Showing posts with label marriagefinder. Show all posts
Showing posts with label marriagefinder. Show all posts
21 Nov 2015
Emmerdale Farm and a wife-swap: the 1939 Register
I was very sceptical that the 1939 Register would deliver anything new for me. I have been studying family history for over 20 years, and if I needed information about the 20th century, I could mostly look at freebmd. And then jump straight into the electoral roll, to get an address of a living relative. I have done this countless times, so what good would sniffing around a 75 year-old summary do for my tree?
Child baptisms of around the year 1900 often gave the infant's exact date of birth - and assuming they lived another 69 years, you can then use this information to find their death record, particularly useful if they married overseas, had a common name or moved around unpredictably.
Child baptisms of around the year 1880 occasionally gave an exact date of birth, but the infant concerned is very unlikely to have lived another 89 years to produce such a record...
Believe me, I homed in on Catherine Jones (born 1881) pretty instantly, scouring the new 1939 Register for any evidence of a Catherine, but she eluded me. I was pretty sure she had survived and was living in Manchester, but she was proving a mite tricky to locate.
I knew that she'd had a massive bust-up with her sister Florence - the only family member to produce a will. And Florence goes to great lengths not to mention Catherine, so her archival betrayal means that Cath is utterly missing from our official family record.
Of course, I found her - and on the 1939 Register, too, but not by my own endeavour. Who should I spy living with Florence Jones in Manchester, 1939, but Katherine Bateman. Katherine! My fingers quiver as I double-check the birth-date. Yes, Katherine was born in March, and yes, she was born on 6 March 1881. And yes, there was a marriage (one of 23 possibles) in Liverpool 1905.
So, I was looking at the 1939 household before the barney. Katherine's two grandchildren lived nearby, and thirty years later, old Florence's heart softened and she added them to her will. Stupidly I had never checked out this reference, as the name Bateman had no resonance for me then.
EMMERDALE? Katherine's grandchildren both have large Irish-Manchester families. A great-great-grandson plays a cleaner living in the village of Eccup, just outside Leeds, in the soap Emmerdale.
WIFE-SWAP? Missed the wife-swap story. It's here.
3 Nov 2015
1939 Register - wife swap
Mr Richard and Mrs Louisa May Bowman raised four kids together but were never married.
Twenty years earlier, Richard Bowman had married the real Louisa May, and the pair had gone their separate ways. Richard took up with another Louisa May (not her real name), while the real deal found love in a different part of the country.
The 1939 Register for Kent shows Richard with the fake Louisa May. When he has a heart attack at the wheel of his lorry, both ladies choose to remarry under the name Louisa May. This was the first indication of an inaccuracy in the official record - one the registrars would have missed.
I tried to understand how a lady could marry two different men in different areas at the same time, with two separate death records, with ages at least a decade apart. Before deciding it was impossible! There had to be two individuals. Kent Louisa was royally faking it, putting the pretend maiden name on her kids' birth certificates.
She even stuck to names that the real Louisa had given to her kids. As the real Louisa was using Bowman for her kids by the new man, and the fake Louisa (calling herself Bowman) was recording the real Louisa's maiden name on her kids' birth certificates, and they were BOTH using the same Christian names for their kids - it was a right royal mix-up.
Richard and Louisa May are in Kent in 1939. The real Louisa was miles away with her new partner. Richard's migration path is in orange.
It's only, as ever, on the fake Louisa May's deathbed, that honesty prevails. Well, mostly. She is still listed as Louisa May Bowman. She still tells a small porky about where she actually dies. But the probate entry reveals......
ALSO KNOWN AS Millie! Then the obituary says she's Millie, and the burial clerk calls her Millie as well. There's no hiding place, girl....
The 1939 Register gave me July 1901 as the birth date for Millie. Searching all the women born July 1901 with the forenames Millie H E yielded only one birth. I've found you, Millie. But, she disappears utterly from the records, not even showing up in 1911, until she 'becomes' Mrs Louisa May Bowman circa 1930.
While the real Louisa has evolved into someone entirely different, quietly playing the piano and nurturing musical talent at another southern location. Her grandson had no idea of the family in Kent.
Thanks to 1939 Register for quietly resolving these potentially awkward family mysteries.
(Note, as this 90 year-old wife-swap is still pretty recent, Bowman is a pseudonym.)
Twenty years earlier, Richard Bowman had married the real Louisa May, and the pair had gone their separate ways. Richard took up with another Louisa May (not her real name), while the real deal found love in a different part of the country.
The 1939 Register for Kent shows Richard with the fake Louisa May. When he has a heart attack at the wheel of his lorry, both ladies choose to remarry under the name Louisa May. This was the first indication of an inaccuracy in the official record - one the registrars would have missed.
I tried to understand how a lady could marry two different men in different areas at the same time, with two separate death records, with ages at least a decade apart. Before deciding it was impossible! There had to be two individuals. Kent Louisa was royally faking it, putting the pretend maiden name on her kids' birth certificates.
She even stuck to names that the real Louisa had given to her kids. As the real Louisa was using Bowman for her kids by the new man, and the fake Louisa (calling herself Bowman) was recording the real Louisa's maiden name on her kids' birth certificates, and they were BOTH using the same Christian names for their kids - it was a right royal mix-up.
Richard and Louisa May are in Kent in 1939. The real Louisa was miles away with her new partner. Richard's migration path is in orange.
It's only, as ever, on the fake Louisa May's deathbed, that honesty prevails. Well, mostly. She is still listed as Louisa May Bowman. She still tells a small porky about where she actually dies. But the probate entry reveals......
ALSO KNOWN AS Millie! Then the obituary says she's Millie, and the burial clerk calls her Millie as well. There's no hiding place, girl....
The 1939 Register gave me July 1901 as the birth date for Millie. Searching all the women born July 1901 with the forenames Millie H E yielded only one birth. I've found you, Millie. But, she disappears utterly from the records, not even showing up in 1911, until she 'becomes' Mrs Louisa May Bowman circa 1930.
While the real Louisa has evolved into someone entirely different, quietly playing the piano and nurturing musical talent at another southern location. Her grandson had no idea of the family in Kent.
Thanks to 1939 Register for quietly resolving these potentially awkward family mysteries.
(Note, as this 90 year-old wife-swap is still pretty recent, Bowman is a pseudonym.)
12 Jan 2012
Singer song of sixpence
When James Burrows married in 1858 his wife's name was given as Elizabeth Singer daughter of William Jessie. Searches for the first Singer marriage failed. findmypast had just lately launched their MarriageFinder TM tool, so I plugged in the names, and was delighted to find the marriage of Elizabeth Jess in about the right time frame. freebmd gave me the groom's name, Edward Sanger. It took quite a while to get all the census entries sorted, and I've still not found James and Elizabeth's two children, but feel much closer to a solution. In addition findmypast has the burials at Penselwood for some of them. All for a lot less than sixpence!
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