Cranston, Midlothian, Scotland Genealogy

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Parish  #680

History[edit | edit source]

    The name of the parish of Cranston or Cranstoun, in the charters of the twelfth century, was written Cranestone, the Anglo-Saxon, Craenston, signifying the crane's district, or resort.  There are cranes in in the river Tyne, which intersects Cranston.  In the 12th century the  manor was divided into New Cranston and Cranston Ridel.  The Church was at New Cranston which was the larger of the two manors.  The parish registers begin in 1682 and are now regularly kept but not voluminous.  In 1792 the population was 839, and in 1831 it was 1030.  The land is used primarily for potatoes, turnips, hay, wheat, oats, barley, pease, and beans.  The villiages in the parish are Cousland, Chesterhill, and Preston.  The nearest market town is Dalkeith.  There are about 62 families in the parish that belong to the Established Church, and about 36 that are Disenting or Seceding.

This account was written in 1839.

Source:  New Statistical Account of Scotland (FHL book 941 B4sa, series 2, vol. 1)

Established Church—Old Parochial Registers[edit | edit source]

Years Covered FHL Film Number
Births: 1682-1820 1066676 item 3
1820-1855 1066677
Marriages: 1692-1696, 1784-1820 1066676 item 3
1820-1855 1066677
Deaths: 1738-1746 0103010 - in vault
1853-1857 1066677

Condition of Original Registers—[edit | edit source]

Indexed: For an index to these records, see the Scottish Church Records Index on computer at the Family History Library and family history centers.  Some records may be indexed in the International Genealogical  Index. 
Births: There are no entries except six, March 1691–September 1694, May 1713–March 1714, and November 1750–February 1752. Mothers’ names are rarely recorded before 1694.
Marriages: Except for three entries June and July 1713, there does not appear to be any record extant earlier than July 1784, and the entries from the latter date refer mainly to proclamations, and to clandestine or irregular marriages, of which a large number are recorded.
Deaths: Mortcloth Dues, the entries occur on two pages of the register of baptisms, before births for December 1740 and before births September 1742. Last entry is dated April 1746.
Source: Key to the Parochial Registers of Scotland, by V. Ben Bloxham, pub. 1970. British Book 941 K23b.


Established Church—Kirk Session Records
[edit | edit source]

Minutes 1783–1949
Note: Available at the National Archives of Scotland, Edinburgh, record CH2/74.

Nonconformist Church Records[edit | edit source]

Ford Relief Church[edit | edit source]

History—
This congregation originated with members of the Established Church who were dissatisfied with the doctrines taught in the pulpits of the parish churches, and the moral deadness that pervaded the congregations, the Presbytery of Dalkeith being notorious at the time for its moderatism. They applied for and obtained supply of sermon from the Relief Presbytery of Edinburgh in 1784. This congregation became extinct after the departure of its third minister in 1814, and the property belonging to it was sold to the Secession Church congregation.
Source: Annals and Statistics of the United Presbyterian Church, by Rev. William MacKelvie, D.D., pub. 1873. FHL Film #477618. More details may be given in the source including ministers.

Records—
Extent of records is unknown.


Ford Secession Church
[edit | edit source]

History—
This congregation originated with members of the Relief Church, and some of the Secession, resident in the locality, who attended church in Fala and Dalkeith. These parties applied to the Associate Burgher Presbytery of Edinburgh for supply of sermon in 1815, which the Presbytery was disposed to grant; but such was the strenuous opposition shown to the movement by the minister and several members of the congregation of Fala, fearing the loss of Number of their congregation, that it was deemed expedient to refer the case to the Synod. The Synod by a majority granted the petition, but there was still opposition. However, when the Relief Church building was offered for sale the same year, a congregation was formed in connection with the United Associate Synod and the place of worship was purchased. They occupied that church until 1851 when a new one was built. Ford is partly in the parishes of Cranston and Crichton.
Source: Annals and Statistics of the United Presbyterian Church, by Rev. William MacKelvie, D.D., pub. 1873. FHL Film #477618. More details may be given in the source including ministers.

Records—
Extent of records is unknown.

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