Interested in these two families of Oxfordshire.
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Thread: BURROWS & DODWELL
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01-12-2008 9:28 PM #1Starting to feel at home.
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BURROWS & DODWELL
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02-12-2008 8:45 AM #2Lesley RobertsonGuest
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02-12-2008 1:19 PM #3Starting to feel at home.
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Yep, got it Lesley.
I was giving it a broad sweep hoping to fill in irritating recordless gaps in a big tree and to perhaps hook an earlier unfound Dodwell progenitor dude (who cameth unto Long Crendon Bucks from God knows where pre-1696 and settled there, but seers wiser than me have said he may have originated from the Oxford area - possibly or possibly not being related to the DODWELLS of Gloucestershire).
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02-12-2008 2:39 PM #4GeoffersGuest
Have any of the Hearth Tax returns been published for either Bucks or Oxon? This may give you a spread of the surname over a cluster of parishes and a likely place to beginneth looking.
Any settlements surviving for Long Crendon?
Hath he wealth enough to leave a will?
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02-12-2008 8:24 PM #5Starting to feel at home.
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Good pwoynte Geoffers - I do have lots of genealogical material and other stuff - especially relating to Dorset (I have a large glass-fronted bookcase in the sitting room full to overflowing with exclusively Dorset literature of one kind of another*).
Unfortunately my antecedent family tendrils are so widely spread over the land that cost and shelf-space becomes a factor in trying to match fifty counties with genealogically-useful printed matter. The libraries over here are no help of course.
As we have all found out with most records, unless you know specific place and specific dates and some key link to a specific individual, like say an unusual occupation (badger nurdling comes to mind) finding the right name in a likely place doesn't equate to finding the right dude.
One must be careful not to get stuck pursuing endless fruitless lines of enquiry and inadvertently overshoot the allotted fourscore and ten and the really big breakthrough still over the horizon.
. . .
*Such as 'Mary Chafin's Original Country Recipes' (of 17th century Dorset) which includes an all-time favourite of mine - 'Ragout of Hog's Ears', and another: 'Lady Lear's Little Hollow Bisketts'.
Also the phraseology is of the amusingly quaint 'take a fair-sized hare' kind.
I was also lucky to obtain the 3 volume set of 'Old Buildings of Weymouth' many years back - compiled from the notes and copious beautiful architectural pencil sketches of Eric Ricketts featuring a great number of buildings of architectural and historical significance now long-disappeared from the town.
Just wanted to get all that off my chest.
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02-12-2008 9:05 PM #6GeoffersGuest
One thing you might try is to use the free searches available on
Oxfordshire Heritage
I don't know if Bucks RO has anything similar, but you could always try
Access to Archives
You might locate something to give you some ideas.
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