
For advice about tracing your original birth record or a child that you have given up for adoption please see also our Adoption [1] page in the Registration area of this website.
This guide provides information about:
Before 1930 adoptions were arranged on a private basis, either by individuals or by one of a number of charitable adoption agencies. We do not hold records for adoptions before 1930.
The Adoption of Children (Scotland) Act, 1930 introduced legal adoption into Scotland from that year. Adoptions since then have been arranged by charitable bodies or by local authority social work departments and then ratified by the civil courts. The majority of adoptions are ratified through the local sheriff courts, although a tiny number (perhaps two or three each year) are settled through the Court of Session in Edinburgh.
The Registrar General for Scotland has maintained the Adopted Children Register since 1930. It is a register of persons adopted under orders made by the Scottish courts. There are no entries relating to persons born before October 1909.
Often adopted people can find the whole business of tracking down their birth parents very distressing. Similarly, the adoption papers themselves can sometimes contain upsetting revelations. Because of this it is best to seek advice and counselling before beginning such a search. If you are starting from scratch, the best first step is to identify the agency that arranged the adoption. The following services offer counselling and advice:
Records of adoptions originating in the Court of Session are kept at that court for five years.
Records of adoptions in sheriff courts are generally kept in the local courthouse for up to 25 years after the process closed.
All of these court records will eventually transfer to the National Records of Scotland and become available in our adoptions unit. As a general rule, if an adoption took place less than 25 years ago, you should contact the court to confirm where the records are held.
The overwhelming majority of adoption records for the years after 1930 survive. Inevitably, however, from the many thousands of processes, a few are missing. This is one reason that it is worthwhile contacting us (or the court) before you visit.
Adoption processes are among the most confidential records we and the courts hold. They are closed to general public access for 100 years. This means that our staff are forbidden to examine them. Each process is individually sealed and the indexes themselves are restricted. The processes may, however, be opened to access in the following circumstances:
Once it has been examined, the packet of process papers is resealed in the presence of the person who has read them. All enquiries are kept confidential.
To locate an adoption we need to know the adopted person's adoption name, the date of adoption and the court that dealt with the adoption. Then we can advise whether the record is held here or in a local court.
If you want to see your adoption papers please do not visit us without notice. Contact us in advance so that we can ensure that your visit is not wasted. The advance notice will allow us to check that we do in fact have the appropriate records. We can then have them out waiting for your arrival. It will avoid you having to sit waiting while we work through the indexes.
Please contact us on 0131 535 1355 or 0131 535 1383.
Yes.
We can only provide copies of a process for the personal use of the adoptee or their nominated representative if the adoptee attends in person. These copies will be made in their presence. With the exception of a court order, there are no circumstances in which we will provide copies to anyone else.
The adoption court process will normally contain:
Any other information depends on what the birth parents revealed. As they were under no obligation to reveal any information whatsoever, some adoption processes contain minimal information and sometimes nothing. People examining their adoption process should be prepared both for this and for the possibility that the papers may reveal other distressing information.
Links
[1] https://www.nrscotland.gov.uk/registration/adoption
[2] http://www.birthlink.org.uk/
[3] http://www.scottishadoption.org/home
[4] http://www.adoptionsearchreunion.org.uk/default.htm
[5] http://www.counselling-directory.org.uk