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hcoldron
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French Relatives - Where do I start?
« on: Wednesday 02 August 06 15:58 BST (UK) »

Hi, I'm tracing my partner's side of our tree, and have a bit of a dilemma. His grandfather is French (DUMONT).

We're hoping to get some more information when his parents visit a surviving sibling.

Are there French Census records / BMD archives like in the UK?

Where do I find these?

Are they in French?
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Bassham, Booth, Chambers, Cobb, Coldron, Courts, Dernie, Farmery, Hill, Houghton, Lawson, Marsh, Snowden, Ulyatt, Wagstaff in Lincs/Yorks/Notts

Cottrell, Grice, Walley, Wade in Staffs
Dumont, Hall in London
Dumont in Tolouse-France
jorose
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Re: French Relatives - Where do I start?
« Reply #1 on: Thursday 03 August 06 15:29 BST (UK) »

For French records you will need to know which town they were from.   Census records generally aren't used for genealogy as none are indexed and you have to go to the departmental archives to get hold of them.  (Consider the 'department' like the county here in England, the departmental archives - 'archives departmentales' are the big archives but generally will not do research, although a few have records online.)

The basic source, post 1792, are the BMD records (like English civil registration records).  Everything is in French (exceptions: very early church records which will be in old French or Latin or if your ancestor came from an area which was part of Germany at some point in which case some records are in German)

There are what are called 'tables decennales'  - ten year indexes, which list all births, marriages, and deaths in a particular commune for a space of ten years.  Because these are organised at the commune level and there isn't any sort of departmental/national indexing like the BMD indexes here, you have to know the commune you are searching for first.  But if you do know the area then it is fairly easy to find people in this way.

The records follow a fairly standard format and can be understood with basic French (like mine!).  An Acte de Naissance will give the date (+time) of birth, the date (+time) that the birth was registered, the name (and usually age and occupation) of the father, the name (inc. maiden, and usually age, sometimes occupation) of the mother, say if the child is from a legitimate marriage, and also give the names of two witnesses, often with their relationship to the child.

The Acte de Mariage often has a lot of information, which I've found varies over the years and depending who is doing the recording, but you almost always get the names of both parents for each spouse, including where they are living at the time, and if they are deceased sometimes it will say when/where.  Often you will even get the exact date/place of birth for those who are marrying.  There are four witnesses for a marriage act of which usually two are from the groom's side and two from the bride's side and they are often relatives as well, with relationships given.  (I have one case where there was a fourth cousin as one of the witnesses - I am related to, I think, everyone in about a five mile radius of a particular village in Vendee, and they all married each other...)

One exception: if someone is marrying for a second time they will list them as, say, 'Jean Dumont widower of Marie LeBlanc', and not give the parents.  Then you have to find the first marriage to get the parents!  (Women kept using their maiden name, so Jeanne Dumont widow of Pierre LeBlanc would also be something you might see)

Death records seldom give a cause of death, but will often give parents names (if known - less likely for older folks, obviously), and mention the spouse.  Two witnesses again, often the father, son or son in law is the one who registers the death but I have some in which the neighbours were the ones listed - and they knew her parents' names!  Women are usually listed in these records under their maiden names.

Also, for about 12 years from 1793, civil records are dated using the French Republican Calendar, so look out for that if you end up going back that far:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/French_Republican_Calendar

1792 and before, the main source is church records.  The further back you go the less info these give, unfortunately, and they are not indexed.  If you, like me, have families who move freely between five or so different communes, each with their own set of records, it becomes a real pain in the behind. Tongue   I am very lucky in that the Vendee archives are one of those who have their records online (if you want to look at examples of civil records, go to http://archives.vendee.fr/recherche/ and hit 'etat civil' )

Church records list baptisms rather than births and burials rather than deaths, and for larger cities there will be lots of parishes which makes it more of a struggle (much like trying to do research in London without any of the indexes).  Hope and pray you don't have relatives from Paris, as well; a lot of records were lost in a fire there AND you'll have to check through all the different parts of the city and the numerous parishes there if that's the case.

