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Thursday, 1 May 2025

Haunted Houses

New Month Old Post: first posted 1st March, 2016
It could do with being shorter. Since originally posted, the 1921 Census has become available

The 1939 Register
 
Somewhat obsessively, I have been an active researcher of my family history for over twenty years now, buying countless genealogical resources and subscriptions. Along the way have been some surprising and even astonishing findings, as well as many mundane, but in February when the findmypast site released a new resource, The 1939 Register, I experienced an entirely new reaction.

The 1939 Register

Rather like a census, The 1939 Register records the names and addresses of everyone living in England and Wales on the 29th September, 1939, just after the outbreak of the Second World War. It did not go into as much detail as a normal census, but was carried out in a similar way for wartime purposes: to issue national identification and ration cards, to administer conscription, and to plan population movements in the event of mass evacuation. It was later used by the National Health Service at its inception in 1948. As no census was taken in 1941, and as the records for the 1931 census were destroyed by fire during the war, the Register is the most complete survey of the population between the as yet unreleased censuses of 1921 and 1951.

What makes it different for me is that, as a snapshot taken just over a decade before I was born, The 1939 Register is almost contemporary. Other population surveys such as the 1911 census were from so long ago that just about everything has since changed, which will also be true of the 1921 census when they finally let us see it, but much of the information recorded in The 1939 Register remained unchanged into the nineteen-fifties. Many of the same people were at the same addresses as I remember them. If my parents were still around they would be fascinated.

First home
I can see the two-bedroom terraced house my parents rented from 1946, where I first lived. It is occupied by a canal tugman and his family. They had brought up six children there. Wherever did they put them all? 

The people next door are the same as I remember, as are those at the corner shop next-door-but-one. Across the road is the same gentlemen’s hairdresser, then newly married. He would remain there with his wife, childless, for the next thirty years. It was where I used to be sent for my hair cut – short back and sides the only style on offer – every three or four weeks throughout the nineteen-fifties and nineteen-sixties. Once old enough to go unaccompanied, I would wait my turn in the smoky den of his barber’s shop (it would never have been called anything so epicene as a salon) trying to make sense of the swaggering conceits of the older customers. From time to time the hairdresser’s timid wife would materialise at the through-door from the house to leave a cup of tea, and then dematerialise as silently as she had arrived. 

In the mid nineteen-fifties we moved to a new address, up in the world to a small semi-detached house. The 1939 Register shows it occupied by the shipwright’s family we bought it from. The adjoining neighbours were still there when we moved in, father, mother and grown-up children. The mother and father would die in the nineteen-sixties but one of their daughters would remain in the house, unmarried, for the next sixty years. The neighbours at the other side are a young widow still in her thirties and her elderly mother. They too were still there when we moved in. The mother died soon afterwards, but the widow remained long after we had left until she died at an advanced age in the nineteen-nineties. She became a close family friend. Up and down the street are so many other familiar names: the master mariner; the butcher; the mother and her daughter who in turn became the mother of the boys we played with when they visited their grandma. 

The Register is more flexibly searchable than almost any previous resource. Whereas the censuses, for example, can be trawled only in limited ways, The 1939 Register search is so powerful you can find almost anyone, even when they are partially mistranscribed in the index. The main limitation is that you are not supposed to be able to see anyone born less than a hundred years ago, although often you can. In most households, such as my father’s parents’, the children are blacked out, and only the names of the adults are shown. But despite being born in the nineteen-twenties, my mother can be seen with her parents, her name amended after marriage, a result of parts of the Register continuing in use with the National Health Service until 1991, after she had died.

You can find just about any house built before 1939. In Leeds, I can see the elderly couple I lodged with in 1970 at the same Kirkstall address in 1939, although then they are not elderly. The husband is a railway clerk. The address also has one ‘closed’ line for their daughter who would later marry a corporation surveyor and have one son. At other places I lived, much later in some cases, the 1939 residents had moved on long before my time. One through-terrace is occupied by an engineer’s turner and his wife, both born in the eighteen-seventies. Another is occupied by a wool foreman with his wife and four children. The only back-to-back I lived in is the home of a shoe repairer and his wife, both in their mid-twenties. At yet another mid-terrace there are nine residents: a couple born in the eighteen-seventies and seven grown-up children. The father and one of the sons are asphalters. Again, how did they fit them all in?

Some houses I have known were larger. In the Levenshulme area of Manchester, in the early nineteen-eighties, I lived in a three-bedroom, bay-windowed terrace with front and back gardens. Next door lived a widow who in 1939 is there with her husband and mother-in-law. The husband, the neighbours and the occupants of my address have mainly clerical occupations. I still have some of the next door neighbour’s late husband’s drill bits and an ancient tobacco tin full of wire staples which she gave me when clearing out her shed. The hardware was probably there in 1939 but the Register lists only people. I lived in yet grander surroundings in the Avenues area of Hull. In my day they were already what are now called HMOs (Houses in Multiple Occupation) but in 1939 they were occupied by the likes of Ministers of Religion, newspaper reporters, merchants, lecturers, collectors of taxes and people of private means. 

Like having the gift of premonition, if you are near my age or older, you look through The 1939 Register and find you knew or can remember so many of those named in it. You know what happened to them, who they married, who their children were, and when they died, or at the very least, what became of their houses. Do they return as ghosts to light their coal fires in the mornings, the husbands going off to work and the children to school as they must have done so many times? Do the wives cook and clean for their return? Do they relive their happy days, sad days, sunny days, rainy days, Easters, Christmases, an holidays? Will we?

