Family History Research

For all births, deaths and marriages since 1837, you are almost certainly better off using Civil rather than Church records. The Family Record Centre provides access to some of the most important sources for family history research in England and Wales including births, deaths and marriages and census returns. You cannot consult the registers themselves directly; instead you use the indexes to order certificates. There is a long-running voluntary project to index the Victorian (1837-1901) records online; click here.

For records before 1837, and just occasionally after that, church registers are your best option. These consist of baptism, marraige and burial records for every parish in the country, and have been kept since the mid-sixteenth century - though many of the earliest registers are no longer in existence, and those that do exist are often almost illegible and very scanty in terms of information. Later records are particularly useful: baptism registers recording parents' names, and marriage registers giving father's names, for example. But don't forget that your ancestors may not have been members of the Church of England, or (more recently), may not have been married or buried by the church, or indeed baptised at all.

Parish records from the last few decades may still be kept in the respective parish churches, but the great majority of parish records from Guildford Diocese, including all the earliest, are kept at the Surrey History Centre in Woking. Staff at the Centre are happy to undertake simple, limited searches on email request; but for more protrected searches, you will need to do the work yourself, or employ a local agent to do it for you.

However, many parish records from this country and throughout the world have been indexed by members of the Mormon religion (thanks to their convenient belief in converting people posthumously). The results are accessible at thre online International Genealogical Index, which forms a good starting point for pre 1837 research. You should be aware, however, that the reacords are neither complete nor always entirely accurate; and references should always be checked against the original records when possible.

Obviously, there are many other sources of information for tracing your Surrey ancestors, including the ten-yearly censuses since 1841, local directories etc. Good genealogical sites for advice and further research include Genuki, the Society of Genealogists and GenForum.

Guildford Diocese itself holds no records whaich are likely to be useful to you, and so for further information, you should contact one or more of the agencies listed above. Happy hunting!

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Card fit for a Queen

Church school pupils impress judges with their entries in the diocese's Big Thank You Card competition to celebrate the Diamond Jubilee
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“Skydiving is fun, the fundraising is harder…” – Joy, 84

Partially-blind supergran skydiving for charity... again!
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Government agrees £30 million extra to resolve VAT

Unique heritage value acknowledged
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Building work due to start on Ruxley's new church centre

After six years of waiting and many twists and turns a £2.8million project is poised to begin.
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Football set to unite communities in a one-day tournament

People of all faiths and none will play for Woking's 'People of Faith Charity Football Trophy'.
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Archbishop Nominations Chairman appointed

Lord Luce appointed Chairman of Crown Nominations Commission
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Church urges rethink on Government removal of VAT exemption

Diocese urges swift support for petition against moves which would cost churches millions
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Back To Church Sunday 30 September 2012
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London 2012 Olympics & Paralympics

Olympics 27 July - 12 August, Paralympics 29 August - 9 September
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