Is Uploading Scotlandspeople Images to Ancestry Legal
How does one cite the "ever changing" ScotlandsPeople?
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Dear Editor;
ScotlandsPeople seems to have changed frequently over the last xv or more years. It comes as no surprise that the example in section 9.56 of my 3rd ed. copy of EE doesn't help to cite the current website structure.
There is no longer a, "Statutory Births 1855–2013," drove. It has been renamed.
To accomplish the relevant search page, one at present needs to select Advanced Search > Statutory Registers > Births from the principal URL, https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk.
Once in that location, the search-page title is merely, "Births".
So; would the post-obit commendation brand sense?
(I assume that the page number (p. 280) or entry number (entry no. 838) need not exist included, since the entry number already forms function of the cited reference number.)
-------------------------
Source Listing Entry
"Statutory Registers — Births." Database and images.ScotlandsPeople. http://world wide web.scotlandspeople.gov.uk : 2019.
Offset Reference Notation
"Statutory Registers — Births," database and images,ScotlandsPeople(http://www.scotlandspeople.gov.united kingdom : downloaded 16 March 2003), image, birth registration, Charles Murison, born 19 November 1891, registered 9 December 1891, District of Plantation, County of Lanark; citing Statutory Birth Registers no. 646/1 838 .
Subsequent Note
"Statutory Registers — Births,"ScotlandsPeople, prototype, birth registration, Charles Murison, born 19 Nov 1891, registered ix December 1891, Plantation, Lanark.
Annex: one) I would have…
Annex:
1) I would have tried a "trail of breadcrumbs" style of commendation for this site, merely read in i of the posts that it was non recommended . That said; would the new site structure now brand it a viable option?
2) I'thou not sure that using quotation marks effectually the collection would be correct in this case, since information technology is not a literal cutting an paste.
three) I used the "nuance" notation in naming the collection, but something tells me a colon might be more than advisable. The "births" are something like a subsection of a affiliate in a book.
History-Hunter, EE maintains…
History-Hunter, EE maintains a subscription with many different tape providers for its ain research needs, simply ScotlandsPeople is not currently one of them. With regard to the three issues you lot raise in your 2nd message:
1. When a site'south database is structured and so that we admission material through a series of carte choices, rather than just querying a database for a proper noun, and then the "path" approach is usually necessary. (EE 10.6, ten.35, 10.39, and discussion at 11.33, for example)
2. Quotation marks are used around whatever three words that we copy exactly from another source (EE 2.6). Normally, we do not put drove names in quotation marks. When a titled manuscript is in a drove, we put quotation marks effectually the title of the manuscript, but we do not do that for a collection. (EE 2.22)
3. Dashes are usually used to carve up ii things of equal weight or to add together more than accent to something we want to set off. Colons are used to divide two things when the 2d part is subservient to the get-go, every bit with Title: Subtitle or volume:folio (EE two.63, 2.65)
Dear Editor; Given your…
Honey Editor;
Given your responses, it would appear that the citation of ScotlandsPeople would now follow a format very similar to what I've been using for Ancestry. However; it is complicated by the need to incorporate a sufficient number of search terms to minimize the resulting list. Once one has the listing of results, supplying the reference number is sufficient to brandish the desired paradigm.
Technically; one could utilize no search terms and later on search a very long list for the specified reference number. At that place is, unfortunately, no way that I can see to specify the reference number directly. If in that location were, crafting the citation would be far more simple.
As a result; I've come up with the following "trial" citation, as a basis for further comments.
Source List Entry
Statutory Registers: Births. Database and images.ScotlandsPeople. http://www.scotlandspeople.gov.great britain : 2019.
First Reference Note
Statutory Registers: Births, database and images,ScotlandsPeople(http://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk : downloaded sixteen March 2003) > Advanced people search > Statutory registers > Births, search terms: "Murison [surname], Charles [forename], Male person [gender], 1891 [to] 1891 [twelvemonth range]", ref. 646/1 838, image of birth registration for Charles Murison, born nineteen November 1891, registered 9 December 1891, District of Plantation, County of Lanark.
Subsequent Note
Statutory Registers: Births,ScotlandsPeople, epitome, nascency registration, Charles Murison, built-in 19 Nov 1891, registered 9 December 1891, Plantation, Lanark.
