Great to find this great site. Well done to all those responsible.
I know I'm probably preaching to the converted but don't forget all of the fantastic free resources out there on the web.
Sites such as Freebmd, FreeReg, FreeCen, and of course the often neglected familysearch site. All great sites to access information, and for free. I'm sure there are many more as well.
And yes, as mentioned elsewhere, Google can be a great tool in itself. I have made many discoveries just by googling a nama and place.
We welcome any query on Who When Where. If you have previously posted it on another forum (including the old WDYTYA forum), please state this in your opening post - this will save people redoing the research which has been done before: they can look at it and possibly go further with it.
Free resources
Re: Free resources
I'd like to recommend www.dustydocs.com which has links to just about every family history resource available across the British Isles.
Re: Free resources
I’d second that, I’ve found a great deal of interesting stuff that way. In some cases a link has gone straight to FS images rather than the ordinary search.
Paul
-
- Posts: 377
- Joined: 15 Jun 2020, 07:27
Re: Free resources
Not forgetting the OPC projects (Online Parish Chest). E.g. www.lan-opc.org.uk, who are slowly working through the Parish Registers within Lancashire, transcribing and publishing the results on-line. Great effort, which deserves our full appreciation-thanks guys
Re: Free resources
https://Archive.org
Thousands of scanned books freely downloadable. ( just make a donation ) This is where the E bay parish register sellers get them from.
https://trove.nla.gov.au/
National library of Australia. Books, newspapers and high resolution scans of Ordnance survey maps on England from around 1830.
https://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-231925569/view#
click on bottom menu box for interactive map index, then you can load the map you want.
Thousands of scanned books freely downloadable. ( just make a donation ) This is where the E bay parish register sellers get them from.
https://trove.nla.gov.au/
National library of Australia. Books, newspapers and high resolution scans of Ordnance survey maps on England from around 1830.
https://nla.gov.au/nla.obj-231925569/view#
click on bottom menu box for interactive map index, then you can load the map you want.
Last edited by Templ4r on 01 Aug 2020, 12:18, edited 2 times in total.
Re: Free resources
another great free opc project http://www.opcdorset.org/
http://www.wsom.org.uk/Parreg.html free parish registers for West Somerset
http://www.wsom.org.uk/Parreg.html free parish registers for West Somerset
Sally
Re: Free resources
Crew List Index Project: http://www.crewlist.org.uk/
Good resource for anyone researching British merchant seafarers of the late 19th and early 20th century
Cornwall OPC Database: https://www.cornwall-opc-database.org/home/
West Middlesex Family History Society: http://www.west-middlesex-fhs.org.uk/default.aspx
I have Isleworth ancestors and this site has been a very helpful resource
Good resource for anyone researching British merchant seafarers of the late 19th and early 20th century
Cornwall OPC Database: https://www.cornwall-opc-database.org/home/
West Middlesex Family History Society: http://www.west-middlesex-fhs.org.uk/default.aspx
I have Isleworth ancestors and this site has been a very helpful resource
Re: Free resources
I was recommended by a friend to try the search engine Duckduckgo. Out of interest, I typed in my great aunt’s details. Up came a parish local history group. The group had transcribed all the parish records and added some additional research that members had done.The parish was where my grandparents were married. But they lived in London some 75 miles away from the parish. However, what had never occurred to me was that my mother and her brother were both baptised in that parish. My grandmother had gone back to stay with her sister who lived nearby whilst my grandfather was serving in the military. I’ve also found other useful information on Duckduckgo.