Show Posts

This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.


Messages - cousinjack

Pages: [1]
1
Cornwall / Re: COLWILL/COLWELL Cornwall/Devon Border-help gratefully received
« on: Tuesday 14 August 12 21:44 BST (UK)  »
Hi Rick

I can go back to John Colwill (b Whitstone 1730), father Thomas, mother Elizabeth. I haven't found a Jane.

Good sources are -

IGI batch searches compiled by High Wallis - you can search births and marriages by parish by surname. Go to http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~hughwallis/IGIBatchNumbers.htm and follow the instructions.

Cornwall online Parish Clerks at http://www.cornwall-opc.org/ and find the parish you are interested in. They are mostly very helpful, and know a lot about their parish.

Other than these free online sources, there are transcriptions of a number of parish records available from the Cornish Family History Society, and of course archive records held by the Cornish Records Office in Truro.

I hope this helps. Good luck.

Cousin Jack

2
Cornwall / Re: COLWILL/COLWELL Cornwall/Devon Border-help gratefully received
« on: Monday 18 October 10 07:27 BST (UK)  »
Hello

There were also Colwills in Whitstone, the adjoining parish to Week St Mary. I am related to Thomas, who lived there in the 18th century.

3
Lincolnshire / Re: Hospital for 4 Poor Women in Worlaby
« on: Tuesday 08 June 10 21:22 BST (UK)  »
Thanks for the photographic link - so it still exists as a private house. It's quite a place to live.

Cousin Jack

4
Yorkshire (North Riding) / Re: Thomas EASTERBY - Convict to Australia
« on: Tuesday 08 June 10 16:24 BST (UK)  »
Hi Chantelle

I have worked out a detailed family tree, which I can message you privately if you want – it is too complicated and long to post here. Thomas Easterby is an ancestor of my wife.

Basically, his parents were William and Elizabeth (nee Kay according to IGI batch sources), and his g/parents Christopher and Phoebe (nee Rivas).  He was christened in 1813. Siblings were Bessie, James (a shoemaker), and Richard (a whitesmith) who married Mary Leng. Richard and Mary almost certainly died in the mid-1850s. Their daughter, another Mary Ann must have died young, as she does not appear in the 1851 census when she would have been 4. Their son Christopher appears in the 1861 census as a cabinet maker living in Pickering with his wife Elizabeth.

Thomas married Mary Ann Holroyd and had four children (born between 1834 and 1844), Elizabeth, Ann, Mary, and Phoebe. Mary Ann seems to have survived until at least 1861, and to have conceived two more children, David and Francis (possibly twins as their births were registered together) without Thomas who must have been imprisoned on the Warrior since 1847, after which he was sent on the Fairlie to Tasmania in 1852.

The Elizabeth with three children living next to Mary Holroyd, Mary Ann’s mother, in the 1861 census is almost certainly the eldest daughter of Thomas and Mary Ann, and the baby Mary living with Mary Ann, who is clearly not a “widow” is the daughter of her daughter Mary, who had a live-in job as dairymaid at the “Dog & Duck” pub in Hutton-le-Hole. Mary later had two more children, Margaret Hannah and John William who was my wife’s ancestor. She later had further children after marrying George Thompson, an ironstone miner.

I believeThomas married Bridget Stanton in Hobart in 1854, and moved to Gunning NSW where he farmed until his death in 1890.

It seems to me that both Thomas and Mary separately decided to start new lives, with Mary describing herself as a widow, and Thomas marrying again in Tasmania.

Incidentally, in the 1841 census, Mary Holroyd is described as a farmer, and is living with Mary Ann, Thomas and their first three children. By 1851, she has become an ag lab, suggesting she sold land to raise money, or couldn’t afford to rent it any more. Her late husband, David, had been a blacksmith.

