The United
Kingdom has kept voting records, called Poll Books, Burgess Books or Rolls, and
Electoral Registers, depending on the time period. Poll books are generally early records of those who voted and how
they voted in parliamentary
elections. Secret ballots did not begin until 1872.
Burgess books or rolls listed the freemen of a borough who
were often entitled to vote for members of parliament and for members of the
borough corporation. Note: A borough is a self-governing place with a
corporation and privileges granted by a royal charter. This term has wider uses
today; see www.en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Borough.
Since 1832, electoral registers of people eligible
to vote in parliamentary elections
have been compiled annually, with the exception of the war years: 1916-1917,
1940-1944. They were compiled twice a year from 1919 to 1926 and again from
1945 to 1949. Registers for voters in local elections were kept was well, such
as those for county council kept since 1889.
Voting was
not secret?! Before telling you how to find these registers and books, it may help
to discuss the differences in voting between the UK and North America because
they can be distracting when working with this data.
Voting
Age
Until 1971, men
could vote when they reached age 21. Since then, the voting age is reduced to 18
years. The exceptions were soldiers and sailors age 19 and 20 after World War
I. Women over age 30 got the vote in 1918. That age was reduced to 21 in 1928
and 18 in 1971.
Qualifications
Who was
qualified to vote varied between the counties and the boroughs in the UK, and
the various boroughs had customs that widely varied with each other. To be
simplistic, citizens could vote if they were of legal age, and owned or rented
property, based on the value of the real estate or the amount of rent paid. The
necessary values were changed over time.
Plural
Voting
You might
find an ancestor on more than one voting list and wonder how that can be. In
1948, ‘One man, One vote’ became the law of the land. Before that year, there
were three geographic categories; residence, business and university. You could
vote in all three before 1918 and between 1918 and 1948, in two of the three.
_____________.
UK Electoral Registers and Their Uses. London: British Library, Social Sciences
Collection Guides, Official Publications. www.bl.uk/socialsciences
Gibson,
Jeremy and Colin Rogers. Electoral
Registers. Birmingham, UK: Federation of Family History Societies, 1990.
Herber,
Mark. Ancestral Trails. Baltimore, Maryland: Genealogical Publishing Company,
2006.
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