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Windsor
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The Centre
A great space for society members and the public to use and to enjoy. It’s a lively meeting place and friendly focal point for everyone interested in heritage and history — including family, local and social history
The Centre is our only office. Our branches hire premises for any face-to-face branch meetings but do not have office space
Opening hours
Day | Time |
---|---|
Mondays* *except public/bank holidays |
10:30 – 15:00 |
Tuesdays | 10:30 – 16:00 |
Last Thursday of the month | 10:30 – 16:00 |
First Saturday of the month | 10:30 – 14:30 |
Research
The Centre provides the area’s best family history research facility. Today’s researchers need to know how best to search for, organise and present information using digital sources and vital offline resources. It’s FREE to visit and informed advice and support are always at hand from society volunteers
Education
The Centre hosts a lively activities and events programme, aimed at widening researchers’ knowledge and deepening their understanding. Talks, walks, courses and workshops deliver updated perspectives and help place research findings into better historical context
Research Tools
FREE use of key online research tools improves prospects of finding that elusive ancestor. Each service offers different record sets, geographical coverage, search capabilities and levels of detail. That is why The Centre offers access to Findmypast, The Genealogist, the British Newspaper Archive and Ancestry’s national and international records
Print
For a small charge, The Centre offers A3 and A4 print services for research findings.
Events Programme
July 2024
18
Create an enduring family tree in YourTrees
Jul, Webinar
EVENT DETAIL
20
World War Two RAF Records for Family Historians Workshop
Jul, Webinar
EVENT DETAIL
22
Getting the most out of your Membership Workshop
Jul, Webinar
EVENT DETAIL
25
A Potpourri of Social History Talks – Summer Series
Jul, Webinar
EVENT DETAIL
25
Tilehurst’s Big Houses: Dellwood, The Laurels & Kentwood
Jul, Webinar
EVENT DETAIL
27
DNA Special Interest Group – July
Jul, Webinar
EVENT DETAIL
August 2024
05
Face-to-Face Family History Advice Clinic Sold Out
Aug, The Centre for Heritage & Family History
EVENT DETAIL
06
Tour of Historical Goring
Aug, Goring Village
EVENT DETAIL
06
August Natter Group
Aug, Webinar
EVENT DETAIL
08
The Watlington Hoard
Aug, The Centre for Heritage & Family History
EVENT DETAIL
No event found!
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Berkshire Family History Society
The Centre for Heritage and Family History
2nd Floor, Reading Central Library
Abbey Square
Reading
Berkshire
RG1 3BQ
Find us easily with what3words:
+44 (0) 118 950 9553 (only manned during opening hours – but please do leave a message outside those times)
There are SIX branches across historic Berkshire …
… providing friendly help and advice, key resources and information for your family history research — wherever in the world your ancestors came from
Meetings
Meetings usually take place monthly (except July and August)
Come to a meeting, join in and chat with other family historians. You will meet researchers of all ages – and at all stages — from newcomers to family history to the more experienced. Everyone is welcome — you do not have to be a society member to attend.
Each meeting features a topic likely to be of relevance and interest to all researchers. Speakers are experts in their respective fields.
Some branches are online only while others use a hybrid of face-to-face and online according to the season
Audience
This society and its Branches are not just about Berkshire.
The people you’ll meet have research interests that range across the UK, even worldwide. Draw on their experience and advice, you’ll be surprised at how much you can learn.
Drop-in advice sessions
Society volunteers run regular drop-in advice sessions at many of Berkshire’s libraries, including those at Abingdon, Bracknell, Cippenham, Mortimer, Newbury, Thatcham, Wantage and Wokingham
Details are given in the Events Programme
Collect your names. dates and questions, bring them with you, and get some friendly help and advice with your research and in breaking down those brickwalls – wherever your ancestors came from.
The society also hosts occasional open evenings at Royal Berkshire Archives in Reading, where you will find almost all of the surviving original records of the ‘old’ Royal County of Berkshire, including those for the parishes of the Vale of the White Horse, and Abingdon/North Berkshire.
Literature
- Society branches often have a monthly newsletter.
- Society members can borrow from a range of family and local history books from branches with their own libraries.
- Some branches offer society publications for sale.
