Just wondering what others do in respect of the Registration District, etc., on a Birth / Marriage / Death GRO Index record - do you consider this to also be the Place of Birth, etc, or do you leave the Place in the Birth fact blank on FH. From what I have read, the vast majority of BMD's are registered "locally" and therefore it is probably (?) fairly safe to assume that the Registration District is the locale of birth (or M or D).
Until now I have always ignored the Registration District (in terms of the Birth, etc., fact Place) but I am just wondering if I should perhaps treat it as the "real" Place unless I have information to the contrary?.
* GRO Registration Data & Place Data
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jbtapscott
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GRO Registration Data & Place Data
Brent Tapscott ~ researching the Tapscott and Wallace family history
Tapscott & Wallace family tree
Tapscott & Wallace family tree
Re: GRO Registration Data & Place Data
I use the registration district as the place the event took place if I have no other information. So that I know it is only a registration dustrict I call it eg. Patrington (RD), YKS. This distinguishes it from Patrington, YKS, where
I know the event did actually take place in the village.
Anne
I know the event did actually take place in the village.
Anne
- tatewise
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Re: GRO Registration Data & Place Data
Yes, I use a similar scheme to record the Place the Event happened as the Registration District.
Mike Tate ~ researching the Tate and Scott family history ~ tatewise ancestry
Re: GRO Registration Data & Place Data
I also tend to use Registration District, County as a proxy place of Birth/Death/Marriage until/unless I have a more accurate location. The only 'problems' I've encountered and have to manage are those Registration Districts that cross County Boundaries and a few that aren't 'true' place names. For much older records, I also tend to use 'the Parish of' where the only source information available is a Baptism/Burial Register Entry.
- Wilfreda99
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Re: GRO Registration Data & Place Data
I tend to leave the place and address fields blank, unless I am pretty sure that they coincide with the registration area. The quarter date is a clue and then I put the details of place, volume and page in the note. The people in my current project are born married and died in my village, but the registration district is 7 miles away in a different county. In fact thinking about it I probably should go back and review all such situations in my other projects, because the registration district name has often been different from the place. Although I suppose it only tends to apply ultimately to the more peripheral people for whom you don't later splash out on a certificate.