New Register House

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New Register House

Midlothian

New Register House.jpg
New Register House
Type: Government building
Location
Grid reference: NT25787410
Location: 55°57’15"N, 3°11’25"W
City: Edinburgh
History
Built 1859-1863
By: Robert Matheson
Government building
Information
Owned by: The Crown

New Register House is the main building of the General Register Office for Scotland, located near St Andrew Square to the east end of Princes Street in the New Town of Edinburgh.

The building accommodates:

  • The General Register Office for Scotland
  • The Accountant in Bankruptcy
  • The Court of the Lord Lyon

It housed the Office of Director of Chancery until the latter’s abolition in 1928.

Architecture and construction

The building is located in West Register Street, Edinburgh behind Robert Adam's 18th century Register House (referred to now as General Register House[1]).

New Register House was built in an Italianate style by the architect Robert Matheson between 1859 and 1863 and was complementary in architectural style to Adam's Neoclassical original. A portico was added to the south elevation to give it the character of a public building; and the style of internal finish was kept simple. New Register House was needed to provide additional storage capacity for Scotland's archives, particularly for the birth, death and marriage records, which were the result of compulsory registration after 1855.

The building was first occupied in 1861 and completed in 1863 following the addition of 5 offices to each floor on the north side. The Accountant in Bankruptcy and Lord Lyon's departments were also allocated rooms. It cost, complete with fittings, nearly £35,000 to build.

The main feature of the building is the lofty fireproof central repository, the Dome, which consists of five tiers of ironwork shelving and galleries and is surrounded on the outside by staff and search rooms on three floors. The Dome is a large and striking circular chamber, over 90 feet high and of interest as a piece of 19th century functional architecture and structural engineering. The four miles of shelving in the Dome contain some half a million volumes. These include some 400,000 statutory registers of all the births, deaths and marriages in Scotland since 1855, still being added to every year. Red birth volumes are on the first tier, the death volumes in funereal black on the second, and the marriage volumes in green on the third. The original marriage schedules, which are signed by the parties immediately after marriage ceremonies in Scotland, are shelved on the top tier of the Dome as are the open Census records from 1841 to 1891.

Repository

It is today popular among genealogists because, in addition to the Statutory Registers from 1855 onwards, it houses the Old Parish Registers, some of which date back to the 16th century, and the declassified Census records, starting in 1841. The oldest parish volume dates from 1553 and is for the parish of Errol in Perthshire. The Canongate parish supplies the earliest parish register for the city of Edinburgh. It dates from 1564, before the Canongate became part of the royal burgh. Among records of ordinary citizens and burgesses it contains the proclamation of banns of marriage of Mary Queen of Scots and Lord Darnley. As well as royals, the building contains records of most famous men, for example Robert Burns, David Livingstone and James Watt.

Computerised access is available on the web to indexes of these records; and also to scanned images of those before about 1906, thus it is possible to see those actual documents in the comfort of your home anywhere in the world.

Potential Closure

In January 2015 it was revealed that both New Register House and the neighbouring General Register House had been recommended for closure, upon which time staff and public archive facilities would be located in buildings elsewhere in Edinburgh.[2]

References