« Reply #5 on: Saturday 24 February 18 13:05 GMT (UK) »
Thank you pb3 and amondg. I am so sorry for the delay in thanking you. I thought I had all my posts responses checked. However, I have just noticed your posts now in my new replies. I am so ashamed and hope you will forgive me.
This was so kind of you to tell about the cemetery information. Margaret's family were Roman Catholic and her father's death was in the Brooms RC Church records. My great Grandfather was also married at this RC Church at Brooms. If there is a cemetery at Brooms perhaps I could try checking the records there. I have noticed that some of the ancestors in my family tree in this family also went to Stanley. So now I have two potential cemeteries to check. Thank you so much for these pointers - I am truly grateful. I am not from the Durham area but I had hoped to get back to the Durham archives again long before now, but have been prevented by work commitments. I am not sure exactly when I will next be able to get there because of work but hopefully when I do I will check out these two cemeteries. I will check with the archives that they hold these cemetery records of course. As Margaret died in 1908 I presume she would have been buried at a cemetery rather than in a Church yard.
Yes, you are correct, amondg these two girls do appear to have been the youngest children.
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