Events and Open Days
Meet society volunteers at outreach events held throughout the year in Berkshire and central southern England. See calendar for details.
The society usually supports regional shows like The Family History Show and family history fairs, open days and workshops staged by local organisations and nearby county family history societies.
An extensive Berkshire Search facility (including the publications mentioned above) is usually available on a PC at most outreach events too.
At these events, you can usually buy CDs and other items from the growing range of society publications, including:
- indexes and transcriptions of original Berkshire Parish Registers
- an index to Berkshire’s probate records
- full details, with photographs, of monumental inscriptions.
- historic maps
- directories
- electoral rolls
- calendarised Berkshire overseers’ papers
- Berkshire coroners’ reports
- Berkshire and the First World War
- Berkshire War Memorials.
If you have ancestors in the historic ‘old’ county of Berkshire, transcriptions in the three Berkshire Baptisms, Berkshire Marriages, and Berkshire Burials CDs (containing some 2 million names in total) are essential finding aids. These CDs include parish records in North Berkshire and the Vale of the White Horse too.
Meetings
When
Jul
13:00 – 17:00
Summer Outing to Buscot Park
Thursday, Buscot Park
EVENT DETAIL
Sep
19:30 – 21:30
Anne Marsh Caldwell a Victorian Novelist and her family library
Monday, Abingdon Branch
EVENT DETAIL
Oct
19:15 – 21:30
The Earl and the Pharaoh
Wednesday, Webinar
EVENT DETAIL
Oct
19:30 – 21:30
Discussion Group
Monday, Abingdon Branch
EVENT DETAIL
Nov
19:30 – 21:30
A Stroll through Berkshire’s Graveyards
Monday, Abingdon Branch
EVENT DETAIL
Jan
19:30 – 21:30
Sarah Churchill, Duchess of Marlborough: taking the waters in Bath, Scarborough & Windsor Great Park
Monday, Abingdon Branch
EVENT DETAIL
Feb
19:30 – 21:30
Discussion Group
Monday, Abingdon Branch
EVENT DETAIL
Mar
19:30 – 21:30
Drovers’ Roads in Oxfordshire and Beyond
Monday, Abingdon Branch
EVENT DETAIL
May
19:30 – 21:30
A Man and his Shed – The Story of Cowley Concrete
Monday, Abingdon Branch
EVENT DETAIL
No event found!
Time
Doors open at 7.15pm
Parking
FREE parking adjacent to the Centre
Welcome
Non-members are welcome at Branch meetings and events. A donation of £5 would be appreciated.
Agenda
- Most meetings feature a talk by a speaker who is a recognised authority on their subject
- Q&A.
- News items
- Refreshments
- General discussion
History
From Saxon times until 1974, the Royal County of Berkshire extended to the western edge of the city of Oxford, separated only by the River Thames. That river marked Berkshire’s northern border and it is entirely fitting that Abingdon — Berkshire’s principal settlement for so many years — continues to host the most northerly of Berkshire Family History Society’s six local branches.
Other Activities
- Advice Sessions
- Local Projects
Abingdon Branch members provide advice occasionally at local events in and around Abingdon and Wantage. You can bring your family history questions to these sessions and get some fresh ideas and answers on how you can move your research forward.
From time to time, similar events are held at other locations in the area.
Check the events calendar to find out where and when you can next seek advice on your family history research questions
Projects are a vital part of the work of the society. They are important in helping to preserve historic records and making information from those records accessible to a wider public. Without such project work, there would be few if any accurate indexes or transcripts accessible to for you as a family historian.
Examples of Abingdon Branch projects include the recording of memorial inscriptions in the churchyard of St Peter’s Church, Drayton, near Abingdon, with the transcriptions published on a CD, available from the society.
Meeting Location:
Long Furlong Community Centre
Boulter Drive
Abingdon
OX14 1XP
GPS 51.687976, -1.278497
what3words: ///guilty.life.comic
Contact
Any questions about Branch activities?