Thanks, History-Hunter, for…
Cheers, History-Hunter, for supplying a helpful example to utilise for ScotlandsPeople'southward current iteration. Including the search terms is a necessary strategy in many cases. One question: is there a reason why you left off the quotation marks effectually the database championship?
Dear Editor; I will add the…
Dear Editor;
I will add the quotation marks back in.
I of your previous statements (see beneath) led me to believe that the collection proper name should not be quoted. Withal; I actually wasn't sure what your intent was, since I have been using quotes around collection names (whether more than three words or not) in other examples I've posted. Could y'all clarify a scrap?
"2. Quotation marks are used around whatsoever iii words that we copy exactly from another source (EE 2.half dozen). Normally, we do not put drove names in quotation marks. When a titled manuscript is in a collection, we put quotation marks around the championship of the manuscript, simply we do not do that for a drove. (EE 2.22)".
If y'all wouldn't mind, for future reference, could you comment on any rules for stating multiple search terms in a commendation? What I did was just my best gauge based on the single search-term instance I'd seen in EE 3rd ed. and the syntax sections of the aforementioned book. I'm happy to see my extrapolation skills are working.
History-Hunter, even in…
History-Hunter, even in citations, sometimes one rule bumps upward against another. Normally (as in this case), it's a state of affairs in which a rule applies in Situation A but doesn't in Situation B considering it would create defoliation in State of affairs B. Past longstanding convention when citing manuscript cloth, nosotros use quotation marks around the exact title of the manuscript (when it has an exact title), merely we don't utilise them for the collection, series, subgroup, and record group. That fashion, anyone reading our commendation (or we a later date afterward our recollection has gone cold) will be able to instantly identify the manuscript equally opposed to the record heirarchy in which information technology is filed. For example, see EE 11.53:
1. "Record of Employee's Prior Service" (Form AA-2P), filed three March 1941, Leonard Ray Anderson alimony file, Social Security no. 702078940, 1941; Records of the Railroad Retirement Lath, 1934–, National Archives Record Grouping 184; RRB–Congressional Enquiry Section, Chicago, Illinois.
If nosotros used quotation marks around every element in this archival heirarchy, nosotros'd have this:
i. "Record of Employee's Prior Service" (Form AA-2P), filed three March 1941, "Leonard Ray Anderson" pension file, "Social Security no. 702078940"1941; "Records of the Railroad Retirement Board, 1934–," "National Archives Record Group 184": "RRB–Congressional Inquiry Section," Chicago, Illinois.
That plethora of quotation marks would not brand the entry clearer--which is why, a hundred or more than years agone--some unnamed individuals decided that document titles would bear quotation marks, but the units of the filing system would not.
Re writing rules for the employ…
Re writing rules for the utilize of search terms, that's a quagmire EE has decided not to wade into. We're non convinced rules are needed for that in a citation or that they would create a positive benefit.
Dear Editor; I retrieve I see…
Dear Editor;
I call up I see how to attack search terms. If I put double quotes around the whole search term expression and single quotes around the explicit search terms themselves, information technology seems to make sense. I believe I've seen something about this in the EE book.
Beloved Editor; I think I see…
Dear Editor;
I remember I see why the quotes are used in the current instance. There is no "document championship" present, then the regular quoting rules apply. Is that correct?
Dear Editor; I have updated…
Beloved Editor;
I have updated the citation to correct the quotations and also to utilize the search criteria that the site conveniently prints out for the user. This will make it easier for others to apply every bit an example.
Due to the site having been restructured since 2003, I've also added a annotation to explain that the paradigm admission instructions reflect the current method (rather than show the less than useful original instructions). As part of the restructuring, the website owners did not carry forward previously purchased record admission permissions. This meant that I was not able to re-download the aforementioned image, just to update the download date.
Source List Entry
"Statutory Registers: Births." Database and images.ScotlandsPeople. http://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk : 2003.
Starting time Reference Note
"Statutory Registers: Births," database and images,ScotlandsPeople(http://www.scotlandspeople.gov.united kingdom of great britain and northern ireland : downloaded 9 March 2003) > Advanced people search > Statutory registers > Births, search terms: "Surname: 'Murison', Surname Option: 'Verbal', Forename: 'Charles', Forename Choice: 'Exact', Gender: 'M', From_year: '1891', To_year: '1891', Canton: 'LANARK'," ref. 646/one 838, image of birth registration for Charles Murison, born xix November 1891, registered 9 December 1891, District of Plantation, County of Lanark. Record access instructions were updated, on 9 May 2019, from those used on the stated image download appointment.
