Stockport St Saviour Cheshire Family History Guide
Stockport St Saviour an Ecclesiastical Parish in the county of Cheshire created in 1934 from Stockport St George Ecclesiastical Parish and Stockport Hall Street Ecclesiastical Parish.
Table of Contents
Stockport St Saviour Parish Registers
Search online registers of baptisms, marriages, banns and burials including digitised images of original records and registers and indexed transcriptions.
Baptism, Marriage and Burial Records
These records include images of Church of England parish registers of baptism, marriage, and burial records.
Stockport St Saviour, Cheshire Church of England Baptisms, 1879-1934
Marriage and Banns Records
These records include images of Church of England parish registers of marriages and banns records.
Stockport St Saviour, Cheshire Church of England Marriages and Banns 1935-1957
Historical Maps
British National Grid Ref: SJ 91161 88000
BNG Eastings, Northings: 391161, 388000
Latitude, Longitude: 53.388764, -2.134369
View detailed 19th-century Ordnance Survey maps from the National Library of Scotland Maps – includes OS 25 inch 1892-1918 maps, a vast range of other historical OS maps and land use maps. These maps reveal old street layouts, parish boundaries, and landmarks long since vanished.
Sources
The following sources have been used to compile this article.
- F. Youngs, Local Administrative Units: Northern England (London: Royal Historical Society, 1991)
- FamilySearch Research Wiki – Cheshire, England Genealogy
- Cheshire Archives and Local Studies Catalogue
- Ancestry.co.uk
County Maps
The Godfrey Edition reprints of Old Ordnance Survey Maps are invaluable for historians and genealogists. Many are taken from the highly detailed 1:2500 plans, reprinted at about 14 inches to the mile, showing individual houses, railways, factories, churches, mills, canals. Each map includes historical notes on the area. Alongside these large‑scale sheets, Alan Godfrey also publishes the smaller‑scale Inch‑to‑the‑Mile series, and a range of maps based on the OS five‑foot plans.
































































































































































































