England
& Wales Hardwicke Marriage Index |
The ParishThe parish of Acton lies in southern Cheshire not too far from its border not only with neighbouring Shropshire with which it forms a part of the border but also with neighbouring Staffordshire. Acton is located just a mile west of the market town of Nantwich but the parish covers an extensive area of rural Cheshire containing 14 further townships as well as the relatively small village of Acton. Acton village sits at the junction of the A51 (running from Nantwich to Chester) and A534 (Nantwich to Wrexham) roads and is just a small and compact village of a few hundred folk. The area is crisscrossed by canals both Llangollen & Shropshire Union Canals passing either side of Acton village. The economy of the area, at the time of this transcript, would have been dominated by pastoral farming on the clay-rich soils of the Cheshire Plains, in addition Acton parish would have participated in the salt industry of the area for which it is famous. Acton parish sits on the western side of the valley of the River Weaver and this drains the parish northwards to reach the Mersey Estuary at Runcorn and thence to the Irish Sea. Acton village is sited at around 60 metres above the sea and sits on the broad and broadly level Cheshire Plains, albeit land rises gently to around twice that height towards the western border with Bunbury parish. Cheshire parishes are often large in the rural areas and Acton parish was no exception, the parish covered around 15.500 acres and would have supported a population of over 4,100 parishioners albeit only 300 were living in Acton village, itself. In Domesday time Acton was held by one William Malbank and could offer 17 ploughs, meadows and woodlands plus a mill and intriguingly an hawk's eyrie. |
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Register No | Covering Dates | Deposited With | Register Style | Quality Standard | Comments |
1 | 16th April 1754 - 28th September 1783 | Cheshire Archive & Local Studies - Reference P331/8212/11A | Standard preprinted and self-numbered combined Banns & Marriage register with 4 entries per page | Grade 2 Register - not a perfect read but with a low likelihood of misreads | This and its subsequent register are collated as a single document in the catalogue |
2 | 4th October 1783 - 14th February 1797 | Cheshire Archive & Local Studies - Reference P331/8212/11B | Standard preprinted and self-numbered combined Banns & Marriage register with 4 entries per page | Grade 2 Register - not a perfect read but with a low likelihood of misreads | None |
3 | 21st February 1797 - 29th December 1812 | Cheshire Archives & Local Studies - Reference P331/8212/12 | 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 |
4 | 7th January 1813 - 19th April 1837 | Cheshire Archives & Local Studies - Reference P331/8212/13 | Standard Rose style preprinted and prenumbered Marriage register | Grade 2 Register - not a perfect read but with a low likelihood of misreads | None |
Bunbury
St Boniface
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Church
Minshull St Bartholomew
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Bunbury
St Bomiface
Wrenbury St Margaret Baddiley St Michael Marbury St Michael |
Nantwich
St Mary
Wybunbury St Chad |
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Whitchurch
St Alkmund, Shropshire
Audlem St James |
Audlem
St James
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1755 1760 1765 1770 1775 1780 1785 1790 1795 1800 1805 1810 1815 1820 1825 1830 1835
Corrections to Tinstaafl Transcripts