<<snipped>> I would suggest that "Angus" is the best term to use. <<snipped>> I started recording my data before I really understood the historical nature of the name "Angus", so I've ended up with loads of references to "Dundee, Forfarshire, Scotland". Now, I could bite the bullet and change them all to Angus - but having unknowingly, as it were, used Forfarshire, there is an advantage.... GG-grandfather went bankrupt and was examined by the Sheriff Substitute of Forfarshire. It makes sense to have him living in Dundee, Forfarshire and being examined by a representative of Forfarshire, whereas having him living in Dundee, Angus and being examined by a representative of Forfarshire doesn't make sense. And Sheriff Substitute of Forfarshire is the title so can't be altered to Sheriff Substitute of Angus. Guess what - there's no easy answer! Adrian B
Angus was never a burgh! Re-read the item you referred to. It says Dundee was a Royal Burgh in the county of Angus. I get over all the problems by always citing the county as Angus in my database. As someone else mentioned, the name Forfarshire was treated as a temporary aberration!. The 1995 local government reorganisation was 16th May 1995. It sticks inm my mind as I was present at the opening of a new school by the old county council of Aberdeenshire on the day before reorganisation. From the next day I stopped being employed as a librarian by Aberdeenshire County Council, and was instead employed by a joint committee representing three of the new District Councils. It turned out to be a GOOD THING, as the joint committee was strictly non-political.... Gordon. On 27/07/2011 18:03, Marilyn wrote: > I also found this reference to Dundee as being a part of the burgh of Angus in 1803, so now am wondering when it went from Angus to Forfar, now that we've resolved the Forfar-Angus (1929) issue. REf:http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/sct/ANS/Dundee/index.html. This transition is important to me in referencing the BMD's of my family and records for them appear to begin ~ 1800 in Dundee.
Pat Carson wrote: >1928 is when Forfarshire reverted to being called Angus. >Politically, Dundee is now on its own (ie not part of Angus) and I'm unclear >as to how we should cite it for the present-day. Maybe someone could help on >this? > > There have been other changes in name and territory. In 1891, the boundaries of the County and various of its parishes were re-aligned, and for 20 years starting in 1974, the County was effectively suppressed, becoming part of Tayside Region. In 1995, the County name of Angus was resurrected (although I don't know whether the "new" Angus has the same boundaries as the old - Aberdeenshire similarly disappeared in 1974, but the "new, improved" version that has existed since 1995 has swallowed up the former county of Kincardine, and half of Banffshire). In the context of genealogy, various major data sources (OPRs, Civil BDMs, Census, Poor Law) are catalogued according to the county and parish boundaries that applied from 1891-1974 *. As there are now very few people around who can remember when it was "Forfarshire", and as that form was no more than a passing Anglicism (which also gave us such tonguetwisters as "Haddingtonshire", "Edinburghshire" and "Linlithgowshire") I would suggest that "Angus" is the best term to use. The main things are to avoid the LDS nonsense of referring to the county as "Forfar", or using forms like "County Angus". Gavin Bell * although some awareness of the 1891 changes may be needed to locate relevant records in some sources.
