« Reply #307 on: Sunday 01 January 12 21:30 GMT (UK) »
It doesn't surprise me that Frederick had another first name - Johan Michael seem's to have mainly used Michael, and the Kramers also had a habit of dropping their first names.
Regards
Kathie
Hi there,
Sorry to butt in on this thread - I wanted to point out that the first given names are usually the sponsors/god parents names and quite often were family members. Also parents would think about the future of the child and ask a well heeled member of the community to be a sponsor in the hope that the sponsor would act as a benefactor and/or apprentice the child when it grew older. e.g. my grandmother was baptised Sophia Edith Flamme (known as Edie) in Hull 1884 and it was noted that a Sophie Christiene Hedwig Ehlers, grandmother. had "donated" the name. Sophie Ehlers had died in Steinlah, Germany 1881.
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Quite often it's difficult finding a German on early UK census because the ennumerator/census asks for first names which to a new immigrant means their first donated name on their official documentation.
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Aberdeen: Findlay-Shirras,McCarthy: MidLothian: Mason,Telford,Darling,Cruikshanks,Bennett,Sime, Bell: Lanarks:Crum, Brown, MacKenzie,Cameron, Glen, Millar; Ross: Urray:Mackenzie: Moray: Findlay; Marshall/Marischell: Perthshire: Brown Ferguson: Wales: McCarthy, Thomas: England: Almond, Askin, Dodson, Well(es). Harrison, Maw, McCarthy, Munford, Pye, Shearing, Smith, Smythe, Speight, Strike, Wallis/Wallace, Ward, Wells;Germany: Flamme,Ehlers, Bielstein, Germer, Mohlm, Reupke