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England (Counties as in 1851-1901) => England => Durham => Topic started by: jakezed on Wednesday 19 May 10 04:18 BST (UK)
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Had so much help with Ursula Dodds, I thought I'd ask for information about her mother-in-law, Jane Haining, who married her father-in -law John Wake in June 1843. She was born in about 1816, I think near Alnwick,John was born in Welbury North Yorkshire, in 1808.
She was his second of three wives......first Ellen ? no maiden name or info, third a widow called Mary Stobbs.
Jane and John had two children, William, and Elizabeth, and disappeared ( died ?) before the 1851 Census.
John and Ellen? had a daughter Anne born Sept 1835 in Welbury.
In1841 Census John and Anne are in Jarrow with his cousin Ann Norman.
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There was a Jane Haining baptised at Edlingham, Northumberland on 23rd April 1815.
Parents were William Haining and Jane. Father's occupation was Woodman and they lived at Edlingham.
see Family Search pilot site, Bishops Transcripts for Durham and Northumberland,
Northumberland : Edlingham : image 114 of 212.
Possible siblings -
William Joseph, born 30 Sep 1812, baptised 05 Oct 1812, mother's maiden name recorded as Armstrong and this one says 2nd son ( image 101 of 212)
Margaret - baptised 06 Dec 1818 (image 127 of 212)
Joseph baptised 18 Oct 1821 (image 140 of 212)
Mary baptised 20th Aug 1824 (image 156 of 212)
Elizabeth baptised 28 Feb 1827 (image 169 of 212)
May be worth considering / investigating.
Boo
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Hi Boo,
That's absolutely brilliant!!
Thank you!
I haven't come across that site, I don't suppose I could trouble you for the address?
Thanks
Michael
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Hi Michael
Sorry I have taken a while to reply, the living have been demanding my attention :-)
The family search pilot site is sort of the new version of the IGI. I don't think I can give a direct url to the Bishops Transcripts for Durham and Northumberland, but if you go to
http://pilot.familysearch.org/recordsearch/start.html#start
and then click on 'Search or Browse our Record Collections'
then click on Europe on the map
now scroll down to United Kingdom
and finally
England, Diocese of Durham Bishop' Transcripts 1700-1900
From there choose Northumberland and then Edlingham.
Phew! when you get your breath back, navigate to the pages I said and you will see the relevant scans of the parish register.
At the moment, you can only browse the images, they have not indexed them, so you can't search for a name and find it. I am transcribing Edlingham parish for Free Reg at the moment though, which is how I was able to give you the image numbers to be able to find these entries.
Good luck with it, if you get lost trying to follow my directions, let me know and I will have another go :-)
Boo
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I don't think I can give a direct url to the Bishops Transcripts for Durham and Northumberland,
This link will take you direct to the Bishops Transcripts http://search.labs.familysearch.org/recordsearch/start.html#c=fs%3A1309819&s=waypointsOnly&w=0&p=waypoint
.........but you'll still have to go through them page by page when you've found the parish you want ;D
Jennifer
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PS :-)
In case you aren't aware of it, FreeReg http://www.freereg.org.uk/ is a growing source of searchable parish register info.
Edlingham baptisms 1659 - 1837 (which I am almost finished transcribing) should be available soon and then I shall make a start on the burials and marriages for that parish.
Other counties are also available on Free Reg, it really is a great resource and getting better each month :-)
Boo
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I don't think I can give a direct url to the Bishops Transcripts for Durham and Northumberland,
This link will take you direct to the Bishops Transcripts http://search.labs.familysearch.org/recordsearch/start.html#c=fs%3A1309819&s=waypointsOnly&w=0&p=waypoint
.........but you'll still have to go through them page by page when you've found the parish you want ;D
Jennifer
Thanks Jennifer, I wasn't sure about a direct url, hope Michael reads your post before following my trail of breadcrumbs! I did give Michael the image numbers for the baptisms I listed, so he should be able to find them reasonably easily.
Boo