Subsequent Note
"Statutory Registers: Births,ScotlandsPeople," epitome, birth registration, Charles Murison, born 19 November 1891, registered ix December 1891, Plantation, Lanark.
Dear HistoryHunter, Here is…
Beloved HistoryHunter,
Hither is a helpful page on the NRS website:
https://www.nrscotland.gov.britain/research/guides/birth-expiry-and-marriage-records/statutory-registers-of-births-deaths-and-marriages
I am using the following structure for my ScotlandsPeople downloaded images.
National Records of Scotland, "Statutory Registers of Deaths," database with images, ScotlandsPeople (https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/ : accessed 29 June 2018); digital image, Margaret Pryde death registration, died xiv Dec 1883, registered eighteen December 1883, Commune of St George, Metropolis of Edinburgh; citing Statutory Registers no. 685/1 1278.
I decided to proceed the "Statutory Registers of Deaths," every bit the database championship (as I have way too many to go back and modify) but also if you google that championship, the first matter to come up up is:
and y'all wait at this page, it clearly states:
Today the records are available as index-linked digital images on our ScotlandsPeople website, in the ScotlandsPeople Centre and at Local Family History Centres.
Regards,
Robyn
Robyn, the upload limit is…
Robyn, the upload limit is 1MB. Information technology should be stated at the bottom of your screen, along with a list of file types:
1 MB limit.
Allowed types: png txt doc docx log msg odt ods rtf pdf tiff ping bmp gif jpg jpeg xls csv dat pps ppt.
Dear Editor; Having been…
Dear Editor;
Having been able to recover my old ScotlandPeople Records, I've been reviewing how best to cite those records and have gained a few new insights into the naming of their collections. I actually liked your QuickLesson on citing Ancestry records, so I put together a few notes on ScotlandsPeople, if using a similar approach. (Come across the earlier example of 05/09/2019 for the general commendation structure I've been using.)
As an example, I'll use the Inventory for the estate of David Murison. Nonetheless; the principle is like for other collection types.
When one searches on their website, the search criteria are displayed along with the results. When one has narrowed the results to a single entry, i can then but cut and paste the displayed search criteria into a reference note (surrounded by double-quotes). Rather handy, I remember.
Surname: 'Murison', Surname Option: 'Exact', Forename: 'David', Forename Pick: 'Starts', From_year: '1918', To_year: '1918', Court: 'Edinburgh Sheriff Court Inventories'
(At that place is 1 issue, of which one should be enlightened, when citing the collection on ScotlandsPeople. Their records are from the taken from the National Records Collections (NRS), the catalogue for which tin can be searched at http://catalogue.nrscotland.gov.uk/nrsonlinecatalogue/welcome.aspx. Unfortunately; ScotlandsPeople does not proper name their web-based collections using the same names as the title of the respective item in the NRS catalogue. The catalogue is, however, handy for better understanding the provenance of the records.)
The search results page of ScotlandsPeople also contains a "title'.
Legal records - Wills and testaments - Search results
This is essentially defines the "collection" name that appears to be used by ScotlandsPeople, "Legal records - Wills and testaments." As there are other subdivisions of "Legal Records", every bit indicated by the path to get to the search page, I tend to record it as, "Legal records: Wills and testaments." The sub-sub-collection name is already in the search criteria, "Edinburgh Sheriff Courtroom Inventories," and so it shouldn't need to be restated elsewhere in the citation.
(On the NHS site this specific record, "[SC70/1/612]" is institute in; "Records of H M Commissary Function, Edinburgh": "Tape of Inventories (1808-1984)", "23 May to 18 Jun 1918.")
Of class, as ever, your feedback and suggested changes are always welcome. That is why I post such items.
Dear Editor; A idea…
Dear Editor;
A thought nigh shortening the citation...
If the access path already reflects the hierarchal-based collection proper name, can one assume that the reader can find the " Wills and testaments" search course without an explicit path? If then; the path would not exist required and one could just cite the URL for ScotlandsPeople.