Hi Marilyn, Anne's explanation is the best you could get, I think. Some elaboration on it follows, though at the risk of introducing more confusion... :) Angus is a county (or 'shire'), which for a while was called Forfarshire or 'County of Forfar', from the 18th century until 1928. Within Angus or Forfarshire, if you're looking for records as in OPR, usually Angus will pull them up, though if searching older catalogues try 'Forfarshire'. If in doubt, refer to the Scotland's People site documentation. OPR records are now centralised at NRS, from the 19th century, but copies/microfilms are often available locally. Some other records are centralised, and it's always useful checking with NRS as to where things are. Within Angus, the county, there are/were several burghs (towns). (The terms Burgh, Royal Burgh, and Burgh of Barony are specific and relate to the rights and duties of the burgh concerned.) Both Forfar and Dundee are Royal Burghs, as are Montrose, Arbroath and Brechin. Records for each, such as sheriff court records, would be kept there - but are now located in various repositories including Forfar, Angus archives (Restenneth, near Forfar) Dundee archives, Dundee University archives, Dundee public library, and St Andrews University archives. And some at NRS (previously NAS). Local records for bits of Angus which weren't royal burghs or indeed burghs at all may be in Forfar or elsewhere - all need checking. (E.g. the Kirk Session records for Airlie are in St Andrew's University archives.) I have some ancestors (possibly) from Airlie and Kingoldrum in the 18th century. I'd refer to them as from Angus. If I had some from Forfar burgh (which I don't to my knowledge) I'd refer to them as from the Royal Burgh of Forfar. Dundee ones - City and Royal Burgh of Dundee, or earlier just the Royal Burgh of Dundee. I grew up with my address being Dundee, Angus, Scotland. Throughout Scotland, and indeed the UK, just 'Dundee' will signify the City of Dundee. That aside, the town, village, or hamlet name plus 'Angus' is all that's needed. (Unless you're putting something on Ancestry, in which case if you don't put a country often Ancestry tries to default to a US place!) So, for instance, 'Kirkton of Auchterhouse, Angus' would be a suitable designation for where my g-grandfather was in the 1841 census, even though at that time the county was deemed to be called 'Forfarshire'. However, if what you are looking for is a precise reference for an old parochial or for a statutory record, rather than the place, I tend to use the GROS number. All best, Jenny On 27/07/2011 18:03, Marilyn Arnold wrote: > What I THINK I'm hearing, and please correct me if I'm wrong, is that the important thing in the reference is for someone to be able to find the records, so all BMD records up to and including 1928 which happened in Dundee would be referenced as "Dundee, Forfarshire, Soctland" and not "Dundee, Angus, Scotland." But 1929+ events would be recorded as "Dundee, Angus, Scotland." Because at the time the event occurred (pre 1929)-- Dundee was part of the administrative shire of Forfarshire. Although I would socially refer to my ancestors as from Angus, formerly Forfarshire? Is this correct? Just want to keep my references straight. If this isn't correct, please let me know! (Or am I just assuming this is a correct citation for place because it's like a US citation of town, county, state?) > > But ... where does this mean the records were kept for Dundee, now that I'm thinking about this? Were they kept at the City level or ??? (i.e. if Angus had the administrative center as Forfar, what was the administrative center of Forfarshire? Dundee?) > > I also found this reference to Dundee as being a part of the burgh of Angus in 1803, so now am wondering when it went from Angus to Forfar, now that we've resolved the Forfar-Angus (1929) issue. REf: http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/sct/ANS/Dundee/index.html. This transition is important to me in referencing the BMD's of my family and records for them appear to begin ~ 1800 in Dundee.
> What I THINK I'm hearing, and please correct me if I'm > wrong, is that the important thing in the reference is for > someone to be able to find the records, so all BMD records > up to and including 1928 which happened in Dundee would be > referenced as "Dundee, Forfarshire, Soctland" and not > "Dundee, Angus, Scotland." That is possible. I'd have to have a look at some certificates to check the wording on the top line of the page. I think, however, that the wording would be '.... in the county of Forfar' rather than '.... in the county of Forfarshire' (which would be tautological). > But 1929+ events would be > recorded as "Dundee, Angus, Scotland." Because at the > time the event occurred (pre 1929)-- Dundee was part of the > administrative shire of Forfarshire. Although I would > socially refer to my ancestors as from Angus, formerly > Forfarshire? Is this correct? Just want to keep > my