Prestatyn, Flintshire, Wales Genealogy

Guide to Prestatyn, Flintshire ancestry, family history, and genealogy: civil registration, census records, and parish register transcripts.

History
Prestatyn is a seaside town, community and ecclesiastical parish in Denbighshire, Wales.

Before 1974 the town was in the historic county of Flintshire and, between 1874 and 1996 in the County of Clwyd. In 1996 it became part of the modern county of Denbighshire.

"PRESTATYN, a joint township with Nant, in the parish of Meliden, hundred of Prestatyn, county of Flint, 6 miles (N.N.E.) from St. Asaph. ... This place, from which the hundred derives its name, was anciently a lordship, and had a castle, which is suppposed to have been erected at a very early period by the native British inhabitants of the district. This fortress was wrested from its ancient owners, in the reign of Henry II, by the English, who had possession of it in the year 1167, when it was destoyed by Owain Gwynedd, Cadwaladr, and Rhys, Prince of South Wales, who then reduced the whole of Tegengel to the power of Owain."

For more information on Prestatyn see:
 * | Prestatyn at Genuki

Parish Chest
Vestry minutes (DATES) are at the [URL ARCHIVE].

Church warden accounts (DATES) are at the [URL ARCHIVE].

Tithe Records
The tithe agreement date for Prestatyn was DATE.

Nonconformist Chapel Records
XXXX-XXXX denotes that the information has not been compiled yet.

Civil Registration
The Civil Registration District for Prestatyn is DATESANDNAMESCIVREG.

Poor Law Unions
Visit the England and Wales Poor Law Records page for more information.

Websites

 * Vision of Britain - Prestatyn
 * Prestatyn Parish Church at Clwyd FHS
 * Prestatyn War Memorial at Clwyd FHS