* Find My Past appears to have the new GRO Index
- Jane
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Find My Past appears to have the new GRO Index
I have just been working on a new family and discovered that FMP appear to be using the new GRO index with the mothers surname.
This means you can search the whole index for a Surname and Mothers name combination, rather than in 5 year chunks and once for each gender.
This means you can search the whole index for a Surname and Mothers name combination, rather than in 5 year chunks and once for each gender.
Jane
My Family History : My Photography "Knowledge is knowing that a tomato is a fruit. Wisdom is not putting it in a fruit salad."
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- ColeValleyGirl
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Re: Find My Past appears to have the new GRO Index
Is it consistent throughout, Jane? They've had (seemingly random) elements of it in the past. Also, do they have the first name for mothers with common surnames, which the GRO seems to be intrducing?
Helen Wright
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- LornaCraig
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Re: Find My Past appears to have the new GRO Index
They have been steadily adding to it since they first started showing mothers' maiden names a few years ago. It's pretty good now, but I think there may still be a few gaps because I am still occassionally seeing entries where there is no mother's name in the index. (i.e.not even a repeat of the child's surname, which indicates the mother was unmarried).
I have not noticed any mothers' first names, but it's not something I have been looking for. If you give an example from the GRO index, Helen, I can check FMP.
I have not noticed any mothers' first names, but it's not something I have been looking for. If you give an example from the GRO index, Helen, I can check FMP.
Lorna
- Jane
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Re: Find My Past appears to have the new GRO Index
> Is is consistent
Not sure, I just noticed this week that most of the entries I was working on had the information. I have just managed to find 4 more children for one couple all of which were born and died between census and all fit neatly into the gaps in the existing children.
Not sure, I just noticed this week that most of the entries I was working on had the information. I have just managed to find 4 more children for one couple all of which were born and died between census and all fit neatly into the gaps in the existing children.
Jane
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Re: Find My Past appears to have the new GRO Index
They have probably been 'scraping' the added data from the GRO Online Index. Not aware that there is any other source for that information that they could use.
- ColeValleyGirl
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Re: Find My Past appears to have the new GRO Index
Lorna,
I can't find an example right now -- I remember it was pointed out in (I think) the LostCousins newsletter) and I looked at some examples at the time.
I can't find an example right now -- I remember it was pointed out in (I think) the LostCousins newsletter) and I looked at some examples at the time.
Helen Wright
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- AdrianBruce
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Re: Find My Past appears to have the new GRO Index
Sorry - are we talking FMP or GRO index here in relation to "no mother's name in the index"?LornaCraig wrote:They have been steadily adding to it since they first started showing mothers' maiden names a few years ago. It's pretty good now, but I think there may still be a few gaps because I am still occasionally seeing entries where there is no mother's name in the index. (i.e.not even a repeat of the child's surname, which indicates the mother was unmarried). ...
For the new GRO index, the Mother's Maiden Name, which is officially the name immediately before (first?) marriage, is taken from the surname prefixed by "formerly". Hence an unmarried mother in the new GRO index will have no "formerly" name and therefore the child of an unmarried mother will have a blank MMN. (Though I'm not sure about a woman who was married and, for this birth, is with the father but is unmarried to him... I think.)
Or were you talking about the FMP index? Which I have to say I'm not that familiar with having stuck to FreeBMD and the new GRO index so far - maybe it's time for me to look at the FMP one?
Adrian
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Re: Find My Past appears to have the new GRO Index
I was talking about the FMP index. They have been gradually adding mother's maiden name to their index of pre 1911 births for some time now. I don't know whether they are doing this by 'scraping' the data from GRO online, as Mervyn suggested, or collecting data from local family history societies which have accessed local register office records. But I have seen a few where the mother was unmarried and her maiden name has been shown as the same as the child's, rather than blank.
Lorna
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Re: Find My Past appears to have the new GRO Index
Oh good - I rather hoped you were. Apologies for doubting you!LornaCraig wrote:I was talking about the FMP index. ...
Well, checking my Grandpa's details for 1896, FMP has his mother's maiden name now and this must have come from the GRO as CheshireBMD are forbidden to publish MMNs for Cheshire East by the Registrar who took the view that if it wasn't explicitly permitted, then it was forbidden. (The Cheshire West Registrar, however, took the opposite view). I very much doubt that they are scraping the stuff on-line as I believe that this would come under the concept of database copyright whereby individual entries might not be copyrighted but the database as a whole is. Probably they've simply negotiated for a download from the GRO databases. The numbers of differences between the FreeBMD and new GRO indexes must surely mean that there needs to be a lot of manual(?) reconciliation, accounting for the gradual nature of things.LornaCraig wrote:... They have been gradually adding mother's maiden name to their index of pre 1911 births for some time now. I don't know whether they are doing this by 'scraping' the data from GRO on-line, as Mervyn suggested, or collecting data from local family history societies which have accessed local register office records. ...
I shall try to remember that, thanks.LornaCraig wrote:... But I have seen a few where the mother was unmarried and her maiden name has been shown as the same as the child's, rather than blank.
Adrian
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Re: Find My Past appears to have the new GRO Index
I wonder if FMP have decided to show the surname of an unmarried mother as the same as the child's, rather than leave it blank, to make the pre-1911 index consistent with their long-standing post-1911 index entries.
Also, while they are still working on adding the mothers' names, leaving the surname blank would make it impossible to know whether it was indeed an unmarried mother or an entry that FMP had not yet updated with the mother's surname.
Edit:
Having said that, I now find that FMP are inconsistent. Here's an example of the difference between GRO index and FMP index regarding single mothers:
Ann Elizabeth Roberts, born Q2 1861 in Brighton, vol 2B page 203.
