Author Topic: "Your family made the news"  (Read 1698 times)

Offline River Tyne Lass

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Re: "Your family made the news"
« Reply #9 on: Thursday 19 October 23 13:31 BST (UK) »
My ancestors seemed to be regularly in the news. 
A couple of my Grt x 2 ancestors were accused of murder in 1856 (later acquitted on lack of sufficient evidence)  so that made for fascinating reading although obviously I am sorry the person was murdered and for what my ancestors suffered on account of being (I believe) wrongly accused.  If  could undo all that, I would, and forfeit all the salacious reading that made. :o

In general, I am amazed at what they would publish about back in the day.  No such thing as data protection.  We have an old local paper at the local studies which I like read - Whitley Seaside Chronicle.  Shame it is not on line as it has great articles and photos.
This will often list minutiae such as who stayed at local hotels, and who bought what gift at weddings .. and who might have collapsed in the street even! 
It almost seemed like you couldn't sneeze back in the day for fear it might be written about. 8)
Conroy, Fitzpatrick, Watson, Miller, Davis/Davies, Brown, Senior, Dodds, Grieveson, Gamesby, Simpson, Rose, Gilboy, Malloy, Dalton, Young, Saint, Anderson, Allen, McKetterick, McCabe, Drummond, Parkinson, Armstrong, McCarroll, Innes, Marshall, Atkinson, Glendinning, Fenwick, Bonner

Offline nestagj

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Re: "Your family made the news"
« Reply #10 on: Thursday 19 October 23 14:14 BST (UK) »
My  husband's grandfather was done for speeding in Cannock in the 1930's when I found it in the newspaper I thought it was hilarious as he was known for having a heavy right foot in the family as my husband used to tell me regularly when we talked about him.    He was the owner of several garages and motor dealerships in the Wrexham area and used to travel around the country deleivering cars, he also had a daughter who lived in Suffolk with her grandparents and used to travel there often.
Nesta

Offline Top-of-the-hill

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Re: "Your family made the news"
« Reply #11 on: Thursday 19 October 23 14:37 BST (UK) »
  I have found some pieces about my husband's family, who did make the news sometimes. Several of his great-uncles were drivers, and sometimes owners, of steam traction engines and sometimes fell foul of the laws of the road. There was also a fatal accident where an engine ran out of control on a hill. The most useful report was when these brothers were in court about maintaining their aged parents - names, jobs and wages were given, and how many children they had to support. Another son, the direct ancestor, was in Paris and could not be served a payment order. I presume he was there with a steam engine.
Pay, Kent
Codham/Coltham, Kent
Kent, Felton, Essex
Staples, Wiltshire

Offline River Tyne Lass

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Re: "Your family made the news"
« Reply #12 on: Thursday 19 October 23 14:41 BST (UK) »
My Grandfather and his brother as youngsters made the news for stealing a turnip from a field in the early 1900s.
The judge seems to have read the riot act about it and told them they were lucky to get fined and be spared prison.  I thought he was very harsh.
I know we should not condone crime but they came from a large, poor mining family.  Their Mother had bled to death in childbirth.  No food banks back then.  I would feel compassion even if they weren't my family.
The brother, my Great Uncle went on to be  gassed in WW1 and died of stomach cancer.  My coal miner Grandfather died of exhaustion and anaemia aged in the early 1930s.  He died when my Aunty, his youngest was a toddler.  But she said she remembered he would always give her the top of his boiled egg.
I never eat turnip now without thinking about my Grandfather and his brother.  I can only imagine the fine would have made their poverty even worse.




 
Conroy, Fitzpatrick, Watson, Miller, Davis/Davies, Brown, Senior, Dodds, Grieveson, Gamesby, Simpson, Rose, Gilboy, Malloy, Dalton, Young, Saint, Anderson, Allen, McKetterick, McCabe, Drummond, Parkinson, Armstrong, McCarroll, Innes, Marshall, Atkinson, Glendinning, Fenwick, Bonner


Offline Erato

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Re: "Your family made the news"
« Reply #13 on: Thursday 19 October 23 14:51 BST (UK) »
In my experience, newspapers are most useful if your target relatives lived in a small town.  One branch of my tree was located in Brooklyn, NY, and they didn't make the news.  But in Merritt's Landing, Wisconsin, singing a song, getting a new coat of paint on the barn or finding a large hair ball in a cow's stomach was considered newsworthy.
Wiltshire:  Banks, Taylor
Somerset:  Duddridge, Richards, Barnard, Pillinger
Gloucestershire:  Barnard, Marsh, Crossman
Bristol:  Banks, Duddridge, Barnard
Down:  Ennis, McGee
Wicklow:  Chapman, Pepper
Wigtownshire:  Logan, Conning
Wisconsin:  Ennis, Chapman, Logan, Ware
Maine:  Ware, Mitchell, Tarr, Davis

Offline BettyofKent

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Re: "Your family made the news"
« Reply #14 on: Thursday 19 October 23 16:20 BST (UK) »
I received this email & got quite excited thinking it was a hint for something I didn't know, but was sadly disappointed!

