Actually, Ancestry does have a lot of
UK data. The trick is to know which Ancestry site to subscribe to. I am a Canadian but my research is almost exclusively
England. For that reason I subscribed to Ancestry.co.uk. There are a great many
English databases there, from the very common (the GRO Registers and all the censuses from 1841 to 1901) to the esoteric (
Oxford Alumni and Burke's Family
Records.)
What I have against Ancestry is that it is so expensive, and that the site is difficult to navigate.
If you have research in both the USA and the
UK, you may wish to call them and find out about converting your subscription to Ancestry.co.uk with a Worldwide Subscription. That would cover all bases that they have. (North American toll free number 1 800 958 9073 from 6 am to 3 pm Mountain time, Monday to Friday.)
Like anything else, Ancestry does not have it all. Other fee-based
UK sites are very important and have very good databases, and depending on your needs, you may wish to consider them. Find My Past is the first one that pops to mind. The have the 1911 census. Some others are British Origins and Family Relatives, not to mention the National Archives and their excellent Documents Online service.
But before you start parting with your hard earned cash, if you are unfamiliar with
English research I would suggest clicking on to FamilySearch.org. Under the Research Helps tab, click E for
England. Then scroll down and select
England Research Outline and
England Finding your Ancestors. Also check out the
England section of Cyndislist.com
You are right about laws being different in different countries. I don't know about American law, but I do know that the privacy laws in the
UK are much more lax than here in Canada. For example, birth registrations are not public for 120 years in my province.
Good luck in your research
Penny
in Canada