GRO has mother's name blank, FMP has mother's name Roberts.
And here's an example where both FMP and GRO have the mother's name blank:
Douglas Spencer Colley, born Q4 1900 in Yeovil, vol 5c p 361.
(And FMP have definitely added mother's maiden names to other 1900 Yeovil births)
Also, while they are still working on adding the mothers' names, leaving the surname blank would make it impossible to know whether it was indeed an unmarried mother or an entry that FMP had not yet updated with the mother's surname.
Edit:
Having said that, I now find that FMP are inconsistent. Here's an example of the difference between GRO index and FMP index regarding single mothers:
Ann Elizabeth Roberts, born Q2 1861 in Brighton, vol 2B page 203.
GRO has mother's name blank, FMP has mother's name Roberts.
And here's an example where both FMP and GRO have the mother's name blank:
Douglas Spencer Colley, born Q4 1900 in Yeovil, vol 5c p 361.
(And FMP have definitely added mother's maiden names to other 1900 Yeovil births)
Lorna
Re: Find My Past appears to have the new GRO Index
Of course concluding that all children whose mother's maiden surname was the same as theirs were probably illegitimate would be inaccurate. I have numerous examples in my own research of people marrying spouses with the same surname and producing many offspring. Some were close to distant cousins, but not always?
The Mother's Maiden Name as recorded in GRO Index can also present the unwary researcher with problems when no corresponding Marriage Index entry can be found, as it suggests a variety of possibilities (apart from simple miss-indexing), including she was married before and the marriage was only indexed using her previous married name, they were not married when the children were born, they were married in another country, etc., etc. Examining such possibilities and solving those 'mysteries' can be frustrating but, for me, it's part of what adds interest and colour to some of those apparently ordinary past lives.
Mervyn
The Mother's Maiden Name as recorded in GRO Index can also present the unwary researcher with problems when no corresponding Marriage Index entry can be found, as it suggests a variety of possibilities (apart from simple miss-indexing), including she was married before and the marriage was only indexed using her previous married name, they were not married when the children were born, they were married in another country, etc., etc. Examining such possibilities and solving those 'mysteries' can be frustrating but, for me, it's part of what adds interest and colour to some of those apparently ordinary past lives.
Mervyn
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Re: Find My Past appears to have the new GRO Index
I too have noticed this and FMP is incomplete, I only record what is in the GRO entry as this is more likey to be accurate, but the FMP entry is helpful when searching as GRO indexing isn't 100% correct (but a fantastic free tool).
David Wilkinson researching Bowtle, Butcher, Edwards, Gillingham, Overett, Ransome, Simpson, and Wilkinson in East Anglia
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Re: Find My Past appears to have the new GRO Index
There is another option recently highlighted to me.mjashby wrote:The Mother's Maiden Name as recorded in GRO Index can also present the unwary researcher with problems when no corresponding Marriage Index entry can be found, as it suggests a variety of possibilities (apart from simple miss-indexing), including she was married before and the marriage was only indexed using her previous married name, they were not married when the children were born, they were married in another country, etc., etc. Examining such possibilities and solving those 'mysteries' can be frustrating but, for me, it's part of what adds interest and colour to some of those apparently ordinary past lives.
Mervyn
When I registered my parents' deaths (relatively recently in genealogical terms), I was not asked for ID; the only identifying information that they had was the "doctor's letter" - which only proved the identity of the "claimed deceased" - not of the person making the claim. Likewise the funeral directors accepted the death certificates as the only required ID. As the applicant for cremation my ID was not questioned. The only time my ID was checked was when collecting my mother's ashes - when I had to sign for them with the same signature as that on the application.
I have been trying to find a possible (illegitimate) birth in the 1950s - using the [Mother's Surname] = [Child's surname] as the initial filter - and not really getting a sufficiently short short list to start applying for birth certificates to see if the child who after birth had apparently "disappeared" with no further records might have disappeared due to being adopted (which is noted in the RHS of the certificate). I was in correspondence with a registrar who in essence eventually confirmed to be that
Of course this would be illegal, but if you wanted to hide an illegitimate birth that was one way to do it. Does make parts of our work virtually impossible. And we have no way of knowing how often this was done!If, in that time, a woman wearing a wedding ring walked in to the office, and said that she was Hilda Ruth Joyson and she wanted to register the birth of her daughter Jane Elaine Joyson, and gave her maiden name as Jones, she would be believed without asking for any proof and would issue a birth certificate in that name and make the requisite entries in the register.
Presumably similar levels of trust used to be shown when other records were created.
David
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Re: Find My Past appears to have the new GRO Index
Just as well the local vicar wasn't always so lax. I came across a baptism today where vicar had crossed though 'Husband and Wife's names' and changed it to just the wife with her maiden name. In a note alongside, he commented the couple were not married at the time of the baptism, but noted that they did marry later. What he didn't mention was that the husbands name changed from Steven on baptism to Herbert on marriage. I ask myself if Herbert's brother Steven was actual father of the childdavidf wrote:Of course this would be illegal, but if you wanted to hide an illegitimate birth that was one way to do it. Does make parts of our work virtually impossible. And we have no way of knowing how often this was done!If, in that time, a woman wearing a wedding ring walked in to the office, and said that she was Hilda Ruth Joyson and she wanted to register the birth of her daughter Jane Elaine Joyson, and gave her maiden name as Jones, she would be believed without asking for any proof and would issue a birth certificate in that name and make the requisite entries in the register.
Presumably similar levels of trust used to be shown when other records were created.
David
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