(I am still open to using the original "-" in the collection proper noun instead of ":".)
First Reference Annotation
FROM
"Legal Records: Wills and testaments," database and images,ScotlandsPeople(http://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk : downloaded xi May 2019) > Avant-garde people search > Legal Records > Wills and testaments, search terms: "Surname: 'Murison', Surname Option: 'Exact', Forename: 'David', Forename Selection: 'Verbal', From_year: '1919', To_year: '1919', Court: 'Kilmarnock Sheriff Court Inventories'," ref. SC7/28/15, imaged pages 421-424, "Inventory of the personal manor of David Murison ... who died at Ardrossan, on the 5th solar day of February 1919," presented 23 August 1919, Kilmarnock, Scotland. There are two pages per epitome, which are numbered past the correct-mitt page number; 421, 423 and 425.
TO
"Legal Records: Wills and testaments," database and images,ScotlandsPeople(http://world wide web.scotlandspeople.gov.uk : downloaded 11 May 2019), search terms: "Surname: 'Murison', Surname Option: 'Verbal', Forename: 'David', Forename Choice: 'Exact', From_year: '1919', To_year: '1919', Court: 'Kilmarnock Sheriff Court Inventories'," ref. SC7/28/15, imaged pages 421-424, "Inventory of the personal manor of David Murison ... who died at Ardrossan, on the 5th twenty-four hours of February 1919," presented 23 August 1919, Kilmarnock, Scotland. There are two pages per prototype, which are numbered by the right-hand page number; 421, 423 and 425.
H-H, you write: "When ane…
H-H, you write:
"When one has narrowed the results to a single entry, i tin then simply cut and paste the displayed search criteria into a reference note (surrounded by double-quotes). Rather handy, I think.
Surname: 'Murison', Surname Selection: 'Exact', Forename: 'David', Forename Selection: 'Starts', From_year: '1918', To_year: '1918', Courtroom: 'Edinburgh Sheriff Courtroom Inventories'
And so you lot give an example:
"Legal Records: Wills and testaments," database and images,ScotlandsPeople(http://www.scotlandspeople.gov.great britain : downloaded 11 May 2019), search terms: "Surname: 'Murison', Surname Pick: 'Verbal', Forename: 'David', Forename Option: 'Exact', From_year: '1919', To_year: '1919', Court: 'Kilmarnock Sheriff Court Inventories'," ref. SC7/28/xv, imaged pages 421-424, "Inventory of the personal estate of David Murison ... who died at Ardrossan, on the 5th day of February 1919," presented 23 August 1919, Kilmarnock, Scotland. At that place are two pages per image, which are numbered by the right-paw page number; 421, 423 and 425.
The instance works, at to the lowest degree until the website changes its labels on its search form. Your inclusion of the explanation "search terms" clarifies what otherwise would non be articulate if someone were to but post in the search terms without an caption.
You also write:
(I am still open to using the original "-" in the collection proper name instead of ":".)
If we are using quotation marks effectually an verbal title, the employ of the hyphen hither would be excused. Just, as EE ii.65 points out: "the hyphen's purpose is to connect, while the em dash's purpose is to carve up." As general rules:
- Any time we utilise a hyphen betwixt ii words, we connect those words into a compound word.
- If the intent is to separate two thoughts (or two parts of a championship) and then nosotros utilise the longer em dash.
- In a tape, drove, or volume title, the colon separates the title from the subtitle—a useful flag because in shortened citations, after the first full cite, we typically drop the subtitle.)
Detect that in the last sentence, I did non say:
the colon separates the championship from the subtitle-a useful point because in shortened citations, afterward the first full cite, we typically drop the subtitle. <g>
Dear Editor; I appreciate…
Dear Editor;
I appreciate your taking the time to provide feedback.
With respect to:
"The case works, at least until the website changes its labels on its search form. Your inclusion of the explanation "search terms" clarifies what otherwise would non exist clear if someone were to simply post in the search terms without an caption."
At that place is currently no other way to access the ScotlandsPeople records, except via their search form. They are not browsable at all. There has been some word, on a Scotland-related Facebook forum, about the lack of conventional supporting source information on the ScotlandsPeople site. For the moment, I'm agape we'll have to take accessing records via the search form. Actually; the noted example was provided specifically to demonstrate that the added "search terms" circumlocution was required for clarity. Currently; the only other way of providing a more conventional citation would exist by physical visiting the, National Records of Scotland, HM Full general Register Business firm, 2 Princes Street, Edinburgh EH1 3YY and recording source information that is non accessible via pay-per-view site.
