Showing posts with label religion. Show all posts
Showing posts with label religion. Show all posts

Saturday, 11 April 2026

British Newspaper Archive releases Salvation Army's War Cry

If your ancestors were members of the Salvation Army, the British Newspaper Archive (www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk) has now uploaded the archive of the War Cry publication. The current release includes content from 1879-1985, but coverage is planned to continue to the present day, according to its description page at https://www.britishnewspaperarchive.co.uk/titles/BL/war-cry.

My grandmother was a member of the Salvation Army in Belfast as a child, with her mother and grandparents being staunch members. I am still trying to determine which branch they attended in the city, but have already found some clues that I will now pursue with the Salvation Army itself, via its International Heritage Centre (https://www.salvationarmy.org.uk/about-us/international-heritage-centre).

Happy hunting!

Chris 

Order Researching Ancestral Crisis in Ireland in the UK at https://bit.ly/4jJWSEh. Also available -Tracing Your Belfast AncestorsTracing Your Irish Ancestors Through Land Records, Sharing Your Family History Online, Tracing Your Scottish Family History on the Internet, Tracing Your Irish Family History on the Internet (2nd ed), and Tracing Your Scottish Ancestry Through Church and State Records - to purchase, please visit https://bit.ly/ChrisPatonPSbooks. To purchase in the USA visit https://www.penandswordbooks.com. Further news published daily on The Scottish GENES Facebook page.

Sunday, 2 November 2025

A visit to Glasgow Cathedral

Earlier this week I wrote an article about Glasgow to tie in with a conference happening next year, and as a part of this I ventured into the city to take some photographs to help illustrate it. On my shopping list was the Kelvingrove Museum, and Glasgow Cathedral, and so it was a little disappointing to discover both covered in scaffolding! However, I ventured into the Cathedral, and I thought you might like to see some of the images from what is a stunning building. The cathedral was built in 1136 on a site beside the Molendinar burn (stream), and is dedicated to Glasgow's patron saint, St. Kentigern, better known as St. Mungo. It is also located adjacent to the Glasgow Necropolis, our city of the dead. 

 

 

For further details on visiting the cathedral, see https://glasgowcathedral.org.

Chris

Order Researching Ancestral Crisis in Ireland in the UK at https://bit.ly/4jJWSEh. Also available -Tracing Your Belfast AncestorsTracing Your Irish Ancestors Through Land Records, Sharing Your Family History Online, Tracing Your Scottish Family History on the Internet, Tracing Your Irish Family History on the Internet (2nd ed), and Tracing Your Scottish Ancestry Through Church and State Records - to purchase, please visit https://bit.ly/ChrisPatonPSbooks. For purchase in tthe USA visit https://www.penandswordbooks.com. Further news published daily on The Scottish GENES Facebook page.

Friday, 15 March 2024

FindmyPast adds Irish 18th century religious censuses, and enhances Belfast and Ulster directories collection

FindmyPast has added the following 18th century Irish religious censuses, as sourced from transcriptions by Tenison Groves held at PRONI , as well as an update to its Belfast directories collection:

Ireland, 1766 Religious Census

This week's biggest new set consists of 20,505 transcriptions from the 1766 Religious Census. Although the original documents were lost when Ireland's Public Records Office was destroyed in 1922, these extensive transcripts were recorded by antiquarian and genealogist Tenison Groves prior to the fire.

From these records, you may be able to learn the name of the head of the household, the year, their religion, the parish and the county. The information recorded varies widely, because different enumerators recorded different details.

NB: Note that the Virtual Record Treasury of Ireland platform provides free access to a substantially greater version of this 1766 census at https://virtualtreasury.ie/gold-seams/1766-religious-census

 
Ireland, Census of Protestant Householders 1740

Secondly, we've also added transcriptions of a census that was taken of Protestant householders in 1740. The 15,957 records within this new set are from parishes in the counties of Antrim, Armagh, Derry, Donegal, Down and Tyrone.

Also created by Tenison Groves, these transcriptions contain details like a name, year, barony, parish and county.


Ireland, 1775 Dissenters' Petitions

This week's third and final new set is a collection of historic petition records. It contains approximately 4,000 names, of people who protested the Church of Ireland's sacramental tests in 1775. The petitions consist of dissenters' names categorized by parish, congregation, town, neighbourhood, or, in one case, barony.

