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Beginners => Family History Beginners Board => Topic started by: Southernman on Tuesday 08 August 17 10:49 BST (UK)
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I am trying to trace any descendants of Thomas John and Eleanor Patterson who lived at 11 Double Row, Cowpen at the time of the 1911 census. Thomas John, a miner at Cowpen Colliery, was killed fighting with the Northumberland Fusiliers on 1 July 1916, leaving his wife to raise their nine children alone. Eleanor died in 1957, aged 80, and is buried in the same grave as her youngest daughter, Hannah, in Cowpen Cemetery.
From the 1911 census the children were
Sarah Annie Patterson b 1897
Eleanor Patterson b 1899
Edward Patterson b 1900
Oswald Patterson b 1902
Robert Henry Patterson b 1905
John Thomas Patterson b 1907: known to be alive in 1957
Sidney Patterson b 1909
Andrew Patterson b 1911
Plus
Hannah Patterson b 24/06/1913 d 2/04/1942: buried in Cowpen Cemetery.
Hannah is my real interest. She was educated at Blyth Secondary (later Grammar) School circa (1926-1932) but disappears from my radar until she receives an immediate commission on joining the Women's Auxiliary Air Force in September 1941. When she died of meningitis the following April her estate amounted to over £400 (equivalent about £15000-18000 today), not bad for a lass with her beginnings.
Unfortunately Patterson is a common name, and other than Hannah and her parents I've not enjoyed any success in tracing the lives of her siblings.
My hope is that if I can find a descendent it may be possible to fill the gap in her life between leaving school and joining the WAAF, and also find a photograph.
The information would be used in a Book of Remembrance I am compiling of meteorologists who died during the two wars.
Any help would be much appreciated.
Brian
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Possible death for Oswald in 1966
Administration to John Tom Patterson locomotive driver national coal board
Death for John Tom (same address as for Oswald 44 Newsham Rd Blyth) 1977
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Thank you, Milliepede.
I will have to get JTP's death certificate to see who registered it; might give me a link to another family member. As an aside JTP registered his mother's death, also at 44 Newsham Road.
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Probable death:
Robert Henry Patterson, born 20th December 1904 died June quarter 1975 at Northumberland Central
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Robert H Patterson might be with a Maria in 1939 census (I do not have full access), so possibly this
Marriages Mar 1928
Maria Hilsdon Tynemouth
Robert H Patterson Tynemouth
No closed records, and I cannot see any births.
This might be her death:
Maria Patterson born 20th May 1907 died November quarter 1987 in Northumberland Central
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Do you have full access to the 1939 census to see who is still living at home?
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If it's any help
Some family members with Hannah are on 1939 register at same address you give in 1911
Cas
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Thank you all.
I'm a little confused, Cas - do you mean there were Pattersons still living at 11 Double Row in 1939 (from the Census referred to by Chempat?). I understood Double Row to be miners cottages/houses connected with the colliery, and would have assumed the family would have vacated the dwelling when the father was killed.
Thought the census was restricted for 100 years.
Brian
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The 1939 register was compiled for citizens to register for ration books taken just before WW2. You can google for info.
I cannot give full details on thread due to copyright
http://www.findmypast.co.uk/1939register The index is free to search but a sub or credits needed to view full records. The NHS updated the register until around 1990.
Any records blacked out are those presumed or still living when the register closed.
Cas
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Thank you all.
I'm a little confused, Cas - do you mean there were Pattersons still living at 11 Double Row in 1939 (from the Census referred to by Chempat?). I understood Double Row to be miners cottages/houses connected with the colliery, and would have assumed the family would have vacated the dwelling when the father was killed.
Thought the census was restricted for 100 years.
Brian
It is not a census, it is a register used to get ration books http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/help-with-your-research/research-guides/1939-register/
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They were still at this address in 1939 (some family members)
Cas
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Looking at the ages of the children, both Edward and Oswald would have been old enough to be working at the mine by 1916. If one, or both, were employed by the coal company then the tenancy would have been secure.
Christine
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Thank you Christine - it had sunk into my thick skull about 10 minutes ago that was probably what happened.
Fascinating what turns up in these searches; I've made more progress on this story during the last 24 hours than in the last three weeks. Thank you all.
Brian