Berkshire Family Historian
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| Berkshire Family Historian |
| Sample issue and contents |
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The Berkshire Family Historian has been published quarterly since 1975. It is distributed to all members, to copyright deposit institutions and to around 60 other family history societies within the FFHS exchange magazine scheme.
Originally in A5 format, the Berkshire Family Historian is now published in A4, and each issue now comprises 44 pages printed throughout in two colours.
Regular features include:
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Society news and announcements
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Other family history-related news
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Dates of forthcoming family history events
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News from the society’s six branches
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Details of online developments and resources
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Feature articles, including
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Personal research stories of members
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How-to-do-it articles at all levels
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Berkshire local history
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Descriptions of specialist archives and resources of interest to genealogists
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Book reviews
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Letters from readers
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Research Centre guide
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Members’ interests
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Gleanings from exchange magazines
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Calendar of branch meetings and speakers
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Publications list
Here is some guidance if you would like to write for the Berkshire Family Historian, articles are always welcome.
Copies of the magazine are archived online two years after publication.
Archived issues are accessible to society members only.
Page last reviewed and revised 12 December 2011
On this page you will find main features from some past issues of the Historian.
You will also find a sample issue (PDF file opens in a new window) further down the page.
Many previous issues are available for members in the Members’ Area.
For reasons of privacy, contact details have been redacted. If you wish to contact an individual named in an issue, please first contact the society.
The site search engine can also be used to trace subjects and authors.
COPYRIGHT STATEMENT
© 2011. All articles (taken from the Berkshire Family Historian) are the copyright of the Trustees of Berkshire Family History Society, on behalf of the Society, and of individual contributors, unless otherwise stated. Articles may not be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted by any means without the prior written permission of the Society's trustees.
Opinions expressed are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect opinions of the editor or the Society.
December 2009 (sample issue)
- Broadcasting your family history
- What did Grandma’s generation do with their education?
- Alfadammerung
- DNA testing: the next generation
- Christmas Day in the workhouse
- Taxing the dead
- Booth’s life and labour: London poverty
- Benefactors of Aldermaston
- Things to find out from your relatives
June 2009
- Google BookSearch by Penny Stokes
- Networking with the Cassell family by Vicki Turner
- A way with wills by Lionel Carter
- The parish of Bray by Judith Mitchell
- Birth of an archive by Valerie Storie
- Bradfield Road shops in the 1950s by Vicki Turner
- Mystery diarist from Berkshire by Isobel Turner
March 2009
- Conservation of Broadmoor archives by Mark Stevens
- Facebook for family historians by Debbie Kennett
- Mystery visitors to Shurlock Row by Mick Henry
- MIs in Enborne and Hamstead Marshall by Penny Stokes
- Early Berkshire Quakers by Manfred Brod
- The BRO since 1981 by Mark Stevens
- Cloth and money by David Peacock
December 2008
- Seventeenth-century religious dissenters in Berkshire by Manfred Brod
- John Rocque’s 1761 map of Berkshire: an evaluation by Charles Masters
- When did the middle ages end in western Berkshire by Margaret Yates
- The Clarence Clump murder by Alan Gardener
- Adding value to research findings by Barry Jerome
- Ironmonger, campaigner, artist, diarist and mayor by Phil Wood
September 2008
- Bradleys of Wokingham by Richard Bradley
- The wreck of the Mohegan by Joan Vinall
- Answers from your genes by Debbie Kennett
- Family legends: true or false? by Bob Adams
- BRO celebrates its 60th anniversary by Mark Stevens
- Using some photo-editing tools by Lionel Carter
- The House of Toomer part II by Phil Wood
Page last reviewed and revised 12 December 2011
Journal - Berkshire Family Historian



