Place:Aberdour, Aberdeenshire, Scotland

Watchers
NameAberdour
Alt namesNew Aberdoursource: village in parish
Pennansource: village in parish
Glasslawsource: village in parish
Auchmeddensource: estate in parish
TypeParish
Coordinates57.658°N 2.196°W
Located inAberdeenshire, Scotland     ( - 1975)
Also located inGrampian Region, Scotland     (1975 - 1996)
Aberdeenshire (council area), Scotland     (1996 - present)

NOTE: There is a larger parish named Aberdour further south in the county of Fife. The town in Fife has a page in Wikipedia; the parish in Aberdeenshire does not.

Scottish Record Office Number: 169
(used by ScotlandsPeople, see Research tips, below)

Churches: St. Drostan, Aberdour

Cemeteries: list available from the Aberdeen & NE Scotland FHS (link under Research tips)

Old Parish Register Availabilty (within FamilySearch):
Baptisms: 1698-1854
Marriages: 1698-1854
Deaths: 1786-1854

NOTE: Civil registration of vital statistics was introduced to Scotland in 1855. Prior to that date births, marriages and deaths had been recorded in local churches in the Old Parish Registers (OPRs). The OPRs were collected by the Registrar for Scotland in Edinburgh as civil registration started. Although local churches continued to record bmd after 1855, these registers were not collected and stored by the Registrar for Scotland. Some may have found their way into local archives. FamilySearch and ScotlandsPeople both keep records prior to 1855, but only ScotlandsPeople retains microfilms of the original parish books.

Missing intervals in OPRs dates may be due to non-collection of volumes (possibly through loss or damage), or the events being recorded in another book held in the parish.


Location

Aberdour is a coastal parish with its north coast facing the Moray Firth, some 9 miles (14 km) west of Fraserburgh and 11 miles (18 km) northeast of Turriff. Its name comes from its position at the mouth (or aber) of the small River Dour. The coast is extremely rocky and there are only three places where craft can land.

The parish contains the village of New Aberdour, established in 1798, which is inland but in the north of the parish, and Pennan, a fishing village on the coast. There is also a settlement at Glasslaw and an estate at Auchmedden. Most of the parish inhabitants are employed in agricultural pursuits, but there was also some quarrying carried on in the 19th century.

Aberdour has 4 neighbouring parishes; namely Pitsligo and Tyrie to the east, New Deer to the south, and King Edward and Gamrie (in Banffshire) to the west.

Image:Aberdeenshire north eastern parishes smaller.png

Population Growth

Areaacressq mihectares
1801-1900 16,50025.786,677
1901-2001 14,034 21.93 5,679
YearPopulationDensity per sq miDensity per hectare
18011,30450.60.20
18511,85772.00.28
19011,60173.00.28
19511,03247.10.18
200148222.00.08

Populations 1801-1951 from A Vision of Britain through Time (http://www.visionofbritain.org.uk).
2001 population from Scotland’s Census (https://www.scotlandscensus.gov.uk).

Research Tips

There was formerly a note on this page that the parish was linked to the Presbytery of Garioch, Synod of Aberdeen, Scotland. It would appear that since 1975 the organization of the presbyteries and synods within the Church of Scotland has been revised. Readers are reminded that the Church of Scotland is Presbyterian in nature while in England the Church of England is Episcopalian.

  • official civil (from 1855) and parish registers (from when first produced) for births, marriages and deaths for all of Scotland
  • original census images for all years available (1841-1911).
  • references to wills and property taxes, and
  • an extensive collection of local maps.

This site is extremely easy to use. There are charges for parish register entries and censuses. The charges are reasonable and payable by online transfer.

  • The Statistical Accounts of Scotland Online provides access to digitised and fully searchable versions of both the Old Statistical Account (1791-99) and the New Statistical Account (1834-45). These uniquely rich and detailed parish reports, usually written by local Church of Scotland ministers, detail social conditions in Scotland and are an invaluable resource for anyone interested in Scottish history.
  • Scotlands Places
  • Gazetteer of Scotland includes descriptions of individual parishes from F. H. Groome, Ordnance Gazetteer of Scotland (1882-4)
  • The FamilySearch Wiki
  • GENUKI which provides, amongst other data, complete quotations from A Topographical Dictionary of Scotland (1851) by Samuel Lewis, John Bartholomew's A Gazetteer of the British Isles (1877), and A New History of Aberdeenshire edited by Alexander Smith (1875)
  • A list of Burial Grounds in Scotland is now available on the website of the Scottish Association of Family History Societies.
  • Aberdeenshire and Moray Records. Town Council minutes, accounts, letters, plans and harbour records provided by Aberdeenshire Council plus other local records.
  • Aberdeen and North-East Scotland Family History Society is one of the largest and most reputable family history societies in Scotland and has a long list of publications referring to individual parishes.