Hi Next week I will be in Dundee for just two days ( Friday & Monday) and would like to use my time to research family history. Can anyone recommend the best places to go for research?
The Scotland's People Centre in
Edinburgh. This is by far the best place to construct the basic tree because it's the only place you will get all the birth, marriage and death records, plus the census, at the click of a mouse. It costs £15 for a day but you can easily access all the information you would have to pay-per-view for in the online system, plus all the more recent certificates, at no additional cost.
If you already have your basic tree with all the births, deaths, marriages and census, then you are ready to start on local archives and record offices.
are there any advantages to visiting the records offices
Once you have your basic tree, then the local records offices or archives are useful for other
information. The information in archives varies enormously, so you need to scrutinise the catalogues of each one to find out what is likely to be useful for your particular family.
or is it still the same process as using Scotland's People?
A few local archives (Aberdeen, Glasgow, Hawick, Inverness and possibly others) also offer access to the Scotland's People system. I do not know whether or not Dundee does. Otherwise no, each local archive has its own systems.
You may be able to find other resources of interest by searching the catalogue of the Scottish Archive Network
www.scan.org.uk - sometimes information of interest is in a university or private archive. For example I know that the archives of the University of Dundee holds a lot of archive material not obviously related to the university itself, so that might be worth looking at.
http://arccat.dundee.ac.uk/ mentions
Business Records: relating to businesses in the Tayside area in particular to the linen and jute industries and the latter’s connections with India family history centres will give you access to modern records
Only the half dozen or so archives which are linked in to the Scotland's People system can do this. Specifically, the family history centres run by family history societies and the LDS church
cannot offer access to certificates later than the online cut-off dates.
One source you might find useful for checking where your people lived is the various Post Office and other directories on the National Library of Scotland web site
www.nls.uk - go for the digital gallery.