The Five Records Every Local Historian Should Know
A Brief Introduction
Every investigation needs evidence.
In all historical studies, evidence takes the form of sources; it’s no different with the local variety. The sources are often records — documents created during the period being researched, by people who had no idea that someone like you would one day be reading them. That gap between intention and use is what makes them so interesting. A Victorian census enumerator trudging from door to door in a Lancashire mill town was not thinking about posterity. He was thinking about getting home before dark. But what he wrote down that day is now one of the most powerful tools available to anyone trying to reconstruct the lives of ordinary people.
There are hundreds of different record types available to the local historian. But five of them form the bedrock of almost every investigation. Learn to use these well, and you’ll have the foundations of a serious research practice.
Tip 1: Census Returns (1841–1921)
The Victorian and Edwardian censuses are the closest thing local history has to a universal starting point. Taken every ten years from 1841, they recorded the name, age, occupation, and birthplace of every person in every household in England and Wales on a single night. Scotland had its own parallel system.
What can you learn from them? Quite a lot. A street in a mill town in 1851 might reveal a whole community of Irish migrants who arrived after the famine; a rural village in 1861 might show ten agricultural labourers crammed into a two-room cottage. The census doesn’t just tell you who lived where — it tells you something about how people lived.
The key thing to understand is what the census doesn’t tell you. It is a snapshot of a single night, and a night chosen by parliament rather than by anyone with a historian’s instincts. People move. Children die between censuses. Ages are misremembered or names misspelled, occupations are misrecorded. Use the census as a starting point, not a final answer.
All censuses from 1841 to 1921 are now available online via Ancestry, FindMyPast, and FreeBMD. The 1921 census was released in 2022 and is a particularly rich resource.
Tip 2: Parish Registers (from 1538)
Parish registers are older, patchier, and considerably more rewarding for those willing to dig into them. From 1538, Church of England parishes were required to record baptisms, marriages, and burials. The survival rate varies enormously — some parishes have near-complete records stretching back four hundred years; others lost theirs to the neglect or violence of time.
What makes them extraordinary is their reach into the pre-census world. Before 1841, the parish register is often the only record that an ordinary person existed at all. Finding a wedding entry for a great-great-great-grandmother is a genuine thrill. Finding her burial follows nine months later, and her infant’s baptism a few days after that, is a moving experience.
Many parish registers have been transcribed and are available via Ancestry and FindMyPast. Original registers are typically held at county record offices, and are often digitised. The FamilySearch website, run by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, offers a vast free collection.
Tip 3: Tithe Maps and Apportionments (1830s–1850s)
The Tithe Commutation Act of 1836 required a survey of almost every parish in England and Wales. The result was a pair of documents: a large-scale map showing every field, building, road, and plot of land in the parish, and an accompanying apportionment listing who owned each plot, who occupied it, what it was used for, and what tithe was owed on it.
Together, they are a snapshot of the mid-Victorian landscape in extraordinary detail. For anyone trying to understand how a place looked before the railways arrived, or the suburbs engulfed the fields, the tithe map is indispensable. You can find out what a specific field was called, who farmed it, and what grew there.
Tithe maps are held at The National Archives and at county record offices. Many are now available digitised online — the Maps Portal at The National Archives is a good starting point.
Tip 4: Trade Directories (1780s–early 20th century)
Trade directories were the Victorian Yellow Pages. They were commercially produced guides listing the tradespeople and professionals of towns and villages across the country. Published by firms like Kelly’s, White’s, and Pigot’s, they appeared roughly every five to ten years and covered most of England, Wales, and Scotland.
Their value is in what they reveal about the commercial and social life of a place. A directory entry for a small market town in 1830 might list a dozen tradespeople who have left no other trace in the historical record. A mill town directory from 1880 might reveal the names of factory owners, their addresses, and the scale of their operations. They are also useful for dating changes; for example, when a business appears in one edition them disappears in the next.
Trade directories are widely available through the Historical Directories of England and Wales project, hosted by the University of Leicester. Many are freely searchable online.
Tip 5: Newspapers (The British Newspaper Archive)
The British Newspaper Archive, launched in 2012, has digitised millions of pages from local and regional newspapers going back to the early eighteenth century. It is searchable by keyword, date, and location — which means that for the first time, it is genuinely possible to find references to specific individuals and events in local newspapers without spending weeks in a library with a microfilm reader. I wish I’d had this when I first started digging into the archives. Though at the distance of all these years there seems to be something romantic about the hours I spent spooling through miles of microfiche!
The results can be extraordinary. A worker killed in a factory accident in 1873. A court case involving a dispute over a field boundary. A school prize-giving reported in loving detail. A market day brawl. Local newspapers recorded the texture of daily life with a thoroughness that no other source matches, and the British Newspaper Archive has made it extremely accessible.
It is a subscription service, but the cost is modest and the return is considerable. If you are serious about local history, it is close to essential.
Where to go from here
These five record types will take you a very long way. In future issues, we’ll look at each one in much more detail — how to read them and how to combine them to build a fuller picture. For now, the best thing you can do is pick one and dive in.
The records are there. They’ve been waiting for you a long time.

