Show Posts

This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.


Messages - jmsp1kers

Pages: [1] 2 3 4
1
The Common Room / Searching for wills by executor
« on: Thursday 07 July 22 18:33 BST (UK)  »
Hi,

I'm researching somebody who was accused of altering a will. The accusers sent him a poetically worded letter, but didn't actually provide any specific evidence, and didn't appear to go public. It was also signed off with initials rather than full names, leaving me with little to go on. However, it's piqued my curiosity.

The accused was a public figure in his local area during the 1800s and did apparently act as executor to several friends and business associates, so who knows? My thinking is that if I can identify those wills something might just stand out. Unfortunately, all the usual ancestry sites only seem to search by the deceased, not by the executor or other related parties.

Is anybody aware of a way to do this, or can point me to sites that provide more detailed searches of the probate calendar? Thanks.


2
Armed Forces / Re: Thomas Mosely (1786 - 1868), Foot Guards
« on: Saturday 24 April 21 19:12 BST (UK)  »
Thanks for the replies. I wonder if there is any significance in the fact his military service was only mentioned in the 1851 census (or why it was even noted at all).

3
Armed Forces / Thomas Mosely (1786 - 1868), Foot Guards
« on: Saturday 24 April 21 16:48 BST (UK)  »
I'm researching an ancestor, Thomas Mosley of Denby, Yorkshire (1786-1868), who was apparently in the foot guards. I've based this on the vague text "foot guards - formally soldier" under the occupation column of the 1851 census.

This is speculation but he married quite late in his 30s so presumably he was in the army in his 20s. That would place him during the Napoleonic Wars.

The problem I have is though I've found multiple Thomas Mosely military records, I can't link any of them to my ancestor as none mention a DOB, abode, etc.

I know it's not a lot to go on, but if anybody can point me towards more detailed records or know of ways to narrow down my search it would be much appreciated.

4
Hi,

I'm looking for the burial record for a Benjamin Wright who died in Mexborough in Dec 1921. I'm assuming he was buried in the local cemetery, but I'm struggling to find records for it.

Any help would be much appreciated.

5
Thanks for all the help. At least I have a date of death so can narrow the search down a bit further. The other cemeteries near to them were All Saints and St Andrews, which I will check out next. Unfortunately from a quick initial look the available All Saints records on FamilySearch seem to be organised by plot rather than date so this could take a while :)

6
Hi, I'm searching for burial records related to two ancestors of mine. George Douglas/Douglass died in Q2 1862 and his wife Esther died in Q1 1863. Based on the 1861 census they were living in the Shieldfields area, so I'm guessing they were buried in Jesmond Old Cemetery (I've not been able to find any church records).

Thanks for any help on this.

7
Yorkshire (West Riding) / Wombwell baptisms
« on: Tuesday 15 January 19 20:59 GMT (UK)  »
Hi,

I have several ancestors from Wombwell who I can't find baptism records for. The fact it's four different families makes me think there are records missing or I'm looking in the wrong place. I've explored the obvious resources - Ancestry, FindMyPast, FamilySearch (including going page-by-page through scanned records) - but can't find anything. I've checked St Mary, St George and even some methodist records (there's no evidence of them being non-conformist but who knows?). Now I'm stumped on where to look next. Any insight would be much appreciated.

People I'm searching baptisms for:

Emily Jenkinson, born 1884
Minnie Etherington, born 1877
William Edward Whittaker, born 1877
Benjamin Wright, born 1882
Elizabeth Wright, born 1908
Enoch Whittaker, born 1902

8
Armed Forces / Paragraph 121, Queen's Regulations, reason for discharge?
« on: Tuesday 04 September 18 20:57 BST (UK)  »
I have my ancestor's very short attestation papers for the Royal Artillery in 1893. It appears he didn't last a day. His medical records weren't even filled in. The only real information is under the statement of services page, which says:

"Discharged in consequence of his not being likely to become an efficient soldier. Paragraph 121, L(?).a. section 19. Queen's Regulations."

Giving there wasn't a medical examination performed, I'm hoping the paragraph and section numbers might give me more details of exactly what made him "inefficient". But having explored a few copies of the Queen's Regulations online I can't seem to tally those numbers up to anything relevant.

Any guidance on this would be much appreciated.

9
Handwriting Deciphering & Recognition / Re: Residence on a birth certificate
« on: Saturday 30 June 18 13:08 BST (UK)  »
Thanks for the replies.

The birth certificate is from 1843. The family mentioned on it lived on the "wrong" side of Barnsley in the 1841 and 1851 census, for the purposes of my research. I've struggled for months to find compelling evidence that links them to another family who I know did live in Collier Row in 1841, so this is big progress!

Pages: [1] 2 3 4