Roots Mon! - Tracing Ancestors in RenfrewshireMany Scots left home in the great waves of emigration caused by the Highland
clearances, but most prospered and a few even found immortality waiting on the other side
of the ocean - for example, Alexander Graham Bell. If you are interested in genealogy,
Renfrewshire is where records still exist for many of our less famous 'exports' to
America, Canada, Australia and elsewhere round the globe.
It may take some digging to find out where your Scottish forebears came from, but some of
our visitors say that's half the fun! For a start, we suggest:
Paisley Library & Museum provide a joint facility,
including a family history enquiry service (just write or phone) as well as self-service
facilities. The focus is on Renfrewshire and in particular, the old county of Renfrew.
Census material for 1841-91 on microfilm is the bedrock of the archive, which includes
parish registers, the name index from the 1891 census, a partial index for Paisley from
the 1841 census. Also the Family Search computer programme, the UK index compiled by the
Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, directories of business and tradesmen from
1782, a large photographic collection of houses and local newspapers from
1824 to present. Contact Trisha Burke or David Robertson (0141 889 2360).
James Watt Library, Union Street, Greenock. Tel 01475 715 628. Librarian Lesley
Couperwhite has pulled together the best archive in the West of Scotland, including the
complete census for Renfrewshire (1841-91), parish records, name indexes for Inverclyde,
and much more -plus, a record of local births, deaths and marriages between 1802-1913,
with records of sailors who died at sea or in foreign ports, victims of the cholera
epidemics of 1832 & 1849, etc - a real rarity.
Mitchell Library, Glasgow. Reference library for all of
Scotland. Their free leaflet has a comprehensive list of genealogical research sources and
addresses. Telephone 0141 287 2938 or email to
history_and_glasgow@gcl.glasgow.gov.uk
The Internet is a rich source of information. Genealogy
Helplist United Kingdom offers hundreds of contacts. Many of the searches are to do with
specific family names. Some of the more prominent local ones in Renfrewshire are Caird,
Scott, Wallace, Lindsay, Shaw, Lamont, Maxwell and MacMillan.
Of particular relevance to Renfrewshire are:
Jayne Paradis jparadis@mts.net for Renfrewshire
Monumental
Inscriptions, Volume 1, pre-1855, covering Arthurlis (Barrhead), Bridge of Weir
(Freeland), Cathcart Old Churchyard, Eaglesham Old Churchyard, Eastwood (Pollok) Old
Churchyard, Erskine Old Churchyard, Gourock, Greenock, Houston, Inchinnan, Inverkip,
Johnstone, Kilbarchan East and West, Kilbarchan Burntshields, Killellan Hilary Machan shmachan@scsinternet.com for Renfrewshire
Scotland Monumental Inscriptions, Volume 2, pre-1855, covering Kilmacolm, Lochwinnoch Old
Churchyard, Lochwinnoch Beltrees, Lochwinnoch Castle Semple, Mearns Churchyard, Neilston
Churchyard, Neilston Cemetery, Paisley
Abbey Interior, Paisley Abbey Churchyard, Paisley Laigh Churchyard, Paisley High Kirkyard,
Paisley Gaelic Churchyard, Paisley (West) Oakshaw Street, Paisley Abbey Close, Paisley
Canal Street, Paisley Oakshaw East, Paisley Thread Street, Paisley Trinity Church, Paisley
Woodside Cemetery, Pollokshaws Kirk Lane, Port Glasgow Old Churchyard, Port Glasgow,
Newark
Church, Port Glasgow Blackstone Ground, Port Glasgow Cemetery, Renfrew Churchyard.
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