This is not a Wikipedia article: It is an individual user's work-in-progress page, and may be incomplete and/or unreliable. For guidance on developing this draft, see Wikipedia:So you made a userspace draft. Find sources: Google (books · news · scholar · free images · WP refs) · FENS · JSTOR · TWL |
FreeREG (Free UK Genealogy)
editFreeREG is a Free UK Genealogy project, which crowdsources volunteer[1] transcriptions of parish and nonconformist registers of baptisms, marriages and burials.[2]
Access to the online searchable database is given freely, as well as information on the records that have been transcribed for each county.[3]
History
editDevelopment of FreeREG started soon after the launch of FreeBMD in 1998. It was publicly announced by Rod Neep in January 2000[4] but without any search ability. Rod was very much the driving force for its creation but development in Javascript was under the guidance of Ben Laurie as the project manager with support from Graham Hart, David Mayall, Camilla Gemmingen von Massenbach, Brian Randell and Phil Stringer. A test version of a search capability first appeared in July 2001 due to the efforts of Graeme Faichney and David Newbury (who had replaced Rod Neep as Chairman of the FreeREG Executive Committee). The test version proved to be unacceptable as a basis for future development and a decision was taken to redevelop the project using the same computer language (Perl) as was being successfully used by FreeBMD.
In 2004 Kirk Dawson joined David Newbury[5] on the Executive to work on the User Interface of the website and Anne Fish took on responsibility for Scottish records.
FreeREG finally went live on 29 September 2006 with a search engine and with the database of 1,066,000 records with updated monthly thereafter.[6] David Mayall then assumed responsibility for the programming and further development. After the launch several county coordinators were appointed and as a result of their work with transcribers around the world the database continued to grow. Eric Dickens assumed chairmanship of the Executive Committee and was joined by John Pingram, Mark James and Kirk Dawson.
In early 2012 the Trustees decided to investigate the feasibility of moving to on-line transcription and to redevelop FreeREG to support such a capability. A development team of Ben Brumfield and Kirk Dawson was established to carry this work forward. The new version of FreeREG was released to the public on 8 April 2015 supporting real time updating and data entry/editing, On line transcription remains to be implemented, Due to the hard work of over two thousand transcribers and their dedicated coordinators there were over 38 Million records available for research free of charge in June 2017.
Activities
editMembership
editThe organisation's facilities are available to all without the need to become a member. Volunteers who transcribe data for the project sign up for membership online, in order to allow access to the relevant facilities.
Awards and Reputation
editThe accuracy of FreeREG's transcriptions has been recognised by the Bristol & Avon Family History Society.[7]
References
edit- ^ Scott, Jonathan (2016-10-31). Tracing Your British and Irish Ancestors: A Guide for Family Historians. Pen and Sword. ISBN 9781473853256.
- ^ Peacock, Caroline (2003). Genealogy. The Good Web Guide Ltd. ISBN 9781903282489.
- ^ Christian, Peter (2012-06-21). The Genealogist's Internet: The Essential Guide to Researching Your Family History Online. A&C Black. ISBN 9781408171158.
- ^ "RootsWeb: FREEREG-L [FreeREG] Welcome". archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com. Retrieved 2017-06-05.
- ^ "A brief history". www.freecen.org.uk. Retrieved 2017-06-07.
- ^ "RootsWeb: FREEREG-L FreeREG live". archiver.rootsweb.ancestry.com. Retrieved 2017-06-05.
- ^ "On the Internet - June 2017 - BAFHS". www.bafhs.org.uk. Retrieved 2017-06-20.
External links
edit