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Messages - drodgers34

Pages: [1] 2 3 4 ... 36
1
Worcestershire / Re: Thomas Tidmarsh born or bapt 1763 to 1771
« on: Monday 07 June 21 04:17 BST (UK)  »
Cheers David. I’m going to start my visit here which is merevale parish. Staying at this B&B ‘on site’

https://www.tripadvisor.com.au/Hotel_Review-g1041932-d1154040-Reviews-Abbey_Farm_Bed_and_Breakfast-Atherstone_Warwickshire_England.html#/media/1154040/203147307:p/?albumid=101&type=0&category=101

Also linked to Henry VII and Richard III dastardly deeds.

I’ll take in some local locations then once my daughter breaks up for summer well make our way up to yorkshire etc.

2
Worcestershire / Re: Thomas Tidmarsh born or bapt 1763 to 1771
« on: Tuesday 01 June 21 08:36 BST (UK)  »
Hi Dobfarm.

How are you these days?  Funny how thing s work out but my daughter is studying ballet in Hinckley and I’m coming over from australia to stay with her over her summer break.

It’s near atherstone and I’m staying at a bnb near the merevale church for a few days.

Did you confirm this Thomas Tidmarsh is our ancestor?  Looks like all the locations are around that location.

Dale Rodgers

3
The Lighter Side / Re: Ancestor throwing down a challenge?
« on: Saturday 28 January 17 03:14 GMT (UK)  »
Oh dear! I'm sure a lot of us would like to get pages left to us like that bit in the Bible- so and so begat so and so begat so and so...

10 Generations seems like a lot to remember, even if you think of the possibility he might have known his great grandparent at most? Perhaps there was some record out there that he found. Perhaps a family Bible or something. Another possibility is that he might have made it up! I do recall a rootschatter saying years ago that they found an obituary for an ancestor's brother that said he was descended from some prominent family back in England- he certainly wasn't, so she said, but might have been a good yarn for him to tell and cash in from!

Any number of possibilities. But you'd think he would have passed it on

Small village in Yorkshire with a Viking name. And a traditional on of encouraging youngsters to marry within the village. Although my studies show that while this happened. Many cases of outsiders joining families and youngsters who didn't actually inherit property or leases leaving to live elsewhere

If the practice of withinbreeding was more prevalent going back in time. There's need to be some Local safeguards to steer youngsters away from marrying some one too close generically
Using imagination to go further. If the village did have a de facto expert on such matters.  It quite probably been my ancestors mother.  He is quoted as saying on his mothers side. Perhaps she knew the detail. And he only knew the broad facts. More likely people 'knew' these facts to enhance their claim to the property they inhabited, particularly if there was a possibility of dispute:
His mother lived 1827 to 1920 and only had one surviving child

My grandmother. Who I knew, would have known her
I never discussed genealogy with my grandmother. But it's notable that I could be just four generations from someone who still practiced the verbal tradition

5
The Lighter Side / Re: Ancestor throwing down a challenge?
« on: Friday 27 January 17 23:11 GMT (UK)  »
He could at least have had the decency to leave you his research so you had a starting point.

I didn't know him died just before my birth

I have talked with descendants who still farm the land and they don't know. I'm assuming the knowledge was verbal history

6
The Lighter Side / Ancestor throwing down a challenge?
« on: Friday 27 January 17 09:46 GMT (UK)  »
A prominent Ancestor who died 1957 was often in the local paper.

One article has him saying he could trace his ancestors ten generations on his mothers side.

Best I can manage is four back from him.

http://person.ancestry.co.uk/tree/31847296/person/18135564431/facts

7
Peasants and clothiers, by pupils of holmfirth sec school in the late sixties.

Lists all the above inns and notes most were closed when stricter laws came into force after the first world war

Reference to Princess Royal simply states Used to be Higgin Briff

Couldn google any reference to Higgin Briff but it threw up lots off repeated references to Higgin Brigg as a summer wine filming location

8
This got me thinking. The location I extensively study (Holme valley in West Yorkshire) has had a school officially since 1690s and in comparison the local records are very sparse for the area at that date, the chapel of ease being in nearby Holmfirth. You often see different spellings for common local names done differently.
Quite apart from a presumption of some literacy generally, youd think the clerk would be literate and know the families involved

Whats now known as Howard would commonly be written as Heward or Hayward, Heywood.
Heward seem quite staright forward to me as many would have actually pronounced their name that way in the local dialect. Maybe they insisted on that spelling or maybe the clerk was having a lend. I assume family feuds were rife so perhaps some differentiated families in that way too

I also looked at the Holmfirth express in the local library. although it is now defunct it dates back to late 1800s and would have a level of language closer to the financial times today than common tabloids, so which era is illiterate ?

(takes care not to have spelling mistakes in a post critisising literacy standards)

9
Stalking the dead I like to call it

If theres something the person wouldnt have liked published, do you publish ?

Considering they dont get the right of reply, which our current open mindedness would want to give them if they were alive

I often think of this when wdytya gets into slavery etc.

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