Scotland
Genealogy Links
General
Register Office of Scotland.
New
Register House holds all the "hatches, matches and despatches"
for the whole of Scotland. The births, marriages and deaths are
on a computerised database and copies of all the church parish
records have been microfilmed and are available there for research.
A fully searchable on-line index of these records are available
at Scottish
Origins. The records available are the indexes of all surviving
Old Parish Registers of births/baptisms and banns/marriages from
1553 to 1900, indexes to the Statutory Registers of births and
marriages from 1855 to 1899, indexes to the Statutory Registers
of deaths for 1855 to 1925 and an index to census records for
1881, 1891 and 1901 (with images of actual pages for 1891 and
1901). One additional year of births/deaths/marriage index data
is added per annum. For a payment of six pounds sterling, about
ten US dollars, a customer will be able to see and download up
to 30 computer-screen pages of index data. For an additional ten
pounds the customer will be able to highlight a particular index
entry and send an electronic order for an extract of the full
record to which the index entry relates. The General Register
Office not only provides up to date statistics about births, marriages,
divorce and deaths and Census Records
but also the most frequently used Popular Forenames,
1900 - 2000 in Scotland and also Surnames.
The
Hall
of Fame Web pages illustrate entries for some famous people
including the baptism entry for Rob Roy McGregor.
Ancestry.com
(www.ancestry.com)
is the leading resource for family history online. The site offers
over 1 billion names in over 3,000 unique databases.
GENUKI:
Scotland.
Part of the UK and Ireland Genealogy project, there is a vast
amount of information including an extensive description of (non-Web)
genealogical archives and bibliography of publications on Scottish
family history, plus libraries, cemeteries, census information,
gazetteers, maps, newspapers etc. Each of the Scottish counties
(as structured before the 1975 local government reorganisation
destroyed centuries of the traditional counties) is looked after
by an expert in that county; the information held is therefore
not identical but reflects what is available in a given area.
The
individual counties are:
Aberdeenshire
Angus
Argyll
Ayrshire
Banffshire
Berwickshire
Bute
Caithness
Clackmannanshire
Dunbartonshire
Dumfriesshire
East
Lothian
Fife
Inverness-shire
Kincardineshire
Kinross
Kirkcudbright
Lanarkshire
Midlothian
Moray
Nairn
Orkney
Peeblesshire
Perthshire
Renfrewshire
Ross
& Cromarty
Roxburghshire
Selkirkshire
Shetland
Stirlingshire
Sutherland
West
Lothian
Wigtownshire
Scotland
"GenWeb"
Project. Provides help for genealogical researchers investigating
Scotland to find local resource and reference information, including
a multi-part Introductory Guide to help people who are just starting
out to research their family history. The Scotland GenWeb is a
part of the UKGenWeb Project. As with GENUKI: Scotland (above)
each of the former Scottish counties (prior to restructuring in
1975) is allocated to an expert in the individual areas.
Indexes
of Parishes,
Births, Deaths and Marriages.
Genealogy
Gateway. This is a vast site with over 20,000 genealogy and
resource listings including 2,000 surname homepage listings, commercial
genealogy products and services and a site search engine.
Cyndi's
List of Genealogical Sites on the Internet has 17,000+ URL's
on the subject. There is a specific page dedicated to Scottish
Genealogical Links but really the entire set of pages is worth
a thorough investigation for anyone researching their family tree.
Cemeteries
on the Internet. There are links to cemeteries representing
the resting places of more than 4,000,000 people from United States,
United Kingdom, Norway, Finland, Canada, Australia and New Zealand
on this page, as well as much information about cemeteries worldwide.
Sites are listed in order of population size they represent.
Church
of the Latter Day Saints. One of the most important sources
of genealogical information are the Family History Centres operated
by the Church of the Latter Day Saints (the Mormons, often referred
to in genealogy pages as "LDS"). The microfiche record
they have made of all the births and marriages recorded in all
the parish records in Scotland is a treasure trove and this site
lists the addresses and phone numbers of the locations of the
Family History Centres in USA where these records can be viewed.
(Copies of the microfiche are available in main libraries in the
UK also). The LDS database is available On Line and contains 13
million records of births and marriages abstracted from Scottish
old parish registers. Also available are similar records for over
400 million people from the UK, USA, Europe, Asia and Japan.
Burke's
Landed Gentry. The classic multi-volume Burke's Landed Gentry
has been a standard reference work for generations of researchers
into the genealogy of all the major titled and untitled families
in the UK. The first volume of the 19th edition, due to be published
in August 2001, covers all the people who have power and influence
in Scotland. So it not only covers all the expected aristocracy
such as peers, lords, barons, knights and clan chiefs but also
senior figures in politics, the military, law, religion, education,
business and the arts. The Web site promises to have an on-line
searchable database from spring 2001 onwards and you can order
the printed version via the site.
National
Library
of Scotland.
Online
Scottish Names Research
Directory.
The
Scots/Irish
Immigration of the 1700s.
Scots
Members of the French
Nobility.
Hebridean
Scots of the Province
of Quebec.
Scottish
Immigrants to North America, 1600s-1800s
Learn the immigrant's name, age, and gender; country of origin;
arrival date; and much more.
Scottish
Connection in Kansas,
USA.
Scottish
Texans.
Scottish
Emigrants to Upper Canada in 1820
(Paisley
Township)
(Ramsey
Township)
Passenger
Lists.
