(use microfilm) 1907 - 1908: 3393: New Glasgow directory including Stellarton, Trenton, Westville, Pictou and Pictou County. EAST CHICAGO, IN - Antonio A. Pena, age 87 of East Chicago, IN passed away from complications due to COVID-19 on Saturday, January 9, 2021 at … Lanarkshire Family History Society Society. of the Directory. A comprehensive listing, including location of registers and monumental inscriptions can be found in:- Burial Grounds of Glasgow: a brief guide for the genealogist by J Willing and J S Fairie - published by the Glasgow & West of Scotland Family History Society 2nd Revised Edition published in 1997. The chief natural cause of the rapid growth of Glasgow is its position within the richest coal and ironstone field in Scotland, and on the banks of a river which has been rendered, by almost incredible labour, navigable for vessels of the largest tonnage. It's definitely after 1927 - I'd posted a link to the 1927 directory earlier in this thread - so if the Glasgow Guide is also accurate, it's sometime between 1927 and 1940. The previous link to the First Glasgow Directory (1787) is no longer available on the web. Forebears will shortly commence a further digitisation project focusing on a different time period. This Directory may help you in finding the address of your ancestor, then use the 1940 Census ED Finder. d.1699-1854. Printer: John Graham & Co. (Glasgow, Scotland) Additional cemetery registers for Glasgow are kept by Glasgow City Council. The Family History pages offer a good starting point for on-line research. Contact the FHS to confirm access arrangements. Individual members of the FHS have made transcriptions in various other cemeteries in the West of Scotland, notably the Glasgow Necropolis (incomplete) and Maryhill Old Burial Ground. Glasgow, Clydebank list of civilians killed WW2 page1, page2, page3, page4, page5 and page6 Glasgow & West of Scotland Family History Society Glasgow Libraries Glasgow Deaths 1855 Glasgow 1927 Directory. Evening Journal. In the Lanarkshire area microfilm copies can be consulted at a number of locations in Glasgow and at a number of local libraries. Be sure to check them all out! confidentiality rule applies in the United Kingdom. Imprint and title vary slightly North, J.S. "In a report furnished in 1869.....it was recommended that, except in very special cases, the intramural cemeteries of St. David's; College; North Street and Main Street, Anderston; Cheapside Street, Anderston; Calton; Bridgeton; Rutherglen Loan, Gorbals; St. Mungo's Cathedral; Abercromby Street, Roman Catholic; Christchurch, Mile End; Greendyke Street; and Wellington Street should no longer be used. 1926 - BARTHOLOMEW - New Plan of Glasgow with Suburbs, from Ordnance and Actual Surveys, Constructed for the Post Office Directory; 1927 - W. & A.K. Glasgow 1927 Directory. There are more than 30 churches identified in this place. "Glasgow Lists, 1817". top of page The Glasgow 1927 Directory and similar directories are available for download from the internet archive. microfilm copies of the Evening Times from 1877. the Glasgow Herald from 1790. There are 4 parks -- the Green, the Kelvingrove or West End Park, the Queen's Park, and the Alexandra Park. ... A separate register for the burgh of Glasgow was kept from 1694 to 1927 (GCA). Lists of coal mines operating in Lanarkshire in 1896 were at one time available for eastern Lanarkshire and western Lanarkshire, but the group concerned now seems to focus only on lead mines in Derbyshire. Some assorted photographs of churches in Glasgow. The Merchant Marine and shipbuilding both played a large part in the city's history. Design studios. A number of indexes for the 1841, 1851, 1861, 1881, 1891 and 1901 Censuses are also available. The health of the city has been greatly benefited by the Loch Katrine water supply, completed in 1859, and by the Improvement Act of 1866. The Glasgow 1927 Directory and similar directories are available for download from the internet archive. (Ochiltree Sawmill, The Lade, Ochiltree, Ayrshire KA18 2NX) These images remain the copyright 674,095; 13 newspapers. Glasgow Daily Times 02/09/2007 