references straight. If this isn't correct, please > let me know! What I am saying is that I personally never, ever, use 'Forfarshire' at all, because 'Forfarshire' is (a) synonymous with Angus and (b) has the potential to be confused with the town and/or parish of Forfar. > But ... where does this mean the records were kept for > Dundee, now that I'm thinking about this? Were they > kept at the City level or ??? (i.e. if Angus had the > administrative center as Forfar, what was the administrative > center of Forfarshire? Dundee?) No. Angus and Forfarshire are and always were identical until 1975. Forfar was the administrative centre for the whole of Angus, including Dundee, (though there were also town councils in Forfar, Dundee, Arbroath, Carnoustie etc etc) throughout the time before, during, and after the county was also known by officialdome as 'Forfarshire'. Dundee was never the administrative centre of any county, though it is and was the largest burgh/town in the Angus. Registers of BMDs from 1855 were kept at registration district level, and were gathered together at national level in Edinburgh. In any case, the indexes at GROS and on Scotland's People don't refer at all to the counties. They use only the registration district names and numbers, so it is completely unnecessary to know which county any event occurred in in order to find the certificate. You would only need to know which county it was if you were determined to track down and look at the duplicate set of registers held in the registrars' offices, and even those are not necessarily held in the county where the event occurred. The ones for the county of Kincardine from 1855 to 1899, for instance, are in the registrar's office in Aberdeen. > I also found this reference to Dundee as being a part of > the burgh of Angus in 1803, so now am wondering when it went > from Angus to Forfar, now that we've resolved the > Forfar-Angus (1929) issue. REf: http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/sct/ANS/Dundee/index.html. That reference describes Dundee, quite correctly, as "A royal burgh in the county of Angus". Angus was never a burgh, and Dundee never went from Angus to Forfar or vice versa. Note that this reference, dated 1803, uses the correct traditional term, 'Angus', not 'Forfarshire'. > This transition is important to me in referencing the BMD's > of my family and records for them appear to begin ~ 1800 in > Dundee. Make it easy for yourself and everyone else. Use 'Angus' for the county and 'Forfar' only if referring to the parish or town/burgh of Forfar, and don't use Forfarshire at all. > I've learned on this Rhode Island > family to cite the record as it was recorded in whatever > administrative unit it was recorded in. If that makes > any sense....!) Yes. But the point is that Angus is exactly the same as Forfarshire is exactly the same as the county of Angus is exactly he same as the county of Forfar. Until 1975, it isn't a case of moving boundaries or changing the local areas, and in any case registration was done at registration district level, which is originally the same as the parishes, except within the city of Dundee which was subdivided in various ways with ever-changing boundaries. > And, I'll certainly keep Anne's comment in mind about how > the abbreviated term "Forfar" can be heard/received by > natives. This too, is important.! Thanks Anne! It's only an abbreviation if it is used to refer to Angus, of course. Anne
A point I forgot: Anne says: "However the various reorganisations affected only local government. For ceremonial purposes the traditional counties remain unchanged; in other words the Queen's Lord Lieutenant for the county of Angus still includes Dundee in his/her patch, and it remains perfectly correct to say that Dundee is in the County of Angus, even though there is no longer an Angus County Council responsible for the administrative functions of the local authority". It is my understanding that Lord Provost Letford of Dundee is Lord Lieutenant of the city while Mrs Georgina Osborne occupies that office for Angus. Cheers, Bruce D ----- Original Message ----- From: "Pat Carson" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Wednesday, July 27, 2011 5:11 PM Subject: Re: [ANGUS] Dundee -- Once Forfar now Angus -- When? Many thanks for a very clear and concise explanation - from one who was born and bred in Dundee - and thoroughly confused by the various 'reorganisations' the happened whilst I was living in the deep south of England and not paying attention to what was happening 'at home' because I was too busy bringing up a family!! Pat "Here's tae us! Wha's like us? Damn few! - an' they're a' deid!" Old Scots Toast Check out my website www.genesontheweb.co.uk PC>-----Original Message----- PC>From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On PC>Behalf Of Anne Burgess PC>Sent: 27 July 2011 16:52 PC>To: [email protected]; [email protected] PC>Subject: Re: [ANGUS] Dundee -- Once Forfar now Angus -- When? PC> PC>> Can SKS tell me when Dundee went from PC>> being considered a part of Forfar to PC>> then being considered a part of Angus? PC> PC>It did, or it didn't, depending on how you look at things and what time PC>period you are thinking about. PC> PC>First of all, the county of Angus, which includes the city of Dundee, was PC>known by officialdom (but not necessarily by the inhabitants) ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message ----- No virus found in this message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 10.0.1390 / Virus Database: 1518/3791 - Release Date: 07/27/11