Online newspapers are a wonderful resource, without them I would never have discovered the full story of a missing child, a grandfather in court for receiving stolen goods, a cousin burning to death in her father's shop, a drowning in the Yarra River, a cousin inventing a new flour-milling process, another introducing a particular breed of sheep to New Zealand. Note to self - when searching NZ newspapers do not use the word sheep  ;D luckily I knew the breed which considerably cut down the search results. Suicides, child neglect, husband abandoning his wife & child...it all makes a family tree into a family history.
KENT:
Stutely - Wittersham & Stone
Padgham - Wittersham
Wanstall - Northbourne
Taylor - Ringwould & Ash
Skinner - Deal
Bushell - Walmer
Spain - Walmer
Also
Schloss - Poland, Nottingham, Massachusetts & New Zealand.
Cohen - Birmingham

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Offline Keitht

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Re: "Your family made the news"
« Reply #15 on: Thursday 19 October 23 16:21 BST (UK) »
I can boast two newsworthy ancestors.

My paternal third great grandfather was transported to Australia in 1817 for "having in his possession counterfeit banknotes". A considerable amount of digging revealed the fact that the total sum of his skulduggery amounted to £3.00. His 14 year term rnfded abruptly with his death in 1823. Though we were able to uncover a burial certificate no amount of research has uncovered his cause of death.

On the maternal side of my tree a second cousin, a professional silversmith, spent the entirety of WW1 in prison for manufacturing and distributing his own two shilling pieces on an industrial scale.

Offline aghadowey

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Re: "Your family made the news"
« Reply #16 on: Thursday 19 October 23 16:34 BST (UK) »
In my experience, newspapers are most useful if your target relatives lived in a small town.  One branch of my tree was located in Brooklyn, NY, and they didn't make the news.  But in Merritt's Landing, Wisconsin, singing a song, getting a new coat of paint on the barn or finding a large hair ball in a cow's stomach was considered newsworthy.

My grandmother retired to an Island where two older sisters lived. The local newspaper came out weekly and it was considered rude not to announce each and every visitor from Off Island, when you were getting your house painted, etc. The local correspondent was the daughter-in-law of my grandmother's landlady so there was no danger of me, or anyone else in the family, even making a day trip on the ferry for a quick visit without it appearing in print. Therefore, I have a stack of clippings over the years for my visits and lots of other things.
The most popular edition of the paper was the annual one which listed EVERYONE's amount of property tax for the year. I think they did double the print run for it and it was read and re-read then discussed for at least a week. [not sure it they still do it]
Away sorting out DNA matches... I may be gone for some time many years!

Offline coombs

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Re: "Your family made the news"
« Reply #17 on: Thursday 19 October 23 18:13 BST (UK) »
I can boast two newsworthy ancestors.

My paternal third great grandfather was transported to Australia in 1817 for "having in his possession counterfeit banknotes". A considerable amount of digging revealed the fact that the total sum of his skulduggery amounted to £3.00. His 14 year term rnfded abruptly with his death in 1823. Though we were able to uncover a burial certificate no amount of research has uncovered his cause of death.

On the maternal side of my tree a second cousin, a professional silversmith, spent the entirety of WW1 in prison for manufacturing and distributing his own two shilling pieces on an industrial scale.

I managed to stumble across a newspaper article for my Suffolk ancestor in 1791 stealing a hog and being told he is to be transported for 7 years. He landed in Australia in February 1792 and died likely at the end of April as he was buried in Sydney on 1st May 1792.
Researching:

LONDON, Coombs, Roberts, Auber, Helsdon, Fradine, Morin, Goodacre
DORSET Coombs, Munday
NORFOLK Helsdon, Riches, Harbord, Budery
KENT Roberts, Goodacre
SUSSEX Walder, Boniface, Dinnage, Standen, Lee, Botten, Wickham, Jupp
SUFFOLK Titshall, Frost, Fairweather, Mayhew, Archer, Eade, Scarfe
DURHAM Stewart, Musgrave, Wilson, Forster
SCOTLAND Stewart in Selkirk
USA Musgrave, Saix
ESSEX Cornwell, Stock, Quilter, Lawrence, Whale, Clift
OXON Edgington, Smith, Inkpen, Snell, Batten, Brain