London Church Records

England London  London Probate Records 

London_Church_Records

Historical Background of London's Parishes
Click here to read a description of each parish within London City's environs from James Elmes,  Topographical Dictionary of London (published in 1831). Each parish is listed under the name of the patron saint to which it was dedicated, i.e. St Mary Abchurch, will be listed under the "M" section under "Mary", or, St Lawrence Jewery will be listed under the "L" section under "Lawrence", and St Andrew Holborn, under the "A" section under "Andrew".

Click here to read a description of the City of London from John Marius Wilson's Imperial Gazetteer of England and Wales (published in 1870-72). 

Census Records
British census records for 1841 through 1901 are indexed and imaged on the Ancestry.com website, which is accessed by subscription fee or may be available for free at a library near you. The census are also indexed and imaged on the findmypast.co.uk website, which is accessed for a per-use fee. Both websites are available to patrons for free at the Family History Libraryin Salt Lake City, and at some family history centers.

The Derbyshire Family History Society has created surname indexes to the 1851 and 1891 censuses. The indexes are available at the Family History Library.

Church Records
Dale Abbey was originally a private peculiar owned by the Stanhope family. It was annexed to the parish of Stanton by Dale in the 1960s. The church is dedicated to All Saints and records date from 1667. The parish registers and chest records are deposited at the Derbyshire Record Office in Matlock.

Records in the Collection of the Family History Library
The parish registers are not available on microfilm at the library, but marriages for 1667-1813 have been published in Phillimore's parish register series. The earliest general register for 1667-1731 has also been transcribed and published by the Derbyshire Archaeological Society in volume 22 of their publications.

Civil Registration
From 1837 until 1938, Dale Abbey was in the Stapleford sub-district of the Shardlow registration district. For information on obtaining birth, marriage and death certificates from 1837 to the present, see the Wiki article on England Civil Registration.

Probate Jurisdiction
Dale Abbey had a manorial court with peculiar probate jursidiction over the estates of persons who resided there.

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Neighboring Parishes
Include the names, and link to the parish pages, of the contiguous parishes.

Census
Add unique information about the censuses. Add links to online census records, and/or link to the Family History Library film/fiche numbers.

Church Records
Add information about location of Church of England and nonconformist records, including time periods covered, location of the original records, or Family History Library film/fiche numbers.

Cemetery Records
Add the names and condition of the cemeteries in the parish. Add information if each cemetery has been indexed, added to the Internet, published or the name of the group which is transcription the headstones.

Civil Registration
Add any unique facts about registration in the parish. Link to online sites to search for names, such as FreeBMD. Add the address, or link to the address, of the superintendent registrar.

Probate Records
For details about the probate records for this parish, click here.

Maps and Gazetteers
England Jurisdictions 1851 maps are based on multiple sources produced about 1851. Parish boundaries, contiguous parishes, civil registration districts and more are in this Web site. Go here to find a map for Pilton.

Web Sites
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See also links to sources for Dale Abbey at GENUKI.org.uk.

Parish History
1. Find the place where your ancestor lived in the first column. 2. Click on the court name in the second column to learn where to find the records and indexes. 3. Click on each name of the court in the third column if the record isn't found in the first court. 4. Search last the Prerogative Court of the Archbishop of Canterbury.

If no will is found, your ancestor may not have left one.