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Messages - AlexanderFields

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1
Essex / Re: Tendring Local History Fair
« on: Thursday 30 September 10 22:35 BST (UK)  »
Greetings, Ninkynoo!

Thank you for posting news and details of the Tendring Fair. Wish I could get there. No chance, though. If you spot anything pertaining to Great Oakley or Beaumont cum Moze or any of my family interests, do please let me know.

Best wishes from AF.

2
World War One / Re: Accrington Pals WW1
« on: Wednesday 25 August 10 23:35 BST (UK)  »
Just back from a visit to the Somme battlefields. The picture shows the inscription on a memorial to the Accrington Pals near Serre and what remains of a front line trench nearby. About 700 men of the Pals battalion went into action on the first day of the Battle of the Somme, June 1st, 1916,  to attack the village of Serre. Two hundred and thirty-five were killed and 350 wounded in half an hour, effectively wiping out the battalion (source Wikipedia). AF

3
Suffolk / Re: Aldridges Shop In Ipswich...
« on: Wednesday 18 August 10 23:53 BST (UK)  »
I wonder if Dave Kindred has any old pics of Key Street. I'd like to be able to ask him. AF

4
World War One / Re: Soldiers pay
« on: Thursday 12 August 10 14:00 BST (UK)  »
I don't think many (if any) ordinary folk had current bank accounts as we know them today, let alone joint accounts. The system in National Service days was that a serviceman was paid weekly in cash at a pay parade. If (as was common) he had allotted part of his pay to someone at home (eg wife or mother) that person had a book of dated authorisations and collected the cash weekly from a post office. I guess that similar arrangements had existed from time immemorial. I suppose that in the trenches of WW1 the men were paid as and when, probably when they were back in rest areas. (After all, there weren't many NAAFI's on the Front Line to buy stuff in!) But the person at home was still paid regularly, as above. Someone more knowledgeable will correct me if I am wrong! AF

5
Suffolk Completed Lookup Requests / Re: Addresses in Ipswich 1914
« on: Wednesday 11 August 10 15:39 BST (UK)  »
Thanks for the additional info. Will look it up. AF

6
Suffolk Completed Lookup Requests / Re: Addresses in Ipswich 1914
« on: Tuesday 10 August 10 15:41 BST (UK)  »
Many thanks for your interest, Pat, and for the two websites, which I shall look at this evening. Unfortunately, I'm not able to get to Ipswich at the present time and so I shall not be able to take a look at the Suffolk picture collection. Perhaps in days past Orwell Street was simply that, and not split into Upper and Lower. Whatever, I'd still like to know if No 20 (Upper or Lower) was a pub. AF

7
Suffolk Completed Lookup Requests / Re: Addresses in Ipswich 1914
« on: Tuesday 10 August 10 12:22 BST (UK)  »
I also have an interest in addresses in Ipswich. Two of my ancestors, John Denny and Emma Eliza Block, were married at the parish church of St Clements, Ipswich, on April 20, 1878. On their certificate, John's address is given as 6 Orford Place, St Clements, and Emma's as 9 Potter Street, St Clements. I can't find either road on a modern map. Do they still exist? If not, where were they?

One of their offspring, Alice Maud Mary Denny, was born on November 14, 1881, and the place of her birth is given on her certificate simply as Key Street, Ipswich. I believe, on the evidence of census returns, that this was actually the Maltsters Arms, long gone. The excellent Old Suffolk Pubs website gives some details of the pub/beerhouse but no picture and it seems probable that none exists if they haven't been able to raise one. But does anyone have a picture of Key Street itself as it was in those days? I'd really like to see one. I've not been able to visit the area since I discovered the family connection, and won't be able to soon,  and I understand that it has changed beyond all recognition.

John Denny and his brother Robert certainly kept the Maltsters Arms (is it spelt Maltsters or Malsters?) either together or separately at some time. But by the time Alice's mother registered her birth (which she did on Christmas Eve 1881), although the occupation of father is given as publican, the mother's address is given as 20 Orwell Street, Ipswich. Was that also a pub or beerhouse? I haven't been able to answer that question myself.

I don't think that John and his wife had separated. They were certainly still together when they later moved to Debenham and took over the Eight Bells there.

In summary...
1 Where are/were 6 Orford Place and 9 Potter Street, both in St Clements.
2 Was 20 Lower Orwell Street a pub/beerhouse? Does a picture exist?
3 Are there any pictures of Key Street as it was in the 1800s?

Thank you for reading this. AF

8
Thanks, Jebber, for furthering my education on the subject of Family History. AF

9
Will do, Trish.

In the meantime, is there anyone with access to the parish records of St Leonard's, Beaumont, who would be kind enough to try and find out

     (a) if Emma Wyatt was baptised there c 1838, rather than at Great    Oakley, and
     (b) if she was buried there in 1930, as her husband was in 1914.

I'm still puzzled that Emma's birth cannot apparently be found in the GRO index, although, as I understand it ,she was born after registration became compulsory (in 1837?). Perhaps she was one of those whose arrival in this world simply was not registered. But, as she lived until 1930, you'd think she'd have required documentary evidence of her existence at some stage in her long life!

Regards to all from AF

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