Tracing Your Lancashire Ancestors (Paperback)
Imprint: Pen & Sword Family History
Pages: 224
Illustrations: 40 illustrations
ISBN: 9781848847446
Published: 5th November 2012
Last Released: 24th January 2022
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If you want to find out about Lancashire's history, and particularly if you have family links to the area and your ancestors lived or worked in the county, then this is the ideal book for you. As well as helping you to trace when and where your ancestors were born, married and died, it gives you an insight into the world they knew and a chance to explore their lives at work and at home.
Sue Wilkes's accessible and informative handbook outlines Lancashire's history and describes the origins of its major industries - cotton, coal, transport, engineering, shipbuilding and others. She looks at the stories of important Lancashire families such as the Stanleys, Peels and Egertons, and famous entrepreneurs such as Richard Arkwright, in order to illustrate aspects of Lancashire life and to show how the many sources available for family and local history research can be used.
Relevant documents, specialist archives and libraries, background reading and other sources are recommended throughout this practical book. Also included is a directory of Lancashire archives, libraries and academic repositories, as well as databases of family history societies, useful genealogy websites, and places to visit which bring Lancashire's past to life.
Sue Wilkes's book is the essential companion for anyone who wants to discover their Lancashire roots.
As featured in
Lancashire Evening Post, May 2017
An essential companion if you have Lancashire ancestors, since it identifies what records to look at, what indexes may exist and where they will be located. It also places Lancashire ancestors into social context.
Federation of Genealogical Societies
The similarities between Lancashire and Lanarkshire are obvious – both cradles of the industrial revolution with an emphasis on coal and textiles as well as shipbuilding and trade with the Caribbean and the Americas, plus a large influx of Irish immigrants.
Journal of Glasgow and West Scotland Family History Society
This is an invaluable book for these with Lancashire ancestors or connections.
Sue Wilke’s accessible and informative handbook outlines Lancashire’s history and describes the origins of its major industries – cotton, coal, transport, engineering, shipbuilding, and others. She looks at the stories of important Lancashire families such as the Stanley’s and peels, and reveals the sources available for family and local history research.
Your Family tree, March 2013
Sue Wilkes’s book is full of accessible information about Lancashire’s history and ancestors who lived and worked in the county. She tells the stories of important families such as the Stanleys, Molneuxs and Egertons, and famous entrepreneurs like Richard Arkwright. This guide is essential for anyone who wants to discover their Lancashire roots and relevant documents, specialist archives and libraries, background reading and other sources are recommended throughout this practical book.
Lancashire Magazine, Feb 2013
If you want to find out about Lancashire’s history, and particularly if you have family links to the area and your ancestors lived or worked in the county, then this is the ideal book for you. As well as helping you to trace when and where your ancestors were born, married and died, it gives you an insight into the world they knew and a chance to explore their lives at work and at home.
Kent FHS Journal
Sue Wilkes book is the essential companion for anyone who wants to discover their Lancashire roots.
I particularly chose this book to review because of my Lancashire ancestors, and I have not been disappointed. I was fascinated with the opening story of Lancashire and its people even though I am Yorkshire by birth.
Federation of Family History Societies, Marcia Kemp
The ‘Matter of Religion’ is colourfully dealt with. It includes details of the trial of 19 people from the Pendle and Samlesbury areas being tried as witches, and the section also touches on Parish registers, church records and marriage bonds etc.
A chapter on ‘rags to riches’ follows showing how the new industries made fortunes for the mill owners. It also highlights the dreadful living and working conditions of those working in them and in particular the children and how Sir Robert Peel campaigned tirelessly for better conditions. This section led neatly into the chapter on transport and industry, in which I was particularly interest myself.
The last part of the book deals with how to search, which leads into a research guide and archive directory. Useful addresses in alphabetical order and two separate lists on free online resources and subscription ones make this book an invaluable companion. I am working my way through all the sites mentioned, many of which I knew but there are a lot which I did not know about.
