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Topics - Fitty

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19
Norfolk / Norfolk Migrants Letters home.
« on: Friday 03 April 09 21:17 BST (UK)  »
I recently purchased a book about the life and times in Norfolk in the middle 1800's

It's called "Labouring Life in Norfolk Villages 1834 -1914"  At the back of the book are some interesting letters from the migrants.  Unfortunately the author left out the names of the persons concerned but they make interesting reading.

Carneston - Aug 26 1843.

I have got fifty acres of land, for which I pay 45 dollars. or £11 5s. currency, per year, on which I can keep 5 head of cow cattle..... Shoemaking is very good business in the country.  I can get 5s. for making one pair of boots and 2s. 6d. for one pair of shoes.  The former is what you call Wellington Boots. If I make them in my own house, I will get 6s 3d a pair.   We kill five or six hundredweight of pork every year and eat it all ourselves.  We have to sell it as you do.... It is a great country for rearing fowls this. I have twenty hens.  We have preachers preaching in all parts of the country the the end of the world will be 25 of March 1844.  I will be glad to know if you have it preached at home.  Market butter id from 5s. to 7s. per pound; potatoes are from 3s. to 4s. per bushel; beef is from 2d to 4d. a pound; eggs from 6d. to 7d. per dozen; flour is from 12s. 6d. to 13s. per hundred.  This is a fine fruitful country of everything except money and it is very scarce.  Any person that comes to this country he must learn his trade in the new. Boots are all pegged. I can make one pair of boots in a day.  I have nothing of it to do in the summer, but have plenty of it to do in the winter.  Boots and shoes are pretty much the same price as they are at home.

_________________________________________________________________

Brackhaven (Canada) 26 Jan. 1873.

I must tell you how we are getting on, which is far better than we expected.  We are meeting with the best of treatment, we have completed one weeks work, and have given satisfaction enough to have a fresh agreement with master, as he is going to give me 50 pounds, and my wife 30 pounds and Maria 50 pounds and Kezia 12 pounds and Jabez 25 dollars, which is 5 pounds in english money, and stephen is to take care of the baby. Gezra will have good learning for free,  I will tell you what i had for dinner today, apple tart, meat, rice, cheese, four meals a day and all that i ever want, and plenty of tea and sugar we want  Jack is as good as his master here.  I tell you the truth as i find it. We are all as one here.

More to follow..

20
Canada / Letters from Norfolk Migrants
« on: Friday 03 April 09 21:08 BST (UK)  »
I recently purchased a book about the life and times in Norfolk in the middle 1800's

It's called "Labouring Life in Norfolk Villages 1834 -1914"  At the back of the book are some interesting letters from the migrants.  Unfortunately the author left out the names of the persons concerned but they make interesting reading.

Carneston - Aug 26 1843.

I have got fifty acres of land, for which I pay 45 dollars. or £11 5s. currency, per year, on which I can keep 5 head of cow cattle..... Shoemaking is very good business in the country.  I can get 5s. for making one pair of boots and 2s. 6d. for one pair of shoes.  The former is what you call Wellington Boots. If I make them in my own house, I will get 6s 3d a pair.   We kill five or six hundredweight of pork every year and eat it all ourselves.  We have to sell it as you do.... It is a great country for rearing fowls this. I have twenty hens.  We have preachers preaching in all parts of the country the the end of the world will be 25 of March 1844.  I will be glad to know if you have it preached at home.  Market butter id from 5s. to 7s. per pound; potatoes are from 3s. to 4s. per bushel; beef is from 2d to 4d. a pound; eggs from 6d. to 7d. per dozen; flour is from 12s. 6d. to 13s. per hundred.  This is a fine fruitful country of everything except money and it is very scarce.  Any person that comes to this country he must learn his trade in the new. Boots are all pegged. I can make one pair of boots in a day.  I have nothing of it to do in the summer, but have plenty of it to do in the winter.  Boots and shoes are pretty much the same price as they are at home.

_________________________________________________________________

Brackhaven (Canada) 26 Jan. 1873.

I must tell you how we are getting on, which is far better than we expected.  We are meeting with the best of treatment, we have completed one weeks work, and have given satisfaction enough to have a fresh agreement with master, as he is going to give me 50 pounds, and my wife 30 pounds and Maria 50 pounds and Kezia 12 pounds and Jabez 25 dollars, which is 5 pounds in english money, and stephen is to take care of the baby. Gezra will have good learning for free,  I will tell you what i had for dinner today, apple tart, meat, rice, cheese, four meals a day and all that i ever want, and plenty of tea and sugar we want  Jack is as good as his master here.  I tell you the truth as i find it. We are all as one here.


