Genealogy Chat

Top tip - using the Genes Reunited community

Welcome to the Genes Reunited community boards!

  • The Genes Reunited community is made up of millions of people with similar interests. Discover your family history and make life long friends along the way.
  • You will find a close knit but welcoming group of keen genealogists all prepared to offer advice and help to new members.
  • And it's not all serious business. The boards are often a place to relax and be entertained by all kinds of subjects.
  • The Genes community will go out of their way to help you, so don’t be shy about asking for help.

Quick Search

Single word search

Icons

  • New posts
  • No new posts
  • Thread closed
  • Stickied, new posts
  • Stickied, no new posts

Slartibartfast's Weekly Rant

Page 1 + 1 of 3

  1. «
  2. 1
  3. 2
  4. 3
  5. »
ProfilePosted byOptionsPost Date

Joy

Joy Report 10 Jan 2012 11:36

"I have done something about it. I have transcribed the parish registers"

- good :-) My OH is an online parish clerk for some Cornish parishes :-) - reminds me, I must give a nudge to OPC thread. - He bought fiches, transcribed them on a fiche reader in a library, came home and put them on the computer, and does look ups; the transcriptions are in the Cornish parishes database (free)
:-)

Slartibartfast

Slartibartfast Report 10 Jan 2012 11:12

Thank you for your replies;

Flick - I have done something about it. I have transcribed the parish registers and all the census returns for my village. If everybody did that, the world would be a better place wouldn't it?

What gave you the impression I was not a volunteer?

bmd - Respect. As for certificates, they all cost the same if you buy them direct from the GRO (£9.25)

Flick - GRO certificates will probably be the subject of next weeks rant - stay tuned.

MR_MAGOO - I wouldn't set up a website to make money from genealogy. The point that I am trying to make is that there are already many volunteers doing this work for nothing. All I ask is that they give a copy to a well established organisation such as FreeReg for the greater good. I bet you use FreeBMD. Any complaints?

Flick (again) - Most professionals charge for their time and expenses, not what information they supply. How do you know that bmd is not a volunteer?
You seem to know an awful lot about us.

GlitterBaby - Yes, FreeBMD, FreeREG & FreeCEN are all part of the same organisation. Lets support them wholeheartedly.

SylviaInCanada

SylviaInCanada Report 10 Jan 2012 01:37

Flick

I would not be at all surprised to find that professional researchers do not tell their clients that information has been found on free sites.


There have been times since I joined GR that there have been grave suspicions that someone asking for look-ups to be done by "helpers" has actually been doing those look-ups for other people, and is charging them ............... ie, professional researcher, or quasi-professional research, or someone trying to make a bit of money on the side.

I can think of at least 5 such cases.


and I'm sure they never told the "client" that the information had been found courtesy of other people ....... using services paid for by the unsuspecting "helpers"!


I do have a small listing of such requesters, which I started after getting suspicious of the sheer number of requests for many many names :-D


The one who has since made me laugh at the memory was the one who would post 15 or more (usually more!) threads 2 or 3 nights a week, asking for help with finding a name. It was a different name on each thread ................... so asking for as many as 50 to 60 different surnames a week. :-0

That went on for weeks and weeks last year. I stopped doing it after about the 3rd week, when I began to feel "used" ............... but that person continued to get help from others, until more and more helpers dropped away from those threads.



sylvia


edited ca 4:10 am Jan 10

GlitterBaby

GlitterBaby Report 9 Jan 2012 22:14

FreeCEN is another site where volunteers do the work.

Flick

Flick Report 9 Jan 2012 22:08

I can't imagine any professional researcher doing the work for nothing, so why should the people who spend time and money transcribing records be any different?

I wonder, do the professionals who use the free sites tell their clients that the info they are passing on didn't cost them anything?

MR_MAGOO

MR_MAGOO Report 9 Jan 2012 18:56

I'm pretty sure that if you ran a Genealogy site offering BMD's and other info you would like it to make money

If you don't like the thrill of the chase don't enter the competition.

Flick

Flick Report 9 Jan 2012 16:53

bmd

As you have been researching for so many years, I am astonished that you do not know that the place to get certs is from the GRO, who charge a standard fee of £9.25 including postage.