to Current Genealogy Bank . Glasgow Court Records at the Mitchell Library. Publisher: Forrester, Robert, publisher in Glasgow. Records are arranged in chronological order and there are no indexes! Established in Glasgow in 1854 by Donaldson Brothers, they now have a large fleet, which regularly trades between Glasgow and St. John, N.B., Quebec, Montreal, Baltimore, Norfolk, and Newport News, and make a specialty of livestock and frozen cargoes. Glasgow Directory, Glasgow: McFeat & Co., 1806. Glasgow Daily Times. A less complete set is available in GCA. Select one to see a link to a map of that particular area. There are of course limitations to directories, but on the whole, they are a very useful source. Market-day, Wednesday. Three of the daughters got married, one remained a spinster, and the fifth died at the age of six. The 1851 census films for these areas are also available. [85274816] Publisher: Tait, John, of Glasgow. Our vision is to lead and transform information management, guarantee the survival of today's information for tomorrow and bring history to life for everyone. ), pop. Glasgow and West of Scotland Family history Society is assisting Glasgow City Archives in the ongoing project of indexing the records of St. Andrew's Episcopal Church. Vinny the Mackem wrote:Anyone got a Glasgow Post Office Directory after 1927? it is from a time period when government census records are not available - a 100 year 1927-28 - BARTHOLOMEW - Plan of the County of the city of Glasgow constructed for the Post Office directory "Some ancient cemeteries in the city have been converted into building ground or market places; while others at the Cathedral, St. David's, St. Mary's, Gorbals, Calton and Bridgeton still remain, but are not now important for their original purpose, but as lungs for the city." eighteenth century onwards. The Mitchell Library has many facilities for Family History research in its Special Collection Room on the 5th floor (lifts available). Scottish newspapers Library lacks 1830/31-1833/34, 1843/44, 1848/49, 1850/51 1849/50 lacks map and trade directory (p. 426-569) Richard Stenlake Publishing ", From John Bartholomew's Gazetteer of the British Isles, 1887. The Glasgow City Archives (formerly known as the Strathclyde Regional Archives) are housed in the Mitchell Library in Glasgow. A leaflet, entitled Family Roots, is available from the Greater Glasgow and Clyde Valley Tourist Board and gives some information on places where family history research can be conducted throughout the board's area. You can see the of Dumbarton (at the commencement of the Firth of Clyde), 47½ (by rail) W. of Edinburgh, and 401½ (by West Coast route) NW. This contains a variety of newspapers published since 1715 until 1993 including. 166,128; parliamentary and municipal burgh, pop. Fulmer School, Homer Township, District 2, 1925 - 1926. The opening hours of this centre are Monday 11am - 2pm: Tuesday 10am - 9pm and Wednesday 2pm - 6pm, but please note that advanced booking is required by letter or telephone. ... Glasgow School. To The following list of churches has been compiled from the 1807 map of Glasgow (& Anderston & Calton) on the National Library of Scotland website. of London -- royal burgh (co-extensive with City par. You can see pictures of Glasgow which are provided by: family history material are held by the Mitchell Library, Glasgow & West of Scotland Family History Society, Glasgow and West of Scotland Family history Society, 1841, 1851, 1861, 1881, 1891 and 1901 Censuses, Glasgow & West of Scotland Family History Society, Report problems or contribute information, Glasgow Cathedral, also called the High Kirk of Glasgow or St Kentigern's or St Mungo's Cathedral, Barrony (sic) Church (by the cathedral) : see, St Enoch's Church (St Enoch's Sq off Argyll St), Relief Meeting House (Great Dove St / Graeme St), Relief Meeting House (Campbell St / Graeme St), New Light Burgher Meeting House (Graeme St / Campbell St), New Light Burgher meeting house (North Albion St), Independent Meeting House (Grey Friar's Wynd), Antiburgher Meeting House (Cheapside / Picadilly), All places within the same township/parish shown on an. This map was issued by John Bartholomew & Son to accompany the Post Office Glasgow directory for 1926-1927. At the Reformation the population was about 5000, at the Union about 12,000, and at the beginning of the 19th century about 77,000; it is now. The pages have been scanned in pairs - ie, image 1927names99.jpg contains pages 98 and 99 from the Names Section limits were extended; the Universities of Glasgow and Aberdeen return 1 member. Contact the publishers for a full list, but some of the titles are:- have published a range of illustrated books showing past scenes of old Glasgow. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. (Glasgow, Ky.) 1949-1953 US Newspaper Directory . (principally cotton, woollen, and carpets): bleaching, printing, and dyeing; chemical mfrs. NRS Reference CH3/1360/8. The harbour extends along the river for over 2 miles, and includes 2 tidal docks, one of them (the Queen's Dock) the largest in Scotland. A catalogue and family history material are held by the Mitchell Library including the Glasgow City Archives. Mitchell Library, Glasgow Collection, Maps Collection. View on PubMed Virtual Mitchell - Images of Glasgow 1927 Glasgow Directory. annually, directories are a primary source of listing the inhabitants of a city when other hdl:2027/wu.89038302311. Entrance to the Mitchell Library is FREE as is the use of its microfilm/mircofiche readers - photocopies or printed copies of documents carry a small charge. The Special Collection Room at the Mitchell Library holds the records of some twenty Glasgow cemeteries covering the period from the Glasgow City Archives, as well as lair plans and registers of burials in intra-mural burial grounds from 1870 to 1950. 1783 - John Tait's directory for the City of Glasgow ... also for the towns of Paisley, Greenock, Port-Glasgow, and Kilmarnock, from the 15th May, 1783, to the 15th May 1784, etc. Re: Business Directory Glasgow 1901-1920 « Reply #7 on: Thursday 05 October 17 10:30 BST (UK) » In the 1914/1915 & 1915/16 Post Office directories he is listed only at the Shields Road address (with a home address in Shawlands). Glasgow City Archives in the Mitchell Library holds shipbuilding records from Fairfields, Connels, Barclay Curle and other shipyards. Date printed: 1871. Glasgow & West of Scotland Family History Society has published transcriptions of monumental inscriptions in the St. David's Ramshorn Burial Ground. You can see maps centred on OS grid reference NS618665 (Lat/Lon: 55.872021, -4.209709), Glasgow which are provided by: Glasgow was built on the Clyde and on the trade that river brought. It is an ancient place, but almost the only monument of antiquity which it contains is the Cathedral (1179), dedicated to St Mungo, or Kentigern, the apostle of Strathclyde, who is said to have settled at Glasgow about 580. 511,415; town (municipal and suburban), pop. sources frequently do not. The Glasgow & West of Scotland Family History Society has a Research Centre at Unit 13, 32 Mansfield Street, Partick, G11 5QP, Glasgow. These cover years 1787, 1789, 1790, 1793 to 1799, 1801, and 1803 to 1978 (pre-1886 directories are on microfiche). The description of Glasgow from Groome's Ordnance Gazetteer of Scotland, 1896. Sign up Subscribe to our weekly newsletter and join our design community of 275,386 emerging graphic designers around the globe. b.1609-1855 This record set contains 206 entries (in PDF format), and has not, as far as we are aware, been published before. Appearing usually [A.R.Nicoll@dundee.ac.uk], January 2001. Extraction of baptisms for Shamrock Street United Presbyterian Church Glasgow 1850 - 1855. The Glasgow Story tells the story of the great city in words and pictures. Crow Funeral Home, Glasgow Kentucky, obituaries WorldCat . HG holds the complete set except for 1792, 1800 and 1802. Its facilities include the Statutory Registers (on microfiche) of the former Strathclyde region , a national computer index covering the period since 1855, an index to the 1891 census and other source material. Amherst Directory (use microfilm) 1900: 3292: Amherst Directory (use microfilm) 