Occasionally, members of the Established Church also signed the petitions. The lists typically specify whether signatories were dissenters or Established Church members. In cases where no denomination is indicated, the list contained names of both dissenters and Established Church members without differentiation.

While available for all Northern Ireland counties except Fermanagh, these records are most extensive for areas in Counties Antrim and Down.


Belfast & Ulster Directories

In addition to the three brand new Irish record sets, we've also made a significant update to an existing Irish collection. We added 951,127 Belfast and Ulster directory records, with both transcriptions and original images available for you to explore.

These new additions span 1831 to 1900, and contain over 900,000 names. With almost 70 years of history covered, they offer a detailed glimpse into what the North of Ireland was like in the 19th century.

Comment: There's no source cited for the additional directory records, but the year range suggests that these too may be from PRONI.  

For further details visit https://www.findmypast.co.uk/blog/new/protestant-householders-dissenters-petitions

Chris

Order Tracing Your Belfast Ancestors in the UK at https://bit.ly/BelfastAncestors. Also available - Tracing Your Irish Ancestors Through Land Records, Sharing Your Family History Online, Tracing Your Scottish Family History on the Internet, Tracing Your Irish Family History on the Internet (2nd ed), and Tracing Your Scottish Ancestry Through Church and State Records - to purchase, please visit https://bit.ly/ChrisPatonPSbooks. For purchase in tthe USA visit https://www.penandswordbooks.com. Further news published daily on The Scottish GENES Facebook page, on Threads at @scottishgenesblog and via Mastodon at https://mastodon.scot/@ScottishGENES.

Thursday, 20 July 2023

The 1851 Religious Census of Britain

If you have never heard of the 1851 Religious Census of Britain, read on! The following is an article that I originally wrote for the short-lived Your Family History magazine in the UK, in 2012. I have slightly updated it to take into account an additional find subsequent to its publication, and to update some links.

The 1851 Religious Census of Britain

The decennial census returns from 1841–1921 are some of the most useful records to help with our genealogical research, providing a once-in-a-decade snapshot of our ancestors’ lives, offering information about their occupations, birthplaces, and in many cases, their very existence. Although the census was first in fact recorded in 1801, we concentrate on using the records from 1841 onwards for the simple reason that these were the first to actually name every member of a household in the land, whilst the pre-1841 returns instead tend to be statistical in nature only. From 1801 to 1851 the censuses were initially carried out across Britain by the Home Office, before responsibility for the gathering of the records in Scotland was devolved to the new General Register Office for Scotland, established in 1854. The 1851 census is therefore the last census that was carried out across the length and breadth of Britain by the same legal authority.

What many people do not realise, however, is that 1851 also had one other distinguishing feature, in that there were in fact two other very separate census enumerations carried across the island on the same weekend as the regular decennial census. The first was an educational census, which enumerated details relating to all of the schools in Britain, including Sunday schools. The second was the Census of Accommodation and Attendance at Worship, better known as the 1851 Religious Census of Britain

The purpose of the Religious Census was to ascertain exactly what the religious provision for the country was, and indeed needed to be, at a period following some extraordinary recent developments. For one thing, Roman Catholicism had only relatively recently been granted a degree of toleration as a religion in Britain, via the 1829 Roman Catholic Relief Act. The reasons for slowly liberalising the discriminatory rules against Catholicism had been many throughout the late 18th and early 19th centuries. On the one hand, Ireland, a predominantly Catholic country, had become an integral part of the United Kingdom in 1801. On the other, the threat of a Jacobite restoration – and therefore of Catholicism becoming the state religion once more – had long since passed with the death in 1766 of the ‘Old Pretender’, James Francis Edward Stuart, the son of the deposed Stuart king James VII and II.

Whilst emancipation had finally granted toleration towards Catholicism, a far more pressing development by the middle of the 19th century had dramatically changed the numbers of Catholics residing in Britain – the Irish Famine. From 1845 the discovery of blight in the potato crops of Ireland and Scotland had soon caused death, hardship and hunger that had led to a dramatic migration of peoples across the British Isles. 

Thousands of Catholic refugees in particular had crossed the Irish Sea to the ports of Glasgow, Liverpool and London, desperate for food and a chance of survival, the authorities in their home land having failed to deal with the situation in anything like a humane and civil manner.