With respect to the utilise of ":" or "-":
"If we are using quotation marks effectually an verbal title, the use of the hyphen here would exist excused."
Given that the ScotlandsPeople site access is a bit unconventional and can be confusing, I remember I'll opt for using an explicit quote of the drove name every bit information technology appears at the summit of the search folio results page. Unfortunately; information technology does utilize a hyphen. As implied in your comment, this would exist excused [in the interests of providing a faithful quotation].
In short; I recall that what I've suggested would likely provide a fairly consistent approach of citing any of the genealogical records on the current version of the ScotlandsPeoples site.
Dear Editor; As I was…
Dear Editor;
As I was preparing my previous mail service, I received the following e-mail (received half dozen June 2019), in response to a query addressed to ScotlandsPeople. The folks at ScotlandsPeople accept been exceptionally supportive in addressing any questions I've had virtually their records.
I remember that I've addressed about of their recommendations in my suggested citation of material on their site, but you will undoubtably take some suggestions afterwards reading their response.
In whatever example, their email may provide reference material for time to come editions of EE and assistance others in the meantime.
[header redacted for privacy]
Thank you for contacting the National Records of Scotland via the ScotlandsPeople website.
There isn't really a single prescriptive way to describe each record set; individual records don't necessarily have championship pages like published books, and there volition tend to be slight variations in dissimilar researchers' written descriptions depending on the citation way they are using. The record headers are mainly at that place to permit researchers to see the source of an paradigm at a glance, with more detailed information on the authoritative history of each record serial available at https://world wide web.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/guides/record-guides-alphabetical and on the master NRS website at https://www.nrscotland.gov.united kingdom/research/guides/a-z.
The records that come from the archival collections here at the National Records of Scotland—that is, testamentary records, war machine service appeal papers, valuation rolls, not-conformist church building registers, emigration records, and maps and plans—will all have a catalogue reference, with a respective clarification available in our online catalogue at http://catalogue.nrscotland.gov.uk/nrsonlinecatalogue/search.aspx. These descriptions could be used equally the ground for commendation; they are, where applicable, based upon the description of the record used by the record creator.
When compiling citations, we would generally suggest including the name of the individual; the type of record/annals (e.m. Annals of Deaths, Annals of Inventories for Edinburgh Sheriff Courtroom, Parish Register for Peebles, Valuation Roll for Brechin Burgh); the engagement of the record; the reference number; and the repository responsible for the original records (this will exist the National Records of Scotland unless otherwise stated on the paradigm, due east.g. with Catholic parish registers held by the Scottish Catholic Archives). You may also wish to include the URL and the date the record was accessed online, if compiling full references, and it would exist advisable to note a page number/range if this doesn't form part of the reference number (as is the case with wills and testaments). I've included some notes on the nature of the reference codes used for different record sets on the ScotlandsPeople website beneath, in case this is helpful.
Statutory registers (i.e. Registers of Births, Deaths and Marriages):
The offset number in the reference is the registration district number (run into here for a detailed guide to registration districts: https://world wide web.nrscotland.gov.britain/research/guides/statutory-registers/registration-districts). Larger districts were subdivided into separate, smaller districts (so, for example, Edinburgh has the general RD number 684, just certain areas within the city will have a longer number such every bit 684/i or 684/2). The final number is the unique entry number, and should correspond to the number in the 'No.' column on the record. Further guidance on parishes and districts can exist constitute at https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.united kingdom/guides/parishes-and-districts.
Census records:
Similarly to the statutory registers, the census used the numbered registration districts, which were then subdivided into enumeration districts. The reference number for an individual record will be comprised of the RD number, the enumeration commune number, and then a page number (referring to the folio in the original census volume). Encounter here for farther data: https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.united kingdom of great britain and northern ireland/guides/demography-returns.
