User:AnthonyJCamp

Anthony J. Camp, MBE, BA (Hons), Hon FSG, FUGA, FAGRA
Interested in genealogy as a child Anthony Camp was encouraged by the late Sir Anthony Wagner (subsequently Garter King of Arms) to become a research assistant at the Society of Genealogists in 1957 and in 1961 he organised its fiftieth anniversary exhibition ‘The ancestry of the common man’. Having taken an Honours Degree in Ancient and Medieval History at the University of London he was appointed Director of Research at the Society at the age of twenty-five in 1962 and then Director (and Company Secretary) in 1979.

His popular introduction to genealogy, Tracing Your Ancestors (1964), was followed by Everyone Has Roots (1978) and innumerable articles on the subject. He oversaw the first weekend course in genealogy in England in 1965. An early interest in probate records led to his compilation of Wills and their Whereabouts (1963, 1974) and to his Index to Wills proved in the Prerogative Court of Canterbury 1750-1800 (6 vols. 1976-92); the administrations for the same period (some 2,330 pages in 8 volumes) he typed in retirement. His published booklets have included My ancestor was a migrant (1987), My ancestors came with the Conqueror (1988), First Steps in Family History (1993) and Sources for Irish Genealogy in the Library of the Society of Genealogists (1998). The growth in membership of the Society of Genealogists, which rose from 1,500 to 14,000 in the period in which he worked there, and its ability to purchase freehold premises in 1968 and then to move to larger premises in 1984, owed much to his work. He oversaw the development of regular publishing and of a bookshop at the Society. His popular ‘Diary of a Genealogist’ appeared in the monthly Family Tree Magazine (UK) from 1984 to 1998 followed by monthly articles in Family Tree Magazine 1998-2003 and Practical Family History 2002-2003. Revised versions of many of these articles are now being included in the FamilySearch Wiki.

Anthony Camp lectured widely in the British Isles and overseas, speaking at the early Conferences in the States initiated by the National Genealogical Society (from 1981), at the Australasian Congress, Canberra (1986), at the Sesquicentennial Conference, Auckland (1990) and at the First Irish Genealogical Conference, Dublin (1991), and he accompanied ten study tours to the Family History Library in Salt Lake City (1989-2006). He initiated the highly successful series of national Family History Fairs in London in 1993.

He was involved in innumerable committees and campaigns to preserve and gain access to records (notably in connection with the Parochial Registers and Records Measure in 1978, against fees in county record offices, with amendments to the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Bill and with the campaign for access to the historical records of the General Register Office) and was the Convener of the British Genealogical Records Users Committee 1979-1997. Concerned for the improvement of technique and scholarship in genealogy and for its uses in biographical and historical studies he took a leading part in the foundation of the Association of Genealogists and Record Agents (AGRA) in 1968 (he was a Vice-President 1980-2011 and was elected a Fellow 2011) and was for many years External Assessor for the University of London courses in Genealogy and the History of the Family organised at Birkbeck College. His use of a wide variety of sources is illustrated in his most recent book Royal Mistresses and Bastards: Fact and Fiction 1714-1937 (2007).

Anthony Camp was a Trustee of the Marc Fitch Fund (1991-2003), a founder member of the Friends of The National Archives, is an Honorary Fellow of the Society of Genealogists (1982, the first elected), a Freeman of the City of London (1984), has the Award of Merit of the National Genealogical Society (1984), is a Fellow of the Utah Genealogical Association (1989), and Honorary Member of the Society of Australian Genealogists (1997), was President of the Federation of Family History Societies 1998-2000, has been President of the Hertfordshire Family History Society since 1982, and was awarded the Membership of the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire for services to the Society of Genealogists in 1999, the first genealogist to be so honoured.

Anthony Camp features in Who’s Who (1993 to date) and in Debrett’s People of Today (1990-97).

For his earlier contributions to the FamilySearch Wiki see the User Pages for ‘AnthonyCamp’, the two not having amalgamated in the change-over in 2011.

Anthony Camp has contributed the following articles to the Wiki:


 * Agricultural Labourers: Sources for Labourers in an Agricultural Community
 * Aliens and immigrants in England and Wales
 * Apprenticeship in England:overview
 * Apprenticeship in London and Borough Towns
 * Parish Factory and Charity Apprenticeships
 * Bank of England Will Extracts
 * Church Courts in England and Wales
 * Civil Service Evidences of Age
 * Clergy of the Church of England
 * Dead end or new beginning?
 * An admission to copyhold property
 * England County Records
 * Directories in England and Wales
 * Divorce in England and Wales
 * Doctors, Physicians, Surgeons, Dentists and Apothecaries
 * Electoral Rolls or Registers in England
 * London Foundling Hospital: Reclaimed Foundlings
 * Guardianship Bonds in England and Wales
 * Hearth Tax in England and Wales
 * Illegitimacy
 * The Irish in England
 * England Land and Property
 * Lawyers in England and Wales
 * The London Gazette
 * Marriage Allegations, Bonds and Licences in England and Wales
 * Marriage Settlements in England and Wales
 * Non-parochial registers in England and Wales
 * British births, marriages and deaths overseas
 * Parish Administration in England and Wales
 * The Parliamentary Archives (UK)
 * Poll Books In England and Wales
 * Probate Fees and Valuations in England and Wales
 * Proving a pedigree in England
 * Schools and their records
 * Public Schools and their records
 * Removal orders in England and Wales
 * Settlement Examinations in England and Wales
 * Six short lessons in family history in England
 * Trinity House