We can help!
| Most people know about their
grandparents (some even their great grandparents), but do you know who
your great, great grandparents were, where they lived and what they
did? When you start tracing your ancestors you begin a search into the
past - you will become your own 'family detective'. Through your search
you will meet many other people united by the same absorbing interest.
You will make new friends and acquaintances.
No matter how many, or indeed
how few, relatives you may have, you begin the search for your ancestry
with yourself and immediate family. Start by talking to your relations,
particularly the older ones. They will have memories of people past and
present. They will have interesting anecdotes that will round out your
family history.
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It's important to
collect as much information as you can as this will save time and
effort later.
Look
at your family documents, photographs,
certificates, and wills. Many of you will have a family bible and this
may give you a great deal of information about your ancestors. When you
have discovered as much as you can from reminiscences and family
records, you are ready to go back, generation by generation, and find
your family.
Many
of the records you will need are kept in Record
Offices, Register Offices, and Libraries who will respond to postal
enquiries, so travel can be limited. However, it's always helpful to
visit the places where your ancestors lived.
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What can membership of the Berkshire Family
History Society offer?
| All new members
receive an Information Booklet. This contains information, not only
where to find and how to use Berkshire records, but advice on other
records throughout the country.
If you are a beginner you will also be given the help
and assistance necessary to make a positive start in tracing your
forebears.
The Society publishes a quarterly journal, the Berkshire Family
Historian. Your interests
and questions are published free, a service that has proved extremely
popular over the years. The journal is also invaluable for keeping
members up to date with the most recent developments in family history,
not only in Berkshire but also throughout the country.
Members may also attend Society Branch meetings in
Abingdon, Bracknell, Earley (Computer Branch) Newbury, Reading and
Windsor where expert speakers
are invited to share their experiences. Some branches have a reference
library from which books, etc may be borrowed and new publications and
books purchased.
See the branch details
and benefits of membership.
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| A principle aim of
the Society is to assist in the preservation of local records. Indexing
of records is continually in progress. A major completed project is the
surname index of the 1851 census for Berkshire, which includes 200,000
inhabitants. |
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The Research Centre
| To house these
indexes and many other records the Society has a fine Research Centre
adjacent to the
Berkshire Record Office in central
Reading and is easily accessible by car, bus and train. It is open on
three weekdays and two evenings each week and on certain Sundays.
The Research Centre is the repository for an extensive
collection of books, film and fiche records. We also have many indexes
to the 1851 census of England and Wales, indexes and transcripts of the
1881 census of England, Wales and Scotland and the International
Genealogical Index which contains three hundred million names. In all,
there are about 6000 books and about 10,000 microfiche with fiche
readers and printers. We also have a wellstocked bookstall with
books for sale. It does not matter that you do not have ancestors in
Berkshire for only one fifth of the library covers Berkshire. The rest
of the library has material from Cornwall to Yorkshire; Caenarvon to
Suffolk; and Australia, Canada and New Zealand.
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Diary of Events
The Berkshire Family Historian will give
the precise details of speakers at Branch Meetings.
They are also available on this site.
Meetings are usually held at 7.15pm for 7.45pm |
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| Bracknell
and Wokingham Branch
Priestwood Community
Centre, Priestwood Court Road,
Bracknell.
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Computer Branch
Oakwood Centre, Headley
Road, Woodley
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| Newbury
Branch
St. Mary's Church Hall,
Church Road, Shaw, Newbury.
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| Reading
Branch
The Church of Latter Day
Saints, Church Hall, The
Meadway , Tilchurst, READING
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| Vale
of White Horse Branch (Abingdon)
Long
Furlong Community Centre, (at
end of) BOULTER DRIVE off DUNMORE ROAD, Abingdon, Oxon.
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| Windsor, Slough and
Maidenhead Branch
Christ Church, United
Reform Church, William Street,
Windsor.
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For more information contact 
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