Birmingham St Jude Warwickshire Family History Guide
Birmingham St Jude (Hill Street) an Ecclesiastical Parish in the county of Warwickshire, created in 1845 from Birmingham St Martin Ancient Parish and Birmingham St Philip Ecclesiastical Parish1. Services were held in the national school in Pinfold Street until the church was ready; it was consecrated in 18512. The parish was enlarged by a further part of St. Martin’s in 18853. Birmingham St Jude Ecclesiastical Parish was abolished in 1971 with the entirety of the parish transferred to Birmingham St Martin Ancient Parish4.
Mission Churches and Rooms: St. Jude’s mission hall, Inge St., licensed for public worship, 1888-19075.
Table of Contents
Adjacent Parishes
Birmingham St Jude Parish Registers
Baptism, Marriage and Burial Records
These records include images of Church of England parish registers of baptism, marriage, and burial records.
Birmingham St Jude, Birmingham Church of England Baptisms 1846-1912
Marriage and Banns Records
These records include images of Church of England parish registers of marriages and banns records.
Birmingham St Jude, Birmingham Church of England Marriages and Banns 1780-1937
Birmingham Cemetery and Crematoria Records
Birmingham Cemetery and Crematoria Records 1836-2017
Maps
Vision of Britain Historical Maps – includes topographic maps, boundary maps and land use maps
Administration
- County: Warwickshire
- Civil Registration District: Birmingham
- Probate Court: Pre-1837 – Court of the Bishop of Lichfield and Coventry (Episcopal Consistory), Post-1836 – Court of the Bishop of Worcester (Episcopal Consistory)
- Diocese: Worcester
- Rural Deanery: Arden
- Poor Law Union: Birmingham
- Hundred: Birmingham Borough
- Province: Canterbury
References
- F. Youngs, Local Administrative Units: Northern England (London: Royal Historical Society, 1991) ↩︎
- Religious History: Churches built since 1800 | British History Online ↩︎
- Religious History: Churches built since 1800 | British History Online ↩︎
- F. Youngs, Local Administrative Units: Northern England (London: Royal Historical Society, 1991) ↩︎
- Religious History: Churches built since 1800 | British History Online ↩︎


































































