Hi again Deb,
I think you are selling yourself short with your comments about not contributing. After all, who was it who gave the original suggestion that KNORRTON might be CARNARTON - none other than Deb! Would we ever have got there otherwise? Well, I can assure you that I wouldn't have. And who is it who has suggested getting the birth cert of one of the children of George SLACK/SMITH and Amelia whatever!
Back on page 1(!), Valda listed SLACK entries in Cornwall on FreeBMD and in the IGI. From which it seemed that, though your family used SMITH in the censuses and later swapped over to that name entirely, they seem to have formally registered events under SLACK (and used it at baptisms). Valda also commented that SLACK was extremely rare in Cornwall and probably almost every one of the SLACK events would have been connected to your family.
So, from page 1, your Mary seems to be:
Mary SLACK, birth, Sep qtr 1858, Truro, Vol 5c, page 180Mary SLACK bap 30 Aug 1858, Truro, parents George SLACK and Amelia
Mary SLACK's birth cert might reveal all! Let's hope so - fingers crossed that Mary's mother turns out to be, on the birth cert, Amelia SLACK ms CARNARTON! This is such a great family and rare name that it would really be a pity if it doesn't turn out to be yours.
Incidentally, at some stage you might order in to your nearest LDS FHC the film of the baptism of George SLACK, 29 Dec 1803, age 1, parents William SLACK and Ann, St Andrew Holborn London to see if it mentions William's occupation - George having given his birthplace as Holborn, his father's name and occupation as William a coachmaker, and his age suiting a birthdate as ca 1803.
Hi again Valda,Of course I saw that wonderful forename Abednego. But didn't make a connexion with Benjamin and didn't even look at the actual
names of his children (Peter Charles, eh, and to think I even mentioned that it was Peter C training to be a schoolmaster). Duh! Thus does the reputation of the wielder of the IGI 'magic hat' crumple. What's worse, I even recollect that, after noticing the name Abednego, I searched in the Helston batch just for children to father Abednego - there were just the two CARNARTONs (and, distracted by the name Abednego, I still didn't notice their so-relevant forenames) but also three PERROW girls in the 1770s/1780s. No Margery/Margaret but I recall wondering whether these might have been her sisters.
Hi again Peter,That's a great list of C*N*T*Ns!
But whether you'll ever link them all up ...
I have two informal one-name studies and with one (LOCHTIE/LOCHTY) I can link every single one of them back to Aberdour in Fife Scotland. But can I link the two main lines (there are also a few loose ones) to each other? No way! Though I'm sure they are related - and I have no record of the name before the early 1600s (the lines being separate from much later but a big gap in between). I am sorely tempted by the folklore from the other main line that the original LOCHTIE was a 'Scandinavian' seaman who lobbed in to Aberdour in the late 1500s, married a local girl, and LOCHTIE/LOCHTY was what they made of his surname or place of origin.
Regards to all,
JAP
PS: I said I had no Cornish connexions and this is true. BUT, when I travelled to the UK for the first time, it was back in the days when one went by ship

And my ship docked at Falmouth - so I first stepped on land in England in Cornwall. The ship had engine trouble and went into dry dock (a tanker size dry dock in which my little ship was hardly a speck) in Falmouth. And to anyone who might regard this as "spooky" - not at all; I like puzzles and finally I've got involved in one which happens to be in Cornwall.