A point missed in the several replies is that Dundee was, administratively, part of Angus (or Forfarshire) though, like the other main towns in the county, was run internally by its own Town Council. I have been searching for a date (and confirmation) which I can't find in the Wikipedia entry on Dundee or another "historical" web-site. It is my belief that Dundee became a self-governing entity (I think in Scotland this was called a "Police Burgh") administratively outside Angus/Forfarshire although geographically still in the same place. I think this was about 1895 but I would like some confirmation. While Dundee was (still is) listed as "Dundee, Forfar", in the IGI for example, that means Dundee Forfarshire/Angus, some of the surrounding Parishes are listed as Mains (for example), Forfar (or Angus). As Dundee expanded, some of the suburbs, and their associated Parishes, remained in Angus. However, as Anne explained, many of these outlying districts were incorporated into Dundee (and they are still trying to get more) with the result that their modern records are held by Dundee Council rather than Angus. This is particularly noticeable in the burial records in DeceasedonLine. I have noticed that several Listers have been baffled by the absence of a burial record for family members who they know to have lived in "Mains, Forfar" (the Parish of Mains in Forfarshire/Angus). Quite appart from the fact the the Parishes of Mains and Strathmartin amalgamated, the former churchyards are now in Dundee's administrative area and only the Forfarshire/Angus records, held by Angus Council, appear on DeceasedonLine. There are/were other considerations such as the children on one side of a certain street in the Broughty Ferry/Monifieth area having to travel to Carnoustie for their secondary education (Angus Council admin.) while those on the other side could attend a very good secondary school in Broughty Ferry (Dundee admin.). And that's all still fairly simple! Cheers, Bruce D ----- Original Message ----- From: "Pat Carson" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Wednesday, July 27, 2011 5:11 PM Subject: Re: [ANGUS] Dundee -- Once Forfar now Angus -- When? Many thanks for a very clear and concise explanation - from one who was born and bred in Dundee - and thoroughly confused by the various 'reorganisations' the happened whilst I was living in the deep south of England and not paying attention to what was happening 'at home' because I was too busy bringing up a family!! Pat "Here's tae us! Wha's like us? Damn few! - an' they're a' deid!" Old Scots Toast Check out my website www.genesontheweb.co.uk PC>-----Original Message----- PC>From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On PC>Behalf Of Anne Burgess PC>Sent: 27 July 2011 16:52 PC>To: [email protected]; [email protected] PC>Subject: Re: [ANGUS] Dundee -- Once Forfar now Angus -- When? PC> PC>> Can SKS tell me when Dundee went from PC>> being considered a part of Forfar to PC>> then being considered a part of Angus? PC> PC>It did, or it didn't, depending on how you look at things and what time PC>period you are thinking about. PC> PC>First of all, the county of Angus, which includes the city of Dundee, was PC>known by officialdom (but not necessarily by the inhabitants) ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message ----- No virus found in this message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 10.0.1390 / Virus Database: 1518/3791 - Release Date: 07/27/11
Alex: you make me laugh!! So sorry for the headache I started! But, thanks for your tolerance in this very detailed discussion for someone on the other side of the Atlantic. It was very helpful and I'm sure there are others out there that will benefit from this thread. Marilyn ----- Original Message ----- From: "Alex. Gray" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Wednesday, July 27, 2011 4:34 PM Subject: Re: [ANGUS] Dundee -- Once Forfar now Angus -- When? > Being an Angus loon, I've got a sair head after a that explanation! > > > Alex > Born in Logie Pert, Angus in 1939. > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes > in the subject and the body of the message
