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Messages - Georgfriedrich

Pages: [1] 2 3 4 ... 31
1
Kent / Re: Luke Miles - farmer - Rainham/Upchurch
« on: Sunday 07 August 16 02:53 BST (UK)  »
Thank you bearkat,

That's going to be very useful.  Actually the last time I was in Rainham having a poke around the churchyard, we happened to meet one of the ladies doing the flower arrangements and she 'phoned one of the bellringers who came and took us up to the bell loft, and showed us the bell that has Luke Miles name on it.

That was very exciting!

Kirk

2
Ross & Cromarty / Re: James Tweedie pensioner 'auto ness'
« on: Saturday 23 July 16 02:41 BST (UK)  »
Hello Annette,

I agree with you.

I looked at the full page and saw other children born to families living at the Ness.  My partner thinks that perhaps the pen 'malfunctioned' so that the strokes on the ts didn't show up or else the pries wrote in a hurry.

Then I tried to work out what it could mean and found this:

Originally known as An Rudha, "the point" or "the Ness", Invergordon received its name from Sir William Gordon, a local landowner of the early eighteenth century. For centuries the estate on which Invergordon now stands was known as Inverbreakie (the mouth of the Breakie); the Breakie presumably being the stream which enters the Firth at Rosskeen Bridge near the old parish church.

(Source: http://www.invergordon.info/OurHistory accessed 23 July 2016)

So thank you, Annette: I'm so glad I decided to post my problem here!

Kirk

3
Ross & Cromarty / Re: James Tweedie pensioner 'auto ness'
« on: Friday 22 July 16 23:04 BST (UK)  »

Thanks for your reply. 

Yes it is believed that James Tweedie was a soldier for a period of time.  He was also a tailor by profession. 

I'm not sure about 'at the Ness' as the first word really does look like auto

Here is a snippet for you:



4
Ross & Cromarty / James Tweedie pensioner 'auto ness'
« on: Friday 22 July 16 12:56 BST (UK)  »
Hello fellow Rootschatters,
I was looking at some Scottish baptism records for Rosskeen and found an ancestor's occupation listed as what looks like 'pensioner auto ness' but I have no idea as to what this means.

The whole records reads as follows:

James, son to James Tweedie Pensioner auto Ness and Isabel Ross his wife was born 21 Feb and bapt 10 March.

I realise that what I am reading as 'auto ness' might be something else but it is definitely 'auto' and possibly 'ness'.  Perhaps other have come across an expression that  is similar?

James Tweedie senior was a tailor by profession and later moved to London.

Is anyone able to help?

Kind regards

Kirk

5
Wiltshire / Re: Zachariah GILES
« on: Friday 06 November 15 08:47 GMT (UK)  »
Thank you Alan,
I am going to add this to my information.
Kirk

6
Huntingdonshire / Re: Roberts of Buckden
« on: Sunday 30 August 15 00:36 BST (UK)  »
Thanks Margaret and Beds. Boy,

This is my research on Sarah. 

According to her, she was born in Buckden.  She married Robert Cook in St Neots in 1809.  They had various children: John, Ann, Thomas, Susannah (all born at St Neots) and Sarah born 1820 at Caxton.  Robert was dead by 1841 and Sarah lived for a while in Royston with her married daughter Susannah before returning to Caxton with her youngest daughter, Sarah who I think eventually married.  At first she lived with some of her children and their families in a place called 'The Warren' in Caxton.  But as the years passed she ended up on her own. 
Poor and with little in the way of skills Sarah lived at a cottage in High Street, Caxton for many years on parochial relief before dying in 1878 at the Union Workhouse in Caxton, aged about ninety - although her death certificate states ninety-four.

I have her death certificate but not her burial record  ??? as I didn't have time to look at Caxton records for Cook. I'm fairly certain she was buried in the Parish Churchyard and I am thinking that perhaps her husband died in Caxton as well.  This is something for me to investigate.

Bye for now,

Kirk

7
Huntingdonshire / Re: Roberts of Buckden
« on: Saturday 29 August 15 14:02 BST (UK)  »
Dear Margaret,
Thank you ever so much for looking these up for me. 
It looks right but there are so many gaps.  I will have to keep looking but I am keeping all these details near at hand.
Just as a matter of interest.  Are there any records for the name Cook?  Sarah married a chap called Robert Cook at St Neots in 1809.
Thank you once again for your help,
With kind regards,
Kirk

8
Huntingdonshire / Re: Roberts of Buckden
« on: Saturday 22 August 15 13:19 BST (UK)  »
Thank you Margaret,  that's very interesting.  Although it isn't conclusive proof that John Roberts and Sarah Dixon are the parents of my Sarah, the names John, Sarah and Susannah are to be found amongst her children and so there might be a link/.
The marriage of John Roberts and Sarah Dixon in 1785 are consistent with them being possible parents of my Sarah who was born in c. 1785/6.
If you have any Roberts burials in Buckden - they might prove informative.
Are there any births for Robert as a surname?
Thank you once again Margaret.
Kind regards
Kirk

9
Huntingdonshire / Re: Roberts of Buckden
« on: Sunday 16 August 15 11:16 BST (UK)  »
Hello Jackie,
Unfortunately there were no Roberts witnesses at her wedding

Thank you Bedfordshire boy I will look into that.  Maybe I should ask if someone will go and look for me at the archives.

Bye for now,
Kirk

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