Learn more about the English county of Nottinghamshire and its inhabitants with this collection of registers and records. Find your ancestor in parish registers, and learn when and where your ancestor’s baptism, marriage, or burial took place.
Learn more about the English county of Nottinghamshire and its inhabitants with this collection of registers and records. Find your ancestor in parish registers, and learn when and where your ancestor’s baptism, marriage, or burial took place.
This collection comprises eight publications:
Highways & Byways in Nottinghamshire, published 1924
History of the Parish of Gedling – Including Marriage Registers, 1558-1812
Nottinghamshire Marriage Licenses, Vol II Archdeaconry Court & Peculiar of Southwell, 1701-1853
Old Nottinghamshire, published 1881
Parish Register Transcripts of 24 Parishes Belonging to the Peculiar of Southwell, 1600-1700
Parish Registers of Warsop – Extracts with Notes, 1538-1912
The Nottingham Date Book, published 1884
Thorton’s History of Nottinghamshire, updated by John Throsby, published 1797
The digital images in this collection are presented in PDF form. Searching through a PDF can be different from searching through other record sets.
The search feature uses direct search: it will only search for the exact words you write in the search field. For example, if you search for John Smith, the results will give you pages with John and Smith.
All search results will bring you to the page on which your search word has been found and not to an individual transcript. You can then read through the page to find your result.
To search for your ancestor by their name, write it as it would appear in the original record; for example, if your relative was known as Will, it is likely that the name used in official documents was William.
If you are unable to find your relative on your first search, you can try different name variations; for example, if your search for William Smith yields zero results, try searching for W Smith.
Page numbers correlate with the individual pages of the images rather than the page numbers printed in the publication. Therefore, page one pertains to the first page of a volume.