The premier resource for tracing your British and Irish
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About Militia Attestations Index 1860-1915
Militia Attestations can be very fruitful sources of genealogical data. They were documents filled in at the time of recruitment and contain much personal data. The Origins Network will be making available indexes to over a hundred thousand militia attestations, covering the whole of the British Isles, for the period of late 19th & early 20th centuries. This dataset currently contains the names of over 110,000 recruits to militias in Cheshire, Cornwall, Devon, Dorset, Durham, Essex, Hampshire, Kent, Lancashire, Lincolnshire, Middlesex, Norfolk, Northumberland, Suffolk, Surrey, Wiltshire and Yorkshire, and in south and central Scotland; the Irish Origins database contains an index to a further 12,500 men who applied to militias in Ireland. These recruits came from all over the British Isles. For all the militia attestations in these indexes you can order copies of the original documents online from The Origins Network.
About the Militia Attestations Index Militia Attestations can be very fruitful sources of genealogical data. They were documents filled in at the time of recruitment and contain much personal data. The Origins Network will be making available indexes to over a hundred thousand militia attestations, covering the whole of the British Isles, for the period of late 19th & early 20th centuries. Presently the database contains covers over 110,000 recruits to militias in England and Scotland; a further 12,500 recruits are included in our Irish Origins database. For all the militia attestations in these indexes you can order copies of the original documents online from The Origins Network. The index contains the birthplaces of nearly all recruits. While, as one might expect, most recruits to a particular militia were born locally, typically a quarter to a third come from further afield. For example, nearly 10% of recruits to the Scottish militia were born in Ireland.
What do these records tell you? The index records give the last name and first name of the militiaman, place and county of birth, and The National Archives reference. The original Attestation Papers, copies of which you can order online, are very rich, and can tell a great deal about these men and their families. They show the following details:
The original documents Click on the "thumbnails" below to view examples of original Attestation Papers, which show the kind of documents you could order. Militia Attestation of William Byrne - WO96/1441
Militia Attestation of Joseph Hogan - WO96/1451
The amount of information in the documents varies: some, such as those of William Byrne, have much information about their family on the last page (Byrne has a brother in Plymouth, England, two sisters in Chicago, and three further sisters in Queensland); others, such as those of Joseph Hogan, show no relatives but contain a wealth of other personal information. Ordering copies of original documents online You can order copies online, directly from the index records and receive the copies by mail. Each copy costs £10 (approx. US$18.50 or €15). Click the "Add to Cart" button on the displayed index record to add the order to your Shopping Cart. You will be asked for a credit/debit card number and delivery details on the Checkout page. Accessing original documents in person The original documents are held at The National Archives, London. The index records include the information necessary to find the original records yourself at The National Archives (see Source Records Archives). The National Archives Reference Number identifies the class - always WO96 - and the box (the number after the slash) within which the attestation papers are stored; eg WO96/1441. The Sequence Number was generated from the order of the documents within each box at the time the index was created; the documents should all be - more or less - in alphabetical order. If the document you are looking for does not appear where you expect it, it may be because someone who accessed the documents previously has put the documents back in the wrong order. (The National Archives take a dim view of this, and prefer that even where a document is clearly out of order it be left where it is.) If you do not find them in this order, then look for them in alphabetical order or at the top of the box. The Indexes to Militia Records were created by Jenifer Edmonds, and are made available on The Origins Network with her permission.
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