Who are you looking for?
The Somerset Electoral Registers can provide you with unique information about where your ancestors lived. Find out if they rented or owned their homes and businesses and trace changes of address year by year. You can even find clues to the nature of their business and how prosperous they were.
Each entry follows a set format and there will be numerous entries on each PDF page. Please take note that only those who were qualified to vote are listed here, restricted to men who owned or leased a certain amount of property. The amount of information sometimes varies but you can find the following about your ancestor.
The electoral registers are presented in PDF format, which means that you can search the whole text, an advantage if you either have no address or only have their home address, since people often registered to vote from somewhere other than their abode.
The original printed registers are organized by polling district, and then by parish, with electors listed alphabetically in separate tables for each type of property qualification.
When you search for your ancestor you will be brought to the page where their entry is. Each entry gives the full name of the voter, the exact nature of the property held and the location of the property which conferred the right to vote.
Place of abode will not always be the same as the qualifying property, particularly for the wealthy or those in trade or business. In any part of Somerset, you will find voters whose abode is given as a nearby city, or even further afield. The qualification column may well indicate the ownership of more than one piece of property in the area.
By the very nature of the franchise, these records list only a proportion of the adult male population, perhaps 15% in 1832, rising to around 60% by 1914. Electoral Registers are likely to be very accurate records: local officials will have been familiar with local street and place names, and the formal process of registration, which was subject to public scrutiny, suggests that the full names of voters will be free of the sort of errors we find in, for example, census records. In fact, a voter whose name was not correctly registered wasn’t entitled to vote.
1832-1868
The former Somerset constituency was divided into new East Somerset and West Somerset divisions created for the 1832 general election.
1868-1885
The Second Reform Act brought about significant boundary changes, which came into effect at the 1868 general election.
The southern end of East Somerset (including Glastonbury, Radstock, Shepton Mallet, Somerton, the area round Frome and Wells) was moved into the new Mid Somerset division.
The revised East Somerset constituency was now defined as consisting of the Long Ashton, Axbridge, Keynsham, Temple Cloud and Weston Petty Sessional Divisions.
1885-1918
At the 1885 general election Somerset's divisions were reorganised into seven single-member county constituencies: East Somerset, West Somerset, North Somerset, South Somerset, Bridgwater, Frome and Wells.
The 1867-85 East Somerset constituency was divided between the new Frome, North Somerset and Wells divisions. The new East Somerset division was carved out of the previous Mid Somerset division, with Shepton Mallet, Somerton, Street and Wincanton.
There are 3 dates associated with each Register:
These dates can spread over 3 calendar years. The qualifying date is the one which is most useful here - at the later dates the person may have moved or died.
The dates varied over the years and the changes are listed below
Some of the electoral registers have not survived the passage of time. Below is a list of the various electoral divisions with the years for which they are available.