The migration of Irish Catholics to Britain was not the only major religious upheaval, however. Whilst the established church of Ireland, England and Wales was the Anglican Church, in Scotland this was not the case, with the Presbyterian based Church of Scotland (‘the Kirk’) the official church of the country. In 1843 a major ecclesiastical crisis transformed Scottish religious affairs for the next 80 years. At the annual General Assembly in Edinburgh, a long festering dispute between two wings of the Kirk, known as the Moderates and the Evangelicals, finally led to a massive schism, which came to be known as the ‘Great Disruption’. One third of the Kirk’s ministers walked out and established a new body, the Free Church of Scotland, the new institution being free from the constrictions of the law of ‘patronage’ (the right of landowners to decide who the ministers should be within what was supposed to be a democratic form of church worship).  

Britain in 1851 was therefore, in an ecclesiastical sense, in chaos, and a true picture was desired by the Westminster Parliament as to the rapidly changing religious make-up of the country. As with the decennial census, schedule forms were distributed to every church, chapel and religious establishment across the land, with a request that they be filled in on Sunday 30 March 1851, and then collected again by the local census officer. Unlike the regular census, however, the government did not seek to record the names of each and every person attending a service, but rather to gain a statistical overview on the numbers attending a service. The census was also completely voluntary.

The information requested on each census form included the name and description of the church or chapel, where it was located (the parish, superintendent registrar’s district, etc), when it was first consecrated, and under what circumstances it was first established – for example, was it the original parish church, or perhaps built as an additional facility? If a church was built after 1 January 1800, additional information was sought, such as who erected the building and at what cost. The questions then asked included on what basis a church was endowed financially, the number of spaces that were available within for worship (including ‘free’ and ‘other’ sittings), and an estimate of the numbers who had attended service at the church on census day, at the services in the morning, afternoon and evening. A follow up question also asked for an estimate of the average numbers attending in the 12 months preceding.

Whilst most churches in England and Wales did return the form, many thought the questions to be somewhat intrusive. Of the almost 34,500 forms distributed in England and Wales, not all were returned completed, or indeed at all. In Scotland, the return rate was particularly low, with the recently split Kirk still picking up the pieces following the Disruption.

Surviving census schedules from the religious census for England and Wales can be consulted at many County Record Offices across both countries, but they have also been digitised and made available to download for free via The National Archives’ Digital Microfilm project at https://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/help-with-your-research/research-guides/free-online-records-digital-microfilm/, or more directly at http://tinyurl.com/d75dtdy, arranged by county (below). In some cases surviving copies of the educational census are included alongside them. 

The situation for the Scottish returns, unfortunately, is bleaker. Not only did many churches refuse to return the schedules, but those that were returned have largely not survived, although I have found two examples that have from Morayshire, concerning Speymouth Parish Church and Gartmouth Preaching Station (below: NRS CH2/839/20/1B) - see https://scotlandsgreateststory.wordpress.com/2015/12/20/1851-religious-census-of-scotland-surviving-returns/

Fortunately, the records were gathered for a reason, and in 1854 reports were produced on the statistics generated, not only for England and Wales, but also for Scotland. The Scottish report is available online via HistPop at http://www4.histpop.org/ohpr/servlet/PageBrowser2?ResourceType=Census&ResourceType=Legislation&ResourceType=Essays&ResourceType=Registrar%20General&ResourceType=TNA&SearchTerms=1851%20religious&simple=yes&path=Results&active=yes&titlepos=0&mno=34&pageseq=1.

Although the report consists mainly of various statistical tables, the results will provide a real eye opener for those seeking to carry out their research exclusively through online resources such as ScotlandsPeople (www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk) and FamilySearch (www.familysearch.org). Of the churches that did make a return, some 904 were Church of Scotland, and a further 104 Roman Catholic. There were, however, some 427 United Presbyterian Churches, 824 Free Church congregations, 112 Episcopal Church returns, 168 independent congregations and 100 Baptist churches, with many other smaller groups. ScotlandsPeople mainly holds pre-1855 records from the Church of Scotland and Roman Catholic churches, and some dissenter congregation records, but not all! If you cannot find a baptism before civil registration commenced in 1855, a look at the county-by-county returns on the Religious Census Report can list the strengths of each religious denomination present at that time, which may help to provide some useful context. (For the existence of denominations in each parish, consult the slightly earlier returns of the Statistical Accounts of Scotland at https://stataccscot.edina.ac.uk/static/statacc/dist/home).


