org.uk/genuki/reg/
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Civil birth registration began in England and Wales in 1837. It was not until 1874 however that failure to register a birth became punishable by a fine. During the interim years it is known that many births went unrecorded. That can lead to a lot of frustration for family historians who are trying find a record of an ancestors birth.
More frustration can be caused by the fact that there is no such thing as standardized spelling of names so although the birth may have been registered initial efforts to find it fail because the spelling you are entering differs from the one recorded at the time.
Another possible reason why efforts might fail is that your ancestors birth may not have been registered in the surname that you thought. Illegitimate births were very common and the birth may well have been registered under the mothers surname.
Well those are the problems, so what is the solution?
The free site www.freebmd.org.uk (Currently has births between 1837 and about 1955) has an excellent search engine which means that the registration index can be searched in many different ways:
You can search using forenames only. This may reveal registration under the mothers maiden name.
You can use wildcard options such as * which may reveal minor differences in the spelling of a name.
Something as simple as adding on or leaving off the letter “S” can make the difference of whether we can find our ancestors record or not. The most powerful search tool is ticking the “Phonetic search surnames” option which will reveal not only spelling variations but also all like sounding possibilities. E.G. Symonds, Simmons or Higg, Higgs ect. This option may also reveal a record which was mistranscribed.
Try all of the options and you may find that “Elusive” record is revealed.
Good luck.
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