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1891 Census

ProfilePosted byOptionsPost Date

John2000

John2000 Report 14 Dec 2012 21:56

I've tried to look at various relatives in 1891 and I can't find them. They are on 1881 and 1901. was this a bad year for some reason in Derbyshire / Nottingham? :-)

GlitterBaby

GlitterBaby Report 14 Dec 2012 21:58

Post the 1881 and 1901 and let the members see if they can find them

ErikaH

ErikaH Report 14 Dec 2012 23:02

Which website are you using?

DazedConfused

DazedConfused Report 15 Dec 2012 11:23

Mis-transcribed?

Jonesey

Jonesey Report 15 Dec 2012 11:33

There are many reasons why our ancestors do not appear in the census records where we expect them to be.

Census enumerators may have misheard what they were being told. They may have spelled names differently (Remember that there is no such thing as standardised spelling of names) or because they were human just like us they may have simply made a mistake.

The next step in the recording process is transcribing the record itself. Trying to decipher someone else’s handwriting is not always easy and often results in the record being incorrectly transcribed. Once again the people doing the transcribing are human so mistakes are made. Mistranscriptions can be very frustrating.

Here is a tip which may help you to find who you are searching for.

Type the persons forename into the census search form but leave the surname box completely empty. You can do this in reverse if you wish, entering a surname but leaving the forename box empty. Remember that people often used a different 1st name from the one they were born/baptised with. E.G. Dick = Richard, Harry = Henry, Nellie = Eleanor, Betsy = Elizabeth ect. Be aware also of common enumerators abbreviations such as Thos = Thomas, Hy = Henry, Wm = William ect

Type the persons birth year +/- 2 or +/- 5 years. Some people were not sure how old they were or they may have deliberately lied about their age to make themselves appear younger or older than their spouse. Children’s ages in census returns are generally more likely to be accurate than those of adults.

Type in their birth county/birthplace. Sometimes it pays to leave the birthplace blank because that too may have been misheard, misspelled or mistranscribed. Some people genuinely did not know their exact place of birth or may even have lied for various reasons.

If necessary use wildcards such as "*" or "?" in the surname to try to reveal a name where wrongly transcribed letters may have changed a name. E.G. Pegden, Pigden, Pigdon, Pagden. Entering P?gd* will reveal all those options plus many others if using Ancestry.

Press "Search". This will bring up a list of all the people with that name of approximate age born in that county/place. Scroll through the list (It may be a long list) and hopefully you will find your missing ancestor shown as Borne instead of Bourne or Wilks instead of Wilkes or similar. It doesn't always work but it might.

Look for patterns in words rather than names just beginning with the 1st letter of the correct name. E.G. Baldrick has 8 letters and ends 'ick' as does Coldrick. Anyone looking for someone called Tucker may well be shocked to discover how some of their ancestors were mistranscribed.

Good luck with your search.

John2000

John2000 Report 30 Dec 2012 17:19

Many thanks for your advice Jonesey, I will give it a try

Happy New Year

ErikaH

ErikaH Report 30 Dec 2012 22:48

So no-one else tried to help you.......................noted.

Jonesey

Jonesey Report 31 Dec 2012 14:15

Oh Reggie, you really are priceless. :-D

Have a happier new year.