 The Religious Census recorded on March 30th 1851 was a one-off project, never to be repeated. If you have so far only consulted the regular 1851 decennial census, there may well be further useful information waiting to be unlocked from its findings with regards to your family history. 

Chris

Order Tracing Your Belfast Ancestors in the UK at https://bit.ly/BelfastAncestors. Also available - Tracing Your Irish Ancestors Through Land Records, Sharing Your Family History Online, Tracing Your Scottish Family History on the Internet, Tracing Your Irish Family History on the Internet (2nd ed), and Tracing Your Scottish Ancestry Through Church and State Records - to purchase, please visit https://bit.ly/ChrisPatonPSbooks. For the USA visit https://www.penandswordbooks.com. Further news published daily on The Scottish GENES Facebook page, and on Twitter @genesblog.

Friday, 30 June 2023

The Bible has been translated into Doric

If you're from the north-east of Scotland, and in need of a little religious instruction, help is at hand in the form of a new edition of the entire Bible translated into the Scots dialect of Doric for the very first time!

The translation has taken retired Aberdeenshire solicitor and church elder Gordon Hay some 17 years to complete, with the New Testament initially published in Doric in 2012 (http://www.doricbible.com), and the Aul' Testament to be published imminently.

For more about the new translation, including its formal launch this evening at Longside Parish Church at 7.30pm, visit https://doricboard.com/news/launch-of-the-doric-aul-testament-by-gordon-m-hay/ and https://www.northern-scot.co.uk/news/aul-and-new-testaments-translated-into-doric-317885/.

Chris 

Order Tracing Your Belfast Ancestors in the UK at https://bit.ly/BelfastAncestors. Also available - Tracing Your Irish Ancestors Through Land Records, Sharing Your Family History Online, Tracing Your Scottish Family History on the Internet, Tracing Your Irish Family History on the Internet (2nd ed), and Tracing Your Scottish Ancestry Through Church and State Records - to purchase, please visit https://bit.ly/ChrisPatonPSbooks. For the USA visit https://www.penandswordbooks.com. Further news published daily on The Scottish GENES Facebook page, and on Twitter @genesblog.

Tuesday, 21 March 2023

Review: The Covenanters of Scotland 1638-1690, by David Dobson

I've just received a review copy of the latest book from David Dobson, entitled The Covenanters of Scotland 1638-1690. Davidis a a Research Fellow at The University of Edinburgh and Honorary Research Fellow at the St. Andrews Institute of Scottish Historical Research.

As with most of David's titles, the book acts as a finding aid, in this case to help researchers locate information about those who fought on the side of the Covenanters, the adherents to the Presbyterian cause who resisted the imposition of episcopacy in Scotland, which was heavily promoted by the Stuart kings after their relocation to London from Scotland. The Covenanters cause originated in 1638 with the signing of the National Covenant, and continued until the Stuarts were deposed at the 'Glorious Revolution' of 1689-1690. Their decades long history was bloody, involving the Bishops Wars and the Killing Time, with many Covenanters forced into exile in Ulster and Holland, whilst others were transported to the American colonies and the West Indies.

David starts his book with a very concise summary of the events concerning the Covenanters. This is followed by a two page reference guide noting the various repositories and works that he has consulted to extract the names of those adhering to the Covenant, and nine pages of illustrations, before reaching the main body of work - the alphetical list of all the Covenanters that he has been able to identify. 

Each entry is short and succinct, usually with one reference cited, although some have a few sources to identify them. The following is a typical example:

  • MACKEN, WILLIAM, was captured at the Siege of Worcester in 1651, was transported via London aboard the John and Sarah bound for Boston in December 1651, landed there in February 1652, [SD.1.5-6] 

The SD reference here refers to a collection called the Suffolk Deeds, based in Massachussets (USA). In total, David has identified almost 2,500 Covenanters by name, with additonal information such as the verdict, date and vessel of banishment, place of exile, often additional particulars about the individual, and the source of the information recorded. At 264 pages, The Covenanters of Scotland 1638-1690 is a handy and concise guide to help with research into a tumultuous period within Scotland's history. 

