An analysis of long or short term trends
in the annual numbers of births/baptisms, marriages and deaths/burials (BMDs)
is a great way to add to the understanding of the history of ancestors’ lives
and the areas in which they lived. The effects of major events such as wars,
famines, industrial developments and migration can be seen in BMD summaries. As
an Online Parish Clerk, I have collected and transcribed the data from the
registers of the parishes I administer in Southwest Devon: Cornwood, Harford,
Plympton St. Mary and Plympton St. Maurice (Figure 1).
Figure 1 – index
map to parishes in Southwest Devon
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Important local historical events can be
observed on the graphs as spikes and troughs and represent rapid changes from
year-to-year. Some of those which can be noted on the diagrams are supported by
comments recorded in the parish registers.
There was a very prominent increase in the
number of marriages in Plympton St. Maurice parish between 1653 and 1658
(Figure 2). This was, of course, during the Interregnum (1649-1660), after
Oliver Cromwell’s Puritan government had seized power. In 1653, Parliament
enacted a law regarding the registration of birth, marriages and burials – An Act touching Marriages and the Registring
thereof. The whole act can be read on the British History
Online
website.
Figure 2 – total
marriages, by year, between 1648 and 1665, for Plympton St. Mary and Plympton
St. Maurice parishes, Devon
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Beginning on September 29, 1853, those
wishing to be married were to provide information as to their names, places of
residence and parents or guardians to a Register, an individual appointed to
keep a registration book. A contract between the parties was then published in
advance of the marriage, in much the manner as banns had been published by the
church in prior years.
Marriages were to be performed by a
Justice of the Peace “in the publique
Meetingplace commonly called the Church or Chappel; or (if the parties so to be
married shall desire it) in the Market-place next to the said Church or Chappel”
three weeks following posting of the information about the couple. The Church
was restricted from baptizing or marrying individuals. Birth dates, rather than
baptism dates were recorded by the Register and those wishing to get married
generally had to travel to the nearest market town for a ceremony. In some
cases, the register books of the Church continued to be used by the new
Register. Many of these reverted back to the Vicars at the end of the
Interregnum. In other cases, new books were produced. In many areas these new
books were destroyed when the Monarchy was re-established in 1660.
Plympton is the central market town for
both Plympton St. Mary and Plympton St. Maurice parishes. The ecclesiastical
registers were used before, during and after the Interregnum period which
allows a unique comparison of entries. Figure 3 shows the first two pages of
the Plympton Register with contracts published on the left side and marriages
records on the right.
Figure 3 –
marriage register for Plympton St. Maurice parish, 1653; marriage contracts published
on left side, marriages recorded on right side
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An examination of the rapid increase in
marriages in Plympton St. Maurice shows that most of the couples came from nearby
parishes (Figure 4), almost all within about 5 miles from Plympton Town. Total
marriages peaked at 53 in 1654 from the normal annual numbers of two or three
in prior years. The number of marriages in Plympton St. Mary parish stayed
relatively constant during the period, except for a slight drop in 1656-57. The
number of couples from Plympton St. Maurice more than doubled from the normal
three per year. The very large numbers of marriage were mostly for couples who
came from many nearby parishes. All of them lived within five miles of Plympton
Town.
Figure 4 – total
marriages, by year, between 1648 and 1665, for Plympton St. Maurice parish,
Devon, showing breakdown of place of origin of grooms
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The policies of the Cromwell Government
were not universally popular as shown by a comment written into the first page
of the new registers for both marriages and burials, probably by the parish
Vicar of Clerk who took over at the end of the Interregnum period (Figures 3
& 5). The writer noted that “This is
ye hour & power of Darkness” likely referring to the beginning of the
Cromwell period.
Figure 5 – top
portion of burial register showing note written in different hand
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Family historians looking for birth,
marriage or death information for this period in English history may well find
the data in the records of the nearest town rather than in church registers of
the parishes in which the individuals lived.
Marriage images reproduced here are used with the kind permission of the Plymouth and West Devon Record Office (PWDRO), Images were downloaded from FindMyPast , or copied from my own files or microfiche.
Wayne
Shepheard is a volunteer with the Online Parish Clerk program, handling four
parishes in Devon, England. He
serves as the Editor of Chinook, the quarterly
journal of the Alberta Family Histories Society. Wayne also
provides genealogical consulting services through his business, Family History Facilitated.
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