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Topics - MJW

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1
This photo shows my dad, his sister, and their grandparents.  It's in terrible condition but I would be grateful for any restoration at all.  It's my only photo of my great grandparents, taken about 1920 probably in Blackpool.

Thanks.   Malcolm

2
I'm researching Edward Taylor who enlisted in R.G.A. in April 1915.

He was discharged due to injury in 1919. Among his discharge papers, there's a "Statement as to Disability" (attached) which refers to previous service/discharge and appears to say:
Regiment - 5th Hardwicks
Date discharged - 1890
Cause of discharge - TIME. EX.

I'd be grateful if anyone could advise if I'm reading this correctly or shed any light on it.  I can't find any record of 5th Hardwicks.

Thanks ...... Malcolm

3
Lancashire / Mystery of Edward Taylor, disappeared in Manchester 1930s
« on: Thursday 04 March 21 18:44 GMT (UK)  »
I appreciate this is a long shot but I’m looking for any advice or ideas to help solve a long-standing family mystery.  I’m helping a friend trying to find any information about her grandfather Edward Taylor who “disappeared” in the early 1930s in the Manchester area.  Until recently all she knew about Edward Taylor was his name, that he married her grandmother in 1921, they had 3 children (born from 1924 to 1931), and Edward had worked in the rubber industry. 

Recently, from lots of research and DNA matching, we’ve discovered where/when he was born, his parents and found him on 1881 census.  However, we can’t find any definite sign of Edward between 1881 census and his 1921 marriage, and also nothing definite about him after his 1930s disappearance.

The family story is that Edward left home when his children were very young (in early 1930s) and “was never seen or heard of again”. My friend says that her mum never mentioned him as far as she can remember, and there are no known photographs of Edward.  There are numerous family tales/rumours (without any evidence) that Edward was a forger and played the violin. That he was “a bit of a musician” going round the local pubs earning extra money.  Also, that he was well known in  the Longsight area if anyone wanted letters writing or anything “copying”  then Edward (or “Ted”) Taylor would do it. It’s also claimed that he used to go away for long spells at a time, and that he went to America a lot and could speak several languages.  Also that he had worked for the Royal Mint.

The information we have relating to Edward is:-

Birth (GRO Index). Edward Taylor, mother’s maiden name HOYLAND, 1873 March Qtr., Chorlton.

Baptism. 11 Mar 1875 St Stephen, Hulme.  Edward Taylor, parents John Taylor & Sydonia.  Edward noted as being “about 2years old”.  (John & Sydonia had 2 other children, Alice born 1871 & Elizabeth born 1874, died 1875. They were all baptised at same time as Edward). 

1881 Census. 104, Lower Broughton Rd Salford. Head is Edward’s father John Taylor, 32, Doctor Maker (apparently this is a scraper tool used in printing machines). Edward shown as son, age 8, born Salford. John is with his 2nd wife Ellen (Metcalfe) plus 3 Metcalfe children and 2 other Taylor children (from John & Ellen marriage).  Edward was from John’s first marriage in 1870 to Sydonia Hoyland who died in 1874. 

Marriage Certificate.  5 Sept 1921 Chorlton Register Office. Edward Taylor married Catherine Rochford, widow, age 27. Edward shown as age 46, bachelor, Rubber Worker of 19 Broom Street, Ardwick. (His wife’s maiden name was Catherine/Kate Barrett, previously married to Martin Rochford who died 1919).

During 1920s, Edward with his wife and children lived at various Manchester addresses - Brunswick Street, Ardwick and Egerton Terrace, Fallowfield. Edward was a Rubber Mixer.  Information from children’s birth certificates.

Marriage certificate of Edward’s daughter, Sept. 1940.  This shows her father Edward Taylor, Rubber Worker, as “deceased” but there’s some doubt whether this was true.

I can provide more information about Edward’s parents, and ancestors further back, if that would help.  His father John Taylor is on 1891, 1901 & 1911 census in various addresses in Broughton, Salford. He’s with daughter Alice in 1891, living with boarders in 1901 & 1911.  There’s no sign of Edward.

To summarise, what we’re trying to find out is:-
- any information about Edward after 1881 census until his marriage in 1921
- what happened to Edward after 1931

We’ve searched census records, electoral rolls, passenger lists, BMDs etc but can’t find anything that fits Edward.

Any advice or suggestions would be most welcome … or if any of this rings a bell with someone!!
Thanks …… Malcolm

4
Lancashire / Blackburn newspapers from 1922 - are they available on line?
« on: Friday 03 July 20 18:11 BST (UK)  »
Does anyone know if Blackburn newspapers in 1922 are available online anywhere - or even available anywhere at all to view?  I've searched but can't find anything.

Three brothers (distant cousins of mine) were buried on the same day in April 1922 in Blackburn. I'm trying to find out the circumstances of their deaths and wondered if there might be something in the local newspaper., e.g. obituary, inquest report etc.

I know I could get death certificates but thought I'd try newspapers first.

Thanks .... Malcolm

5
Following an Ancestry DNA test, my closest DNA match (Henry Vila) is a mystery and I've been trying to work out for months how we are connected. Shared DNA is 116 cM across 7 segments.  I've seen the various suggestions & probabilities on Ancestry & DNA Painter but nothing really stands out.

I've discovered that his daughter has also taken a test, shared DNA is only 8 cM across 3 segments. 

