My mums ancestors brother wed a sister of my dads ancestor in Finchingfield in Essex.
I am off to London again on Sunday and shall be spending much time at the SOG or LMA looking up those rellies of mine. Side lines can help in getting back further with direct lines and can help confirm relationships.
Results 21 to 29 of 29
Thread: Mad or obsessed?
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29-06-2012, 10:03 PM #21
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- Apr 2008
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- Norfolk
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- 1,359
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29-06-2012, 10:26 PM #22spisonGuest
I'm obsessed (or perhaps Mary Ann is right and I have an incurable disease)!
I've left my family and their offshoots to investigate an almost unknown event in the history of my city (The Newcastle Industrial School: 1867-1871) that my family history uncovered. I am in the process of researching and writing 200 odd biographies because I believe their stories must be told - only one of them is an ancestor. I have learned so much about the social and welfare history of NSW (some stuff that I'm not sure I really wanted to know) but I can't help it!
Jane
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29-06-2012, 10:30 PM #23
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- Feb 2008
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- South Australia
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- 4,594
Fascinating stuff Jane. will you publish at all even in a small way? Magazine,local History mag.etc?
Happy Families
Wendy
Count your Blessings, they'll all add up in the end.
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29-06-2012, 11:17 PM #24
- Join Date
- Mar 2010
- Location
- Stoke-on-Trent
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- 808
That is the sort of tangent, that this family history lark springs forth, that I find so facinating. I have uncovered an almost forgotten pottery factory in Liverpool populated by people from the Potteries, unpublished accounts of life in Stafford gaol and accounts of the movements of people during the formative years of the industrial age all through my family research. Also I have managed to confirm direct line records by tracing the lines of those with similar names living in the same location. The history of Kings and Queens and people of power and note are all very well but the histories of the ordinary people are what attract me the most because they are the histories of you and me and all the unsung people who make up the back bone of our past.
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30-06-2012, 12:35 AM #25anamarjaGuest
Jane, I'd be fascinated to read your findings. I have a line that runs back to Port Macquarie in the mid-1800s.
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30-06-2012, 9:39 PM #26spisonGuest
Applying for grants as we speak. For anyone who is interested in "the little volcano" which was closed due to wild rioting - among other things, I have a list on Trove of the major events. Search for "Newcastle Industrial School" and go to 'Lists' rather than 'Newspapers'. As a descendant contacts me (or vice versa) or if I find that the girl never had descendants, I tag her into the list. When I found my first reference to the school in connection to my ancestor, even though I live in Newcastle, I had no idea of where it was and neither did the research librarians I asked.
Jane
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30-06-2012, 9:58 PM #27
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30-06-2012, 10:10 PM #28Sandra ParkerGuest
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30-06-2012, 10:20 PM #29spisonGuest
Helping you trace your British Family History & British Genealogy.
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