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September 2013 - Promotional Feature

How to research your ancestor's occupation

Whether your forebear was a dareman, docker or a doctor, you can search occupational records and directories on TheGenealogist to find out more about them.

What type of job did your ancestor do? Whether they were a farmer toiling in the fields, working in the factories that sprung up during the Industrial Revolution, or a member of the clergy, giving others spiritual enlightenment, the working lives of our ancestors give us a great insight into the type of person they were.

However, finding an ancestor with a common surname among the array of records can make tracking down the right person a nightmare. Therefore the best way of navigating the thousands of matches to just a few is by using the term ‘occupation’ in TheGenealogist Master Search.

The ability to search by occupation makes the job faster and easier, and TheGenealogist is the only family history website that lets you search and discover your ancestor by their occupation and name alone. Using the Master Search feature you simply add an occupation as a keyword to help with your search. Using this method we can find John Smith, an ironworker on the docks in Monmouth. Originally from Staffordshire, he is living with relatives in Newport who also work on the docks.

With the comprehensively transcribed census records on TheGenealogist you can discover how they made a living all those years ago. For the more obscure job titles, there is also a handy help tool to explain more about the job, to provide explanations on what occupations such as ‘stevedore’ and ‘lighterman’ involved.

People’s job titles give us more of an insight into their lives, and by searching the census records on TheGenealogist you can find the professions of your ancestors, from stonemason and carver to ship carpenter and even ‘ironer in dye works’. Tracing the jobs they had through each census is easy once you have their year and parish of birth. Instantly you get a snapshot into their life of financial hardship or a one of success and privilege.

TheGenealogist also has specific records dedicated to certain professions. If your ancestor has a trade or skill you can search for them among the comprehensive range of specialist records covering a number of professions including legal, medical and aviation, as well as sports people and actors. By using the Master Search facility we look for a clergyman who achieved a lot in his lifetime in his chosen profession. William Archibald Spooner was a renowned academic who was ordained deacon in the Church of England in 1872 and became a priest in 1875. From the occupational records results, we find William Spooner listed in the 1907 and 1911 clergy lists and the official list of registered teacher in 1917.

Even if your ancestor wasn’t well known in their particular field, you can still locate them by their occupation in the numerous trade directories on TheGenealogist. The trade sections in directories can help you find an ancestor’s place of employment. The official sections of directories list all public buildings and officers, so if your ancestor was a doctor or clergyman, his place of work may also have been his residence, and the commercial sections list everyone in business, from small businessmen to large factories.

These resources are available from the 1700s up to the 1950s and are invaluable for tracking ancestors before, after, and in between census years.

Step-by-Step: Access occupational records on TheGenealogist

Track down the working life of your ancestor through employment records or trade directories with ease

1. Using the unique 'Master Search' feature, we enter the name of our ancestor and search in the 'Occupational' record section. We add the keyword 'railway' to look for our ancestor within the 'railway worker' linked records on TheGenealogist.

2. We find J Williams in our employment record details, with the occupation of 'Passenger Porter'. Uniquely to TheGenealogist, his record is listed with his job title, fully searchable on the site. From here we simply click through to the transcribed record with more details on our Cornish railway worker.

3. Here is the transcribed record of John, listing his occupation as a 'Passenger Porter' with the rail company he worked for and the location of his job in Falmouth, Cornwall. You can now save and print this to go with your tree.

4. Next, we can try searching the trade directories on TheGenealogist for the grocer family of George Albert Lineker, great-grandfather of the former footballer and now TV personality, Gary Lineker.

5. With just the basic details, we search the 'Trade, Residential and Telephone' directory records. We find a result for George Albert Lineker in the Leicestershire Kelly's Directory and one click takes us through to the result.

6. Here is the copy of the actual record. We find George and his business located in 54 North Avenue in Leicester. These listings allow us to track the movement of our ancestors and their work!