Boston
- The parish was in the Boston sub-district of the Boston Registration District.
- For the 1851 census there is a street index for the Boston Registration district. Check your local Family History Library or the Lincolnshire Archives for a copy.
- For the 1861 census there were a number of Irish labourers in town. Here's a list of the surnames found on North Street: COYN, MURRY, FLANNAGAN, M'CAIN, DONLY, O'HARE, M'CAIN, M'GUIRE, RILLEY, BRENMAN, MATTHEWS, BROWN, JENBY, PADLEM, HUGGINS, CLARK, HIGGINS, CALLABY, FOX.
- The The Lincolnshire Family History Society has published surname indexes on fiche or in booklet form for each of these census years under the title "Boston". These are available by credit card from the Federation of Family History Societies Bookstore with worldwide shipping. Please note that these are SURNAME indexes only, and do not show first names, age or relationships.
- Check our Census Research page for county-wide resources.
- The table below gives census piece numbers, where known:
Census Year |
LDS Film/Fiche No. |
Piece Numbers |
LFHS Surname Index |
| 1841 |
0438755 |
H.O. 107/613 |
Fiche |
| 1851 |
0087727 & 0087728 |
H.O. 107/209x |
Booklet |
| 1861 |
0542955 & 0542956 |
R.G. 9/2330-2338 |
Fiche |
| 1871 |
0839353, 0839354 & 0839355 |
R.G. 10 / 3337 & 3339 - 3344 |
Booklet |
| 1881 |
1341766 & 1341767 |
R.G. 11/3212-3219 |
| 1891 |
6097683, 3 fiche |
R.G. 12/2573 |
Booklet or Fiche |
| 1891 |
6097684, 3 fiche |
R.G. 12/2574 |
|
| 1891 |
6097685, 4 fiche |
R.G. 12/2575 |
|
- The Anglo-Saxon St. Botolph founded a monastery here around 650. It stood on the northern side of the present church. This was destroyed by the Danes in 870.
- The Anglican parish church is, of course, St. Botolph's. The church was begun in 1309 and was built on a grand scale to demonstate Boston's wealth as a seaport town. It took over two centuries to complete the church building. The church now sports a small gift shop inside which sells a pamphlet, "Why Boston Stump? A Ten Minute Guide to Boston Parish Church," publ. 1978, for around 30 pence.
- The church is large enough to seat 1,775.
- St James' Church was established in George Street. The church opened on 24 Aug. 1864. It was to serve the heavily built-up working class residential area which sprang up with the arrival of the railway. The foundation stone was laid on St James' day, 25 July 1864, by John Jackson, Bishop of Lincoln, and his successor, Edward King, performed the consecration thirteen months later. This church closed on 1 Jan. 1970 and the site was cleared for a supermarket. Simon Meeds
- St. Aiden's church was located on High Street. It was a Chapel of Ease for St. Botolph's (Boston Stump) and was built of brick in 1821-2. Although renovated in 1908, it was demolished in the 1940s. There was some type of controversy from the pulpit in the 1920s and it closed at the end of a service.
- The Catholic church was dedicated to St. Mary and is on the Horncastle Road (now the B1183 arterial road). It was built in 1826. The church seats about 160. For information and assistance in researching these chapels, see our non-conformist religions page.
- There is a photograph of St. Botolph's church on the Wendy Parkinson Church Photos web site.
- There are two photographs of St. Botolph's church on the Simon Meed web site.
- And the second is at Simon Meeds 2.
- Here is a photo of the St Botolph's Church, taken by (and copyright of) Norma Clare.

- Here are two photos of the church, taken by Ron Cole (who retains the copyright):


- The Anglican parish register dates from 1557 for baptisms, 1564 for marriages and 1559 for burials.
- The register for St. Aiden's dates from 1822.
- St. Botolph's Burial Register (1813-1837) is available on four microfiche from the Federation of Family History Societies Bookstore, which allows purchased by credit card.
- The LFHS has published several indexes for the Holland East Deanery to make your search easier.
- Parish registers are now on file at the Society of Genealogists, covering 1557 - 1638. Check their site for other local churches, also.
- Lincoln Archives have St. James baptisms for 1893 - 1967. No marriages nor burials.
- The Lincoln Family History Society has a Marriage Index for Boston St Botolph 1813-1837 (revised) on 2 microfiche.
- We have a partial parish register extract. Your additions to this are welcome.
