Difference between revisions of "Military Records"

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==Other Sources==
 
[[image:Wm_Brown_Service_Records.jpg|right|frame|300px|Service Record of William Brown of the Grenadier Guards]]
 
  
In the case of the 'elite' forces, The Grenadier Guards, Coldstream Guards, Scots Guards, Irish Guards and Welsh Guards, the Service Records would be kept at The Guards Museum.
 
 
:Regimental Archivist<br>
 
:RHQ Grenadier Guards<br>
 
:Wellington Barracks<br>
 
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:London SW1E 6HQ<br>
 
 
Change the name to that of the Guards Regiment you're enquiring about: [http://www.theguardsmuseum.com/index.htm The Guards Museum]
 
 
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Back to [[Records Office Guide]]
 
Back to [[Records Office Guide]]

Revision as of 13:04, 2 November 2009


For more detailed information see Military Research

What Will I Find?

World War One Medal Card

Most records are held at the National Archives at Kew. They have a number of research guides to its major collections, which can be searched at National Archive

Records range from muster rolls (c.1730-1898) through to the Second World War. A large number of First World War records were destroyed in WW2 and those that survived are microfilmed for viewing at the National Archives.

Medal Cards awarded to those who served in both World Wars can be downloaded from the National Archives by searching Documents Online and both Military and Civilian war casualties can be found on the Commonwealth War Graves Commission site CWGC

The National Archives also hold records on Army Lists, which recorded serving Officers and was published monthly and quarterly up to 1946, and annually after that.

Some Records Offices will have have CD Roms of war casualties; again, Officers were usually filed separately. Details of casualties and awards often featured in local newspapers, which may be microfilmed in most record offices in the area the paper was published. Some Record Offices may also hold microfilm records of Regiments relating to their area.

Gallantry Awards were also listed in the London Gazette, and can be viewed on microfilm at the British Newspaper Library.




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