Contact
Dave Purling
Branch chairman
Find Us on Facebook
Meetings
Calendar
Jul
14:15 – 16:30
Finding Great Grandad: A practical introduction to tracing WW1 soldiers
Friday, Bracknell Branch
EVENT DETAIL
Jul
14:00 – 16:30
Drop In Advice Session
Tuesday, Wokingham Library
EVENT DETAIL
Aug
14:00 – 17:00
Drop In Advice Session
Thursday, Bracknell Central Library
EVENT DETAIL
Aug
14:00 – 16:30
Drop In Advice Session
Tuesday, Wokingham Library
EVENT DETAIL
Sep
14:00 – 17:00
Drop In Advice Session
Thursday, Bracknell Central Library
EVENT DETAIL
Sep
14:15 – 16:30
Take him to the Tower
Friday, Bracknell Branch
EVENT DETAIL
No event found!
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Time
Doors open at 2:15pm
Parking
FREE car parking next to the centre
Agenda
- Most meetings feature a talk by a speaker who is a recognised authority on their subject
- Q&A.
- News items
- Short contributions from local members
Other Activities
- Advice & Outreach Events
- Community Talks
- Local Projects
Branch members provide advice at Bracknell Library, Town Square, Bracknell, RG12 1BH on the second Thursday of the month from 2pm – 5pm and at Wokingham Library, Carnival Hub, Wellington Road, Wokingham, RG40 2AF on the last Tuesday of the month from 2pm – 4.30pm.
Bring your questions and get help, fresh ideas, suggestions and answers on how you can move your research forward.
(Please check the calendar above for these event dates.)
Some members give talks to community groups, in return for a donation to help the work of the society.
To request a speaker, please use the Contact Box
Projects are a vital part of the work of the society, helping to preserve historic records and making information more accessible to a wider public. Without project work, there would be few if any accurate indexes or transcripts accessible to you.
Branch projects include recording memorial inscriptions in the churchyards of Ascot All Saints and Priory Road Burial Ground*, Crowthorne St John*, Wokingham All Saints*, Wokingham St Paul, Wokingham St Sebastian* and in Wokingham Free Church Burial Ground*.
* available on CD from the Shop
Branch Meeting Summaries
Catch up with what you missed or remind yourself what was said, with summaries of the Bracknell & Wokingham Branch meetings
Local Family History – member led talks
‘Finchampstead and its Lords of the Manor’ by Christine Cox; and Michael Rea`s talk entitled ‘An odd Fyshe’
Monumental Inscriptions – Talk
We undertake these inscriptions to publish for family history research and allow access by distant and overseas members
Christmas Crackers – Members’ Evening
DECEMBER ZOOM MEETING REPORT An enjoyable social evening prior to Christmas with a quiz entitled ‘Christmas’ and one entitled ‘Family History’ both presented by our Quiz Master, Bryan Pledger. Most of the questions were multiple choice so as to give…
Canal People – Joint meeting with Bracknell & Wokingham
Joint meeting 20th November 2020 Speaker: Martin Buckland A canal is defined as an artificial waterway which may join up rivers whilst rivers are natural waterways. Canals have locks and need to be able to climb hills such…
It All Started With A Letter From Colditz – talk by Christine Wootton
Report on the joint meeting of Bracknell & Wokingham Branch with Abingdon Branch …
The Edwardians – talk by Tony King
Reported by Christopher Singleton The Edwardian Era, sometimes referred to as the Golden Era, spanned the years from the death of Queen Victoria in 1901 to the outbreak of the First World War in 1914. Tony King’s talk provided a…
Meeting Location:
The New Priestwood Community Centre
Priestwood Court Road
Bracknell
RG42 1TU
GPS 51.421300, -0.764280
what3words: ///care.truck.expand
Contact
Any questions about Branch activities?
Contact
Sandra Barkwith
Branch chairperson
Welcome
Non-members are welcome at Branch meetings and events. A donation of £5 would be appreciated.
Meetings
What
Oct
19:15 – 21:30
The Earl and the Pharaoh
Wednesday, Webinar
EVENT DETAIL
No event found!
Welcome
Non-members are welcome at Branch meetings and events. A donation of £5 would be appreciated.
Agenda
- Most meetings feature a talk by a speaker who is a recognised authority on their subject
- Q&A.
- News items
- Short contributions from local members
Other Activities
- Community Talks
- Local Projects
Some members give talks to community groups, in return for a donation to help the work of the society.