21
The Common Room / I need a favour please.
« on: Friday 03 April 09 12:02 BST (UK)  »
One of my rellies is in the Metropolitan Police force , He's in Westminster on the 1861 Census, 1871 Census he in Kingston, Surrey.  On the 1881 he's in Kings Cliffe, Northamptonshire, England, he status is Annuitant, so i'm assuming he is now retired from the force and living on a pension.

His details from the force must be on the N A webpage but for the life of me i can't find them.  That page does my head in really and no matter how much "Help" pages i read i just go round in circles.

I'd love to see if there is anything on there about his time in the police force and send off for the records if there is any.

Please could someone find him on the N A and let me have the details?

Here he is on the Censuses:

Robert Beales born Banham, Norfolk 1833

1861: Piece: 62; Folio: 42; Page: 47

1871: Piece: 858; Folio: 131; Page: 29

1881: Piece: 1587; Folio: 41; Page: 20;


22
Sligo / Link: Passenger list-1847
« on: Monday 30 March 09 10:53 BST (UK)  »
PASSENGER LIST of the "ELIZA LIDDELL"

Sligo to Shippegan New Brunswick

June/July 1847

http://web.archive.org/web/20090803055338/http://geocities.com/Heartland/Ranch/9002/liddel.htm updated 2015

23
Norfolk / Lost Norfolk rellies in 1835-1836??
« on: Monday 30 March 09 06:41 BST (UK)  »
There is an extract in a book called "Labouring Life in Norfolk Villages 1834-1914" written by Marion Springall.

"Emigration was also encouraged, and between the spring of 1835 and the summer 1836 ninety-one parishes sent 3,068 adults and children abroad, cheifly to Canada, and to this number must be added those who went assisted by friends. Emigration fever reached it's hieght early in 1836. Ship after ship came from the north and anchored at Lynn and Yarmouth. Labourers and their families streamed into ports only to find every berth filled and another ship on its way to accommodate them.  Early arrivals lived on board for a few days while the complement gathered, and then moved off with flags flying on a journey that can never have been comfortable"

The journey from Yarmouth to Canada took about 10 weeks.


I recently found out that this is where my gggg x grandfather went.

Still looking for his baptism records in Norfolk though  lol

24
Canada Lookup Request / Tites of Banham then to Canada
« on: Sunday 29 March 09 20:50 BST (UK)  »
I wonder if someone could point me in the right direction for passenger lists to Quebec around 1836 to 1841.
I have had some information given to me that suggests that the TITE family, James TITE born in Norfolk abt 1778 , his wife Sarah and thier children emigrated to Canada.  They settled in a small town called Bishops Crossing or sometimes called Bishopton.

The information i received came from someone who contacted me many years ago and unfortunately at the time i was more interested in another branch of my tree and now i have lost contact with the gentleman....and now I'm kicking myself for letting all that knowledge slip me by.

I do not doubt the little information he has given me but there are a couple of puzzles that i'm trying to sort out.

(modified) Just looked at Interment.net and found.

Saint John Cemetery
Brookbury, Compton County, Quebec

Adcock, Sarah, d. 25 Apr 1854, age: 65yrs, s/w & wife of James Tite.

Thats them but what does s/w stand for?


25
Norfolk Lookup Requests / Tites of Banham
« on: Sunday 29 March 09 18:27 BST (UK)  »
Looking for the marriage of James Tite and Sarah Adcock in Bunwell around 1808. Their first child William Tite was born/baptised in Bunwell in 1809.


26
Census and Resource Discussion / Confused with the 1891
« on: Thursday 26 March 09 20:56 GMT (UK)  »
I need another pair of eyes on this please.

Class: RG12; Piece: 1146; Folio 66; Page 22;

The family i am interested in is the TARBOX family.

On the transcription page the family are listed, starting with James Tarbox 33 with his wife and children, half way down the list is Elizabeth WALDUCK (transcribed wrongly) aged 20, listed as a visitors,  ok so far! now,  the next person is Sarah Gomm aged 39 listed as Mother and a Widow. Next is Mary Ann Gomm aged 17 but transcribed as TARBOX and the list goes on with each child of Sarah Gomm being transcribed as TARBOX, but the actual image has the children of Sarah GOMM as "Ditto" 

Hope i haven't lost anyone yet!  lol

Now i am assuming that these are two separate families and it's all being mis-transcribed, but i just want to make sure before i email Ancestry and let them know.

As if my lot aint confusing enough with out all these mistakes!!  lol

27
Handwriting Deciphering & Recognition / Whats his surname?
« on: Tuesday 17 March 09 12:53 GMT (UK)  »
i've included the name above the one  i want so you have a little something to go by,

John   ??? who??



This is another one i'm transcribing as a practice.  I put Hancock but it was wrong. the " Clue" i was given was "Horrocks is the cotton manufacturer but I said " the n needs replacing with a double letter, sounds similar to a Lancashire cotton manufacturer"."


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