Yourfamilyline is an independent historical research and documentary project. Every story published here and on the Yourfamilyline YouTube channel is built from primary sources: census returns, parish registers, court records, workhouse and prison registers, newspapers, and other archival material held by public archives, libraries and subscription research platforms.
Full source citations for every story are published on the corresponding blog post, including the holding institution, archive reference, and (where applicable) the platform through which the record was accessed. Where material is drawn from The British Newspaper Archive, the credit appears as "Courtesy of the British Library Board" in line with their attribution requirements. Material licensed directly from county record offices and other archives is credited prominently both in the video and on the source page.
Historical records reproduced on this site and in accompanying videos are used for the purposes of research, historical commentary, and educational documentary work. The vast majority of material referenced concerns events and individuals from the Victorian and Edwardian periods, where underlying copyright has long expired. Where records are accessed through commercial research platforms, those platforms are credited and linked so viewers can verify sources independently.
If you are a rights holder, archive, or institution and you believe any material on this site or the Yourfamilyline YouTube channel has been used in error, or you would like a credit amended or a reproduction removed, please contact me at research@yourfamilyline.co.uk and I will respond promptly. Yourfamilyline is run by a single person and every concern raised in good faith is taken seriously and acted on quickly.
Unless explicitly stated otherwise, Yourfamilyline is not affiliated with Findmypast, Ancestry, Newspapers.com, The British Newspaper Archive, The National Archives, or any other research platform or archive referenced on this site. Links are provided so readers and viewers can verify sources directly; access terms are set by the host platforms.
The written stories, video scripts, and original research published on Yourfamilyline are my own work. If you would like to quote, reference, or reuse any of it — for academic work, journalism, another documentary project, or anything else — please get in touch first. I'm generally happy to say yes with proper credit.