
SCOTS CENSUS GOES ONLINE
SOURCE: BBC NEWS
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/scotland/1778847.stm
24 JANUARY 2002
The 1901 Scottish census is going online and officials are aiming
to avoid the problems which beset the website for England and Wales.
That site proved so successful that it crashed on its launch day
after 1.2 million people tried to search for relatives.
However, the General Register Office for Scotland, whose site
will contain the details, is confident it will be able to cope with
the public demand.
The service comes at a cost, however. Users must pay £6 to access
the database for a 24-hour period.
VisitScotland hopes the availability of the information will
encourage tourists to come to Scotland to see their ancestors’
homes.
VisitScotland marked the occasion with the launch of its own
website - ancestralscotland.com - which aims to offer a one-stop
internet guide to tracing family history.
It also provides a link to the GRO site, which leads to the 1901
census pay-per-view site, and offers information about genealogy.
The website launch in Glasgow was attended by Hamish Clark, a
star of the Monarch of the Glen series.
Accessed online
Ayrshire-born supermodel Kirsty Hume; her husband Donovan Leitch,
from Glasgow; actor Alan Cumming, from Carnoustie and US actor Kyle
MacLachlan, are due to be at a launch in New York on Thursday.
The Scottish records from 1881 and 1891 can already be accessed
online.
However, 1901 will become Scotland’s first census of the
Edwardian era to become available on the internet.
Officials estimate that more than 28 million amateur historians
and people with Scottish ancestry will log on to trace their family
roots.
Mental state
The information on offer includes a range of details about those
living at the start of the previous century, including where they
lived, their age and even their mental state.
The 1901 census website for England and Wales ground to a halt
for several hours after its launch while technicians worked to
improve access.
During Lords question time on Wednesday, the UK Government
refused to say when full access to the site would be allowed.
Baroness Scotland of Asthal said access was currently limited to
users at the London-based Family Record Centre, the Public Record
Office and 150 libraries and service centres across England and
Wales.
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