All of the following applications are available for purchase from the Society Shop. To access support for some applications will you to register your software or data disk. Please click on the appropriate CD number for update and/or support information, where available.
|
| Disk No |
Title |
Brief Description |
|
| CDC001

|
1851 Census Index of the EYFHS area |
This CD Rom includes all the areas covered in booklets C002 to C025 inclusive. It provides information on Name, Age, Birthplace, County, Piece Number and Folio Number for each entry only. The data is supplied in Microsoft® Access 97, Microsoft® Excel 97, Microsoft® Works and pdf formats as well as text files (for import into a database or spreadsheet program of your choice). |
|
| CDC002

|
1861 Census of Eastern Yorkshire |
This CD Rom covers most villages in eastern Yorkshire between the Humber and the Tees and which are east of the A19 trunk road. This is an approximate definition. An index of the places covered can be found on the web site at www.eyfhs.org.uk. It provides information on Address, Name, Age, Relationship, Condition as to marriage, Occupation, Birthplace and full census reference information. The data is supplied in Microsoft® Access, Microsoft® Excel, and Microsoft® Works formats as well as text files (for import into a database or spreadsheet program of your choice). |
|
| CDC003

|
The 1891 Census Index of the
Scarborough Registration District |
This CD Rom includes Scarborough Town (33,767 names) and Scarborough District (12,276 names) and replaces C901 & C902 (floppy disks). It consists of Surname, Forename(s), Age, Birthplace, County, Piece Number, and Folio Number. The data is supplied in Microsoft Access 97, Microsoft Excel 97, Microsoft Works and Adobe PDF formats as well as text files (for import into a database or spreadsheet program of your choice). |
|
| CDH001

|
Battle's 1791 Directory of Hull |
This is the very first publication of a Hull Street Directory and, as such, is a vital document for those with Hull ancestry. Street directories are particularly valuable as they predate the national census, by 50 years in this particular case, and offer the opportunity to discover where your ancestors worked and lived. |
|
| CDH002

|
Battle's 1792 Directory of Hull |
One year on and Battle published his second directory of Hull, which provides a unique opportunity to compare like with like and discover the changing face of Hull during a very busy period of change. |
|
| CDH003

|
White's 1882 Street Directory of Hull |
By 1882, Hull had grown so rapidly that Street Directories became very large, very heavy and popular. Due to the sheer volume of information they contain it is obvious that they took a great many months to compile, print and publish. The 1882 directory is particularly interesting as it would have been 'in production' at the same time as the 1881 census - and you will not have to think too long to realise the significance of that particular tidbit. |
|
| CDH004

|
John Meadley's Index to the
Hull Times (1857-1945) |
The Hull Times covered a wide geographical area from, roughly, Scarborough to Boston and was usually published in two or three editions. By 1886 it was owned by Hull, East Yorkshire and North Lincolnshire Conservative Newspapers Co and in 1907 it became part of the Daily Mail and Hull Times Co. who, in 1924, renamed the paper The Hull and Yorkshire Times. The index is very well cross referenced and can save you hundreds of hours searching through the archives. |
|
| CDH005 |
reserved for future release |
|
|
| CD006

|
Henry Woledge's Settlements & Removals |
Covering the period between the mid17th and 19th centauries, this transcription contains several thousands of records of the East Riding courts of Quarter Sessions as the relate to settlement and removal orders. |
|
CD007

|
J. Travis-Cook’s 1909 Sculcoates Manor,
Church& Parish
with Notes on Ancient Hessle |
For anyone with an interest in Sculcoates (or Hessle and Hull for that matter), this is a must-read publication. It provides a historical insight from the viewpoint of the very start of the 20th centaury. For those who have long wondered why the parish of Sculcoates 'owned' so much of the area we now consider to be Hull, this CD will answer many of your questions. |
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