I love my Smiths. However hard to find they are, at least the name's always spelt right. Although Edward's marriage at the LMA archives gave the wrong name for his father, the occupation fitted, and this census entry proves he was my man. I didn't linger long on the entry: by moving quickly I was able to find his daughter in Romford, and to establish what happened to all the children, though his sister still ranks as one of my big unsolved puzzles, along with his uncle.
12 Jan 2012
By golly it's Bollington
This is an image taken from the probate indexes. I originally found this in 1992, but this was long before digital photography and when I later got a camera, taking pictures was forbidden in a court building, and I had too many research items to waste time getting a microfiche print-out. But here it is. I deduced that Esther Fox had died young based on the will that never was: it even let me guess the year, 1856. With a determination perhaps stupid, I combed through all the Fox probate indexes in the fiddly fading volumes above the Next 'clothing' store, as a schoolboy, and found this! It was then an easy matter to wait three years and take the tube from Lancaster Gate to Chancery Lane to view the Bollington town microfilm for 1861 at the census rooms.
You can do all this at the touch of a button, but I had the upper-hand, genuinely being on virgin territory. I don't even believe the local family history society had even yet attempted a crude surname index, and the various 1881 indexes on fiche were absent too. I was very confused to find a whole load of Fox stepchildren mingling with Esther's children in the census owing to James having taken n his brother's children and their mother, too. The family was living across 5 counties by 1891, but I have finally laid them all to rest, 18 years later.
You can do all this at the touch of a button, but I had the upper-hand, genuinely being on virgin territory. I don't even believe the local family history society had even yet attempted a crude surname index, and the various 1881 indexes on fiche were absent too. I was very confused to find a whole load of Fox stepchildren mingling with Esther's children in the census owing to James having taken n his brother's children and their mother, too. The family was living across 5 counties by 1891, but I have finally laid them all to rest, 18 years later.
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!
finding that marriage before 1837
Clues lurked like chirpy birds around my family tree, but I still hadn't worked out who Mary Creed, born 1811 West Pennard had married. I plugged the names into the Somerset Marriage Index, now online at findmypast, and only the marriage at Pylle 1835 seemed to fit. I looked at children baptised at Pylle 1835-1841 as shown on familysearch, and the name Rhymes came up. When I searched for Mr Rhymes marrying in 1835, here comes the man, with the reference exactly matching Mary's, telling me he was the groom. The census confirmed Mary's birthplace. That just leaves one of the nine Creed siblings yet to find, and I believe he died in America as a young man.
the death of the Lewis sisters of Rushey Green
Tragedy came in 1920 when four of Sarah’s sisters were all killed on the same day in 1920 at 6 Rushey Green Catford according to freebmd and the Probate Index. I haven’t established what happened but suspect it can only have been a fire. They seem to have conducted a small baby’s clothing manufacturing business from home. Bertha was visiting from Horwood Hall, Havant and because her will was proved, we get the date of the accident - 21 April. Another sister had died there six months earlier, presumably of natural causes. The oldest sister had been there almost 20 years and was quite likely to be present on the night, but she died at Horwood Hall two years later, having had to administer the estates aged 86.
The Thompsons of Scar Top
Having established that this family neatly slotted into my Moses family, from Netherton near Carlisle, I wanted to look at the clue left by Mary Lago in her excellent book about Edward. She names a grandchild, who it looked like was the child of Annie Thompson, herself born India. However, how on earth was I to determine which Annie M Thompson married 1911-20 was the girl born in Trichonopoly! Luckily the grandchild appears a couple of times on Google with her full name, which enabled me to find marriage, maiden name and then birth, leading me to Annie's marriage in London, and finally the death record which fits in perfectly.
1911 deleted entries at findmypast, now available at Ancestry
I wrote earlier about findmypast's contra-common sense approach in deleting people who were entered in the census, but then 'crossed out'. Sometimes this is the sad misunderstanding of parents including long-dead children. More often this could be nurses called out in the middle of the night to go and look after a patient or sons out fishing. I'd like to hear if any lifeboats were called out on the night of 31 March 1911, whether those brave men are recorded in this census transcription at all. I felt sure that Ancestry's more dogged approach, like a row of combine harvesters coming at ya, would be sure to pick up these 'crossed out' entries, rather than letting its prey escape on such flimsy terms. Sure enough here is Robert Henderson, appearing nowhere else in 1911 except on Ancestry's index. I'm sure there will be many more. Perhaps even my own grandfather, still not located!
found our Annie from the Lakes in Blackburn
Annie Ward is sitting quietly at home at Troutbeck Bridge aged 12 in the census. Little did I know that once her mother died, all three girls would go off to the cotton mills of Blackburn and there find husbands. In 1911, Annie's husband just left most of the birthplaces blank. In 1901, here is Annie born in Windermere. But the Ancestry index has a garbled version which slowed me down finding her. I had to guess she'd married in Blackburn like her sisters and follow up the only possible marriage there from freebmd. Annie was the only one to have any family, and her son-in-law's youngest sister is still living in Blackburn. I'd like to know more about these Blackburn girls. Census image: Crown Copyright
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