And I would think the idea of getting civil servants to put records on line to satisfy the needs of hobbyists would go down like a lead balloon with the majority of the tax-paying public

As a tax-paying OAP who does FH research, I'd be the first to complain at such an abuse of public funds.................

As you say, this is a HOBBY

Would you expect to be subsidising people who play golf for a hobby?

Or make model aeroplanes for a hobby?

Be realistic........please.

And, as I suggested to the OP.........if you want records on the net..........volunteer to do something about it

bmd

bmd Report 9 Jan 2012 16:05

I agree totally Slartibartfast - you're bang on,the people who do not want info put on the net for all to see are selfish,I am sure we would all pay a nominal fee to view parish records etc but the trouble is Genealogy is becoming a very expensive hobby,I have been a member of Ancestry.co.uk and Genes Reunited for the past 10 yrs but as I am retired I now find the £107 subscription, although worth it beyond my financial commitments,and therefore I have had have to use Ancestry ad hoc at a library, as the government closed my local library this now means a 10 mile round bus trip, so much easier if records were on line,parish records, workhouse, cemetery records (say before 1911) etc.
As you say these are public records and therefore local authorities should not be charging fees for the info and worse still allowing private companies to make millions out of what is after all PUBLIC PROPERTY.
Another thing that really bugs me is the varying cost of BMD certs depending where you purchase them, these were paid for by our ancestors originally and we are just getting copies, soit is fine that we pay for the copies but I have paid between £9 and £30 depending at what registry office and which local authority I buy them , surely this is not right.
To give an eg; if I buy my ancestors death cert in Newport reg office at one price and yet just 7miles away in Pontypool I will pay £5 more Why ? Elsewhere around the UK prices for certs vary WHY?
They say it is up to each local authority to set their prices I believe this is unfair, all certs should have a standard price immaterial of where purchased.
I put this point out on GR and received lots of replies disagreeing with me I just don't see it as fair play.
Genealogy is expensive enough however it is frustrating to be fleeced as usual by government please these are public records stop making a fortune out of us who are interested only in keeping our own records of our families, lets get the records on line and prevent companies inc government offices making money out of this wonderful hobby.
I am sure there are plenty of volunteers out there willing to help get the records on line if not lets take the money we are charge or certs and searches and get civil servants in registry offices or elsewhere in local authorities to put the records on line.

Flick

Flick Report 9 Jan 2012 15:26

As you have such a bee in your bonnet about getting records put on the internet, why not volunteer to help to do something about it?

Slartibartfast

Slartibartfast Report 9 Jan 2012 14:58

OK JoyKM, just for you I'll keep the rant active for one whole year.
Now, lets talk about the free and easy access to on-line databases held by FHS's. Are you with me or against?

SylviaInCanada - The Internet has made the world a smaller place but there is so much more we can do. It's hard enough when you live in central England, it must be really frustrating when you're that far away.

jax - go on, you know you want to !

DetEcTive - I wonder what would happen if you slapped a freedom of information request on the parish clerk?

Joy

Joy Report 9 Jan 2012 10:23

"JoyKM - The rant will remain for as long as its active. use it or lose it "

- every previous time I have posted in a thread of yours, later when I look for it in my threads, it has gone :-S ;-)

+++DetEcTive+++

+++DetEcTive+++ Report 9 Jan 2012 09:59

I so agree with Slarti, but can also understand the financial implications to the original transcribing FH groups.

What worries me more, are the parishes who refuse to hand their records over to the county Archives, or even their Diocese. On a grave hunting expedition a few years ago in deepest Kent, a Verger who started chatting proudly told me that they had retained theirs (someone has transcribed them for FS, and were charged for access). One only hopes that the record books won't be damaged or lost in years to come. From what he was saying, I got the impression that the Parish Clerk was the only person who had the key to the chest; it was unclear if it was kept in the church, or his house.

Partially prompted by my FH obsession, a friend has arranged for the records from his local church to be transcribed; unfortunately the person delegated has died and the remaining Parish council members are in a terrible mess trying to organise what has been done, to upload to the internet. This is another instance where the PR should have been given to the Archives for easy access, or to enable them to be transcribed by a group of people.

SylviaInCanada

SylviaInCanada Report 9 Jan 2012 06:50

as someone who lives overseas, I DEPEND on records being on the internet.