1918 - 1918: 3291: Amherst Directory (use microfilm) 1936 - 1936: 3291: McAlpine's Directory for the County of Lunenburg, N.S. In addition, a surname index of the 1851 Census is available on computer at the research centre for Glasgow City, Barony, Gorbals, Govan, Old and New Monkland, Carmunnock, Rutherglen, Ayrshire, Dunbartonshire, Renfrewshire and Campsie. The University (1450) had in 1882-1883 professors to the number of 27, and students to the number of 2275, of whom 1307 were Arts students. of Jim Bundy. Bygone Partick (volumes 1 & 2) (1992) 1818 ed. Dates of Glasgow Old Parish Registers Glasgow Directory 1918 (part 1) Glasgow Directory 1918 (part 2) Glasgow Office Directory 1939 Content: Contains the names and addresses of the Merchants, Manufacturers and Trades in the City of Glasgow and suburbs. All the iron trade of Scotland is controlled by Glasgow, which is also the headquarters of the great shipbuilding industry of the Clyde. This is the western section. In 1787 Jones's Directory listed an eclectic array of Glasgow shopkeepers, including grocers, confectioners, bakers, tobacconists, perfumers, wig-makers, hairdressers, haberdashers, drapers, hatters, glovers, breeches-makers and stay-makers. Glasgow The first Glasgow directory was published in 1783 and was followed by others in 1787, 1789, 1790, 1792 and annually from 1792 to 1978. Aitken operated an office in Room #409 of the Lyon Building (1920-1924), Lyon Building, Room #326 (1925-1927), Lyon Building, Room #330 (1928-1932), and spent a longer period in Room #202 of the office building at … The interments in these have fallen ....... to 60 last year, ......; and now interments take place in the following extramural cemeteries:- Glasgow.. (1887 reprint) Published in the 19th century. (best to do a Google search for "glasgow city council cemeteries"). A number of useful facilities for researching your ancestors and their backgrounds exist within the City of Glasgow. More Paint Package and resize to fit your printers capabilities - it is best to print A summary of Glasgow's church histories from Groome's Ordnance Gazetteer of Scotland, 1896. The Necropolis, Sighthill Cemetery, the Eastern Necropolis or Janefield, the Southern Necropolis, Craigton at Paisley Road, Sandymount at Shettleston, Dalbeath at London Road, Cathcart at New Cathcart, and the Western Necropolis at Maryhill." Glasgow, like many other cities produced a city directory from the eighteenth century onwards. A recent (c. 2006) update to the history of congregations and parishes compiled by Very Rev Dr Andrew Herron in 1984. The Mormon Church has a Family History Centre at their Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, Julian Avenue, Glasgow G12. The old University buildings in High Street have been converted into a railway station; the new University buildings (1870), on Gilmore Hill, in the NW. We asked our community and we’ve collated a big list of everyone doing awesome stuff in Glasgow. Glasgow City Archives also house the Church of Scotland Kirk Session records for the Presbytery of Glasgow. An excellent summary of Glasgow's history can be found on-line at The Glasgow Story. Daily News. Need somewhere to stay in Lanarkshire when researching? including the neighbouring burghs, which are essentially parts of Glasgow, about 750,000. landscape. The Glasgow Registrars Office has a Genealogy Centre at 22 Park Circus, Glasgow, G3 6BR. These directories are extremely valuable. Copies of most editions of the Glasgow Directory can be viewed in the Glasgow Collection of the Mitchell Library. A list of Registration Districts in Glasgow is available from the National Records of Scotland. details will be added to indentify the contents of each page as time permits. Ordnance Gazetteer of Scotland, 1883. To become your number one, we promise to give our very best to make your stay with us most enjoyable, hassle free and relaxing. Directory of Scots in the Carolinas, 1680-1830, index, ($). Johnston's Map of Glasgow. Imprint and title vary slightly North, J.S. "Inside the city there were also intramural cemeteries at North Street and Main Street in Anderston, Cheapside