RootsChat.Com
England (Counties as in 1851-1901) => England => Yorkshire (North Riding) => Topic started by: kiwibob on Friday 12 August 11 22:33 BST (UK)
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My great great grandmother had 5 acres of land in Upsall and apparently was a "farmer" in 1871 is there anyway of finding out exactly where her land was and what farming she might have done on the land?
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Probably the Land Registry.......more details here....
http://www.landregistryservices.com/land-registry/index.asp
They will certainly put you in the right direction....
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Hi I live in eston up the road is a place called upsill it as farm land stables an old people home and a garden center it as a mining past as Eston ironstone mines if you put upsill near eston in to your browser it with come up with loads of information hope this helps
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Was Your G.G.Grandmother Farming in the 1850s, or another member of the Family, on the same Land ? Unless They owned the Land, They would be Tenant Farmers, paying rent to the Landowner. Tithe Maps and Apportionments, detailing the Tenants and Landowners are available to view on Subscription Geneologist Sites, as well as Public Record Offices, and Libraries.
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If she was living there in the 1871 (or other) census/es you might be able to narrow down the location by following the enumerstor’s route (written on page one of the census book).
Descriptions of routes can vary in amount of detail given, from just a general description of the area covered, to naming specific farms and sometimes owners.
If you need more detail than given on page one, make a note of the neighbouring addresses from the census to map out the route - then try to follow it on an old map. I recommend the NLS side by side maps. Once you find the approximate location, if the NLS map doesn't give enough detail, sometimes different maps from old-maps.co.uk are worth a look.
This method may or may not work to find a specific farm, depending on other factors. Let us know if you need any help with this, and give us her name and other details so we can find her on the censuses.
Regarding what she farmed ... knowing the location might help us make an educated guess. :)
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From British History Online:
SOUTH KILVINGTON
¶The parish, which includes the townships of South Kilvington, Thornbrough and Upsall, lies to the north of Thirsk and covers about 2,920 acres. Of this 1,300 acres are pasture and about an equal area is in cultivation. (fn. 1) The subsoil is lower lias, and the chief crops grown are wheat, barley and turnips.
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Thanks very much Ruskie, BSIGGYME, The Mc for the help and suggestions will investigate. Sandblown not 100% sure but would guess a tenant farmer she was a single mother of 2 assume she made some kind of living of the land but not sure what on 5 acres.