28 comments:

  1. That terrace house in your picture is like the two up two down I lived in as a child after we returned from the North Yorkshire moors. Two parents, seven children, occasional visiting relatives!

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    1. You know the answers to my questions as to how they fitted so many into small houses. I guess it was shared beds and shared rooms. I wonder how today's youngsters would cope. We did not have so many possessions then.

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    2. Shared beds, sofa in use, shared rooms. We had very few clothes or other items -- no place to keep them. No privacy either.

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  2. That is fascinating. I must tell my husband's sister-in-law as she was born and brought up in Leeds and has been researching her family for a couple of decades now. I think she's found her way back to the 17th century.

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    1. Some of my lines go back that far, but I find it interesting to be able to relate more directly to things. I would imagine that she does know about the 1939 Register.

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  3. So interesting. You reminded me to check out the 2 homes I lived in as a child. I looked on a real estate website and if the homes have been for sale in the past years,there are often photos of all of the rooms as they look now. It brought back such fun memories for me and I was amazed at some of the changes made to the homes. Thanks for the trip down memory lane!

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    1. I like the Sold and For Sale sites too, and also google streetview and satellite images.

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  4. When I have some free time I'll make use of the seven day trial to look up my mum (born in 1909) and other relatives in and around London. My aunt stayed on in the same house after the war (despite a bit of bomb damage) along with my grandmother. Didn't leave it until the mid 1960s just after it finally got indoor plumbing (was never my favorite place to visit as a child--having to walk out back to the privy). Perhaps I can find out more about my paternal grandfather who was born in Scotland in 1867. Quite a resource. Thanks.

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    1. I find it a good idea to plan what you are going to look for before starting the free trials. My grandma have an outside earth toilet, but I was too young to ponder on it! I was still very young when the water mains reached the village.

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  5. That must be quite fascinating. We have here a now digitised directory which I think was an annual survey of every property in the state, listing the name of the main resident, usually a male, and their occupation. This survey continued into the 1970s. I've used it a few times for the purpose of curiosity and a couple of times for verifications or research.

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    1. Some of those are on the genealogy web sites, too; useful for family members who emigrated in the 19th century.

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  6. How interesting this is, particularly since the records for the 1931 census were destroyed by fire and there was no 1941 census. The1939 Register fills a real void. I enjoy researching my family and I know the importance of the census. I love reading how your memories fit in what you have discovered on the1939 Register.

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    1. Genealogy can become like a full time job if you become too obsessive about it, but it is fascinating.

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  7. Once, when I lived in Michigan, I drove my children to the Chippewa Nature Center to summer camp programs. To get to the children's education center, you drove through a 'village' constructed from historical buildings which were deconstructed, moved, and rebuilt at the nature center. One of these buildings was a school house. As I drove past it on the little gravel road, I caught a glimpse of movement and looked quickly. It was way too early for volunteers to be there. I had the briefest look at a woman stepping to the side of the window. I remember a high collar and hair pulled back from her face. No more than that. But it made such a happy thing to think on for the day. Suppose in death, you simply remained where you found joy in life? I have often thought back to that summer day.

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    1. That could be disturbing, too. I don't know where I would choose to be, there are so many places, but I do know for certain where I would choose not to be.

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  8. This is fascinating!
    Are you familiar with the Mass Observation project? I wasn‘t, until I read a book with excerpts of one of the many diaries that were kept as part of the project, from a woman who worked at a corner shop in Dewsbury.
    You can find my review and bits about the MO project here, if you are interested:
    https://librarianwithsecrets.blogspot.com/2016/09/read-in-2016-32-view-from-corner-shop.html

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    1. Yes, and there is quite a lot about it in the news at the moment. There are some fascinating accounts. I guess it is the 1940s version of blogging.

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    2. Thank you for the link to your review. It sounds wonderful.
      I can just remember our ration books in the early 1950s, but I was very young. My dad said he used to get eggs from the children of his customers - the hens layed them in the hedgerows and they went round looking for them.

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  9. Well - though I am not obsessed with digging in to the past I knew - back in my East Yorkshire village - this blogpost has inspired me to seek out the 1939 Register and do a little research of my own. Perhaps it will bring back some long buried memories. I will also be looking at Malton and Rawmarsh in relation to my parents.

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    1. I find I can remember so much that was little changed after I was born. Being able to relate to it like that makes it fascinating, but you need a genealogy sub to get the most from it, or a free trial.

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  10. Yes Tasker you have sparked a revolution of hunting out past memories with the 1939 Register. Yesterday I went on Street Map to the old house and tried to peer down the driveway to see if the garden still remained but no luck.

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    1. Streetmap is frustrating in that regard. The aerial view helps a bit, but also has limitations.

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  11. I too find researching family history incredibly fascinating. I have let subscriptions lapse, but must renew then at some point to carry on. It makes ancestors come alive, doesn't it?

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    1. It does. Mine are lapsed, too. I used to spend hundreds of pounds a year on them.

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  12. very thought provoking stuff..... i know some of my relatives have done some genealogy.... so mebbe i'll tap into it and have a look - thanks for the good descriptions

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    1. As I've replied to others, you need a sub or a trial, but yes it is fascinating in all kinds of ways.

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I welcome comments and hope to respond within a day or two, but my condition is making this increasingly difficult. Some days I might not look here at all. Also please note that comments on posts over 7 days old will not appear until they have been moderated.