Can I read anything into these 2 test results to help me work out my most likely relationship with Henry ?

Thanks …… Malcolm

N.B. There's some background in a previous post (on Ireland Tipperary board) if anyone is interested, although it's not strictly relevant to this post.   https://www.rootschat.com/forum/index.php?topic=831192.0



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Tipperary / Trying to find Nora Barrett, possibly from Nenagh
« on: Monday 18 May 20 16:32 BST (UK)  »
I’m trying to find a Nora Barrett who was born in Ireland, and may have a link to Nenagh.

All I know about Nora is that she was the birth mother of my closest DNA match Henry Vila.  I took an Ancestry DNA test in 2018, and Henry Vila was my closest match. I knew nothing about him or where he lived as he had no personal information or tree on Ancestry but we had similar Irish ethnicity from our DNA.  I tried to contact Henry but got no reply until last September when I received a short reply that simply said “My birth mother was Nora Barret. She gave birth to me in NYC in 1930.”   I noticed a small tree (just 3 people) had appeared on Ancestry, just showing Henry, his mother Nora Barrett born Ireland (no other details) and his father Rafael Vila. 

Using the New York connection, I did some searching online and immediately found Henry Vila’s obituary and was shocked to see that he died on 2 September 2019, which was the exact day he’d sent me his short message.  I don’t know the circumstances of his death but I found the timing of his message unusual and unnerving.  His obituary is very detailed, I won’t post it here as it names descendants, but here is the beginning.
It is with great sadness that the family of Henry Vila announces his passing at age 89 on Monday, September 2, 2019 in Hilliard, Ohio. He was born on January 28, 1930 in New York City, where he lived and worked for 80 years. He was the son of Rafael Vila (1899-1944), the owner-operator of a barber shop in Upper Manhattan, and Nora Barett. He was raised by his father and his beautiful and beloved step-mother, Enid Eloise (Grey) Vila (1898-1986) who gave him love and kindness and taught him manners and self-respect.

I find the wording on his obituary strange as Nora Barrett barely gets a mention (I’m surprised in some ways that she’s mentioned at all).  I’ve since discovered that his father Rafael Vila was born in Puerto Rico and had married the “beautiful and beloved” step-mother in 1925, 5 years before Henry was born.  I’ve found Henry on US census in 1930 and 1940 with his father and step-mother but I can’t find any likely Nora Barrett. I’ve searched US immigration records and passenger lists, and found several possible Nora Barretts (with name variations) from Ireland.  I’ve tried to cross-check these to Irish births but found nothing conclusive for Nora. This is difficult without knowing when she went to USA, her age, her birth-place, her parents etc.

The reason I think there might be a Nenagh link is that my Irish connection is through my grandmother Catherine Mahoney, born 1888 in Nenagh.  She came to Lancashire sometime after 1901 census and married my grandfather.  Her parents were David Mahoney and Mary Barrett, married in Nenagh in 1884.  Mary’s parents were Patrick Barrett & Catherine (unknown surname) who both died in Nenagh.

I would really appreciate any help finding Nora Barrett or any thoughts on this. 

Thanks.
  Malcolm

(I previously posted about this on the USA board in February when I was looking at trying to obtain Henry Vila’s death certificate to see if that would help, but that was not possible). https://www.rootschat.com/forum/index.php?topic=825800.0


7
Hi

Does anyone know what a birth certificate issued in New York City in 1930 would contain?  I've searched around but can't find anything that helps.

Any help much appreciated.
  Malcolm

8
World War One / MOD can reissue returned WW1 medals
« on: Tuesday 16 February 16 13:14 GMT (UK)  »
I’ve just received my grandfather’s War & Victory WW1 medals reissued by the MOD. These are newly struck medals with my grandfather’s details impressed on the side.

I originally had thought this was not possible as everything I'd read told me so - MOD’s medal office website states “The MOD Medal Office is not able to provide replacement World War 1 medals”.  Even their medal application form states “Please note: Medals awarded prior to the Second World War can no longer be issued”.

However, I was just about to purchase replica medals when I came across a post on the Great War Forum about having returned WW1 medals reissued. Although this possibility is not specifically mentioned on MOD documents/website, it seems there is an important distinction between the words “replace”, “issue” and “reissue”.  The MOD does not “replace” or “issue” WW1 medals but it can “reissue” medals if it can be shown that WW1 medals were returned.

I had to complete an application form, show that I was next of kin and provide evidence that these medals were returned (his medal card did this).  Then, it was a just a long wait (6 months) but well worth it in the end.

Malcolm

9
Technical Help / Lots of blank emails in Windows Live Mail
« on: Sunday 17 January 16 17:25 GMT (UK)  »
Over the last few days, I've received lots of blank emails in Windows Live Mail on my laptop (running Windows 10). Out of 30 emails, over 20 are blank. No sender, subject or contents is displayed - totally blank.  All I can see is date & time.

I've been using WLM on this laptop for over 2 years - under W10 for the last 5 months - and all has been OK until now.

When I download the same emails on my desktop PC (WLM under W7), they all come in OK.  That seems to eliminate any problems at the ISP end.

All my email settings look OK on the laptop and I haven't changed any.
 
I've run a repair on WLM but this didn't fix it.  Today, I did a full uninstall and reinstall of WLM and this hasn't fixed it.  I've run a full virus scan and this was all clear.

Has anyone else got this strange problem?  Any suggestions most welcome

Thanks ... Malcolm

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