To request a speaker, please use the Contact Box
Projects are a vital part of the work of the society, helping to preserve historic records and making information more accessible to a wider public. Without project work, there would be few if any accurate indexes or transcripts accessible to you.
The Computer branch is working on producing a CD containing transcripts and images of the memorial inscriptions in the churchyard of Woodley St John.
Meeting Location:
Contact
Any questions about Branch activities?
Contact
Gillian Stevens
Branch chairperson
Meetings
What
Sep
14:00 – 16:00
A Nice Quiet Life
Wednesday, West Berkshire Museum
EVENT DETAIL
Oct
19:15 – 21:30
The Earl and the Pharaoh
Wednesday, Webinar
EVENT DETAIL
Nov
14:00 – 16:00
Cope Hall: A Women’s Training Colony
Wednesday, West Berkshire Museum
EVENT DETAIL
No event found!
Time
Face-to-face meetings begin at 14:00, doors open 13:30
Zoom meetings begin at 19:30, doors usually open from 19:10
Parking
Ample provision around the museum, but payable
Welcome
Non-members are welcome at Branch meetings and events. A donation of £5 would be appreciated.
Agenda
- Most meetings feature a talk by a speaker who is a recognised authority on their subject
- Q&A.
- News items
Lending Library
Borrowing a title from our meetings at the museum is possible with advance notice, or at other times by prior arrangement by emailing Judith Thomas
View the books in our library here
Other Activities
- Advice & Outreach Events
- Trips
Branch members provide regular help and advice sessions in locations across West Berkshire, including Newbury Library. See calendar for details.
The branch organises occasional trips to destinations such as The National Archives and county record offices.
Branch Meeting Summaries
Catch up with what you missed or remind yourself what was said, with summaries of the Newbury branch meetings
Newbury Branch Annual Report 2023 – 2024
Newbury Branch Annual Report 2023 – 2024
The years immediately after the Great War saw the greatest impetus for erecting war memorials, but there was no co-ordinated programme, resulting in no national pattern or model; each community made its own decisons. Memorials served as a focus for…
West Berkshire war memorials
Wills can reveal much about family relationships that had been hidden during a testator’s life
Where there’s a will there’s an argument
From 1714 to 1837 women experienced significant disadvantages by comparison with men in legal status, education, employment and social life.
Women in Georgian Newbury
Susan Ellis described a number of search tricks which enabled her to find missing ancestors.
Lost, Stolen Away or Strayed
Evernote is an app which allows you to collate and store your family history research findings in a variety of formats, and access via a powerful search engine on several synched devices.
Organising your research with Evernote
West Berkshire Museum
The Wharf
Newbury
Berkshire RG14 5AS
GPS 51.40152 -1.32134
What3words ///eggs.kinks.softly
Contact
Any questions about Branch activities?
Contact
Nick Prince
Branch chairman
Meetings
What
Sep
19:45 – 21:00
Help, My Ancestor Has Vanished!
Thursday, Reading Branch Webinar
EVENT DETAIL
Oct
19:15 – 21:30
The Earl and the Pharaoh
Wednesday, Webinar
EVENT DETAIL
Nov
19:45 – 21:00
Research at Home Using Your Local Library’s Online Resources
Thursday, Reading Branch Webinar
EVENT DETAIL
Dec
19:45 – 21:00
Quiz, short talks and Q&A’s
Thursday, Reading Branch
EVENT DETAIL
No event found!
Time
Doors open at 7.15pm
Parking
Ample FREE car parking on site
Agenda
- Variety of talks aimed at
- all interests and abilities
- newcomers to experienced researchers
- given by experts in their field.
- July – visit to a place of local historical interest or to a museum or archive collection.
- December meeting is usually ‘home grown’ – members share their own research, often on a linked theme.
- Meetings start with notices and general interest items before our speaker gives their talk.
- Afterwards there is time for questions and general discussion.
- Advice & Help
- Community Talks
- Local Projects
Other Activities
Reading Branch members provide help and advice at The Centre for Heritage and Family History — the Berkshire Family History Society’s base in central Reading.
Members give talks to local Reading groups and organisations, or provide help at advice sessions and events in local libraries to encourage and help newcomers and experienced family historians alike in their family and local history research.