Street in Anderston, Christchurch in Mile End, and Greendyke Street Episcopalian church, in a crypt under the United Presbyterian church in Wellington Street, and for Roman Catholics in Abercromby Street." Appearing usually annually, directories are a primary source of listing the inhabitants of a city when other sources frequently do not. The New Municipal Buildings, at the E. end of George Square, were founded October 1883. These include Old Parish Registers (generally meaning the Church of Scotland records) and Census pages (for Glasgow, Ayrshire, Lanarkshire, Dunbartonshire and Renfrewshire) on Microfilm, IGI microfiche versions and the "Family Search" computerised database version of the IGI on CD ROM - NOTE that access to the "Family Search" CD ROM version MUST be booked in advance and is available for 1 hour at a time. Gazetteers The description of Glasgow from Groome's Ordnance Gazetteer of Scotland , 1896. George H. Hitchings (1927, 1928) – Physiology and Medicine, 1988 Martin Rodbell (Ph.D. 1954) – Physiology and Medicine, 1994 George J. Stigler (B.A. Engineered ACE2 receptor traps potently neutralize SARS-CoV-2. :D. See also the Scottish Mining website entry for Lanarkshire. The Post-Office annual Glasgow directory Item Preview remove-circle Share or Embed This Item. whole, they are a very useful source. Partick Remembered (1996) Bartholomew took over production of the annual Post Office directory map in 1865, basing it on the Ordnance Survey map. Lists of metalliferous mines operating in Lanarkshire in 1896 were at one time similarly available for eastern Lanarkshire and western Lanarkshire but the group concerned now seems to focus only on lead mines in Derbyshire. I think!! Genealogy United Kingdom (UK) : British Coastguards 1841 - 1901 (GENUKI) British Isles Family History Society (BIFHS) - USA National Archives UK - Voices of the Armistice - (Military Records) Officers Died - UK Rossbret Institutions Website UK (includes Workhouses, PLU, most institutions) Edinburgh. ... 1927-28. Passenger Lists of Ships leaving Scotland 1931) – Sveriges Riksbank Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel, 1982 The index below hopefully allows easy access to the pages. The foreign trade is with all parts of the world, but chiefly with India, the United States, Canada, and South America, Belgium, France, and Spain. 3 ($) Directory of Scots Banished to the American Plantations, 1650-1775, index, ($). of the city, are probably the finest modern specimen of secular architecture in Scotland. The commercial importance of Glasgow is of comparatively modern date. William Burrell and Isabella Guthrie married in 1856 and had nine children, one of whom was to become Sir William Burrell (SWB), ship owner and art collector.There were three other sons and five daughters. The burial records actually run up until 1995 at which point the records are kept by Glasgow City's Council's Bereavement Services. The official archive of the UK government. These directories are extremely valuable. Slater's Directory of North & Mid Wales has also been digitised, as Kelly's did not publish a directory for this area. Scottish Post Office Directories > Towns > Glasgow > 1828-1912 - Post-Office annual Glasgow directory > 1828-1829 [83780851]. D8 Website / Twitter. Glasgow, like many other cities produced a city directory from the and royal burgh, partly in Renfrewshire but chiefly in Lanarkshire, on river Clyde, 14 miles SE. The story of Partick (1996). Three of the daughters got married, one remained a spinster, and the fifth died at the age of six. Glasgow is the commercial and industrial metropolis of Scotland, and claims to be the second city of the British Empire. 1825 ed. The book "A Guide to Glasgow Addresses 1837-1945", which gives details of street name changes in the city, is available from the Glasgow & West of Scotland Family History Society, The Glasgow Collection of Newspapers is available in the Glasgow Collection of the Mitchell Library. print them on one page, you must save the image to your local system, open them in a Glasgow is a brigade depot; the barracks (1876) are at Maryhill.