Registering Births (General)

by ChrisW @, Saturday, April 19, 2008, 04:58 (6071 days ago)

Do you have to register a birth at your local Registry Office, or can you do it at any R.O.?

Chris

Registering Births

by robdavis @, Saturday, April 19, 2008, 05:39 (6071 days ago) @ ChrisW

Chris

This information taken from the GRO site relating to births in England and Wales:

Births

Registering a birth

After the arrival of a new baby, it is a legal requirement to register the birth within 42 days. This can often be done at hospital before the mother goes home, otherwise it needs a personal visit to a register office.

A birth which takes place in England can only be registered in English, but births in Wales may be registered bilingually in English and Welsh.

Whether or not there is provision for registering at the hospital, you can go to any register office although things will take a day or two longer if you go to one which does not cover the district in which the baby was born. This is because the registrar will need to forward your information to the district where the birth took place in order for the registration to take place and it is from here that the birth certificate will be sent to you. Register office opening hours vary from one district to another and most operate an appointment system.

Hope this is of help
Rob Davis

Registering Births

by ChrisW @, Saturday, April 19, 2008, 06:17 (6071 days ago) @ robdavis

Thanks Rob.

Regards
Chris

Registering Births post 1837

by slowhands @, proud of his ancient Dean Forest roots, Saturday, April 19, 2008, 09:43 (6071 days ago) @ ChrisW

The General Registration Act of 1836 introduced the system of civil registration by the State which exists today. Since the 1st of July 1837 all births, marriages and deaths have been recorded both locally at District register offices, as well as centrally at the General Register Office, although registration in the early years of the system is not complete.

After 1837, parish registers were supplanted by a more complete system of registration,. However, and esp. relevant to the
Forest, was the nineteenth century growth of nonconformist churches with their own registers.

--
Ἀριστοτέλης A Gloster Boy in the Forest of Dean ><((((*>

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