Cousin Jack

5
Lincolnshire / Hospital for 4 Poor Women in Worlaby
« on: Tuesday 08 June 10 16:05 BST (UK)  »
George Walker was a blacksmith who lived at the Hospital for 4 poor women in Worlaby with his family for many years in the mid-19th Century.

Can anybody suggest why a presumably able bodied working man lived in a charitable institution - could he have been an employee?

And does anyone know whether the charity, or indeed the building, still exists? I have got the basic info from the usual sources, but would like to find out more from someone with local knowledge.

Cousin Jack

6
Cornwall / Re: HARRIS, John - born 1846, Liskeard
« on: Tuesday 01 June 10 17:52 BST (UK)  »
Hi RedFox
I don’t know if this helps much, as I can’t find an obvious connection at the moment, but my wife has Harris ancestors from that area who moved to Brotton. Thomas (b 1844 in St Austell) was the son of John, born about 1814 in Kenwyn, and Ann, born in Marytavy.
Thomas had a brother John (born about 1840 in St Austell), and one called Joseph (born about 1844 in Altarnun). Two later brothers, Michael and Elisha were born in Linkinhorne in 1845 and 1847). As mines closed, the family moved around. Thomas and his wife Christiana’s last home in Cornwall was at St Ive. Sometime in the 1870s Thomas moved to Brotton, where he was  a “pit sinker” on the 1881 census.
I think there was  a decline in mining in the Liskeard area in the 1870s, and so a lot of Cornish miners finished up in places like Brotton, where new ironstone mines were being set up to supply the industries in Middlesbrough, and experienced miners needed.
There are several coincidences here -  Linkinhorne, some of the Christian names, the occupation of pit sinker, and the move to Brotton – but with no evidence, coincidences can mislead! And Harris was a fairly common Cornish name.
All the best
Cousin Jack

7
Cornwall / Re: master mariner
« on: Tuesday 01 June 10 12:13 BST (UK)  »
Hi Harpist
First, Customs Officers were not RN – a Master Mariner’s ticket was a merchant navy qualification. My own g. grandfather was described as a “Master Mariner and Customs Officer” on my grandmother’s marriage certificate. I haven’t fully researched his career yet, but I do know that the Customs Service operated a number of ships known as Revenue Cutters. There were also Excise ships, but Customs and Excise didn’t merge until 1909.
It was quite common for HM Customs to recruit officers, and then move them elsewhere. My g.g. joined at Fowey, and finished in Liverpool. Cornwall produced a lot of maritime people, and so often supplied other ports with personnel.
Kew hold career information on Customs Officers (CUST47 minute books on first and last postings, covering 1696-1874, and CUST39 has pension records and staff lists)
Cornwall Record Office hold some records of Cornish Customs Officers.
Records of Master Mariners can be found at Kew in BT115 (Masters and Mates) covering 1845-54, and there are other records and indexes there – a good place for more info is Debbie Beavis’ Mariners website at
http://www.mariners-l.co.uk/UKMasters.html
The London Cornish Society have compiled an index of Masters and Mates who qualified from Cornish addresses, and will research individuals for small fee. Details on the Cornwall FHS website.
Dr. Reg Davies is compiling an index to all Welsh Master Mariners, Mates and Engineers, and can be contacted at Regandpaddy[at]btinternet.com
Copies of Lloyds Captains Registers are available in various libraries and museums, and you may find something there.

Hope this helps

8
Yorkshire (North Riding) / Re: Lastingham bmd
« on: Friday 28 May 10 21:41 BST (UK)  »
Try Hugh Wallis' IGI batch website that enables you to search parishes by surname at

http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~hughwallis/IGIBatchNumbers.htm

which explains how it works. Lastingham is covered at 

http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~hughwallis/IGIBatchNumbers/CountyYorkshire_%28I-L%29.htm#PageTitle

Unfortunately only one Hardwick appears (in 1811) but if you are not sure of the name, there are other search modes that allow alternative ways of searching. I have found this very useful for parishes where there are LDS transcripts such as this one.

Pages: [1]