Sometime Parish Registers:
Once again, every parish in Scotland was numbered by the Registrar General. You tin can observe a list of these numbers, likewise equally guidance on what registers are held for each parish, at https://www.nrscotland.gov.u.k./enquiry/guides/old-parish-registers/list-of-old-parish-registers. The first part of an OPR reference number will be the parish number; the second volition be the volume number; and the 3rd will be the folio number. In other words, a reference number of 683/12 200 ways that the tape has been found on page 200 of book 12 of the Dalkeith Former Parish Registers (parish ref. 683).
Cosmic parish registers:
The reference number on these records corresponds to the catalogue reference number given by the Scottish Catholic Archives.
Other church records:
The reference number on these records is the NRS catalogue reference. All of them should brainstorm CH3 (the full general series reference for non-Church of Scotland Presbyterian churches), and will and then have a parish number and a volume number. You may wish to include the folio number from the record itself if citing these records.
Wills and testaments:
Again, these volition show the NRS catalogue reference number. This will either begin CC (for testaments registered in commissary courts) or SC (for testaments registered in a sheriff court). Commissary courts were abolished and their functions completely taken over by sheriff courts in 1876. Every court has its own catalogue reference code (so Edinburgh Commissary Court is CC8, Glasgow Sheriff Court is SC36, and so on). The other numbers given on an image downloaded from ScotlandsPeople will be a series and a volume reference. The volume reference, when entered into the online catalogue, will give you lot details of the volume's scope and content, eastward.grand. CC18/three/1 - Annals of Testaments, Peebles Commissary Court, 24 June 1681–17 October 1699).
Valuation rolls:
As with non-conformist church records and testamentary records, the reference number here directly corresponds to the NRS catalogue reference for the original volumes. It will begin with the letters VR.
Finally, guidance on permissible image use tin exist found in our copyright guide at https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.u.k./content/copyright.
I hope this information is of some assistance to you. Please do non hesitate to contact the states if you have whatsoever boosted queries.
Yours sincerely,
XXXXXXXXX [redacted for privacy}
Archivist (Digital Services),
National Records of Scotland
I've been reviewing some of…
I've been reviewing some of the suggestions on this thread, having recently posted nigh a similar topic. A couple of thoughts:
- Scotlands People is an online database of images, simply it is the National Records of Scotland's way of publishing digitised images of the source data that information technology itself holds. In my view there is no 'third layer', so no need for citations within citations, every bit the National Records of Scotland would thereby be citing itself (at that place are some exceptions, such as Catholic Parish Records, but this indicate is broadly true).
- I am completely unconvinced about the need to include search criteria in citations of records at Scotlands People. This is for 2 reasons.
- The first, and most important, is that the search criteria used may not (and in fact oft do non) pb to or define a unique record.
- The second is that the images obtained from the database incorporate the necessary uniquely identifying information. As an example I accept attached the registration of my great-grandmother'due south birth. The numbers at the top, when combined with the year, uniquely place this record (895 is the parish number, 58 the record number). Furthermore they allow it to be selected from the range of possible records that come upwardly when searching for a birth of this proper name in this year in this parish (in fact she was the only one, but this is oft not the case). Including this information in the citation is sufficient for anyone to find the right tape for themselves.
Hi, this is an example. I…
Hello, this is an example. I could have added Edinburgh after National Records of Scotland, and could accept added National Records of Scotland every bit owner of the record at the starting time, but trying to proceed things brusque and but put in what matters:
Statutory Registers Births, 1875, County of Wigtown, Parish of Penninghame, Registration District 895, Entry 58, Campbell, Esther; digital image from National Records of Scotland, www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk: accessed x January 2018
Hmmh. When we use your URL,…
Hmmh. When we use your URL, it takes us to this page:
Your citation gives united states of america three pieces of information that tin can be used within the search form: concluding name, first proper noun, and year. Adding that data (equally above) gives u.s. this:
So yous feel this is more benign than citing the verbal URL? (It is, of course, difficult for united states of america to assess the results further from the document that you have snipped out of context. While EE maintains subscriptions to many subscription-based sites, ScotlandsPeople is one we are not currently using for our ain research.)
Thanks, and this is helpful…
Thank you, and this is helpful. It's not possible to mail a URL to the verbal tape, equally one needs to be logged on and have paid for information technology to view it.
The search works with Advanced Search (Births, so the proper noun, County and twelvemonth). The entries take the registration district and number, which allows ane to select the right 1.
Not certain what the answer is!
Source: https://www.evidenceexplained.com/node/1632
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