Source Information
About Liverpool, England, Catholic Burials, 1813-1985
While the majority of the burials recorded in this database come from the period after a new Catholic diocese was established in Liverpool in 1850, some extend back into the 18th century, when Catholicism still operated under legal sanctions in England. The 1559 Act of Uniformity had made the Church of England the official state church, and until the Catholic Relief Act passed in 1829, Roman Catholics faced varying degrees of legal discrimination. For this reason, registers of Catholic ordinances, like the ordinances themselves, were sometimes kept secret, and sometimes ordinances weren’t recorded at all.
In spite of this, thousands of Catholic registers exist, and parish records—whether Catholic or Protestant—are the best sources of vital record information before civil registration began in England in 1837 and remain an important source thereafter. Liverpool itself has historically been home to one the largest Catholic populations in England.
Burial register entries in this database may include
- deceased’s name
- age
- burial date
- residence
- gravesite
Most of the records are in Latin, with many Latin variations of the English names—for example, Josephus for Joseph.
Updates:
April 2020: Added 50 new images and 499 new indexes for parishes across Liverpool.