This week, nearly 100,000 records from the West Riding of Yorkshire are added from the Family History Federation’s National Burial Index.
These additions are for 19 parishes — All Saints, St Mary, St Peter, Wesleyan Chapel, Nethertown United Reformed, St Paul, St Michael, Baptist Church, St Peter, St James, Bankshill, Bruntcliffe Lane Cemetery, Old Chapel, Queens St Wesleyan Methodist, Rehoboth Congregational, St Mary in the Wood, St Peter (Morley). Holy Trinity and St Mary (Woodkirk). They cover 1737-1954.
The burial records are derived from parish registers, bishop’s transcripts, earlier transcripts or printed registers by local family history society volunteers
The NBI now includes 12 million burial records from across England and Wales, although coverage is far from complete. Some counties, like Cornwall, are missing. There’s a listing of coverage by parish here.


Earlier this month in Sunday Sundries I gave a shoutout to this project about railway worker accidents in Britain and Ireland from the late 1880s to 1939. At the time the database documented 3,914 deaths. Information on another 17,000 British and Irish railway worker accidents between 1900 and 1939 has now been released, it’s free.
New on MyHeritage, 616,486 transcript records of births and baptisms from the Bailiwick of Jersey. Records typically include the name of the child, date of birth, date and place of baptism, name of parish, and the names of the parents. Dates range from the first half of the 16th to mid-20th century.
A presentation was just added to the schedule for the first session of the
There were 15 19th-century additions to the online serials collection of
Tune in to a TNA webinar on Wednesday 20 July at 2:30 pm ET to hear Lindsey Fitzharris, author of 