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Messages - JaneyH_104

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1
Armed Forces / Army discharge code 1929
« on: Saturday 21 August 21 18:13 BST (UK)  »
I'm looking at the record of a chap who joined the Royal Artillery in 1929 and was discharged less than three weeks later. The reason code for his discharge was para 370 (vii) King's Regulations.

I've looked at the 1908 edition of the King's Regulations, which is available online, but this is too early. I need to look at the 1928 edition, but this not online. This is a very long shot in case anyone might have access to the 1928 edition. From another post here:
Para 370 of KR 1928 became Para 383 in KR 1935 and it's likely that (vi a) stayed much the same:
 
it's been suggested that para 370 in the 1928 KR became para 383 in the 1935 edition ... and this IS online. Following this through it would appear my chap left at his own request. If anyone can confirm (or correct) my thought processes I'd be most grateful.

2
Gloucestershire / Re: Southfield Home, Westbury-on-Trym: what was it?
« on: Sunday 29 November 20 12:50 GMT (UK)  »
Thanks, KGarrad - I've just had a little 'walk' along there via Google Streetview. I've also located it on the Bristol Know Your Place website. Looks like I have another line of research opening up! It turns out it IS listed on Peter Higginbotham's website - link here: http://www.childrenshomes.org.uk/MH/ and then click through to Gloucestershire. Given the nature of the institution and the background of the 'inmates' I can see why it might have been the chaplain to the home who conducted the baptism, rather than the incumbent vicar.

3
Gloucestershire / Re: Southfield Home, Westbury-on-Trym: what was it?
« on: Sunday 29 November 20 12:31 GMT (UK)  »
Thanks, arthurk - that's an interesting possibility. I've looked at the Census page and while Florence is not listed there, she could easily have been there in 1915.

4
Gloucestershire / Southfield Home, Westbury-on-Trym: what was it?
« on: Sunday 29 November 20 11:29 GMT (UK)  »
I'm trying to find out any information about Southfield Home, Westbury-on-Trym in Bristol. It is mentioned as the residence of someone I'm researching. Florence Brooks was baptised at St. John the Evangelist in Clifton, in October 1915. By this point she was aged 20; no parents names are given, and the baptism was performed by the chaplain of the home rather than the vicar.

My guess is this might have been a home for single women, given that as far as I know she was unmarried at this point in time. (She married in February 1916 in Devonport, Devon.) A little more than a year after she married she was prosecuted for soliciting and her husband imprisoned for living off immoral earnings!

I've looked through the listings on Peter Higginbotham's websites for workhouses and children's homes to no avail, and a basic Google search leaves me none the wiser. I'm hoping that by posting here there will be someone with local knowledge who can shed some light on this.

5
Cambridgeshire / Re: john hodson of swavesey
« on: Tuesday 15 September 20 21:12 BST (UK)  »
While I can't help with your specific enquiry it's fascinating to see that there were Hodsons in Swavesey so far back. I grew up in Swavesey and one of my classmates at school was a Neil Hodson. His father was a farmer in the villlage.

6
Hi Norman, welcome to Rootschat.

Since my original post two years ago I've discovered much more about Florence, working with jmzcollins who posted above (we're half second cousins) and another of her descendants who lives in Australia.

The children that Florence had with my great-grandfather were all registered with his surname of Bowdler, with her name of Brooks given as the mother's maiden name. As per my original post, they were: Peter William Oliver (Oct 1923, Cardiff), twins Patrick and Gordon (born and sadly died 1925, Cardiff); Marion (born 1926, Cardiff); Ruth (born 1927, Okehampton Devon, died 1928 same place); and Kenneth (born & died 1929, Okehampton, Devon). 

Florence and Oliver William were never married to each other: he was still married to my great-grandmother (who was in a mental hospital) and she was still married to her husband, John Ralph Hamilton. Florence and her husband had a daughter before she met my great-grandfather - Marjorie Hamilton, born in Cardiff in 1919.

Florence died in 1930 in Devon. While the newspaper reports of the funeral refer to the death of "Mrs O.W. Bowdler" her death certificate records her as Florence Hamilton. My great-grandfather was the informant.

The names, dates and location of Cardiff from your story certainly overlap with that of Florence, but I'm not sure that your father Peter would have been her son. As far as my research goes she originated from Devon, and married her husband John Ralph Hamilton in 1916 in Devonport, then moved to Cardiff. There is no known link between Florence and the Forest of Dean - it is my great-grandfather Oliver William Bowdler whose roots are there.

I've looked at births for a child named Peter Brooks in Cardiff between 1920 and 1924. Aside from Peter W.O.Brooks already mentioned above, born October 1923, the only other record is a Peter Brooks born Apr-Jun quarter 1923. Given there's only a maximum of six months between the two births they must have been born to different mothers.

I hope this helps!

7
Yorkshire (West Riding) / Re: Church of the Good Shepherd, Huddersfield
« on: Monday 16 September 19 13:28 BST (UK)  »
Thanks again, daveyp.

I spent some time on Google Street View a little while ago trying to find 476 Bradford Road and I decided that some even-numbered houses had disappeared at some point. While it’s been a helpful tool for some locations, Huddersfield seems to have had a lot of development over the years and places on old maps no longer match the current street layouts.

8
Yorkshire (West Riding) / Re: Church of the Good Shepherd, Huddersfield
« on: Monday 16 September 19 10:46 BST (UK)  »
Thanks again, daveyp!

The THD of 476 Bradford Road was my great-grandfather. He was quite a character from what I know, having played in a concertina band and being chairman of Huddersfield Ladies Cricket Club. He worked for Fisher’s Woollen Mills.

I’ve bookmarked the ‘Huddersfield Exposed’ website as it looks to be a very useful resource.

9
Yorkshire (West Riding) / Re: Church of the Good Shepherd, Huddersfield
« on: Monday 16 September 19 09:10 BST (UK)  »
Thanks so much for that - it’s all falling into place now.

I recently came across an article in the Huddersfield Examiner reporting on a “sale of work” at the St. John’s Mission Church in Cowcliffe (6 May 1904). The report lists the people running the various stalls, including a Mr T.H.Dyson. My great-grandfather was Thomas Henry Dyson, so I wondered if this was him. (I’m always mindful of how many Dysons there are in Huddersfield!)

It sounds like my ancestors may have been quite involved with mission churches in the area.

Incidentally I’ve come across ‘tin tabernacles’ elsewhere in my research, particularly in the Forest of Dean in Gloucestershire. There was even one a couple of minutes’ walk from where I live in Kent!

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