This entire message was too long! I'll split it up into two bits: next, where to actually get the records!
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Re: French Relatives - Where do I start?
« Reply #2 on: Thursday 03 August 06 15:38 BST (UK) »

Now as to how you get your hands on these: you can write to the Mairie of the commune in question, particularly this is necessary for more recent records (there's a 100-year rule there,too, which covers bmd records).

http://genealogy.about.com/library/blfrenchletter.htm - this is a good form letter, I've used this one.  Although they say you can write to the archives in my experience the Mairie is a better choice, unless you know the Archives in question are willing to do research for you.  It takes a couple of months to get a response, though.

Otherwise (and presuming you're not in luck and the department in question does not have records online), the easiest way to do things is via the LDS.  I've done this for years which are not online (anything post-1855 for the Vendee), and for Belgian records.

http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Library/FHLC/frameset_fhlc.asp - is the LDS catalogue, and if you enter the name of the place you are looking for it will tell you what records they have.  For example, for Givrand, Vendee, France, they have civil records (1796-1883) and church records (1668-1792).  These are spread over several microfilms, and the indexes for the civil records are on another microfilm as well.  Although, if you know approximately the date you are looking for, there are yearly indexes in the civil records, at the end of each year, so it may not be necessary to search the tables decennales.  The tables are useful if you are looking for, say, all the Dumonts born in a certain period to try and find siblings or if you have the birth of one child and want to quickly find out when the marriage was.

Also look out for 'Cercle de Généalogie' which is the equivalent of a genealogy society for a certain area, some of which have indexes and research services for members.   Once you have the name of the town your Dumonts were from, try putting that into www.geneanet.com to see if there are others researching the same family - there are a lot of records from French genealogists indexed here so you may be in luck.

http://www.patro.com/ has some records online - you search for a surname and it tells you what departments it has records for, and then which communes in a given department it has records, and how many. To get hold of the actual records, however, requires payment, and as they don't have any for my areas I never worked out exactly how the payment system works, I believe it's a 'credit' system like pay as you go sites such as 1837online.

One last good site: this is a genealogical word list which covers most of the words you'll need to puzzle out French records:

http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/search/rg/guide/WLFrench.asp
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hcoldron
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Re: French Relatives - Where do I start?
« Reply #3 on: Thursday 03 August 06 18:53 BST (UK) »

Gosh, that sounds ever so complicated! I've barely got to grips with the UK BMD!

Well, at least I have a start point now, thanks!
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Bassham, Booth, Chambers, Cobb, Coldron, Courts, Dernie, Farmery, Hill, Houghton, Lawson, Marsh, Snowden, Ulyatt, Wagstaff in Lincs/Yorks/Notts

Cottrell, Grice, Walley, Wade in Staffs
Dumont, Hall in London
Dumont in Tolouse-France
Berlin-Bob
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Re: French Relatives - Where do I start?
« Reply #4 on: Monday 15 October 07 13:08 BST (UK) »

I have split off two off topics with queries on specific names from this topic.

Please can you just add general information here.  Thanks  Smiley

There is also some general information on the two split-off topics:

Topic: FRANCE: DUMONT
http://www.rootschat.com/forum/index.php/topic,261902.0.html
and
Topic: FRANCE: De CAPON
http://www.rootschat.com/forum/index.php/topic,261903.0.html

Bob
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Re: French Relatives - Where do I start?
« Reply #5 on: Monday 15 October 07 13:13 BST (UK) »

Also go to geneanet
http://www.geneanet.org/
Which is run rather along the lines of genesconnected here in the uK - you just put in a search + it will search the uploaded family trees
Also genealogie.com does more or less the same thing if you (like ) don't want to pay
France is not easy tho - 2 world war invasions + a revolution + no centralisation of records does not help

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Dodds + Laws in Co Durham
Holman + Hocking in Cornwall
Chambers + Hall in Yorkshire + Co Durham
Ellis + Leonard in Shropshire, Staffordshire + Glasgow
Péronne + Molinié in Brive la Gaillarde + Caylus
France
Bentley + Wood in Westminster + Marylebone
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Re: French Relatives - Where do I start?
« Reply #6 on: Monday 15 October 07 15:01 BST (UK) »

Here are a few hints got from my own experiences of tracking down French relatives

Forget the good life of just putting the name into freebmd etc + getting the answer - France is more like a Sherlock Holmes job - very satisfying when you see an open door but easier said than done

