The founding of St Anne can be traced to the 15th century. During the
Second World War, in the period between 1940 and 1945,
Germans occupied the entire island, with their headquarters and military establishments located at St. Anne. The island's entire population, including that of the town, was evacuated before the islands were invaded in 1940. The Germans converted the place into a concentration camp; the labour force of 6,000 suffered untold miseries and many fatalities. The court house in New Street, also used for sittings of the States of Alderney, dates originally from 1850. The court room was destroyed by the
German occupying forces but rebuilt in 1955. Alderney's official records were mostly destroyed during the Second World War, but family history volunteers have compiled all of the available records, both civil (except censuses) and ecclesiastical, and have contacted those persons who could provide further information. Several hundred families in various regions of the island, with genealogies tracing to the 1800s, have been categorized as old Alderney families, Breakwater families and others, with family names of Duplain, Gaudion, Hougez, Le Vallée, Ollivier, Pezet, Audoire, Batiste, Barbenson and Renier, Le Cocq, Le Mesurier, Sebire and Simon. As the island was re-surveyed after the German occupation, no land records are available for the period before 1945, although
baptism registers since 1662 have been located from several sources. The
British Pound and the
Guernsey Pound are both legal tender on the island.
Commemorative coins of Alderney have been issued since 1989. ==Noted places==