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Messages - jaybelnz

Pages: 1 2 3 [4] 5 6 7 ... 310
28
Australia / Re: Historical Reality TV series - The Colony
« on: Monday 04 March 19 03:29 GMT (UK)  »
Also on YouTube
https://youtu.be/zaZ8hwxZdBA

Maybe also available at your local library!  Our local libraries have DVD's and Videos to borrow, for  a small fee!!

29
The Lighter Side / Re: most uncommon surnames in your tree
« on: Sunday 03 March 19 07:19 GMT (UK)  »
 ;D ;D And I'll be juggling an uncut loaf!!  ;D

30
The Lighter Side / Re: If you could shout at someone from the past....
« on: Sunday 03 March 19 07:05 GMT (UK)  »
A long term brick wall -  I would shout at the Registrar, (or other responsible person who didn't put the maiden name) of my 3x Irish Great grandmother's 1845 Dublin marriage certificate. -OR - maybe, if it was the case, the person who caused the fire that destroyed the Archives!


31
The Lighter Side / Re: most uncommon surnames in your tree
« on: Saturday 02 March 19 02:18 GMT (UK)  »
I play poker with a Cakebread

LOL David, I play poker with a pack of cards and a few friends! 😜
(Sorry, couldn't help myself)

32
Scotland / Re: Stuart female christian name
« on: Wednesday 27 February 19 02:49 GMT (UK)  »
My Scottish mother's full name was Jessie McMillan Mason McAughtrie,  Jessie after her maternal grandmother, McMillan after her maternal great grandmother, and Mason after her great grandfather!  Can you imagine how much help I got from those names??  Magic!  Gave me a great start when I first begun my research!  💞💞💞 How lucky can a girl get! 👍👍

33
Ayrshire / Re: The life and works of Robert Burns
« on: Tuesday 26 February 19 21:45 GMT (UK)  »
I rather suspect that my Scottish great grandfather, Whitefield Watson, who wrote masses of poetry, may have cheated just a wee bit with his own version of Burn's poem in the early  "To Miss Logan", which he wrote in the 1900's!  🤗🤗

To Miss Logan, With Beattie's Poems, For A New-Year's Gift, Jan. 1, 1787

Again the silent wheels of time
Their annual round have driven,
And you, tho' scarce in maiden prime,
Are so much nearer Heaven.

No gifts have I from Indian coasts
The infant year to hail;
I send you more than India boasts,
In Edwin's simple tale.

Our sex with guile, and faithless love,
Is charg'd, perhaps too true;
But may, dear maid, each lover prove
An Edwin still to you.
************
And my great Grandfather's version:

THE SILENT WHEELS OF TIME - by Whitefield Watson

Once again, the silent wheels of time
Their annual round has driven
Another Milestone left behind
One year's march nearer Heaven

I have past three score and ten milestones
And still I'm struggling on
To reach the Land of Canaan
Where loved ones they have gone

Ofttimes the road was rough and thorny
And my path was filled with care
But the Lord was always with me
And he gave me strength to bear

When darkest clouds they compass round me
And my soul was filled with fear
I heard the voice of Jesus whisper
"I am with you do not fear"

Still today I am struggling onward
Onward at the Lord's command
And I know he will never leave me
Till I reach the promised land

When I stand on the brink of Jordan,
And hear the billows roar,
I'll be safe with the arms of Jesus round me
He will bring me safe to shore

When I am safe across the Jordan
Life's troubles will all be o'er
And I'll lay my weary burden down
On the sands of the Golden Shore
**********

** Whitefield Watson, my great grandfather emigrated to NZ  in 1924, and lived to the ripe old age of 78!

I'm very blessed to have inherited all his writings from his daughter, my grandmother, addresses to his local Burns Club in NZ, with newspaper clippings of his speeches, with his analysis of various poems written by Robert Burns, and also all the poetry he had written himself!  All up they total over 400 scanned pages, written in pencil in his own tiny writing, on the back of old envelopes. They were very difficult to read, as the writing was incredibly faded!  A friend who owned a Cartridge World Franchise scanned and enlarged them all for me, so now they're much easier to read! One day I'll get around to transcribing the rest of them, but at least they're all readable now. 👍👍👍

Modified to add:  My great grandfather worked in the Coalmines from the age of 8 years.  For a man who proved to be so very literate in his later years,  I'm assuming that he could have also be getting Schooling help from his parents! It must have come from somebody!

My Mum told me that he started to teach her to read when she was about 3, because she really loved books and being read to, and wanted to tell her younger sister stories at bedtime! He also taught her the alphabet and simple arithmetic!  By the time she started school when she was 6,  she was running rings around the other children in her primary class!


34
Ireland / Re: David Fleming m Eliza Sheehan ., 24 Nov. 1816.
« on: Friday 22 February 19 14:31 GMT (UK)  »
Sorry if I put it in the wrong place!  I'm not aware if her parents David Fleming and/ or his wife were Catholic or Protestant - all I know is that Mary Jane married in the Church of Ireland, was born in Portarlington, and with a name like Fleming, she may have been a Huegenot!  Many years ago, I was once in contact with a Ronnie Mathews,(no relation to me)  who had a website about Portarlington, and the Huegenot people, but he couldn't find anything about my David Fleming, his wife or his daughter Mary Jane in his registers! 

That, combined with no mother's surnames for either John Gibbons Mathews or Mary Jane Fleming on their 1845 marriage cert, these two have been the biggest brick wall since I began my research about 14 years ago!   These two were actually my very first find online on the old IGI, and I consequently ordered the microfiilm at the Local LDS Family History, and bingo, I was on my way!
Thanks for all your help everyone, it's truly very much appreciated, but perhaps it's past time for me put this couple to rest, and give everyone else a break!  (And way past time for me to go back to bed, it's a very hot summer's night and as usual I couldn't sleep)!   Thanks for the info re the registers, I'll have a crack at those this coming week!  🌺🌺🌺👍👍

35
Ireland / David Fleming m Eliza Sheehan ., 24 Nov. 1816.
« on: Friday 22 February 19 07:07 GMT (UK)  »
I have been clearing out some old genealogy papers today, and came across a note (in my own handwriting) about a marriage I have been looking for for several years.

"David Fleming m Eliza Sheehan ., 24 Nov. 1816 Res Passage, Passage West, Monkstown, Cork and Ross

This entry is in the lately released old Catholic Parish Marriages."
........
A David Fleming, was the father of my 3x Irish great grandmother, Mary Jane Fleming, who married John Gibbons Mathews in Dublin 1845, in the Church of Ireland, Her father was named as David Fleming, but a mother was not named on the marriage certificate!  The time frame from the Catholic marriage of a David Fleming and an Eliza Sheehan in 1816, , to the birth of a child, who could possibly be my Mary Jane was 2 years, so it's just possible this might be the marriage I've been looking for - forever, to find out just who was Mary Jane's Mother, as her name was not on the marriage 1845 marriage cert!  And I haven't been able to find a birth record for her either!

 Could Mary Jane Fleming be a Catholic,  all her census records list her as being born 1818 in Portarlington, so possibly even a Huegenot?? 

I hope someone might be able to decipher this post, sorry, it's pretty mixed up, but then... So am I!! Obviously! 🤔  Thanks though if you can help!  😜😜😜

36
The Lighter Side / Re: Could I have your opinion please?
« on: Wednesday 20 February 19 08:25 GMT (UK)  »
That's really interesting, I didn't realise that Australia didn't release their's either!

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