There are a large number of sites containing detailed lists of
passengers on emigrant ships from Europe to most parts of the
world. Most are not focused on Scotland alone so you you may have
to do some digging through these sites:
The
Immigrant
Ships Transcribers Guild offers a variety of materials obtained
from many different sources that have been transcribed by many
different members of the Immigrant Ships Transcribers Guild community.
Ships
to America (American
Plantations and Colonies) This site is definitely worth a
visit if you are researching ancestors who emigrated to USA.
Passenger
Lists (New
Zealand) Denise and Peter have an excellent website full of
online genealogy records and this page of over 200 passenger lists
is no exception.
The
P.E.I.
Ships Database. Dave Hunter maintains a very popular site
on Prince Edward Island, Canada genealogy and this page is a part
of it. The database of ships is split into 5 pages. The list of
ships is comprehensive, but only some ships have attached passenger
lists. The first passenger list is dated 1770, the last 1864.
There are also some passenger lists for ships from PEI to New
Zealand.
Immigrant
Ships caring some of the first Colonists to the West Michigan
area. Specifically to South Ottawa County, and the Northern part
of Allegan County.
The
following ships carried the "Foreign
Protestants"
to Nova Scotia between 1750 and 1752.
Cornwallis
Ships to Halifax
- 1749.
Ships
Bound for Nova
Scotia Between 1750 and 1862.
Passenger
arrivals at Port
Chalmers, New Zealand, March 1848 - January 1851.
Cyndi's
List of Ships
& Passenger Lists
Ship Passenger Lists from the Mailing List
Scotch-irish-l@rootsweb.com
Australia/New Zealand Passenger
Lists
Emigration / Ship Lists
and Resources
Passenger Lists for emigrants,
arranged by country
of arrival
Links to passenger
lists, ships and ship museums
The Bounty
Scheme; twenty ships that brought 4000 Scots to Australia
between 1837-40.
1770..Campbeltown
to North Carolina, USA on "Edinburgh " intending
passengers and passengers in the hold.
1771..Campbeltown
to Island of St Johns, Canada on "Edinburgh "
1772..Greenock
to Prince Edward Island, Canada on "Alexander "
Olive
Tree Genealogy! Free
Ships' Passenger lists.
Scottish
Archive Network. Potentially, this site will provide access
to the catalogues of nearly 50 Scottish archives participating
in the Network. It will also provide access to the wills of Scots
from 1500-1875 as well as a host of other resources for anybody
interested in the written history of Scotland. However, as of
January 2001, the site is a tantalising glimpse of what is to
come.
Censuses
on the Internet. There are links to over 6,500 censuses on
this page, providing a wealth of information for genealogy researchers
tracing ancestors from UK, US, Canada, or Europe.
Free
downloadable parish
locator Software.
Scots
at War Project & Commemorative War of Honor.
Bevin
Boys. From December 1943 until the end of the war, 48,000
Bevin Boys were directed to work in the coal mines. Bevin Boys
represented 10% of male conscripts aged between 18 and 25 during
the Second World War and were chosen by ballot to serve in the
mining industry rather than in the armed services.
Born
in the Border Counties of Scotland extracted from the marriage
index of Victoria, Australia 1853-1895.
Scottish
Documents. This site offers access to a fully searchable database
of over 300,000 names of "defuncts" in Scottish Wills
from 1500-1875. These names are linked to over 2 million high
quality colour digital images which are available for purchase.
Mapping
Scotland.
Local
Centres of Genealogical Information
Scottish
Border Family History. This page lists the families referred
to (sometimes briefly) in Web page articles on the Scottish Borders.
The
family names of
the Border Reivers.
Tay
Valley Family History Society provides help and assistance
to those researching their genealogical history in that area.
Glasgow
and West of Scotland Family History Society has help, advice
and links.
Central
Scotland Family History Society promotes the study of family
history in Central Scotland.
The
Aberdeen
& North-East Scotland Family History Society is a registered
charity and was founded in 1978. The Society exists to assist
and promote the study of genealogy and family history based on
the North East corner of Scotland. This area covers the old counties
of Aberdeenshire, Banffshire, Kincardineshire and Morayshire.
For
my home county there is the Fife
Family History Society.
This
Angus
Surname Interest List,which is operated in association with
the TAY VALLEY FAMILY HISTORY SOCIETY and GENUKI , invites submissions
from family historians and genealogists with specific interests
in the county of Angus.
Shetland
Family History Society has hints on researching Sheland ancestors,
a map of Shetland showing the parishes and links to related sites.
The
Highland Family History Society. The Society welcomes membership
from interested family historians in all parts of the world. The
Society has a library located within the public library at Inverness,
Scotland and publishes a journal four times a year.
Highland
Clearances. A rapidly-growing digital archive on Scotland's
Highland Clearances. Concentrating on first-hand accounts it tells
the stories of where people came from and the places to which
they went. Photographs, articles, statistics, people and passenger
searches, maps and much more.
Inhabitants
in the Burgh
of Selkirk, 16th June 1817.
County
Map
of Scotland.
Counties
of England, Wales and Scotland
prior to the 1974 Boundary Changes.
Dunning
Parish Historical Society has assembled a Graveyard Survey
- a complete list of inscriptions on the gravestones in St Serf's
kirkyard. The first headstones date from 1623.
Many
of the Clan and Family Web sites have genealogy pages. (The Rampant
Scotland Clan and Tartan page has an extensive list of these).
The
Baronage
Web Page includes a description of Hamilton of Cadzow from
1272 to the 16th century and also Fraser of Lovat genealogy.
Scottish
Heritage, in addition to providing historical background to
a number of clans and families, also has a very useful Genealogy
Help page.
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