To request a speaker, please use the Contact Box
Projects are a vital part of the work of the society, helping to preserve historic records and making information more accessible to a wider public. Without project work, there would be few if any accurate indexes or transcripts accessible to you.
Branch Members help transcribe original documents in Berkshire Record Office, for eventual publication by the society
Meeting Summaries
Where there’s a will, there’s usually an argument
Reading Branch meeting 29th September 2022 Speaker: Sue Ellis Sue took us on a liberally illustrated look at wills, what they look like, what terminology they include and what information they can give a family historian. Wills were first recorded by the ancient Greeks mainly to explain how to dispose of a person’s estate of there were no male heirs. Roman wrote wills too. 272-337AD saw the start of the church’s involvement in wills. From the Middle Ages, there are two wills still in existence, those of King Alfred and his nephew. During this time wills were proved exclusively by […]
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02 October 2022
20 November 2020
Canal People – Joint meeting with Bracknell & Wokingham
Joint meeting 20th November 2020 Speaker: Martin Buckland A canal is defined as an artificial waterway which may join up rivers whilst rivers are natural waterways. Canals have locks and need to be able to climb hills such as The Cotswold Canal for example which climbs 106.68 metres. Canals were good at moving fragile goods such as pottery. A horse carrying about 2 cwt was slow and could break the product compared to a barge with a horse pulling 20 cwts in safety. Irrigation was the origin of the canals. Between about 520 and 510 BC the Persian Emperor, Darius I […]
Photographs and memorabilia
Reading Branch meeting 29th October 2020, conducted on Zoom Speaker: Members – Peter Caton, Richard Brown, Richard Croker and Graham Vockins Peter Caton chose a 200 year old jug which had been handed down through the family from an Aunt Emily. He had researched documents which involved not one but three marriages by one ancestor. He again reestablished links to the entertainer Wattie Hildyard of whom Peter had previously spoken. Richard Brown told members of his Grandmother’s WW1 Medal. Emily Brown was born in the Parish where Charles Kingsley was a Minister in 1869. Through various links with Thorneycroft engineering. […]
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29 October 2020
24 September 2020
Some Wallingford Crooks
Reading Branch meeting 24th September 2020, conducted via Zoom Speaker: Margaret Crook Margaret explained that her research into her husband’s family tree started before the internet and the computers had become the tool of choice it is today. From a family bible handed down by her father-in-law dated 1896 it gave her a start into the Crook dynasty. Margaret’s started collecting names of Crooks from the Berkshire Record Office, at that time in Shire Hall, checking parish records of churches in Wallingford, Cholsey, Britwell Salome etc. She adopted the method of collecting all names and references to relationships in the […]
The Colin Spickett Experiment
Reading Branch meeting 25th June 2020, conducted on Zoom Speaker: Mark Bowman This presentation was a display of how much can be achieved for free in a short space of time. Mark showed that starting only with a name (albeit an unusual one) and a rough date of birth, you can, using free, online resources, construct a pedigree going back 250 years, all in a few hours. As usual, Mark’s talk was engaging and generated quite a discussion afterwards.