Many thanks for a very clear and concise explanation - from one who was born and bred in Dundee - and thoroughly confused by the various 'reorganisations' the happened whilst I was living in the deep south of England and not paying attention to what was happening 'at home' because I was too busy bringing up a family!! Pat "Here's tae us! Wha's like us? Damn few! - an' they're a' deid!" Old Scots Toast Check out my website www.genesontheweb.co.uk PC>-----Original Message----- PC>From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On PC>Behalf Of Anne Burgess PC>Sent: 27 July 2011 16:52 PC>To: [email protected]; [email protected] PC>Subject: Re: [ANGUS] Dundee -- Once Forfar now Angus -- When? PC> PC>> Can SKS tell me when Dundee went from PC>> being considered a part of Forfar to PC>> then being considered a part of Angus? PC> PC>It did, or it didn't, depending on how you look at things and what time PC>period you are thinking about. PC> PC>First of all, the county of Angus, which includes the city of Dundee, was PC>known by officialdom (but not necessarily by the inhabitants)
> The wiki article on "Forfar" provides > additional commentary - not sure > why they can't just join them together. Because they are not synonymous! Forfar is a town and parish, and Angus, formerly called Forfarshire, is a county. Joining them together would merely add to the confusion. Anne
> Can SKS tell me when Dundee went from > being considered a part of Forfar to > then being considered a part of Angus? I'm trying to > cite my records > properly for the time period, and can't seem to find this > info out online. > (I'm sure I'm just not looking in the right place ! > :-) !! It did, or it didn't, depending on how you look at things and what time period you are thinking about. First of all, the county of Angus, which includes the city of Dundee, was known by officialdom (but not necessarily by the inhabitants) as Forfarshire from some time in the 18th century until 1929, when its traditional name was restored by Act of Parliament. So in effect Angus and Forfarshire, or the County of Forfar, or the County of Angus, are exactly the same for all practical purposes. Note that in Scotland we never refer to our counties as, for example, 'Angus County', as is done in North America. The confusion arises because the county town (administrative centre) of the County of Angus was the town of Forfar, which sits in the parish of the same name. Dundee was never part of the parish or town of Forfar, but it was in the county of Angus, which was also known for a time as Forfarshire. It begins to get complicated as recently as 1975, when the local government boundaries in Scotland went through a major reorganisation. Part of this reorganisation involved the abolition of all the town councils (Forfar, Arbroath, Brechin, Kirriemuir, Montrose and Dundee), the creation of two separate new District Councils, the City of Dundee District Council and Angus District Council. Both of these, plus Perth and Kinross District Council, formed part of Tayside Region and were also administered by Tayside Regional Council. Functions were divided between the Region and the Districts; the Region looked after, for example, roads, education, social work etc and the Districts looked after housing, cleansing, libraries, sport and recreation, burial grounds etc etc. Then in 1995 or (my memory for the exact date has let me down) there was another reorganisation, which abolished Tayside Regional Council, removed the word District from both Angus Council and the City of Dundee Council, and made the former districts into all-purpose authorities responsible for all aspects of local government. However the various reorganisations affected only local government. For ceremonial purposes the traditional counties remain unchanged; in other words the Queen's Lord Lieutenant for the county of Angus still includes Dundee in his/her patch, and it remains perfectly correct to say that Dundee is in the County of Angus, even though there is no longer an Angus County Council responsible for the administrative functions of the local authority. When I was growing up in Forfar, it was drilled into me that the name 'Forfarshire'/'County of Forfar' was a temporary aberration to be eschewed. I was and am proud to be a native of the county of Angus, and it still produces a faint wave of irritation when I see it referred to as 'Forfar' instead of 'the County of Forfar' or 'Forfarshire'. For the avoidance of confusion I use the name 'Forfar' exclusively for the burgh (town) of Forfar and the surrounding parish, and I always use 'Angus' for the county. I also ignore the new councils entirely unless citing a document which was produced by one of them. For family history research purposes their only relevance is in knowing which one has custody of the records of the former local authorities you wish to look at. This very probably does not help with your question, because the whole thing has been a bit of a dog's breakfast since the 1975 reorganisation. I'm sure someone will be along shortly to modify my rather over-simplified account! Anne
