RootsChat.Com
General => The Common Room => The Lighter Side => Topic started by: woodensue on Monday 27 February 06 17:08 GMT (UK)
-
Hi
Just wondering if any of you have married women who have married a man with same surname!
I Was a Miss Wood and married a Mr Wood ............. no relation! just wonder how common this is?
also have ancestor in 1880s whose first wife died so he married her sister..............
Had day of ill today so have been busy on Family History! would love to do it again tomorrow but dont think the Head Teacher at school would approve!
Have fun Sue
-
I have a Thomas Crampton who married a Margaret Crampton -
and just to add to the confusion both their fathers were called Thomas as of course was their first son! ::)
Susan
-
Hi
The paternal side of my dads family originate from a small village called Ulpha in Cumberland. I have gone back as far as 1700 and there are four families that are so intermingled ie Stephenson, Casson, Dawson and Tyson that someone surely must have married someone they shouldn't have, at some time.
Half Pint
PS I always wondered why I had hair growing on the back of my hands (lol)
-
Hello half pint - read your post with interest - I live probably 45 mins drive away from Ulpha - it is a gorgeous village, with a churchyard so beautiful and peaceful that, the first time I went there, I said it would be worth moving here, just so I could be buried here!
Beautiful as it was, I remember seeing one gravestone for some poor soul who had died in the snow on the fell - the winter can be fierce up there and it is so very remote - even today.
Have you ever been there yourself?
-
Hi
My dad was born in Egremont and so have been there many times, but I hadn't been to Ulpha until last September.
Whatever words are used, they cannot do justice to the beauty of the village and its surroundings. We were very lucky and it was really sunny and warm and it showed it at its best, but as you say, I would dread to be stranded up there in the middle of winter.
While we were in Cumberland, we went down the Florence Mine, just outside Egremont. It was a slope of 285 feet and I was absolutely terrified but the feelings I had when I stood probably in the same area as my grandad and 2 x gr grandfathers actually worked were worth every second of terror.
Its amazing, my dad was two when he came down to Leicester, and I have never spent more than a week at a time in Cumberland but when we go up there it is just like going home.
I know it sounds really awful, but my husband is a few years older than me and I have said that if he goes before me then I shall move up there.
Half Pint
-
My GG Grandfather, Humphrey Jones, married an Elizabeth Jones.
My G Grandfather, James Jones, married a Phoebe Jones.
My Grandmother, Cecilia Jones, married a Richard Jones.
Thankfully, my Dad broke the chain and married a Lewis ;D
Jan
-
Goodness me, Jan!!! :o ::)
You have a surfeit of Joneses, and it's a dreadful name to research at the best of times!!
Two of my g grandparents were William Justin Beauchamp Cameron (born Ireland, came to Australia at age 14 to an uncle, without his parents!) and Elizabeth Patricia Cameron, born Victoria, Australia.
The story of how they met is rather lovely. William was riding through Central Queensland on his way to a particular place. Elizabeth's younger brother had been sent on an errand with a horse and cart. He had had to camp during the night, and his horse had wandered off, and he had bad toothache. William came across the boy crying in despair beside his cart, and took pity on him. He found the horse and harnessed it up, and took the boy home where his good deed was rewarded by meeting Elizabeth, a pretty young woman of 18. He became a frequent visitor and eventually they were married, although her elder brother did not think him nearly good enough for his sister, and referred to him disparagingly as "The Wild Irishman"!!!
MarieC
-
Hello
Some of my ancestors came from Merriott in Somerset, where on several occasions they have married people with the same surname.
Sampson Pattemore m Susannah Pattemore in 1839 (4xg-grandparents)
and Sampson's father John Pattemore m Charlotte Pattemore in 1808.
This isn't surprising when the Merriott Genalogies website states that 52% of the population shared just 10 surnames. (Total pop. is just 1500 people).
And, like Half Pint, considering the village's size and looking at parish records which show several intermarriages i wouldn't be surprised if my ancestors had children with a close relation :-\ and everyone in the village at the end of the 19th C was related to everyone else. The website also says that because the frequency of surnames was so high, people were given nicknames to separate them from other people with the same name!
acceber
-
I have found 2 couples in my family marrying another person with the same surname.
Bessie Burrow married her first cousin Isaac William Burrow in 1890. Their fathers were brothers.
Bessies father was my gt gt grandfather. Her brother William was my gt grandfather.
And I have a Fanny Burrow married to Thomas Burrow back in 1797. I'm pretty sure they were related but havent worked out how yet. Fanny's father was William Burrow and Thomas's father was - another Thomas of course. ;D
BD
-
It happened twice to the same man
John Cock b 1694, married Elizabeth Cocke who died, then Mary Cock
Later , when the family is now called Cocks, my mother's uncle and godfather Richard Bond Cocks married Sarah Cocks
Bob
-
I have a robert bowers marrying his cousin once removed susannah bowers.
That is one confusing branch of my tree. Coppernob
-
Hi,
Old message, but I recall my father pointing out a house in Waikanae, NZ, in which lived a doctor whose surname was Doctor, who had married a nurse whose surname was Nurse....
Rick (NZ)
-
HEHEHE ;D :)
Trish
-
An ancestor of mine Mary Borthwick married an Adam Borthwick. Their fathers names were both Adam Borthwick, Mary died at an early age, so Adam married her sister. :-X.... I am almost 100% sure their grandfathers names were Adam. Now researching to see if they came from the same part of Mid Lothian, Scotland. Looking forward to finding out. ;)
Kimberly
-
Hi
I have a James Smyth who married a Ann Smyth i am sure the were related probably cousins as Anns two sisters Rebeca Smyth and Eliza Smyth married off most of their children too each other one pair being my gt. grandfather and gt. grandmother i'm surprised by the amount of inbreeding that my family are quite normal although when i told my dad about all this he just refused to believe it all which made me laugh then he kept trying to justify it all which made me laugh even more
Louise ;D
-
I went out for some time with a lovely chap with the same surname as me AND exactly the same date of birth!
Just as well it did not end in marriage as I can imagine endless complications with the current banks/government bureaucracy.
-
I have recently come aross a variation of same surnames, in fact opposites,
John TROW married Eileen WORT.
I suspect there aren't too many of those, or are there? ???
-
My parents had the same surname and so far they aren't related. It has caused my mum problems all her married life and now she's in her 80s it's even worse, "no dear, your maiden name, the name before you were married" ;D
-
I haven't got any same name marriages - or a palindrome one, Wort to Trow. :)
But it reminds me, there is a poster on here who has a 'Jones' certificate.
The marriage parties, the witnesses, and the vicar are all named 'Jones'. :o