Sue Wilkes, an established expert on industrial heritage and a well known family historian, has put together an invaluable handbook packed with practical advice and information as well as an excellent background to Lancashire’s history for those tracking down ancestors who lived or worked in the country.
Blackpool Gazette, 26/01/13
No stone is left unturned in Tracing Your Lancashire Ancestors, a fascinating and essential companion for anyone seeking out their Lancashire roots.
Sue Wilkes’ new guide delves deep into the cradle of the Industrial Revolution. Spanning the centuries from the country’s medieval origins to the First World War and the industrial and social histories between, this is a perfect companion for those searching for their red rose forebears.
Your Family History January 2013
Sue Wilkes’ accessible and informative handbook outlines Lancashire’s history and describes the origins of its major industries – cotton, coal, transport, engineering, shipbuilding and others. She looks at the stories of important Lancashire families such as the Stanleys and Pells, and reveals the sources available for family and local history research. Read it for a dedicated handbook for exploring Lancashire roots.
Your Family Tree, January 2013
Tracing ancestors has become a favourite pastime but it can be hard to know where to start. Wilkes’ accessible and informative handbook provides an excellent background to Lancashire’s history for those tracking down ancestors who lives or worked in the country. As well as helping to trace when and where ancestors were born, marriage and died, the book gives an insight into the world they knew and a chance to explore their lives.
Lancashire Evening Post, 1st Dec 2013
Sue Wilkes’s latest book will be welcomed by family historians interested in Lancashire forebears, as it is perhaps the most comprehensive and wide-ranging work on the subject to date.
Who Do You Think You Are Magazine, January 2013
Tracing Your Lancashire Ancestors certainly deserved a place on the bookshelves of all those interested in the subject and local historians as well.
Sue Wilkes’s guide outlines the history of Lancashire, its industries, famous families and entrepreneurs, to give a real flavour of what life was like for residents in days gone by, as well as directing researchers to the many local sources available.
Family Tree, January 2013
Lancashire was the birth place of the Industrial Revolution and the story has been expertly woven into this useful guide, covering local sources, from marriage bonds to mining records. All life is here for those researching Lancashire forebears, and so are the archives and websites.
Sue Wilkes, an established expert on industrial heritage and a well-known family historian, has put together this invaluable handbook packed with practical advice and information as well as an excellent background to Lancashire’s history for those tracking down ancestors who lived or worked in the county.
Pendle Today
As well as helping you to trace when and where your ancestors were born, married and died, it gives an insight into the world they knew and a chance to explore their lives at work and at home.
No stone is left unturned in this fascinating and essential companion for anyone seeking out their Lancashire roots.
Tracing Your Lancashire Ancestors is the ideal guide to find out about Lancashire’s history and ancestors. It will assist in tracing when and where ancestors were born, married and died and gives an insight into the world they knew and a chance to explore their lives at work and at home.
Lancashire Evening Post, December 12th 2012
Sue Wilkes accessible and informative handbook describes the origins of Lancashire’s major industries – cotton, coal, transport, engineering, shipbuilding and others. Sue looks at the stories of the important Lancashire families such as the Stanley’s, Molyneuxs and Egertons, and famous entrepreneurs such as Richard Arkwright to illustration aspects of Lancashire life and to show how the sources for family and local history research can be used.
Relevant documents, specialist archives and libraries, background reading and other sources are recommended throughout this practical book.
Sue Wilkes is an established expert on industrial heritage and a family historian.
About Sue Wilkes
Sue Wilkes is a Fellow of the Royal Historical Society. She has written extensively on social history, and industrial history and heritage. Sue was born in Lancashire, and has lived in Cheshire since the early 1980s. She read Physics at Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford. Sue is married, with two grown-up children.
She is the author of nine books and is a well-known family historian. A regular contributor to Jane Austen’s Regency World for over two decades, Sue has written many articles for history and family history magazines such Who Do You Think You Are?. She loves exploring Britain’s history and heritage, and is a keen gardener.