England
& Wales Hardwicke Marriage Index |
The ParishThe parish of Ely Holy Trinity comprises much of northeastern Cambridgeshire stretching from the cathedral city itself across to form a portion of the county's border with neighbouring Suffolk. Ely is cathedral city with Holy Trinity parish having its location within the Lady Chapel of the cathedral, itself. Ely is located roughly 16 miles north of the county town of Cambridge and, prior to the completion of its bypass, sits on the A10 road which links Cambridge with the Norfolk port of King's Lynn. Ely has ancient beginnings although its name is disputed as to its origins, theories state it derives from eels, an important foodstuff of the Fens or from the Saxon word for willows. Ely is first mentioned as early as the 7th century when the Anglo-Saxon chronicles records the foundation of its abbey. By Domesday times Ely was already an important settlement, one of the largest 20% recorded in that book and retained by its abbey. It was the Normans who began the construction of its great cathedral that makes it into one of the nation's smallest cities. Ely's location on an island within what was once inhospitable wetlands made it a base for rebellion and it is intrinsically linked with the revolt of Hereward the Wake suppressed by the Normans. In time Ely became a regional market for exchange of goods, mainly agricultural produce, the location of specialist trades, a minor port and the usual rural industries of malting, brewing & tanning. The wider parish, extending toward the Suffolk border, is intensely cultivated largely following reclamation of the former wetlands, besides cereals, beet & oil-seed a wide variety of vegetables is also grown and the odour of onion & leek is a feature. Modern developments arrived in an abundance of railways, the lines from both Norwich & Ipswich toward Peterborough meeting and crossing the King's Lynn to London line at Ely creating something of a railway traffic jam. Modern day Ely has expanded greatly from the single street it was once, the proximity of Cambridge and the excellent rail connections has made it a commuter base of choice for that crowded university town. For genealogists it also the newly created new home of Cambridgeshire Archives who have redeveloped a former 10-pin bowling alley into a state of the age archive. Ely is drained northwards by the Great Ouse, on the western banks of which it sits, reaching the North Sea through the port of King's Lynn and The Wash. Ely is sited at between sea level and 20 metres, the former island being no higher than 22 metres at its highest point is still the highest ground for many a mile. Acreage of the parish is difficult to determine, combined with St Mary and including the chapelry of Stuntney it amounts to over 16,700 acres, the lands of each of the twin parishes being intertwined as a series of reclamation allocations, the parish of Holy Trinity supported a population of just over 4,600 parishioners, a value swamped by today's population. As already mentioned Ely was large enough to be amongst the largest 20% of settlements recorded in Domesday Book, the lion's share being held by Ely Abbey with Count Gilbert's son Richard having a minor stake. Collectively their assets totalled an impressive 41 ploughs, some meadow but it was the 6 fisheries that powered Ely's wealth at the time. |
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Register No | Covering Dates | Deposited With | Register Style | Quality Standard | Comments |
1 |
24th April 1754 - 24th June 1759 |
Cambridgeshire Archives - Reference - P67/1/11 |
Plain, ruled & bordered book containing combined Banns
& Marriages |
Grade 2 Register - not a perfect read but with a low
likelihood of misreads |
None |
2 | 4th July 1759 -1st November 1774 | Cambridgeshire Archives - Reference - P67/1/12 | Plain, ruled & bordered book containing combined Banns & Marriages | Grade 3 Register - there are sufficient quality issues with this register to indicate that some misreads will occur albeit few in number | Fading of this register may produce one or two misreads |
3 | 12th January 1775 - 31st October 1791 | Cambridgeshire Archives - Reference - P67/1/13 | Plain, ruled & margined book containing combined Banns & Marriages | Grade 2 Register - not a perfect read but with a low likelihood of misreads | None |
4 | 8th November 1791 -11th February 1798 | Cambridgeshire Archives - Reference - P67/1/7 | Plain, hand-ruled book, the composite register concurrent in contravention of Hardwicke's segregation & wording requirements | Grade 3 Register - there are sufficient quality issues with this register to indicate that some misreads will occur albeit few in number | Fading of this register may produce one or two misreads |
5 | 8th April 1798 - 21st December 1812 | Cambridgeshire Archives - Reference - P67/1/14 | Standard preprinted and self-numbered Marriage register with 3 entries per page | Grade 1 Register - Few issues noted and a low likelihood of misreads | None |
6 | 27th January 1813 - 20th June 1837 | Cambridgeshire Archives - Reference - P67/1/15 | Standard Rose style preprinted and prenumbered Marriage register | Grade 2 Register - not a perfect read but with a low likelihood of
misreads |
None |
Downham
St Leonard
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Littleport
St George
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Ely St
Mary
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Ely
St Mary
Stretham St James |
1755 1760 1765 1770 1775 1780 1785 1790 1795 1800 1805 1810 1815 1820 1825 1830 1835
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