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Messages - helenM123

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The Lighter Side / Re: Old fashioned names
« on: Tuesday 02 August 16 22:18 BST (UK)  »
I have a few times Gt Grandfather who was called Aminadab! He must have been happy with it as he named his son the same. My daughter's friend has recently had a baby and called her Elsie, that was my grandmas name so it puts me in mind of someone with permed hair and glasses, not a baby.

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The Common Room / Re: Tracing distinctive first names and middle names
« on: Thursday 21 January 16 16:36 GMT (UK)  »
I have in my tree, Aminadab Spivey! His brother's names were Barzalli, Hezekiah and Theophilus.

3
London and Middlesex / Re: Born in Whitechapel..living in Yorkshire?
« on: Saturday 28 November 15 12:09 GMT (UK)  »
Thank you Jolee, that sounds like a possible, I will see if I can follow it up any further. Helen 🙂

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London and Middlesex / Born in Whitechapel..living in Yorkshire?
« on: Friday 27 November 15 23:27 GMT (UK)  »
In my family tree I have Catharine Atkin/Aitkin born around 1800 in Whitechapel. She married James Hudson in Otley, W Yorkshire in 1821, his family originated from a villiage called Fewston nearby. There was a large flax mill in the area which used child pauper apprentices from workhouses as cheap labour. I'm wondering if this may be how Catherine ended up so far from her birthplace in Whitechapel? James and Catharine settled in Yeadon, Yorkshire and are buried in the cemetery there. Would there be any records of apprentices from the workhouse? I would love to find out more if anyone has any ideas.

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The Lighter Side / Re: Heir Hunters prime time
« on: Saturday 05 November 11 09:05 GMT (UK)  »
Just returned from honeymoon and before I left was told the TX date was the 24th of Oct, thought I was going to miss out on answering 50 calls a day with people asking for jobs or if I can check the list to see if they are due any money.

Now been told that is is probably going to be 7pm BBC2 on the 21st Nov for 2 weeks these will be repeats of the the last series with a further 10 programs to follow in the new year being repeats of the next series. The beeb have rules about who commissioned a program and who there for has paid for it and who can show it first.

A little surprised and shocked by  helenM123 comments 40% + Vat isn't a standard fee, would be interested for find out who it was.

Neil
Would just like to clarify it wasn't any of the Heir hunting companies featured in the programme who contacted my family.



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The Lighter Side / Re: Heir Hunters prime time
« on: Tuesday 01 November 11 09:56 GMT (UK)  »
I always enjoyed watching this series until our family was contacted by a firm of "Heir Hunters" We were informed (my brother,sister and myself) that we had been traced as beneficiaries to an estate of a relative on my grandmother on my fathers side of the family but couldn't reveal who until we signed up with them.As my sister and I have been researching our family we could account for everyone way back and couldn't think for the life of us who it could be. My late Dad was an only child and had four cousins,two of whom were deceased,I was asked about any other relatives and mentioned the cousins and the chap from the heir hunting firm said yes he was aware of them and had their details and had been in touch with them too. However we found out the following day,it was infact one of my dad's two remaining cousins who had died. He'd been admitted to hospital and died suddenly over a bank holiday without being able to give details of next of kin,hence the delay in us finding out he had died.Somehow this company had got his details and proceeded to try and sign up relatives. He had only been dead for FIVE days!!! One thing that isn't made clear on this programme is just how large a percentage these companies take from deceased estates, 40% + vat in this case! No wonder they are so keen to beat the competition and sign people up. Needless to say they didn't get a penny out of us.

So basically, if an Heir Hunters company hadn't contacted you, you would have been none the wiser that someone had died ? How long would it have taken you to find out ?  I can tell you from experience that it is very difficult (and very time consuming) and very costly to reclaim money, when it has been paid out to people who have a lesser claim to it than you have.  As another poster has already pointed out, the fees that heir hunters charge are usually based on their costs of tracking down all the relatives involved.

When an estate that my sister and I were heirs to, was paid out to the wrong persons, fortunately those who got the money had taken out "Missing Beneficiary Insurance", but it still cost us more than £2000 in legal fees and it took more than a year to get the money, and even then we didn't get it all because they had slightly  under-insured themselves.  Good job really that they had the insurance, because inbetween the payout and us finding out, one of the beneficiaries had himself died, and his estate had been paid out to his children.



Edited by Nick29 to make clearer at 14:44
[/quoteWell as I saw the person who had died the week previously and he lived nearby yes I would have found out, he died in hospital over a bank holiday weekend without being able to give contact details

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The Lighter Side / Re: Heir Hunters prime time
« on: Sunday 23 October 11 17:51 BST (UK)  »
I always enjoyed watching this series until our family was contacted by a firm of "Heir Hunters" We were informed (my brother,sister and myself) that we had been traced as beneficiaries to an estate of a relative on my grandmother on my fathers side of the family but couldn't reveal who until we signed up with them.As my sister and I have been researching our family we could account for everyone way back and couldn't think for the life of us who it could be. My late Dad was an only child and had four cousins,two of whom were deceased,I was asked about any other relatives and mentioned the cousins and the chap from the heir hunting firm said yes he was aware of them and had their details and had been in touch with them too. However we found out the following day,it was infact one of my dad's two remaining cousins who had died. He'd been admitted to hospital and died suddenly over a bank holiday without being able to give details of next of kin,hence the delay in us finding out he had died.Somehow this company had got his details and proceeded to try and sign up relatives. He had only been dead for FIVE days!!! One thing that isn't made clear on this programme is just how large a percentage these companies take from deceased estates, 40% + vat in this case! No wonder they are so keen to beat the competition and sign people up. Needless to say they didn't get a penny out of us.

8
The Lighter Side / Re: What makes a Black Sheep?
« on: Tuesday 13 September 11 16:59 BST (UK)  »
Thank you so much for that information Marie C, will have a look and see if I can find anything

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The Lighter Side / Re: What makes a Black Sheep?
« on: Monday 12 September 11 15:23 BST (UK)  »
The so called"black sheep" in our family was my G grandfather,Richard Dodsworth Southwell who set sail for Australia in 1910,leaving his wife,son (my grandad) and daughter behind in Yorkshire. It was always said he upped and went and was never heard of again until my Grandad was sent a bill for his burial in NSW in 1939.However looking through a box of old papers after the death of my grandparents we found a letter sent to his wife shortly after his arrival in Australia asking why she wasn't replying to his letters and if she had recieved the cheques he'd been sending. So it would seem he didn't abandon them entirely and maybe it was his wife who broke contact with him.I have found his name on a passenger list and a burial record for him in Albury NSW in 1939 but other than that have no clue what happened to him in the intervening years, I would love to know more about him.

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