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25 June 2020
28 May 2020
Jane Austen and the Thames Valley Connection
Reading Branch meeting 28th May 2020, conducted on Zoom Speaker: Joy Pibworth Joy outlined the family background of Jane’s life and the places where those people lived. She painted a picture of her parent’s lives and those of her close relatives. They involved places as far away as America, Russia as well as Oxford, Tonbridge and Bristol in the U.K. There were stories of Fishing Fleet (female passage to India to seek marriage) and the scandal of trials for stealing lace which resulted in acquittal. One of her ancestors, Sir Thomas White, who was born in Reading in 1492 was […]
A Caribbean Journey: experiences of researching Barbadian ancestors from the UK
Reading Branch meeting 27th February 2020 Speaker: Guy Grannum Guy gave an interesting talk on how he came to research his Barbadian roots and the types of documents that can aid with Barbadian ancestry. Guys started researching for his parents 25th wedding anniversary, and discovered an international family covering South Africa, Gibraltar and Majorca. Unfortunately, early civil registration records gave no clue to the origins of the family name, as there were only a handful of entries. Most entries date from 1955 onwards. Through his work at The National Archive (previously the Public Record Office), Guy discovered his grandfather and […]
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27 February 2020
30 January 2020
Victorian Divorce
Reading Branch meeting 30th January 2020 Speaker: Simon Burbidge Simon spoke of his research into his ancestors who had been divorced by the time of the 1901 census. Prior to 1858 Divorce was subject to Ecclesiastical Law with basically consummated or unconsummated marriage. It required an Act of Parliament and grounds were usually separation, civil suit or adultery. Only 2 divorces a year were recorded in 1670, 322 between 1670 and 1838 and in 1900 there were 560 with only three women suing for divorce. Notable cases from past were 1804 De Manville which involved custody of a child, it […]
Short talks and quiz
Reading Branch meeting 12th December 2019 Speaker: Members There were two short talks by members, a Berkshire dialect quiz from Vicki and the traditional non-alcoholic mulled wine and mince pie courtesy of Rosemary and Angie. Angie Catt spoke about her great-grandfather John Gibbons (West) born in Bath who enlisted in the 12th Prince of Wales Lancers in 1849 in Reading. At his attestation he was stated as being eighteen and a half, and five feet nine inches tall. He was involved in the 8th Kafir War which was the longest military action in Africa lasting 100 years. It was actually […]
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12 December 2019
28 November 2019
Birth and Death Certificates
Reading Branch meeting 28th November 2019 Speaker: Antony Marr Speaking from a background of an ex Deputy Registrar he gave an interesting insight of what can be found on these certificates. The rules surrounding these certificates are covered by a 150-page instruction book. Original certificates will have original signatures; the GRO (General Register Office) version is a copy of a copy. Four checks are done on birth certificates (not telling the truth is purjury) 1. Live birth computer check with hospital/midwife (no still births) 2. Correct district 3. Within time limit (Registrar 12 months, parents 42 Days) 4. Not already […]
Policing Reading in WW1
Reading Branch meeting 31st October 2019 Speaker: Tony Keep from Thames Valley Police Museum Tony started his research to commemorate what was thought to be 47 policemen lost in WW1, but actually turned out to be 49. At the time of WW1 eight forces existed covering the area now known as Thames Valley force. In his research he used Examination Registers which were kept manually, records from Berkshire and Buckinghamshire Records Offices, Chief Constables Reports, Standing Joint Committee Reports, Watch Committee minutes and books or newspaper reports. Additional material was gathered from the Thames Valley Museum, The National Archives and […]
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31 October 2019
26 September 2019
Putting Berkshire on the Map (Gough to Google)
Reading Branch meeting 26th Sept 2019 Speaker: John Leighfield John opened his talk with an anecdote about Einstein and his chauffeur which set the pace and delivery for the evening. He informed the gathering that the earliest maps were around 6000 BC from Turkey, then from 1400 BC Italian wall carving and then 6th century BC from a tablet found in Babylon. Important dates from Britain were 150AD Ptolemy, (1480 print shown) and Matthew Paris 1250. Richard Gough was a notable collector and writer who left a c1360 map to the Bodleian Library which he had purchased in 1774 for half […]
Photos and Memorabilia
Reading Branch meeting 27th June 2019 Speaker: Members Four members talked about their ancestors and artefacts. Peter Caton continued a theme connected to Walter Hildyard the circus performer. This time the subject was his grandfather Charles Hildyard Todd of Islington. A check on the censuses found him in 1861 & 1871 with his parents. In 1881 with his wife and daughter and 1901 with all the family but in 1911 Charles was missing. Further investigations traced him to a workhouse in 1910 and Army Service records where his next of kin was listed as a mysterious Octavia Ketera. Angie Catt […]
