England
& Wales Hardwicke Marriage Index |
The ParishThe parish of Bisley lies in the southern portion of central Gloucestershire roughly 4 miles east of the town of Stroud. Bisley sits more than 3 miles north of the closest significant main road, the A419 linking Stroud with Cirencester. Bisley has a long history, formerly a market town it was already well established by Domesday times. see below, and for most of the medieval period was the larger of it and Stroud, indeed Stroud was merely a chapelry of Bisley for much of that time. Today's Bisley is somewhat diminished from those early days with the market lost it is merely a large village sitting on a plateau within the Cotswold Ranges, most properties line a north to south running High Street with a more modern extension northwest of the church, the main street covers a half mile from north to south. One historical footnote is that Bisley was the home of the initial conspiracy behind the Gunpowder Plot from here the plan was conceived. For much of the medieval and later periods it was the manufacture of both cloth and silk that employed many in the village, power from the effervescent River Frome deep in the Golden Valley to the south powered many mills along its course leading to the growth of subsidiary settlements of Brownshill, Chalford and Oakridge Lynch along its course. In addition to the cloth trades the local stone was actively quarried, it making excellent paving stone and grindstones. Modern developments have come to the parish with the railway line from Stroud to Swindon switching occasionally from the south to the northern side of the Frome's course. The Frome drains the parish westwards passing through Stroud and out across the plains to the Severn and thence to the Bristol Channel. Bisley parish was extensive, despite losing land to Stroud it remained covering over 7,900 acres within which it supported a population estimated to be around 5,300 parishioners. As already mentioned Bisley was already established by Domesday times with its 102 households placing it within the top 20% of settlements recorded in the book by population, held by Earl Hugh of Chester its impressive total of 34 ploughs was substantial, adding in its 5 mills along the Frome made it a very wealthy holding indeed. |
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Register No | Covering Dates | Deposited With | Register Style | Quality Standard | Comments |
1 |
29th April 1754 - 27th March 1800 |
Gloucestershire Archives - Reference - P47/IN/1/8 |
Standard preprinted and self-numbered combined Banns &
Marriage register with 4 entries per page |
Grade 3 Register - there are sufficient quality issues with this register to indicate that some misreads will occur albeit few in number | The earlier portion of this register suffers from
bleed-through of backing entries which may result in one or two
misreads NB the practice of entering marriages in the sequence of first reading of Banns makes it impractical to check for mis-typed dates, apologies if any have slipped through |
2 | 22nd April 1800 - 24th December 1812 | Gloucestershire Archives - Reference - P47/IN/1/9 | 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 | 4th January 1813 - 23rd September 1833 | Gloucestershire Archives - Reference - P47/IN/1/10 | Standard Rose style preprinted and prenumbered Marriage register | Grade 2 Register - not a perfect read but with a low likelihood of
misreads |
None |
4 | 24th September 1833 - 13th February 1837 | Gloucestershire Archives - Reference - P47/IN/1/11 | Standard Rose style preprinted and prenumbered Marriage register | Grade 2 Register - not a perfect read but with a low likelihood of
misreads |
None |
5 | 5th March 1837 - 2nd June 1837 | Gloucestershire Archives - Reference - P47/IN/1/12 | This parish commenced using the Civil Registration styled marriage forms ahead of the system starting in July 1837 | Grade 2 Register - not a perfect read but with a low likelihood of misreads | None |
Stroud
St Lawrence
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Edgeworth
St Mary
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Minchinhampton
Holy Trinity
Sapperton St Kenelm |
Sapperton
St Kenelm
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Corrections to Tinstaafl Transcripts