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 - brynmeister56

Pages: [1]
1
Anglesey / Re: Thomas Street, Holyhead.
« on: Sunday 27 August 23 13:30 BST (UK)  »
Could be! I am on Ancestry.com and have done a DNA test which I have also added to My Living DNA site.

2
Anglesey / Re: Thomas Street, Holyhead.
« on: Friday 25 August 23 18:15 BST (UK)  »
My mother believed that Curly Jack Hill was so named after a relative of John Jones (an ancestor of mine) who owned a shop in Birmingham House, which was located on the corner opposite Poliakoff's at the bottom of Thomas Street.

3
Anglesey / Re: Holyhead Burnal/Burnall/Burnel/Burnell
« on: Tuesday 18 May 21 22:47 BST (UK)  »
No problem. I just use my name on Ancestry. I have done the DNA thing, too.

4
Anglesey / Re: Holyhead Burnal/Burnall/Burnel/Burnell
« on: Monday 17 May 21 23:50 BST (UK)  »
We live in a village not far from Prestatyn, and one of my brothers lives in the next village. Mum is 85, now, and lives on the outskirts of Prestatyn, near Meliden. It's not Holyhead, but we like it here. Mum remembers many of the old family; things she has remembered (such as the Curly Jack thing) have helped me to make headway. She remembered my dad's cousins' names, so I have been able to work back from them, or check if I am on a right track. She knew of the Mc Ewan connection. My researches are reaching an end, I think, as going beyond the 19th century requires greater resources or commitment - especially when dealing with Wales, bearing in mind the names issue. I think it was probably John Jones's son John, the ironmonger, who may have been known as Curly Jack. I still have some unanswered questions about the family to resolve, so I shall keep chipping away. I believe that Thomas Harding's mother may have been related to John Jones, but haven't been able to substantiate that, as I cannot find Edward Jones, John's shopkeeper father. On another note, I can walk down to the church where John and his first wife were married at Rhuddlan. I shall keep at it until the frustration outweighs the intrigue!  ;)
 

5
Anglesey / Re: Holyhead Burnal/Burnall/Burnel/Burnell
« on: Monday 17 May 21 18:37 BST (UK)  »
We first lived in Upper Belvedere, near Bexleyheath and Erith, then we moved down to Chatham. I worked in Sidcup the whole time. My three sons and their families live in Chatham, still. Speaking to my mum, earlier, she told me that my dad always referred to his great-uncle Jonathan as "Jot".

6
Anglesey / Re: Holyhead Burnal/Burnall/Burnel/Burnell
« on: Monday 17 May 21 09:35 BST (UK)  »
I have your Annie in my tree, but as Elizabeth Anne, and I have borrowed a photo of her gravestone from another Ancestry member.

7
Anglesey / Re: Holyhead Burnal/Burnall/Burnel/Burnell
« on: Monday 17 May 21 09:27 BST (UK)  »
Hello, again. I have retired to Prestatyn, after thirty years working in Kent, but visit home a few times a year. I believe that Thomas died in Liverpool, in hospital, and was buried there. I don't think I was aware of Jane's daughter, so must get back to Ancestry and find out how I missed her.  :)

8
Anglesey / Re: Holyhead Burnal/Burnall/Burnel/Burnell
« on: Saturday 15 May 21 11:53 BST (UK)  »
Hello, and thanks for the reply. John Jones' grandson, Thomas, married Jane Burnell; their son, Thomas, is my great grandfather, through his daughter, Annie, and her son, Raymond.

9
Anglesey / Re: Holyhead Burnal/Burnall/Burnel/Burnell
« on: Sunday 09 May 21 18:28 BST (UK)  »
I came across this chat, having entered "Curly Jack" into the search engine. He was an ancestor of mine, as was Jonathan Burnell. All that I know of my family has come through the Ancestry website (except for a visit to Maeshyfryd cemetry). I suspect that one of the participants in the chat is a cousin of whom I am already aware; to her, and to the rest of you - Greetings!  :)

Pages: [1]