Hi Doughty
If you feel comfortable about using Excel, then bear in mind that you can import worksheets into Access. Each datafield has to be unique in Access so if you want to have a combined database for births, marriages and deaths you have to define some datafilelds in certain ways, so the design is important and has to reflect the way the registers have changed. As you are aware the registers changed certain columns:
1860 death registered index incorporated: age.
1911 3rd quarter: marriage register index incorporated: spouses surname.
1911 3rd quarter: birth register index incorporated: mother's maiden surname.
So I combine the spouse surname and the mother's maiden surname into one column rather than have two separate columns.
1969 death register index incorporated the DOB of the deceased. In my table design I have separate columns for dd mm yyyy (day, month and year).
1984 stopped using quarters and had one register for the whole year and used month+year of the event instead.
So sit and work out of paper all the datafields you are going to need for a combined database that reflects the changes the registers have undertaken from inception in 1837 to the current ones.
downside