from the link in post #2 it says
Birth 1854 DAISH, UNDERWOOD Rosetta, Cowes.
Whippingham is in the Cowes registration district.
Results 11 to 20 of 20
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20-02-2013, 10:42 PM #11terrysfamilyGuest
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20-02-2013, 11:48 PM #12terrysfamilyGuest
All census refs crown copyright c/o TNA
1841 Census
HO107/0408/4/~F11
Address: Bartons Village, Whippingham, Isle Of Wight.
James 35 Agricultural Labourer
Elizabeth 30
Ellen 12
Emily 10
Edith 8
James 6
William 5
Benjamin 6M
Family name DASH all born in county
There's a death for a James Daish in Sept qtr of 1841 he is 35 years old.
1851 Census
HO107/1662/~F278
Address: 10 Bartons Village, Bartons Village, Whippingham, Isle Of Wight
Elizabeth 40 Head Washerwoman Northwood, Isle Of Wight,
Emily 20 Daur Washerwoman Northwood, Isle Of Wight,
Edith 17 Daur House Servant Northwood, Isle Of Wight,
James 16 Son Carris Lab Northwood, Isle Of Wight,
William 15 Son Ag Lab Northwood, Isle Of Wight,
Benjamin 10 Son Whippingham, Isle Of Wight,
Family name is again DASH
Groom: James Daish
Bride: Elizabeth Underwood
marriage date 01 Nov 1828, Northwood,Hampshire,England
indexing project (batch) numberM06187-1, source film number823621
Ellen Daish
baptism/christening date 21 Dec 1828, Whippingham, Hampshire, England
birth date 25 Nov 1828
Father: James Daish, Mother: Elizabeth
indexing project (batch) numberC06150-3, source film number1470893
Alfred Dash
baptism/christening date 12 Dec 1839, Hampshire, England
birth date 20 Nov 1839
Father: James Daish, Mother: Elizabeth Underwood
indexing project (batch) numberC16687-1, source film number1470952
There is a burial for an Alfred DASH in 1840 aged 10 weeks.
Alford Dash
burial date 04 Feb 1840, Whippingham, Hants, Hampshire
indexing project (batch) numberI06502-5, source film number1596479
I know he was 10 weeks old as I cross referenced it with the IOW site
Benjamin Dash
baptism/christening date 07 Dec 1840, Hampshire, England
birth date 25 Nov 1840
Father: James Daish, Mother: Elizabeth Underwood
indexing project (batch) numberC16687-1, source film number1470952
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20-02-2013, 11:59 PM #13pennydogGuest
Confused I am now Terry (re post#2), If James died 1841 Elizabeth nee Underwood is unlikely to be the mother of Rosetta?
Methinks it is time for bed!
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21-02-2013, 12:03 AM #14terrysfamilyGuest
Maybe Rosetta was the child of one of the daughters?
You're right time for bed.
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21-02-2013, 12:22 AM #15terrysfamilyGuest
The only other James Dash/Daish who died between 1841 and 1851 was in 1843 and he was 73 years old.
So I recon either Elizabeth had an illigitimat child or it was the child of one of her daughters.
But if Elizabeth registered the child as hers then we will never know.
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21-02-2013, 8:22 AM #16thewideeyedowlGuest
WOW - thanks to you both for all this work. Have just logged on while having breakfast and found that the BG elves had been busy overnight. No time to attend to it all now, but - yes - I will be getting the Hayter/Daish marriage certificate and then Rosetta's birth certificate too.
Isn't BG WONDERFUL! Thank you again.
The WideeyedowlLast edited by thewideeyedowl; 21-02-2013 at 8:23 AM. Reason: Spelling mistake
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21-02-2013, 9:11 AM #17
- Join Date
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- Location
- St Austell, Cornwall
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Just a thought ... the translation of the Rosetta Stone was in the 1820/30s and the race between English and French to master hieroglyphics made Egyptology very popular. It must have figured greatly in the papers of the day. So perhaps the name came from there? (Names often follow trends - schools in the '70s were full of "Marinas" ... now they're all "Britneys"!)
Then again, it could have just meant "little rose"!
Jane
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21-02-2013, 11:28 AM #18CoromandelGuest
The earliest Rosetta I can see on FamilySearch was baptised in 1702 in Norwich, then the only others between 1705 and 1730 are all either in the Netherlands or in Dutch Reformed Church registers in South Africa. Then more start appearing, mainly in Norfolk and London at first, but then spreading.
By the 19th century there are lots of them . . . a few even called Rosetta Stone, poor things.
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23-02-2013, 4:36 PM #19thewideeyedowlGuest
Thank you to everyone for all this help. I have a contact on IoW who also has this Rosetta in her line. She and IoW Record Office are starting to think that in fact Rosetta is the daughter of Edith (who, in 1851, was 17yrs old and a 'House Servant'). Presumably the baby was just 'absorbed' into the family. (Believe it or not, exactly the same thing happens in another IoW line, but that time the young mother is a 'Rosina'. Oh dear, was life a bed of roses?!)
The Wideeyed Owl
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15-02-2014, 8:44 AM #20Lisa DavisGuest
Rosetta Daish and William Robert Hayter are my Great great grandparents and this particular line has driven me insane for a loooooong time. We have also come to the conclusion that Elizabeth and James' daughter Edith was Rosetta's mum.
Lisa
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