See these pages for a quick synopsis

http://genealogy.about.com/od/france/a/french_ancestry_5.htm
http://genealogy.about.com/od/french_records/

Basically the system is run on Parishes rather the way the UK worked until they were centralised post 1837. So you have to start with the parish records

Theoretically these were raised in duplicate + 1 copy sent to the chief town in the Departement (County) This did not always happen so not 100% foolproof. Also the tiny parishes/hamlets surrounding the village/town sometimes only got their records as far as the nearest important village/town - for instance a record from St Martin d'Espiemont that I want is not in the chief town of Montauban but still in Caylus. France was a very rural country + some hamlets were incredibly isolated so it's not surprising that not all the paperwork ended up in the right place

The Mormons are doing their usual good job but light years away from the help they can give us in the UK.

If you are looking for anything less than 100 yrs old then unless you can go there in person + prove you are a direct descendant then you are unlikely to strike gold - I know that death actes are supposed to be available but this is France - I have here a letter that just arrived this week from a French City telling me they are unable to help with a death entry search

Before you do a thing search every nook + cranny available to you, backs of photos, bdm + census entries in your own country - anything to pin down the origins or movements of your French ancestor. For instance findmypast.com shows me that my French greatgrandfather took the boat to Marseille in 1927 - I don't know why - not yet anyway

The French population was not particulary mobile + even now they often still keep the old family home in the country - so if you have a village + a surname look in the tel book
http://www.pagesjaunes.fr/trouverunnom/RecherchePagesBlanches.do
You may find a relative still there.

Finally if you are really hell bent - as I am - of finding those elusive relatives - get someone on holiday in France to buy you a couple of dozen French stamps, brush up your basic French + get into Sherlock Holmes mode.
Hard work but rewarding
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Dodds + Laws in Co Durham
Holman + Hocking in Cornwall
Chambers + Hall in Yorkshire + Co Durham
Ellis + Leonard in Shropshire, Staffordshire + Glasgow
Péronne + Molinié in Brive la Gaillarde + Caylus
France
Bentley + Wood in Westminster + Marylebone
Rothwell + Schofield in Rochdale
Hills + Hills in Keston
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Re: French Relatives - Where do I start?
« Reply #7 on: Friday 23 November 07 13:28 GMT (UK) »



http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Library/FHLC/frameset_fhlc.asp - is the LDS catalogue, and if you enter the name of the place you are looking for it will tell you what records they have.  For example, for Givrand, Vendee, France, they have civil records (1796-1883) and church records (1668-1792).  These are spread over several microfilms, and the indexes for the civil records are on another microfilm as well.  Although, if you know approximately the date you are looking for, there are yearly indexes in the civil records, at the end of each year, so it may not be necessary to search the tables decennales.  The tables are useful if you are looking for, say, all the Dumonts born in a certain period to try and find siblings or if you have the birth of one child and want to quickly find out when the marriage was.


Hi

I am trying to find a birth in Calais in France around 1872, have looked at the above link, and am a bit confused  Huh sorry  Embarrassed

Does this mean they have all the births for that area on the Family Search website? I have searched and found nothing under the name and country as France.

Would appreciate any help or advise anyone has on searching, I have tried some of the sites and also googled for some websites, but can't seem to be able to find anything.

I am looking for William Murrell whose mother (unknown) would have travelled from England to France to give birth, and then back to England again afterwards. His father was Frederick.

Many Thanks

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BOYD (../Croydon/Frederick G b 1892, Silas b 1859&15);   
DIXON  (LIN/Barton on Humber/Alice b 1884, John b1857, Richard b 1819);   
MCDONNELL  (YKS/Leeds, Kingston Upon Hull/Peter b 1842, Edward b 1883);   
MURDY  (DUR/Hetton, Hough'n L S, Lambton, Sunderland/Thomas b1822, William H A b 1869);   
PALFREY  (LND/Paddington/Linda M b1885);   
TAYLOR  (NBL/Ellingham/Jonathan b1841, Moses b 1800, John
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Re: French Relatives - Where do I start?
« Reply #8 on: Friday 23 November 07 14:09 GMT (UK) »

The link is a catalog of microfilms, as the vast majority of French records are not online (it depends on the department - some of the departmental archives have large amounts of info online, some don't even have their own website). You look for the place you are researching, and then order the films through an LDS center.