1928 is when Forfarshire reverted to being called Angus. Politically, Dundee is now on its own (ie not part of Angus) and I'm unclear as to how we should cite it for the present-day. Maybe someone could help on this? This link seem to give some detail: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angus Pat "Here's tae us! Wha's like us? Damn few! - an' they're a' deid!" Old Scots Toast Check out my website www.genesontheweb.co.uk PC>-----Original Message----- PC>From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On PC>Behalf Of Marilyn Arnold PC>Sent: 16 July 2011 18:06 PC>To: [email protected] PC>Subject: [ANGUS] Dundee -- Once Forfar now Angus -- When? PC> PC>Can SKS tell me when Dundee went from being considered a part of Forfar PC>to PC>then being considered a part of Angus? I'm trying to cite my records PC>properly for the time period, and can't seem to find this info out PC>online. PC>(I'm sure I'm just not looking in the right place ! :-) !! PC> PC>Thanks! PC> PC>Marilyn PC>Mainer Native in exile in Virginia
Yes, absolutely correct, Gordon, as always -- I stand corrected and should have more carefully recorded what I read. Thanks again to all for this discussion on administrative districts and jurisdictions, however convoluted! It's been most interesting, and helpful. I like Gordon's approach to always citing the county as Angus, since the name Forfarshire was "treated as a temporary aberration!" That answers part two of my initial question. Thanks again to all! I've been "out of touch" and off the list for several years now and so nice to see some of the familiar regulars out there! Marilyn US RESEARCHING: Powrie, Innes, Bruce, Reid, Hay (town of Forfar) Dundee 1800-1920-ish ----- Original Message ----- From: "Gordon Johnson" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Wednesday, July 27, 2011 2:53 PM Subject: Re: [ANGUS] Angus > Angus was never a burgh! > Re-read the item you referred to. It says Dundee was a Royal Burgh in > the county of Angus. > I get over all the problems by always citing the county as Angus in my > database. As someone else mentioned, the name Forfarshire was treated as > a temporary aberration!. > The 1995 local government reorganisation was 16th May 1995. It sticks > inm my mind as I was present at the opening of a new school by the old > county council of Aberdeenshire on the day before reorganisation. From > the next day I stopped being employed as a librarian by Aberdeenshire > County Council, and was instead employed by a joint committee > representing three of the new District Councils. It turned out to be a > GOOD THING, as the joint committee was strictly non-political.... > Gordon. > > > On 27/07/2011 18:03, Marilyn wrote: >> I also found this reference to Dundee as being a part of the burgh of >> Angus in 1803, so now am wondering when it went from Angus to Forfar, now >> that we've resolved the Forfar-Angus (1929) issue. >> REf:http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/sct/ANS/Dundee/index.html. This >> transition is important to me in referencing the BMD's of my family and >> records for them appear to begin ~ 1800 in Dundee. > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes > in the subject and the body of the message
You are correct, of course, Anne but the two Wikipedia articles, one on Angus and one on Forfar(shire,) don't make the distinction you so ably made in your other message. The two articles discuss the county, not specifically the town/parish (of Forfar.) In fact, if you enter "Forfarshire" as the Wiki term, you end up with the ship that sank in 1838 (or whenever it was.) On 7/27/2011 11:55 AM, Anne Burgess wrote: >> The wiki article on "Forfar" provides >> additional commentary - not sure >> why they can't just join them together. > Because they are not synonymous! Forfar is a town and parish, and Angus, formerly called Forfarshire, is a county. Joining them together would merely add to the confusion. > > Anne > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message >
Thanks to Anne and the others who answered this question. Wonderful historical information and perspective -- thanks! I think I'm clear on most things. I think, I think! What I THINK I'm hearing, and please correct me if I'm wrong, is that the important thing in the reference is for someone to be able to find the records, so all BMD records up to and including 1928 which happened in Dundee would be referenced as "Dundee, Forfarshire, Soctland" and not "Dundee, Angus, Scotland." But 1929+ events would be recorded as "Dundee, Angus, Scotland." Because at the time the event occurred (pre 1929)-- Dundee was part of the administrative shire of Forfarshire. Although I would socially refer to my ancestors as from Angus, formerly Forfarshire? Is this correct? Just want to keep my references straight. If this isn't correct, please let me know! (Or am I just assuming this is a correct citation for place because it's like a US citation of town, county, state?) But ... where does this mean the records