Author Topic: Missionaries in Africa from England  (Read 2474 times)

Offline deb usa

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Re: Missionaries in Africa from England
« Reply #9 on: Thursday 09 October 08 11:55 BST (UK) »
Hi Blackwood

That's wonderful ...please keep us updated!

deb  :)
Travellers = Penfold, Orchard, James
Devon = Middleton,  Waterfield, Adams, Clark/e, Gould
Cornwall = Palmer, Carnarton, Slack/Smith. Morris/h
Wales, New Quay = James, Evans


All UK census information Crown Copyright, from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk

Offline blackwood1

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Re: Missionaries in Africa from England
« Reply #10 on: Wednesday 05 November 08 05:51 GMT (UK) »
Hi deb!
Just a note to let you know that we now have the wills ordered from Devon. They are very informative. We now know that both William and Milleycent lived to a ripe old age, and were obviously *not* masacred by natives in Africa.

I believe it is much more likely that the impresionable young Martha (Richard's wife, who named her daughter Goldsmid) read about the exploits of missionaries in Africa and perhaps a similiar story, and named her child after the brave rescuer. Just don't think it *actually* happened to them.

We are now looking for references to a Goldsmid around the time of the 1830s that Martha could have taken the name from.
POSTLETHWAITE

Offline IJD

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Re: Missionaries in Africa from England
« Reply #11 on: Wednesday 24 July 13 23:47 BST (UK) »
What an interesting thread. I descend from Robert Margary, listed as a herbalist on the 1851 Census [apparently the only herbalist listed in the whole of that year]. His parents, William and Milly Margary lived and died in the West country, and as far as I know never left that area. Interesting how such an exciting family story seems to have attached to them. William was a sawyer.