- The town has a long history of non-conformist religions, including Baptists, Catholics, Society of Friends and Wesleyan Methodists. The Congregational church used to be in Red Lion Street (almost opposite the Centenary Methodist Church) until sometime in the 1970's when the building was sold and then demolished. The church then met in premises used by the Unitarian Church in Spayne Lane. See also our extract from "Boston, Its Story and People". For information and assistance in researching these chapels, see our non-conformist religions page.
- One oddity is that the town had an iron church, which locals called "The Tin Tabernacle". The dates and dedication are unreported. [Tim Sylvester].
- Check our Church Records page for county-wide resources.
- The parish was in the Boston sub-district of the Boston Registration District.
- Check our Civil Registration page for sources and background on Civil Registration which began in July, 1837.
Boston is both a parish and a town near the east coast of Lincolnshire. The River Witham turns southeast and runs through Boston to the sea at Black Buoy Sand. The parish of Boston is surrounded by Skirbeck parish on the east and south, with Wyberton and Brothertoft to the west and Langriville and a portion of Sibsey to the north. Boston parish comprises most of the old town of Boston. Due to the drainage of the Fens and population growth in the area, parish boundaries have been changed over the centuries. New parishes were added in the area in the late 1800's. In 1932, civil and parish boundaries were changed and are no longer the same for each jurisdiction, so no two maps will show the same boundaries.
The town of Boston lies near "The Wash", an inlet of the North Sea on Lincolnshire's southeast coast. The Wash is notorious for its sandbars and shallows.
Boston was a market town and sea port. The town is dominated by the 282-foot-high tower of St. Botolph's parish church (some sources say 272-foot-high). The tower (and not the church) is called "The Stump" by local fishermen who use it as a navigation beacon, but the term is sometimes used by others to include the church as well. If you are planning a visit:
- Click on Boston, UK and then click on "Visitor Boston".
- Boston lies at the intersection of the A52 and the A16 trunk roads and the A17 passes the Borough only a few miles to the south and west. There is good road access from south Yorkshire and the whole of the Midlands and from East Anglia. Regular rail services run through to the East Midlands with connections at Grantham to the East Coast Main Line.
- The Greenwich Meridian runs through Boston. For more background information, check the Website of the Greenwich Meridian (a bit slow to load with all the graphics).
- Visit our touring page for more sources.
Boston was a market town and sea port. The town is dominated by the 282-foot-high tower of St. Botolph's parish church (some sources say 272-foot-high). The tower (and not the church) is called "The Stump" by local fishermen who use it as a navigation beacon, but the term is sometimes used by others to include the church as well.
See the names from the brochure `A short History of Boston, the Parish Church and some of the interesting people who have been associated with the town' (1977), extracted by Tom Miller.
- In 1281 a serious fire devestated the town, and in 1286 it was flooded. In 1287 it was burned again, this time by Robert CHAMBERLAYNE. Chamberlayne was later hanged, but his confederates escaped.
- The Hanseatic merchants had a house in Boston around 1259.
- In 1369 Boston became the centre for wool trade in England.
- Shodfriars Hall on South St is a 15th-century timber-framed building. For more on its past, see Shodfriars Hall.
- In 1634 the Pilgrims set sail on the Griffin for the New World.
- During the period 1764 to 1766 the River Witham was dredged and made navigable again from Lincoln to Boston.
- Although he was born in nearby Aswarby, there is a memorial in Boston to George BASS (1771-1803) an explorer, naval surgeon and naturalist who made Boston his home.
- In 1803 Howden's Foundry at Boston starts operations. It will later produce one of the first steam threshing machines.
- On 1 October 1848, the Great Northern Railway first reached Boston when the line from Firsby was opened. It soon expanded to include links with Peterborough, Sleaford and Lincoln.
- Around 1870, the trading vessel Cuirassier, a steamer, made weekly commerce trips between Boston and Hull.
- For more on Boston's history, click on Boston, UK.
- See the names from the brochure "A short History of Boston, the Parish Church and some of the interesting people who have been associated with the town" (1977), extracted by Tom Miller.
- The Family History Library (FHL) in Salt Lake City has a number of books on the history of Boston under the call numbers 942.53. Only one of these is on microfilm and that is Pishey Thompson's "Collections for a topographical and historical account of Boston" under film no. 990118, item 4.
- There is memorial to the Pilgrim Fathers at the Scalp (pronounced Scawp), very close to the spot from which they set sail.
