What Can I Find in Canadian Church Records?
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Contents
Different denominations, different time periods, and practices of different record keepers will effect how much information can be found in the records. Sometimes, you will only find a simple membership list. This outline will show the types of details which might be found in the best case scenario.
Baptisms or Christenings[edit | edit source]
In Catholic and Anglican records, children were usually baptized a few days after birth, and therefore, the baptism record proves date of birth. Other religions, such as Baptists, baptized at other points in the member's life. Baptism registers might give:
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Marriages[edit | edit source]
Marriage registers can give:
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Burials or Funerals[edit | edit source]
Burial registers may give:
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Membership Lists[edit | edit source]
Membership lists may give:
- the name of the person
- the date and the place the list was made
- may also give the spouse’s name
- the date of admission
- letters of admission or dismission
- the name of the congregation they came from or left to
- a death date, added later
Minutes or Historical Narrative[edit | edit source]
Many denominations, intersperse records chronologically throughout
minutes or church history, without placing them in separate registers.
Other Records[edit | edit source]
Other records, less specifically genealogical, include:
- congregational histories (may have membership lists, baptism lists interspersed)
- church newspapers (may have notices of birth, marriage, death)
- donation lists
- pew lists
- committee officers or lay officers
- business meeting minutes
- correspondence
- Sunday School records (may have attendance records)
- church cemetery records
- pastor's notes or memoirs
- biographies of pastors