THE COVINGTON HISTORY - HOW IT ALL BEGAN

 

The information for my work on the Covington History has been acquired from various sources and locations throughout the UK and abroad. Numerous libraries and proven genealogical institutions have been the source for much of the material. Indeed, many happy hours have been spent poring over Microfilm, Microfiche, Army Records, Files, & Books, as well as walking, head bowed reading the inscriptions, in churchyards around the country.

The whole project started out, in Brighton, Sussex circa 1983, as being simply a desire to find out if there were many other Covingtons listed in the U.K. phone directories. Some months after this initial interest, a job move meant a transfer to Exeter in Devon and I spent 4 months lodging, waiting for my house move to be completed. It was then that I first started to spend early evenings in the local library searching through the various genealogy books for more details of the Covington name.

Those early records were kept on scraps of paper, with no real clear idea of how much information I might find or, more importantly how I was going to collate the data. Again my interest waned as I reached a dead-end for information in all the local Devon libraries. Two more house moves in the next 4 years found our family in High Wycombe and it was from here that, whilst travelling around West London as a sales rep, I stumbled across the Public Records Office in Kew.

At least once a week I would spend my lunchtime searching through all sorts of material, from microfilm of World War 1 medal rolls to discharge papers from 19th century Army records. Quite by chance I came across the 1892 Royal Artillery discharge papers of one Charles James Covington. Within these torn and mottled sheets I spotted the birth details of Ernest Albert Covington at Bow Barracks in 1883, my grandfather. Until then neither myself, nor my father and his 3 brothers, even knew of my great grandfather's, and therefore, their grandfather's, name. Needless to say this spectacular find was the spur to much more searching and, as they say the rest is history.

 

Ernest Albert Covington –  my grandfather

There is no doubt that the project has been easier to attack living in the London area, as major libraries, the Census Rooms & the Public Record Offices are within easy access. One can spend full days at these locations without the need for expensive travel or overnight costs.

Initially all the information that I wanted to find was to ascertain my own family tree, however it wasn't too long before it became apparent that most, if not all, U.K. Covingtons are in some way distantly related.

Whilst some family group off-shoots have appeared in more out of the way parts of Britain, I have been able to trace the largest colony of Covingtons over the past 300 years as living in the Bedfordshire, Hertfordshire, Cambridge & North Buckinghamshire areas, with many moving to London for work in the late 18th and early 19th centuries.

The College of Arms in London did some work for Arthur Edwin Covington, a distinguished Canadian radio-astronomer, and managed to trace his side of the Covington family to Turvey, N.Bucks, back to the early 1600s. Although I have managed to obtain a lot of the details, from Arthur Kenneth Covington, the College of Arms, at that time, required some £240 to send me a full transcript, which was regrettably over my financial limit for the project.

 

                    An interpretation of the Covington Coat of Arms

 

Within 6 months of serious, part time searching I had traced details on over 1000 Covingtons and printed my first book "The Covington History" using an Amstrad 8256 Word Processor. About 30 fellow Covingtons invested in the book, and their interest and kind words after reading the work, encouraged me to delve further. It was at this stage that I decided to create a Covington database, so as to be able to cross-reference all the different levels of information, and hopefully link various Covingtons to their descendents.

I traded in the Amstrad for an Olivetti M111, IBM compatible lap-top, and started to write the necessary program. The results produced The Covington Database, which I had considered offering as a full manuscript to a publishing house, however the number of potentially interested Covington Families in the U.K. stands at just over 200, so the cost of production and printing was prohibitive. Now with the massive scope of the web, I can make my work available to Covington’s throughout the world.

The project has now moved on to a much faster Desktop PC and in the interests of not producing a single book, larger than Tolstoy's "War & Peace", my latest version is now available on CD in various MS formats as well as here on the Internet. Please e-mail me if you are interested in purchasing a copy.  

I have recently been able to add a Search Engine to the Covington History site. So please click on the genealogical missing link logo below and type in your required name, place or word in the box. You will then be given a list of all the pages within my website that include your chosen word, then simply click on the hyperlink to view the complete entry

SEARCH FOR THE MISSING COVINGTON LINK

If you have the time please complete the Covington Questionnaire which will guarantee you and your family a place in the Covington History Database - Please click on the arrow

 

 

 

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E-mail to: covingtonhistory@btinternet.com

Copyright Martin H Covington 1956, updated 19 Jan 2007