were kept for Dundee, now that I'm thinking about this? Were they kept at the City level or ??? (i.e. if Angus had the administrative center as Forfar, what was the administrative center of Forfarshire? Dundee?) I also found this reference to Dundee as being a part of the burgh of Angus in 1803, so now am wondering when it went from Angus to Forfar, now that we've resolved the Forfar-Angus (1929) issue. REf: http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/sct/ANS/Dundee/index.html. This transition is important to me in referencing the BMD's of my family and records for them appear to begin ~ 1800 in Dundee. (I've had similar issues in the US, with towns forming out of other towns and town lines being changed and new counties being formed. So, until I understood what was going on historically with the administrative boundaries, I just thought my people were moving all over the place, but they weren't. They were in the same location for 150 years, just all these political/administrative events affected how the BMDs were recorded, and where the records were located -- 3 locations! -- so I've learned on this Rhode Island family to cite the record as it was recorded in whatever administrative unit it was recorded in. If that makes any sense....!) And, I'll certainly keep Anne's comment in mind about how the abbreviated term "Forfar" can be heard/received by natives. This too, is important.! Thanks Anne! Best wishes, and thanks again to all, Marilyn ----- Original Message ----- From: "Anne Burgess" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]>; <[email protected]> Sent: Wednesday, July 27, 2011 11:51 AM Subject: Re: [ANGUS] Dundee -- Once Forfar now Angus -- When? > Can SKS tell me when Dundee went from > being considered a part of Forfar to > then being considered a part of Angus? I'm trying to > cite my records > properly for the time period, and can't seem to find this > info out online. > (I'm sure I'm just not looking in the right place ! > :-) !! It did, or it didn't, depending on how you look at things and what time period you are thinking about. First of all, the county of Angus, which includes the city of Dundee, was known by officialdom (but not necessarily by the inhabitants) as Forfarshire from some time in the 18th century until 1929, when its traditional name was restored by Act of Parliament. So in effect Angus and Forfarshire, or the County of Forfar, or the County of Angus, are exactly the same for all practical purposes. Note that in Scotland we never refer to our counties as, for example, 'Angus County', as is done in North America. The confusion arises because the county town (administrative centre) of the County of Angus was the town of Forfar, which sits in the parish of the same name. Dundee was never part of the parish or town of Forfar, but it was in the county of Angus, which was also known for a time as Forfarshire. It begins to get complicated as recently as 1975, when the local government boundaries in Scotland went through a major reorganisation. Part of this reorganisation involved the abolition of all the town councils (Forfar, Arbroath, Brechin, Kirriemuir, Montrose and Dundee), the creation of two separate new District Councils, the City of Dundee District Council and Angus District Council. Both of these, plus Perth and Kinross District Council, formed part of Tayside Region and were also administered by Tayside Regional Council. Functions were divided between the Region and the Districts; the Region looked after, for example, roads, education, social work etc and the Districts looked after housing, cleansing, libraries, sport and recreation, burial grounds etc etc. Then in 1995 or (my memory for the exact date has let me down) there was another reorganisation, which abolished Tayside Regional Council, removed the word District from both Angus Council and the City of Dundee Council, and made the former districts into all-purpose authorities responsible for all aspects of local government. However the various reorganisations affected only local government. For ceremonial purposes the traditional counties remain unchanged; in other words the Queen's Lord Lieutenant for the county of Angus still includes Dundee in his/her patch, and it remains perfectly correct to say that Dundee is in the County of Angus, even though there is no longer an Angus County Council responsible for the administrative functions of the local authority. When I was growing up in Forfar, it was drilled into me that the name 'Forfarshire'/'County of Forfar' was a temporary aberration to be eschewed. I was and am proud to be a native of the county of Angus, and it still produces a faint wave of irritation when I see it referred to as 'Forfar' instead of 'the County of Forfar' or 'Forfarshire'. For the avoidance of confusion I use the name 'Forfar' exclusively for the burgh (town) of Forfar and the surrounding parish, and I always use 'Angus' for the county. I also ignore the new councils entirely unless citing a document which was produced by one of them. For family history research purposes their only relevance is in knowing which one has custody of the records of the former local authorities you wish to look at. This very probably does not help with your question, because the whole thing has been a bit of a dog's breakfast since the 1975 reorganisation. I'm sure someone will be along shortly to modify my rather over-simplified account! Anne ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
