It depends on how lucky you are with the information you find! From 1855 on, in the Statutory Records, information was asked about the parents' names, occupations, etc. If these lines were filled in on the forms and if they were filled in truthfully… you should be able to find out the names of the parents of anyone who died from 1855 on. In reality, you will find some blanks-- either the informant didn't know the parents' names, or the bride or groom on a marriage didn't want to admit they were illegitimate, etc. But trying to get to the truth is part of the fun of this detective work!bk313 wrote: How far back could I get using online resources?
ScotlandsPeople also has the Old Parish Records, which can go back very far, but since registration was not obligatory, not all births, marriages and deaths are included.
On ScotlandsPeople, choose Direct Download as your preferred viewing method on your "My Details" page. The images will download onto your computer and you can re-name them as you please.bk313 wrote:Is there a way to save online documents?
http://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/conte ... ?r=551&458
I suggest that you explore all the information tabs on the site before you start paying for images, so that you understand exactly what you are doing.
The searches I was doing on ScotlandsPeople (basically, narrowing down the information, searching again, narrowing down again, etc.) were free. I never saw any of the results, just assumed them from how many results I was getting.bk313 wrote:Additionally, is there a free resource available for these documents? It seems Scotlandspeople is a pay site, which very well be worth it. I'd like to get dates and other relatives too and that would take up a lot of "credits" on scotlandspeople.
Carol paid for the images she downloaded with her hard-earned cash. There is no other way to do it.
We both have (paid) subscriptions to Ancestry.com, where we were looking up the censuses. These are only transcriptions, not images, and there are often errors, but it helps to narrow things down.
Many libraries have subscriptions to Ancestry.com, so with any luck you can do these census searches for free at your local library and only pay for the image on ScotlandsPeople when you are absolutely sure which one you want.
FreeCen also has many counties transcribed, particularly in the early censuses. Check here to see the coverage for particular years and localities: http://freecen.rootsweb.com/statistics.html
The only place where the actual images of Scottish OPR, Statutory Records, Censuses and Testaments (up to 1900) are to be found online is on ScotlandsPeople.
Many of the OPR records can be found for free on the IGI on FamilySearch.org
http://www.familysearch.org/Eng/Search/ ... ch_igi.asp
Keep in mind that this is just an index, however, If you want the images you must get them from ScotlandsPeople.
Read the information on the IGI in the Talking Scot Library:
viewtopic.php?f=39&t=10332
Best of luck with all this and don't hesitate to ask questions if you get stuck!
Sarah