It is impossible for those of us who have left the UK ourselves, or whose ancestors emigrated, to do anything else.



so, yes, I would love it if even more records were uploaded.



I am lucky that my brother and my cousin started tracing our main name back in the 1980s ...... and that cousin lived in the ancestral area so could visit the local churches, as well as going in person to Somerset House.

I have a copy of all the work he did ................. he took the family all the way back to 1740, tracing all branches from the original couple.


and there it has stayed!

I have re-checked as mush as possible of their work ...... and it all pans out.


There are people around the world researching this family. There was even a One Name Study Group (now removed from online) ........... and no-one has managed to take the patriarch back any further than his marriage in 1740.


He appeared from that alien spaceship.

It has been possible to take his wife and her family back to the mid-1500's.




sylvia

jax

jax Report 8 Jan 2012 23:33

Yes you seem to move on very quickly, it is hardly worth replying

Slartibartfast

Slartibartfast Report 8 Jan 2012 23:28

Thank you for your replies.

JoyKM - The rant will remain for as long as its active. use it or lose it !
Blaine - Start your own rant, don't hijack mine.
Janet - I'm sorry, but the point I'm trying to make is that we SHOULD be using current technology. It's irrelevent whether people like computers or not, they are here to stay. Volunteers should donate their work to sites such as FreeREG for the greater good before giving it to their local FHS. If a society that exists solely on the good will of volunteer needs money to survive, then there is something fundamentally wrong.
MR_MAGOO - It is because people have wasted many hours of their lives in the good old days, doing everything manually that I want to change things. I too started before the advent of the Internet as a research tool. I fully agree with you that transcripts are not a primary source of information and that originals should be consulted, but the transcript will give one an idea if the query is worth persuing.
namelessone - Nice to see someone understands.
KenSE - I agree, the best case scenario would be scanned copies of the originals, but it would be difficult to do a search for a particular name.
jax - Sorry, I moved on.
grannyfranny - Exactly, that's how it was done in the old days. Nowadays we can put a man on the moon, so surely looking at what's on a computer in Suffolk isn't out of the question. (Suffolk was a county pick out at randon before anyone says anything!)

grannyfranny

grannyfranny Report 8 Jan 2012 17:48

Parishes are not obliged to offer their records to anyone, if they wish they can charge you to search through them. When I first started searching in about 1985 I spent a lot of time at my local LDS library, where they had microfilms of the GRO records, and their own IGI, plus films you could order. There was a map of the counties showing what percentage of parish records were on the IGI. At the time, Northumberland was 96%, lucky for me, but Somerset was 4%, so the only way to get Somerset records was to trawl round each church on foot. We were still waiting for the 1881 census records to be released.

As time went on, many Parish Record books were deposited at the local library/archives and you could search them there, usually for free, though some liked a donation.

And that's how we did it in the old days, I visited many record offices round the country, often cost me a couple of nights in a hotel, but I found stuff, and got to see and handle many of the original records.

jax

jax Report 8 Jan 2012 16:30

What happened to the other thread? you did'nt return to it....I agree with Joy

Kense

Kense Report 8 Jan 2012 16:04

I am not sure that Parish Records are public documents. I know most parishes are happy to donate their registers to the local Record Office, that is not always the case. Some parishes like to retain their records, I know there is one in Essex and I have seen some restrictions in the Suffolk records.

Another consideration is that by having more than one transcription available on line for a record, there is more chance of finding a correct transcription in cases where the writing is poor, or the original document is in a bad state.

Personally I would prefer more original images to be available on line.

nameslessone

nameslessone Report 8 Jan 2012 15:49

I went to a FHS centre which had the same problem with secrecy!!. Unfortunatley the 'little old lady' I got didn't really know how to use computers nor which questions to ask it.
Luckily for me that society usually treks up to our local Family History event - with experts on their computer.
But I still reckon I could have got a lot more if I had been able to use their database muself.

MR_MAGOO

MR_MAGOO Report 8 Jan 2012 15:44

Think yourself lucky that you can sit at home and view what's on the internet for free or by paying a fee. Others have had to go to County Record Offices up and down the country and search through countless microfiches for hours on end and come away no better off.

You can't research familytrees on the internet alone, you have to back it up with original documents.

BTW....the little old lady has probably done her tree without the help of internet.