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Collins Tracing Your Family History. Anthony Adolph
Читать онлайн.Название Collins Tracing Your Family History
Год выпуска 0
isbn 9780007373567
Автор произведения Anthony Adolph
Жанр Справочная литература: прочее
Издательство HarperCollins
The 1901 and 1911 censuses have started to appear online at www.census.nationalarchives.ie. Otherwise, if you know a general location, you can check the heads-of-households lists, which accompany the census forms, for a townland or street name. The other approach is to seek an address from a GRO certificate first. Some heritage centres have their own indexes, which can be searched for a fee.
You can also check applications for old age pensions made between 1908 and 1921 where, as proof of age, extracts from the later-destroyed census returns could be submitted. The applications are indexed: copies are at TNA, PRONI and the SoG and www.pensear.org.
NORTHERN IRELAND
CHANNEL ISLANDS
ISLE OF MAN
QUICK REFERENCE
See also Main Sources in Useful Addresses.
REGISTRAR GENERAL OF SCOTLAND
www.gro-scotland.gov.uk
For the Channel Islands and Isle of Man addresses, see here
A census enumerator collects a complete census form.
EXAMPLES OF CENSUS RETURNS IN OTHER COUNTRIES
AUSTRALIA
CARIBBEAN
INDIA AND PAKISTAN
KENYA
NEW ZEALAND
SIERRA LEONE
SOUTH AFRICA
QUICK REFERENCE
See also Main Sources in Useful Addresses.
CENTRAL BUREAU OF STATISTICS
NEW ZEALAND NATIONAL ARCHIVES
CHAPTER SEVEN THE MAIN WEBSITES
The internet has not created any new genealogical records, but it has made some of them much more readily accessible than before. The plethora of sites out there can be very confusing, not least because a lot of data is duplicated.
ORIGINAL DATA
The records that you can use for tracing your family tree are clearly described in this book. Increasingly, the most useful ones are being indexed, digitised, and made available on CD-Rom and the internet. Besides producing datasets from original records, the internet sites will often license the use of their data elsewhere.
This is all to the good, but it can make life very confusing for first-time genealogists, though nobody now can keep pace with the number of different sites, and the way many of them change. Equally, there is no duplication-free way of navigating through these sites. Which of them represents the best value really depends on your individual case – one site may contain vastly more useful information for one person than it does for another. I can only advise you to have a quick look at