‘Little pieces of France cast into the sea’

‘Little pieces of France cast into the sea’

Susan Ilie explores the rich and distinctive culture and history of the Channel Islands, and explains where to research your roots there

Susan Ilie, professional genealogist and writer specialising in the Channel Islands

Susan Ilie

professional genealogist and writer specialising in the Channel Islands


The Channel Islands have a long and colourful history. Neolithic farmers settled c5000BC and created the many dolmens and menhirs found in the islands. Christianity arrived in the 6th century (brought by St Helier to Jersey between 535 and 545, then St Sampson to Guernsey c550 – he was Abbot of Dol in Brittany).

Castle Cornet, St Peter Port, Guernsey
Castle Cornet, St Peter Port, Guernsey. Photograph by Chris George, chrisgeorge.dphoto.com

In 933 the islands came under the control of the Duchy of Normandy, and today the Channel Islands represent the medieval duchy’s last remnants remaining to England.

The islands were repeatedly attacked by French pirates and naval forces in the Middle Ages.

During the English Civil War, Jersey remained Royalist while Guernsey sided with Parliament.

The islands prospered during the 18th and 19th centuries due to the islands’ success in the global maritime trade and the rise of the stone industry.

Exiled to the Channel Islands in 1852, the French writer Victor Hugo described them as “little pieces of France cast into the sea and gathered up by England”.

During World War One thousands of island men served in the British Army in France – 6,292 from Jersey and 6,168 from Guernsey. The latter included around 1,000 Guernsey men serving in the Royal Guernsey Light Infantry regiment, formed from the Royal Guernsey Militia in 1916. There were heavy losses with around 1,200 Jersey men and 1,000 Guernsey men not returning and most local families lost a son, brother, father or uncle.

Just a few short years later, the islands were occupied by German troops in World War Two. Many islanders were evacuated to England just before the arrival of the German forces and some were deported by the Germans to camps in the southwest of Germany. There was a concentration camp in Alderney occupied by forced labourers from Eastern Europe. The islands were heavily fortified during WWII as part of Hitler’s Atlantic Wall and defences are still visible all around the coast today.

Occupation Registration form
The Occupation Registration form for the author’s great aunt, Lydia Lowe. Lydia was a shopkeeper and during the Occupation the rooms above the shop were used as living quarters for several German soldiers

Migration and industry
Since earliest times the islands have had a migrant population. In the early part of the 19th century the majority of islanders still spoke a Franco-Norman dialect with a culture related to their close French neighbours. This changed dramatically around the time of WWI when the islands became influenced by English economy and culture.

From around 1600, some islanders left their homes for new lives in North America, Australia, New Zealand and other far-flung places. Sir Walter Raleigh was the Governor of Jersey in the early 1600s and his interest in the development of Newfoundland and Virginia focused islanders’ attention on the New World.

Likewise, immigrants have always come to the islands looking for work. A study of the Guernsey censuses from 1841 to 1901 gives the number of English immigrants as just over 20,000, followed by French immigrants at just over 4,000 and Irish at 2,500. Many of these immigrants to Guernsey would have worked in the stone trade. Guernsey granite was used to pave London streets from 1823 (and Jersey granite was used for Chatham docks). Sizeable building projects in the islands drew a large immigrant labour force who worked on the building of the harbours in St Helier in Jersey and St Peter Port in Guernsey as well as the Alderney breakwater, St Catherine’s breakwater in Jersey and the building of military forts. In Alderney, the population in 1821 was 1154 and by 1851 it had risen to 4932, dropping back to 1598 in 1921.

The first Jersey Royal potato was grown in 1872 and this industry has always attracted migrant workers right up to today with 30,000 tons exported every year. Other trades in the islands over the centuries have included knitting (Guernsey stockings were said to be worn by Queen Elizabeth I, and Jersey sweaters are famous), shipbuilding, fishing, agriculture and horticulture and of course the trades which support the population: butchers, shoemakers, seamstresses, gardeners etc. Grapes were grown in glasshouses from about 1860 and then tomatoes about 20 years later. The tomato industry became very successful and at its height in the late 1960s nearly half a billion tomatoes were picked yearly and exported to England.

map of the Channel Islands by Thomas Kitchin, c1753
A map of the Channel Islands by Thomas Kitchin, c1753

Research
The Channel Islands are rich in sources for family history research. No copies of civil records of the islands are kept by the General Register Office in England although censuses are available online through the major ancestry websites such as thegenealogist.co.uk. Jersey and Guernsey keep their own unique records which are similar to those on mainland England but with notable differences.

Channel Islands Timeline:

c530
St Sampson and his Christian Britons bring Christianity to the islands
1213
King John grants constitutions to the islands
1559/62
Queen Elizabeth I signs the Great Charters giving the islands rights and privileges
1572
French Huguenot refugees arrive in the islands
1651
The surrender of Castle Cornet, the last Royalist stronghold in the British Isles
1781
The Battle of Jersey. French defeated under command of Major Pierson
1787
John Wesley visits and Methodism is established in the islands
1832
Cholera outbreak – 341 deaths in Jersey and 99 in Guernsey
1916
Conscription Act comes into force in Guernsey; Jersey follows in 1917
1940
Conscription Act comes into force in Guernsey; Jersey follows in 1917
1942
Deportation of many islanders to prison camps in Germany
Crowds cheer at Saint Peter Port as the Channel Islands are liberated in 1945
Crowds cheer at Saint Peter Port as the Channel Islands are liberated in 1945

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