The book is on sale at US $43 from https://genealogical.com/store/the-covenanters-of-scotland-1638-1690/. (I also see copies on sale at Amazon in the UK for £35.46, at https://www.amazon.co.uk/Covenanters-Scotland-1638-1690-David-Dobson/dp/0806359560/).

* For a review of David's previous publication, his two volume Scots-Irish Links, see http://scottishgenes.blogspot.com/2022/05/review-david-dobsons-scots-irish-links.html.

(With thanks to the Genealogical Publishing Company for the review copy)

Chris

Pre-order Tracing Your Belfast Ancestors at https://bit.ly/BelfastAncestors. Also available - Tracing Your Irish Ancestors Through Land Records, Sharing Your Family History Online, Tracing Your Scottish Family History on the Internet, Tracing Your Irish Family History on the Internet (2nd ed), and Tracing Your Scottish Ancestry Through Church and State Records - to purchase, please visit https://bit.ly/ChrisPatonPSbooks. Further news published daily on The Scottish GENES Facebook page, and on Twitter @genesblog.

Saturday, 18 September 2021

Scottish Catholic Records talk by Mary McHugh

The Catholic Family History Society has announced that it will be hosting a talk entitled Scottish Catholic Records, to be given by Mary McHugh of the Scottish Catholic Heritage Collections Trust (www.blairsmuseum.com) on Saturday 25th September 2021, at 2pm.

For further details visit https://catholicfhs.wordpress.com/2021/09/16/scottish-catholic-records/.


Chris

Just out, Sharing Your Family History Online is on sale at https://bit.ly/SharingFamHist. Tracing Your Scottish Family History on the Internet, at http://bit.ly/ChrisPaton-Scottish2 is also out, as are Tracing Your Irish Family History on the Internet (2nd ed) at http://bit.ly/ChrisPaton-Irish1 and Tracing Your Scottish Ancestry Through Church and State Records at http://bit.ly/ChrisPaton-Scotland1. Further news published daily on The Scottish GENES Facebook page, and on Twitter @genesblog.

Saturday, 5 December 2020

Mapping the Scottish Reformation database launches December 11th

The Mapping the Scottish Reformation project (http://mappingthescottishreformation.org) has announced that its database of Scottish clergy from 1560-1689 will be launching at 2pm in Scotland on Friday December 11th:

@MappingScotsRef
The wait is almost over. Mapping the Scottish Reformation launches on Friday, 11 December 2020. #reformazing #earlymodern #ScotHist data at your fingertips!

It was a fairly manic period of the Kirk's history, so this will be of massive interest to many.

While you are waiting, for a brief overview of the Kirk's history at this point, you can read my article at http://scottishgenes.blogspot.com/p/kirk-history.html...!

 

Chris

Pre-order my next book, Sharing Your Family History Online, at https://bit.ly/SharingFamHist. My book Tracing Your Scottish Family History on the Internet, at http://bit.ly/ChrisPaton-Scottish2 is also out, as are Tracing Your Irish Family History on the Internet (2nd ed) at http://bit.ly/ChrisPaton-Irish1 and Tracing Your Scottish Ancestry Through Church and State Records at http://bit.ly/ChrisPaton-Scotland1. Further news published daily on The Scottish GENES Facebook page, and on Twitter @genesblog.

Thursday, 27 February 2020

Did your Presbyterian ancestors engage in dirty dancing?!

In a discussion on AncestryHour a few nights ago (www.ancestryhour.co.uk) I happened to mention that an ancestor of mine, Andrew Henderson, was prosecuted in a Perthshire kirk session in 1752 for 'promiscuous dancing', also known as 'promiseray dancing'. Here's the account from the session minutes:

At Arntully 8th Decr 1752. After prayer by ye Modr Sederunt John Sprunt John Morice John Kea Elders & John Richie Deacon

The Officer having reported that according to appointment he had cited to this meeting the following persons viz: Andrew Henderson, in ye Miln of Airntully, Lillias Grigor, John Nathan & George Ramsays, James Stewart, Joseph Morice, John, Agnes & Elizabeth Mallochs, Mary Crookshank, John Grigor, John Gellatly & Emilia Bennet all in Arntully. They being called, they all compeared Except James Stewart, and they being Interrigate by ye Modr One by One if they had been guilty of the indecent behaviour of promiscuous dancing, They all answered in the affirmation. Then After the Indelacicy & Sinfullness of such a Practise was laid before them ye Modr together wt ye Aggravation of their Sin having got publick Warnings agt the same They were severally Interrogate […] they acknowledged their said conduct to be sinful & thro’ Grace resolved agt the same for the future, & also against the Countenancing I so far as Witness it in others. They all after much deal acknowledged & Resolved agreeably to ye Interrogation, Except John Ramsay, who after all dealing wt him would neither Acknowledge nor Resolve as aforesaid.

