The 1939 Register
In December 1938 it was announced in the House of Commons that in the event of war, a National Register would be taken that listed the personal details of every civilian in Great Britain and Northern Ireland. This Register was to be a critical tool in coordinating the war effort at home. It would be used to issue identity cards, organise rationing and more.
On September 1st, 1939 Germany invaded Poland, putting the wheels in motion for Britain to declare war on the 3rd. On September 5th, the National Registration Act received royal assent and Registrar General Sir Sylvanus Vivian announced that National Registration Day would be September 29th.
Having issued forms to more than 41 million people, the enumerators were charged with the task of visiting every household in Great Britain and Northern Ireland to collect the names, addresses, marital statuses and other key details of every civilian in the country, issuing identity cards on the spot.


The identity cards issued were essential items from the point the Register was taken right up until 1952, when the legal requirement to carry them ceased. Until that point, every member of the civilian population had to be able to present their card upon request by an official (children’s cards were looked after by parents), or bring them to a police station within 48 hours. The reasons were numerous - it was essential to know who everyone was, of course, to track their movements as they moved house, and to keep track of the population as babies were born and people passed away.

The 1939 Register, then, represents one of the most important documents in 20th century Britain. The information it contains not only helped toward the war effort, it was also used in the founding of the NHS.  

In addition, the 1931 census was destroyed during an air raid on London and the 1941 census was never taken. The 1939 Register, released online by Findmypast in partnership with The National Archives, is therefore the only surviving overview of the civil population of England and Wales spanning the period 1921-1951. It bridges a census gap that risked losing an entire generation, and is a fascinating resource for anyone interested in understanding 20th century Britain and its people.


The Froyle Archive has downloaded all the records available for Froyle, and they are present here as one list. There are nine columns of information:-

Address The Name of their residence (if given). If the entry is in RED, we have added the modern day name
Schedule Starting from 1 at “Highway House”, runing though Upper Froyle to Lower Froyle and ending at 174 at Isnage. There are ‘diversions’ to Yarnhams, “Crest Hill Farm” and Nomansland.
The second column refers to the persons place in the family - missing numbers are ‘officially closed’. The Register was updated until 1991, meaning that anyone who was born less than 100 years and a day ago but died prior to 1991 will have their record displayed.
Surname This is the Surname of the person referred to in the record.
Christian Name This is the Christian Name of the person referred to in the record.
M/F  
Date of Birth Their date of birth
Status S: Single, M: Married, W: Widow/er, D: Divorced.
Occupation Also shown are Service numbers and ranks of family members in the Armed Forces.
Additional information This includes family members in the Civil Defence network

You can download the entire list as in Adobe Acrobat format below.