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England
& Wales Hardwicke Marriage Index |
The ParishThe
parish of Wellington lies in eastern Shropshire roughly 11 miles
east of the county town of Shrewsbury. Wellington
sits around 1 miles north of the modern M54 motorway, replacing
part of the ancient A5 road and the Roman Watling Street,
connecting Shrewsbury with the main motorway network and the
great towns of the Midlands. Wellington
is a much changed place, its origins lay as a market town for
its region in eastern Shropshire, its market having been granted
in 1244. Throughout the early period it functioned purely as a
centre for trade & exchange together with the location for
specialist skilled trades requiring a larger market to be
profitable. The first great change to Wellington
came through the industrial revolution, just under 4 miles to
the south lies Ironbridge, the location of the "Birth of the
Industrial Revolution" in some people's eyes. Iron & steel
working spread to the surrounding area including Wellington
which became a centre for nail making, other industrial
activities including glass-making, milling and kilning. Wellington's population swelled during the 18th
century, trebling to over 4,000 and making the town 3rd in size
in its county after Shrewsbury & Bridgnorth. Growth was
speeded through the arrival of the railway line from
Wolverhampton to Shrewsbury which grew the town to over 10,000.
The motorway arrived in modern times increasing the area's
attractiveness for both industry and commuting to the larger
towns of the Midlands. The final changes came in 1988 through Wellington's incorporation into the New Town of
Telford, named in honour for the great engineer, a process of
infill has made Wellington, once a
separate and self-contained town into merely a northwestern
extension of that New Town, part of an urban area shaped roughly
as a "J" and reaching 3 miles from west to east at its northern
edges all the way down to include Ironbridge and the Severnside
industrial heritage. Wellington is
drained, perhaps surprisingly, initially northwestwards by small
brooks headed for the River Tern, the Tern, in a classic case of
river-capture is halted in its westwards course on meeting the
Severn where water turns back east to start a long journey
through the English Midlands to eventually reach the sea at the
Bristol Channel. Wellington is sited, at
its centre, at around 100 metres above the sea with its southern
edges some 30 metres higher, its landscape is, however,
dominated by the isolated hill of The Wrekin standing at 407
metres and dominating the local countryside, its isolation
relates the theory that from its summit one can view a horizon
of some 350 to 400 miles in circumference. Wellington
parish was very extensive covering almost 8,800 acres and
including the townships of Aston, Hadley, Horton, Ketley,
Lawley, and Walcot. With the growth from the new industries its
population grew from less than 2,000 to multiple thousands today
with a similar growth in marriage volume too. In Domesday times
Wellington was a much smaller place, a holding of Earl Roger of
Shrewsbury its assets of 17 ploughs made it a large rural
community but it also held a mill and 2 fisheries as more
profitable enterprises. |
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Register No | Covering Dates | Deposited With | Register Style | Quality Standard | Comments |
1 | 1st May 1754 - 22nd November 1771 | Shropshire Archives - Reference - FP291/A/3/1 | Standard preprinted and self-numbered combined Banns & Marriage register with 3 entries per page | Grade 2 Register - not a perfect read but with a low likelihood of
misreads |
None |
2 | 16th December 1771 - 29th November 1784 | Shropshire Archives - Reference - FP291/A/3/2 | Standard preprinted and self-numbered Marriage register with 3 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 |
Intermittent fading of this register may result in one or two
misreads |
3 | 6th December 1784 - 23rd April 1805 | Shropshire Archives - Reference - FP291/A/3/3 | Standard preprinted and self-numbered Marriage register with 4 entries per page | Grade 2 Register - not a perfect read but with a low likelihood of
misreads |
None |
4 | 28th April 1805 - 28th December 1812 | Shropshire Archives - Reference - FP291/A/3/4 | Standard preprinted and self-numbered Marriage register with 4 entries per page | Grade 2 Register - not a perfect read but with a low likelihood of
misreads |
None |
5 | 30th January 1813 - 7th May 1827 | Shropshire Archives - Reference - FP291/A/3/5 | Standard Rose style preprinted and prenumbered Marriage register | Grade 3 Register - there are sufficient quality issues with this register to indicate that some misreads will occur albeit few in number | The handwriting of the curate, Birds, who shares clerical duties
with the vicar is rather poor which will lead to a few misreads for
his entries |
6 | 15th May 1827 - 20th February 1837 | Shropshire Archives - Reference - FP291/A/3/6 | Standard Rose style preprinted and prenumbered Marriage register | Grade 2 Register - not a perfect read but with a low likelihood of
misreads |
None |
7 | 20th February 1837 - 27th June 1837 | Shropshire Archives - Reference - FP291/A/3/7 | Standard Rose style preprinted and prenumbered Marriage register | Grade 2 Register - not a perfect read but with a low likelihood of misreads | None |
Lilleshall
St Michael & All Angels
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Lilleshall
St Michael & All Angels
Wombridge St Mary & St Leonard |
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Wroxeter
St Andrew
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Little
Wenlock St Lawrence
Dawley Magna Holy Trinity |
Dawley
Magna Holy Trinity
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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