They were all Removed. Then ye session proceeded to consider what Censure to Inflict upon them, and after Deliberation upon ye Matter They agreed in regard of some circumstances in ye case of ye Persons who had fallen into ye forsaid Indecent behaviour, to List in an admonition of them wt certifica[tio]n That if they shall afterwards be guilty of such a practise, the Session will inflict a higher Censure upon them. And wt respect to John Ramsay the Session delayed ye Considerat[ion]n of his case till next Meeting & that both he & James Stewart be cited to attend.

They being called in, and after ye Mod[erato]r had intimated to John Ramsay what ye session had agreed upon wt respect to him all ye rest were admonished by ye Mod[erato]r in ye Name of ye Lord Jesus Christ the only King & head of his church, wt certifican That is all or any of them should be found guilty of such a sinfull practise again, ye session would inflict a higher censure upon them. And they were exhorted by ye Modr to watchfulness & Rependance upon the Lord. Closed wt prayer.

(Source: Associate Session minutes, Kinclaven, CH3/502/1/93, National Records of Scotland)

Many of us have ancestors who were guilty of the 'sin' and 'scandal' of 'antenuptial fornication', but to really enter the Scottish genealogy hall of fame, you need to have ancestors who were guilty of dirty dancing!

It turns out, however, that this was not just a Scottish thing. A huge thanks to genealogist Kirsty Wilkinson for flagging up the Twitter find of the century, in the form of an account called Promiscuous Presbyterians, denoted as a "BA-funded project led by@DrLeanneCalvert on the sexploits of Presbyterians in Ireland & N. America, 1717-1830". There is also a website, Promiscuous Presbyterians at https://promiscuouspresbyterian.wordpress.com, concerned with 'Sex, Scandal & Sin in the Presbyterian World, 1717-1830'.


Here's the blurb:

Sexuality and Social Control: Irish Presbyterians in the Atlantic World, 1717-1830.

This project explores the relationship between sexuality, religion and migration. It focuses on Presbyterians and investigates the ways that Presbyterian sexuality was policed in Ireland and North America, between the eighteenth- and early nineteenth-centuries.

Salacious stories of stolen trysts in backrooms, fields and forests; misbehaving ministers riding on horseback, seducing the wives of their church members; and promiscuous Presbyterian youths sneaking around behind the backs of their elders form the basis of this research. What did Presbyterian women and men in past centuries get up to under the sheets? At what point did sexual activity become illicit? How different were Presbyterian communities in Ireland and North America? In tracing this aspect of Presbyterian life, this project asks what we can learn about the family by placing sex and sexuality at the core of our research.

The project is currently funded by the British Academy/Leverhulme Small Grants Scheme (2020-21), supported by the Department for Business, Energy and Industrial Strategy (Ref: SRG19\190269).

Initial funding was received from the Presbyterian Historical Society USA, Research Fellowship Scheme, and the Anna Parnell Travel Grant, from the Women’s History Association of Ireland.


It sounds a fascinating project, and one I will certainly keep an eye on as it develops further!

DISCLAIMER: I can't dance to save my life. Coincidentally, I have no matches on my Henderson line through AncestryDNA yet either. The two things may be linked...) 



Chris

You can pre-order my new book, Tracing Your Scottish Family History on the Internet, at http://bit.ly/ChrisPaton-Scottish2 (out April). Also available, Tracing Your Irish Family History on the Internet (2nd ed) at http://bit.ly/ChrisPaton-Irish1 and Tracing Your Scottish Ancestry Through Church and State Records at http://bit.ly/ChrisPaton-Scotland1. Further news published daily on The Scottish GENES Facebook page, and on Twitter @genesblog.