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Boston

Cemeteries

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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. 9/2330-2336 Fiche
1871 0839353, 0839354 & 0839355 R.G. 10/3335-3345 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
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Church History

Boston parish church

Boston Saint Botolph's church

Boston Saint Botolph's church

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Church Records

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Civil Registration

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Description and Travel

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:

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History

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.

The Boston Freemen and Apprentices Registers (1545-1903) have been published on microfiche by the Lincolnshire Family History Society.

These books may also help:

There is also this pamphlet series:

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Land and Property

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Maps

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Military Records

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Names, Geographical

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Names, Personal

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Newspapers

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Occupations

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Officials and Employees

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Politics and Government

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.

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Poorhouses, Poor Law, etc.

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Population

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
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Schools

Boston has an ancient tradition as a centre of learning:

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"

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Voting Registers

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[Last updated: 12-July-2008 - Louis R. Mills]