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The
Centre -
About our
Branches -
Abingdon
Branch -
Bracknell
Branch -
Computer
Branch -
Newbury
Branch -
Reading
Branch -
Windsor
Branch
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
Opening hours
Day | Time |
---|---|
Mondays* *except public/bank holidays | 10:30 - 15:00 |
Tuesdays | 10:30 - 16:00 |
Third and last Thursdays of the month | 10:30 - 16:00 |
First Saturday of the month* *except 6th May - Coronation Day | 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
For a small charge, The Centre offers A3 and A4 print services for research findings.
Events Programme
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.
Computer related matters feature prominently at the Computer Branch meetings — but other branches also hold a few similar meetings each year. That is because today's researchers need to know how best to search for, organise and present information using online means and available programs, as well as the many vital offline resources. The basic principles of effective family history research have not changed, but intelligent use of a PC or mobile device, and the internet have made a dramatic difference to research techniques.
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 Berkshire Record Office 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
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
Meetings
What
Time
Doors open at 7.15pm
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 on the second Thursday of every month at Bracknell Central Library in Town Square (check the calendar for these event dates). Bring your questions and get help, fresh ideas, suggestions, and answers on how you can move your research forward.
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*.
Branch Meeting Summaries
Catch up with what you missed or remind yourself what was said, with summaries of the Bracknell & Wokingham Branch meetings
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Meeting Location:
The New Priestwood Community Centre
Priestwood Court Road
Bracknell
RG42 1TU
GPS 51.421300, -0.764280
what3words: ///care.truck.expand
Welcome
Non-members are welcome at Branch meetings and events. A donation of £5 would be appreciated.
Meetings
What
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:
Meetings
What
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
West Berkshire Museum
The Wharf
Newbury
Berkshire RG14 5AS
GPS 51.40152 -1.32134
What3words ///eggs.kinks.softly
Meetings
What
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.
Other Activities
- Advice & Help
- Community Talks
- Local Projects
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
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
Welcome
Non-members are welcome at Branch meetings and events. A donation of £5 would be appreciated.
Meetings
What
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
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