The wiki article on "Forfar" provides additional commentary - not sure why they can't just join them together. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forfar On 7/27/2011 11:44 AM, Pat Carson wrote: > 1928 is when Forfarshire reverted to being called Angus. > Politically, Dundee is now on its own (ie not part of Angus) and I'm unclear > as to how we should cite it for the present-day. Maybe someone could help on > this? > > This link seem to give some detail: > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angus > > > Pat > > "Here's tae us! Wha's like us? Damn few! - an' they're a' deid!" Old Scots > Toast > > > Check out my website www.genesontheweb.co.uk > > > PC>-----Original Message----- > PC>From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On > PC>Behalf Of Marilyn Arnold > PC>Sent: 16 July 2011 18:06 > PC>To: [email protected] > PC>Subject: [ANGUS] Dundee -- Once Forfar now Angus -- When? > PC> > PC>Can SKS tell me when Dundee went from being considered a part of Forfar > PC>to > PC>then being considered a part of Angus? I'm trying to cite my records > PC>properly for the time period, and can't seem to find this info out > PC>online. > PC>(I'm sure I'm just not looking in the right place ! :-) !! > PC> > PC>Thanks! > PC> > PC>Marilyn > PC>Mainer Native in exile in Virginia > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message >
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: GordonPertJohnson Surnames: Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/localities.britisles.scotland.ans.general/80.2/mb.ashx Message Board Post: You should also consider the spellings BATE and BAIT, as these are found in the Montrose area. Gordon. Important Note: The author of this message may not be subscribed to this list. If you would like to reply to them, please click on the Message Board URL link above and respond on the board.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: zebadeee Surnames: Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/localities.britisles.scotland.ans.general/80.1/mb.ashx Message Board Post: Hello, I posted a message in relation to your query on Charles Fleming. I am also researching the William Beat/Charles Beat line as they are also ancestors. I would love to exchange family tree information with you. Elizabeth Important Note: The author of this message may not be subscribed to this list. If you would like to reply to them, please click on the Message Board URL link above and respond on the board.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: carol_wardale Surnames: Lawrence, Smith Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/localities.britisles.scotland.ans.general/2721.1/mb.ashx Message Board Post: Hi Ronwyn, George Lawrence & Barbara Smith were my great great grandparents. I am happy to share any information I have. Regards, Carol Important Note: The author of this message may not be subscribed to this list. If you would like to reply to them, please click on the Message Board URL link above and respond on the board.
Hello Julie, Did you try scotlandspeople? I put in a query for Angus, between 1730-1770, & 12 were listed for a Charles Findlay. I also have found purchasing a will for parents or siblings has brought more family members into the picture, including land ownership. Do you have any connection with barrie/y families as there is a Julie Parks in one of their families. Best regards, Barbara, Melbourne, Australia On Sun, Jul 17th, 2011 at 8:30 PM, Julie Parks <[email protected]> wrote: > > I'm having the devil of a time unraveling the Findlay/Finlay and Milne > families. > > Charles Findlay, weaver, married Agnes Milne, daughter of Robert Milne, > tailor, in Forfar Dec. 6, 1783. I need to find out if this Charles was > a) the son of John Finlay and Jean Wilson, born 1757 in Rescobie, > b) the son of Robert Finlay, shipmaster, and Janet Blythe, born 1753 in > Dundee > c) the son of John Finlay, born 1755 in Airlie > d) the son of Thomas Finlay, born 1762 in Kinnettles > > There is no Charles Findlay born in Forfar during that time period, but > once Charles and Agnes married, the family stayed in Forfar for the next > three generations, then moved on to Dundee. > > Also need to find out who Robert Milne's parents were. > > Sure hope someone can give me some guidance on this! > Julie Parks > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes > in the subject and the body of the message > > > Best regards Barbara