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27 June 2019
30 May 2019
The 1939 Register
Reading Branch meeting 30th May 2019 Speaker: Mark Bowman Mark explored the origins of the register and its uses in a highly entertaining and informative talk. On Sunday 3rd September 1939 war was declared, which received Royal Assent on the 5th September. 65000 enumerators were assembled for Registration Day, Friday 29th September to Monday 2nd October, with a population of 41 million people to register. The Enumerators issued Identity Cards. After WW2 this Register was used to set up the National Health Service and the Act was finally repealed as late as 1952. Identity cards were used for rationing during […]
Tracing your Welsh Ancestors
Reading Branch meeting 25th April 2019 Speaker: Gill Thomas Gill started by outlining the differences one might find when tracing Welsh ancestors. These are language, culture and geography. Parish records are affected by non-conformity, and migration. There are resources online to help. English language has been used since 1733, prior to that you may encounter Latin. There were many Welsh Chapels of differing sects such as Baptists, Strict Baptists, and Particular Baptist. People were married in a Church and required a baptism certificate if they were to be buried in a churchyard. Worship was conducted in Welsh. Other non-conformists include […]
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25 April 2019
28 March 2019
Old Photographs: their identification and dating
Reading Branch meeting 28th March 2019 Speaker: Tom Doig Tom started by suggesting it is more accurate when dating old photographs to look at the type of image created rather than the costumes worn by the sitters. His reasoning is that fashion does not travel very fast around the country and what may be fashionable in a city like London may not reach a town like Reading for five or ten years. Also, the subject’s photographed may be more, or less, well-off and be more, or less, likely to buy latest fashion. Sitters sometimes also used costumes provided by the […]
The History of Reading Cinemas
Reading Branch meeting 28th February 2019 Speaker: David Cliffe David opened by recounting that he had first given his talk, now updated, to our branch in 2014 after encouragement from us and the History of Reading Society which resulted in the publication of his book “Reading Cinemas: Picture Palace to Penny Plunge”. He recalled drawing upon information from Leslie North’s 1958 book and Daphne Phillips’ book which mentioned some cinemas but was far from comprehensive. He set about researching as many picture houses with the help of the records in the Berkshire Record Office and from “Woodeson”. His biggest regret […]
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28 February 2019
31 January 2019
Telling Tales
Reading Branch meeting 31st January 2019 Speaker: Mike Swaddling Mike, a retired marketing communications manager living in Sandhurst, after full time work, he was able to follow up an idea inspired by his father’s memoirs to help retired people with their reminiscences. Over 10 years, he visited retirement homes and recorded first-hand stories of lives of five hundred people stretching back almost 100 years. These were compiled into ten or twelve anthologies. The stories are as varied as human nature itself, and his talk brought a handful of them to life in an entertaining fashion and with lots of humour. […]
Meeting Location:
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
280 The Meadway
Tilehurst
Reading
RG30 4PE
GPS 51.453332, -1.029597
what3words: ///soon.winter.simple
Contact
Any questions about Branch activities?
Contact
Vicki Chesterman
Branch chairman
Welcome
Non-members are welcome at Branch meetings and events. A donation of £5 would be appreciated.
Meetings
What
Jul
19:30 – 21:30
Ancestors on the Map; Finding Locations of Family Photographs
Tuesday, Windsor Branch Webinar
EVENT DETAIL
Sep
19:30 – 21:30
Using a Research Methodology for Family History
Tuesday, Windsor Branch Webinar
EVENT DETAIL
Oct
19:15 – 21:30
The Earl and the Pharaoh
Wednesday, Webinar
EVENT DETAIL
Nov
19:30 – 21:30
Victorian Hiring Fairs
Tuesday, Windsor Branch Webinar
EVENT DETAIL
No event found!
Time
Doors open at 7:15pm
Parking
There is only limited parking at the Church itself but there is a multi-storey car park on the corner of Victoria Street and Alexandra Road, immediately opposite William Street.
Welcome
Non-members are welcome at Branch meetings and events. A donation of £5 would be appreciated.
Agenda
- A talk on topics of interest to all researchers whatever experience level, delivered by speakers who are acknowledged experts.
- Q&A
- Refreshments
- Raffle
- Monthly newsletter with details of current and future meetings and other family history events
There’s an excellent lending library for society members who may borrow books, magazines etc or consult reference books. There are also some data CDs relevant to Berkshire research.
Other Activities
- Advice & Outreach Events
The Branch operates a number of regular outreach events each month, including drop-in sessions at Cippenham Library. See the calendar for more details.
Meeting Location:
Christ Church United Reformed Church
William Street
Windsor
SL4 1BA
GPS 51.480284, -0.610211
what3words: ///wisely.splice.plus
Contact
Any questions about Branch activities?
Contact
Leigh Dworkin
Branch chairman