Marriage & Baptism Records of St George’s Cathedral in Cape Town Available Online at Ancestry24.co.za

The following press release was written by Ancestry24.co.za staff. I went to the site, and registered, so that I might fully use the various services available there, including the databases. The big news is the new online database to Cape Town’s St. George’s Cathedral baptism & marriage records. It looks to me like the overwhelming numbers of searchers have taken that portion of the site down. The search just defaults back to the home page at the moment.

Ancestry24.co.za, South Africa’s premier ancestry24genealogy and ancestral website, has partnered with the Anglican Church in making the marriage and baptism records of St George’s Cathedral in Cape Town accessible online. St George’s is the oldest cathedral in southern Africa and is the mother church of the Anglican diocese of Cape Town.

A total of 3,633 marriage records, dating from the first available St Georges records in 1825 and over 6,000 baptism records dating 1921-1969, have been captured and made available online, free to the public. Earlier marriage records, dating from 1812 at the Colonial Chapel at the Castle have yet to be transcribed. This is part of an agreement between Ancestry24 and the Anglican Church Archives at Wits University where marriage and baptism records of some of South Africa’s oldest churches are being accurately captured and published at www.ancestry24.co.za

Says Heather MacAlister of Ancestry24, “The completion of the first phase of the St George’s Cathedral records is a significant milestone. Historians and genealogists researching their family history now have an additional useful tool in the St George’s online database. Many thousands of records are immediately available to be searched and viewed at the click of a button, which presents an enormous advantage over laboriously paging through dusty old church volumes.”

Online accessibility of family records is all the more relevant given the rapidly growing interest in genealogy from South Africa’s youth, says Mrs MacAlister. “Not only is genealogy one of the fastest growing hobbies in the world but a recent Ancestry24 survey points to a significant change in the age and demographics of South Africans researching their family history. While genealogy was traditionally a hobby for older people, there is a huge upswing in interest from younger generations and a cross-section of ethnic groups. Genealogy also forms part of South Africa’s outcomes based education system with learners researching their family history as part of school projects.”

The online availability of the St George’s records in particular is noteworthy considering the role that the cathedral played in the history of the Cape. A great many South African families can trace some sort of connection to what has fondly become known as the “people’s cathedral” through its voluminous records of marriages and baptisms. St George’s became known as the people’s cathedral because of its focal point as a site of resistance against apartheid, a place where protest vigils took place and oppressive policies were denounced.

The St George’s records also present useful information for genealogists and historians interested in tracing the history of the some of the Cape’s more famous families. For example, well known artist Thomas Bowler, bookseller Jan Carl Juta, and governor of the Cape Colony, Sir George Thomas Napier were all married at St George’s Cathedral.

Mrs MacAlister adds that the online capture of St George’s records was made possible through the dedicated assistance of a group of genealogist volunteers who spent over 2,000 hours in capturing and verifying the complete set of records.

Ancestry24 is South Africa’s most comprehensive ancestral and genealogical website, offering a wealth of interesting data and easy-to-use software resources to help kick-start one’s journey into the past. It has a fascinating collection of online data including slave records, voter rolls, church registers, ships passenger lists and rare history books.

About Leland Meitzler

Leland K. Meitzler founded Heritage Quest in 1985, and has worked as Managing Editor of both Heritage Quest Magazine and The Genealogical Helper. He currently operates Family Roots Publishing Company (www.FamilyRootsPublishing.com), writes daily at GenealogyBlog.com, writes the weekly Genealogy Newsline, conducts the annual Salt Lake Christmas Tour to the Family History Library, and speaks nationally, having given over 2000 lectures since 1983.

6 Replies to “Marriage & Baptism Records of St George’s Cathedral in Cape Town Available Online at Ancestry24.co.za”

  1. This is the most fantastic website for anyone doing research on their ancestors in South Africa. http://www.ancestry24.co.za has given me so many answers to family questions that have remained unsanswered for decades.
    Heather you are a star ***

  2. I am so frustrated! I have been trying to subscribe and it will not accept anything I give them. I cannot even get onto the free sites. All I want is information on a marriage in the early 1900’s. PLEASE help

  3. I am trying to find some record of my late Grandfathers wedding to his wife whose name I have no knowledge of, due to her already having passed away before I was born.
    As a teenager I was a member of the St.Michaels and all Angels in Observatory, Cape. So therefore I take it that my Grandfather was a member of St.Georges Cathedral.
    My Grandfathers name was Frank D. Nyman and he died in 1942 at the age of 92years in Observatory, Cape Town.
    I would appreciate it if you could advise if you have any record of him and my late grandmother. Thank you, Harry Berry.

  4. Hi Heather,

    I am trying to find information for my ancestor(s) who emigrated to Kimberley in the mid-19th. century. The names (from the Pioneer Cemetery) are as follows.

    Alexander Hall (1834 – 1877). Born in Clontibret, County Monaghan, Ireland.
    Sarah Hall (1836 – 1903).
    George Hall (1858 – 1876).
    John Hall (1863 – 1898).
    Edith Maud Hall (1874 – 1878).

    Can you advise if there are any South African – Irish Societies, or other groups, in the area that might be able to assist with my research please?

    Regards,
    John Hall (Living in Ireland)

  5. Request to remove blog:

    October 9th, 2011 at 3:25 am
    Hi Heather,

    I am trying to find information for my ancestor(s) who emigrated to Kimberley in the mid-19th. century. The names (from the Pioneer Cemetery) are as follows.

    Alexander Hall (1834 – 1877). Born in Clontibret, County Monaghan, Ireland.
    Sarah Hall (1836 – 1903).
    George Hall (1858 – 1876).
    John Hall (1863 – 1898).
    Edith Maud Hall (1874 – 1878).

    Can you advise if there are any South African – Irish Societies, or other groups, in the area that might be able to assist with my research please?

    Regards,
    John Hall

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