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Tracing Your Naval Ancestors [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 224 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, over 50 illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Jan-2012
  • Kirjastus: Pen & Sword Books Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1848846258
  • ISBN-13: 9781848846258
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 224 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, over 50 illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 01-Jan-2012
  • Kirjastus: Pen & Sword Books Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1848846258
  • ISBN-13: 9781848846258
Teised raamatud teemal:
This concise guide to naval history and naval records is essential reading and reference for anyone researching the fascinating story of Britain's Navy and the men and women who served in it. Whether you are interested in the career of an individual seaman, finding out about a medal winner or just want to know more about a particular ship, campaign or operation, this book will point you in the right direction.Simon Fowler assumes the reader has little prior knowledge of the Navy and its history. His book shows you how to trace an officer, petty officer or rating from the seventeenth century up to the 1960s using records at the National Archives and elsewhere.The book also covers the specialist and auxiliary services associated with the Navy - among them the Royal Marines, the Fleet Air Arm, the naval dockyards, the WRNS and the Fleet Auxiliary. In each section he explains which records survive, where they can be found and how they can be used for research. He also recommends resources available online as well as books and memoirs.His handbook is a valuable research tool for anyone who is keen to find out about the career of an ancestor who served in the Royal Navy or was connected with it. Simon Fowler is a leading authority on military and family history and a prolific writer on these subjects. He once edited the National Archives' family history magazine Ancestors. For nearly 20 years he was an archivist at the Public Record Office (now The National Archives). As well as publishing many articles in magazines and journals, he has written several well-known books on military and family history, including: Tracing Your Army Ancestors, A Guide to Military Historyon the Internet and Tracing Your Ancestors. He is also a professional researcher - find out more at www.history-man.co.uk.
Preface viii
Acknowledgements x
Glossary xi
Chapter 1 Getting Started
1(18)
Where to Start
1(1)
Background Research
2(1)
The Internet
3(1)
Commercial Data Providers
4(1)
Where the Records Are
5(11)
Undertaking Research
16(2)
Making Use of Your Research
18(1)
Chapter 2 Basic Genealogical Resources
19(23)
Birth, Marriage and Death Records
20(3)
Census Returns
23(2)
Wills
25(2)
Newspapers and Journals
27(3)
Private Papers
30(1)
Medals
30(6)
Naval Education
36(6)
Chapter 3 Officers, 1660-1914
42(22)
Careers
45(3)
The Navy List
48(1)
Service Records
49(7)
Pay and Pensions
56(5)
Memorials
61(1)
Admiralty Digests and Indexes
62(2)
Chapter 4 Ratings and Petty Officers, 1660-1914
64(22)
Badges and Uniforms
65(3)
The Records
68(1)
Men Entering Between 1667 and 1853
68(5)
Men Entering Between 1853 and 1872
73(1)
Men Entering Between 1873 and 1923
74(3)
After 1923
77(1)
Pensions
77(4)
Memorials
81(1)
Courts Martial
81(3)
Women at Sea
84(2)
Chapter 5 The Navy After 1914
86(27)
First World War
87(8)
The Inter-war Period and Second World War
95(8)
After 1945
103(2)
Royal Naval Air Services
105(4)
Women's Royal Naval Service (WRNS)
109(4)
Chapter 6 Auxiliary Forces and the Coastguard
113(10)
Royal Naval Reserve (RNR)
114(2)
Royal Naval Volunteer Reserve (RNVR)
116(1)
Royal Fleet Auxiliary (RFA)
117(1)
Royal Naval Reserve Trawler Section (RNR(T))
118(1)
Royal Naval Patrol Service
118(1)
Royal Naval Division (RND)
118(1)
Service Records Not Yet Transferred to TNA
119(1)
HM Coastguard
120(3)
Chapter 7 Care of the Sick and Wounded
123(11)
Researching Naval Surgeons
126(1)
Medical Officers' Journals
127(1)
Nurses
128(2)
Hospitals
130(3)
Lunatics
133(1)
Chapter 8 The Royal Marines
134(4)
Officers
134(1)
Other Ranks
135(1)
Two World Wars
136(2)
Chapter 9 Researching Ships
138(13)
Resources
138(11)
Ephemera
149(2)
Chapter 10 HM Dockyards
151(8)
The Records
154(5)
Appendix 1 Naval Ratings 159(2)
Appendix 2 Royal Navy and Royal Marines Service Documents at the Fleet Air Arm Museum 161(5)
Appendix 3 Merchant Seafarers 166(3)
Appendix 4 Jackspeak 169(1)
Appendix 5 Useful Addresses 170(8)
Bibliography 178(5)
Index 183