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Dr. Williams’ Library, located in London at 14 Gordon Square, has the largest and best collection of English Nonconformist material in the world.<span> | Dr. Williams’ Library, located in London at 14 Gordon Square, has the largest and best collection of English Nonconformist material in the world.<span></span>The library owes its origins to the rambling 18‑page will of Dr. Daniel Williams made in 1711 and proved in 1716.<span></span>Dr. Williams’ estate was valued at 50,000 pounds (probably acquired at the death of his first wife).<span></span>His books were left to his trustees in hopes that it would become “the compleatest library in London”.<span></span>In 1699, Dr. Williams purchased the library of Dr. William Bates.<span></span>Dr. Williams added to the collection and this became the core collection of the library.<span></span>He did not leave an endowment for the library, however, and the trustees collected funds from wealthy Dissenters (there were quite a number at the time) and erected the building in Red Cross Street that housed the collection for a number of years.<span></span>In 1729, the trustees appointed a librarian and caretaker to assist with the care of the books.<span></span>In 1736, Dr. Williams’ building became the headquarters for the dissenting Londoners and remained so for 100 years.<span></span>Some 50,000 Nonconformist births were recorded there prior to the compulsory law requiring registration of births, marriages and deaths in 1836.<span></span>In 1805, an order was obtained from the Court of Chancery allowing 50 pounds to be spent annually on the library.<span></span>Through the years, the Library has been threatened with closure but it has survived, and the book collection continues to grow.<span></span>It is an important library for Nonconformist research. | ||
Dr. Daniel Williams was born about 1643 at or in Wrexham, Denbighshire.<span> | Dr. Daniel Williams was born about 1643 at or in Wrexham, Denbighshire.<span></span>His family was probably well connected.<span></span>The Civil War had just begun.<span></span>Their sympathies were with Parliament and Presbytery.<span></span>There was a Puritan school in the area and Quakers visited the neighborhood.<span></span>When he was about 20 years of age, he became a Presbyterian preacher.<span></span>The difficulties of the time took Daniel to Ireland.<span></span>He became a domestic chaplain to the Countess of Meath.<span></span>He preached for a time in Drogheda and in Dublin.<span></span>In 1675, he married the widowed sister of the Countess of Meath.<span></span>In 1687, he went to London and soon became a leader of the Nonconformists there.<span></span>By the 1690s he was in trouble, and his enemies charged him with immorality.<span></span>He was cleared by a formidable jury of 60 London ministers.<span></span>Daniel’s wife died in 1698 and three years later he married another widow, Jane Barkstead.<span></span>He continued to support Nonconformist causes.<span></span>In 1709, as his health began to fail, he was made a D.D. by Glasgow and Edinburgh Universities.<span></span>He died on 16 January 1716, in his early 70s.<span></span>There is lengthy biographical sketch of him in the ''Dictionary of National Biography'', Volume 61. | ||
The Family History Library has eight volumes of the catalogue of books in the Dr. Williams’ Library.<span> | The Family History Library has eight volumes of the catalogue of books in the Dr. Williams’ Library.<span></span>Their call numbers are Q943.1/L1 A3d and 942.1/L1 A3dr.<span></span>The catalogues take the collection up to 1970.<span></span>The registers of births was closed in 1837 and transferred to the Register General in 1840 and is now among the Nonconformist records at the National Archives.<span></span>The Family History Library has microfilmed the records and they have been extracted.<span></span>The catalog entry for these records are somewhat confusing.<span></span>There is an index to the certificates as well as abstracts and the certificates.<span></span>The abstract shows the number of the certificate, the child’s name, when registered, the parents’ names, witnesses, and the time of birth.<span></span>The certificates show where the birth took place as well as the information in the abstract.<span></span>The volumes of the certificates are arranged alphabetically, as follows:<span></span> | ||
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Volume A | |||
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Those births recorded before the registers were started, some of the entries are births in 1716 and 1717 | Those births recorded before the registers were started, some of the entries are births in 1716 and 1717 | ||
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Volume B | |||
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From March 28, 1739 to May 1792 | From March 28, 1739 to May 1792 | ||
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Volume C | |||
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From 1792-1805 | From 1792-1805 | ||
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Volume D | |||
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From May 29, 1805 to April 15, 1812 | From May 29, 1805 to April 15, 1812 | ||
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Volume E | |||
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From April 16, 1812 to December 3, 1816 | From April 16, 1812 to December 3, 1816 | ||
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Volume F | |||
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From January 3, 1817 to September 29, 1820 | From January 3, 1817 to September 29, 1820 | ||
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Volume G | |||
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From 1820-1824 | From 1820-1824 | ||
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Index | |||
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Film Number 1482452 | Film Number 1482452 | ||
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[[Category:England]] | |||
[[Category:Great Britain]] | |||
[[Category:Wales]] |