Your situation is a little different, as you appear to be dealing with a British family who were temporarily in Calais.  There are some indexes in Britain for overseas births but I think the longer that the family were Calais residents the more likely it is that they would register their children with the French authorities rather than the British.

I can't find any William Murrell b. about 1872 France on the English censuses, though, or any possible siblings for him.
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GlitteringPrize
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Re: French Relatives - Where do I start?
« Reply #9 on: Friday 23 November 07 16:42 GMT (UK) »

Hi Jorose

Thanks for your help!

Apparently the family were French, but lived in England and took poor old William's mother back across to France to give birth to her children.

I'll check out ordering the films through the LDS as it looks like they cover 1872 on those films.

I too, couldn't find a French Born William on the census, or any siblings, or father Frederick. I have some information which points to them not being French at all, but the family history has the family being French and going back and forth from here to there to have their children.

Do you think it possible that they may have registered his birth in France and England?

Many Thanks
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BOYD (../Croydon/Frederick G b 1892, Silas b 1859&15);   
DIXON  (LIN/Barton on Humber/Alice b 1884, John b1857, Richard b 1819);   
MCDONNELL  (YKS/Leeds, Kingston Upon Hull/Peter b 1842, Edward b 1883);   
MURDY  (DUR/Hetton, Hough'n L S, Lambton, Sunderland/Thomas b1822, William H A b 1869);   
PALFREY  (LND/Paddington/Linda M b1885);   
TAYLOR  (NBL/Ellingham/Jonathan b1841, Moses b 1800, John
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Re: French Relatives - Where do I start?
« Reply #10 on: Saturday 24 November 07 12:56 GMT (UK) »

Hi

Re your French relatives if you speak French or Franglais why don't you go to yahoogroupes.fr + join a French group in your area - I'm pretty sure there is 1 called pdc which stands for Pas de Calais. I'm sure someone will help you even if you write in English
Also go to Findmypast.com + look in migration - you never know they may have taken a boat somewhere - I found a journey 1 of mine made to Marseiille
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Dodds + Laws in Co Durham
Holman + Hocking in Cornwall
Chambers + Hall in Yorkshire + Co Durham
Ellis + Leonard in Shropshire, Staffordshire + Glasgow
Péronne + Molinié in Brive la Gaillarde + Caylus
France
Bentley + Wood in Westminster + Marylebone
Rothwell + Schofield in Rochdale
Hills + Hills in Keston
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Re: French Relatives - Where do I start?
« Reply #11 on: Saturday 24 November 07 18:19 GMT (UK) »

Hi birtles

Thanks for your help! I'm waiting on some more information to confirm Calais 100% and may well give the franglais a go  Cheesy

I have already checked out Find My Past and haven't found anything LOL I'd guess William's mother had already had all her children by the time the records start in 1890 for passenger lists. The family I have as a possible (but not listed on the censuses as born in France) all the children were born by 1884.
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BOYD (../Croydon/Frederick G b 1892, Silas b 1859&15);   
DIXON  (LIN/Barton on Humber/Alice b 1884, John b1857, Richard b 1819);   
MCDONNELL  (YKS/Leeds, Kingston Upon Hull/Peter b 1842, Edward b 1883);   
MURDY  (DUR/Hetton, Hough'n L S, Lambton, Sunderland/Thomas b1822, William H A b 1869);   
PALFREY  (LND/Paddington/Linda M b1885);   
TAYLOR  (NBL/Ellingham/Jonathan b1841, Moses b 1800, John
muriel POOLE
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Re: French Relatives - Where do I start?
« Reply #12 on: Sunday 04 May 08 14:43 BST (UK) »

Hello
you can try

http://www.gennpdc.net/lesforums/index.php?showforum=3

may be can someone help you
it was good for me and my Poole family members
Muriel Poole



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« Last Edit: Sunday 04 May 08 16:16 BST (UK) by Berlin-Bob » Logged
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Re: French Relatives - Where do I start?
« Reply #13 on: Tuesday 19 August 08 02:28 BST (UK) »

This maight be completely irrelevant, but my computer has been hogged by a visiting french teenager for the last few days.

One of the sites she has visited is called

http://voila.fr/

and from this page you can acess a link to genealogy, type in the name of an ancestor and ( i think ) pay for some information
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