The Boston Freemen and Apprentices Registers (1545-1903) have been published on microfiche by the Lincolnshire Family History Society.
These books may also help:
- "The Book of Boston" by Neil R. Wright, publ. by Barracuda Books, 136 pages, ISBN: 08602-32654.
- "The History and Antiquities of Boston" by Pishey Thompson, 1856.
- "Boston, Its Story and People" by Geo. S. Bagley, 1986.
- "Floreat Bostona - the history of Boston Grammar School" by Geo. S. Bagley, 1985.
There is also this pamphlet series:
- "History of Boston" published by Richard Kay, 1976. Number 14, for example, by S. N. Davis, focuses on "Banking in Boston" and the GEE and the GARFIT families.
- The National Grid Reference is TF 3343.
- You'll want an Ordnance Survey Explorer #261 map, which has a scale of 2.5 inches to the mile.
- See our Maps page for additional resources.
- In 1900, the 1st Lincolnshire Voluntary Artillery had their drill hall here. Capt. William Henry GANE commanding.
- In 1900, the 2nd Voluntary Battalion, Lincolnshire Regiment, Company C, had their headquarters in the Corn Exchange on the Market Place. Colour-Sergt. Alfred BROWN was the drill instructor.
- The name Boston derives from Botulue+stan, which means a stone marker of a man named Botwulf. But one notices the similarity to Saint Botolph in the ancient name.
[A. D. Mills, "A Dictionary of English Place-Names," Oxford University Press, 1991]
- This Boston is indeed the source for the name of the same city in Massachusetts. The Pilgrim fathers were imprisoned in Boston for a short period and left here on their journey to the New World.
- Boston used to be the home of the "Labourer" in the 1870s. Some issues may be at the Boston Library or Colindale (see below).
- Check out the Newspapers page for more sources.
- The Boston Freemen and Apprentices Registers (1545-1903) have been published on microfiche by the Lincolnshire Family History Society
- Boston's oldest bank, which outlived all its later Boston rivals, became known as Garfit, Claypon and Company twenty years after its formation in 1774, when Bartholomew CLAYPON was taken into partnership.
- John BRACKENBURY was mayor of Boston in 1719. Mr. William T. SIMONDS was the Mayor in 1902.
Caution: due to the drainage of the Fens and population growth in the area, parish boundaries have been changed. New parishes were added in the area in the late 1800's. In 1932, civil and parish boundaries were changed and are no longer the same for each jurisdiction, so no two maps will show the same boundaries.
- As a result of the 1834 Poor Law Amendment Act, Boston was chosen as the regional centre for the Boston Poor Law Union
- We also have a short file of Bastardy Cases as found in the newspaper, "The Lincolnshire, Rutland and Stamford Mercury".
Boston flourished in the early 1800s:
| Year |
Inhabitants |
| 1801 |
5,926 |
| 1831 |
11,240 |
| 1851 |
15,132 |
| 1871 |
15,144 |
| 1881 |
14,926 |
| 1911 |
16,673 |
Boston has an ancient tradition as a centre of learning:
- Boston had a school as early as 1329, and probably even earlier. It seems that this early school was connected with the local guilds. [Simon Meeds]
- The Free Grammar School was erected in 1567. Visit the official web pages of the Old Bostonian Association (association of ex-students and staff of Boston Grammar School), including some historical bits and pieces. Visit the Boston Grammar School site.
- The Laughton Endowed School was founded in 1707.
- A Blue Coat School was founded here in 1713.
- Boston National Schools were built in 1849.
- St Bede's Catholic School is a more recent structure, built as a secondary school sometime around 1970 for pupils aged 11 - 16.
- Boston College has two large campuses in Boston as well as a centre for Performing Arts and an Information and Cybercentre in the middle of town. The College has information and training centres in Spalding and Sleaford. Basic computer skills are offered at centres in Mablethorpe and Market Deeping.
- For more on researching school records, see our Schools Research page.
Frank BONTOFT was a school teacher in Boston in the late 1870s, but it doesn't seem that he was particularly well-liked by his students. Apparently the children used to chant this little ditty which they wrote about him: [Rosemary Ash]
"Down Shodfriars Lane there is a school
And in that school there is a stool
And on that stool
There sits a fool
And his name is Bunkus Bontoft"
- The Family History Library in Salt Lake City has the "Voters' list for the borough of Boston, Lincolnshire, 1867" on microfilm no. 475528, item 5.
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[Last updated: 6-May-2011 - Louis R. Mills]