Author Topic: Haines england 1800s  (Read 14687 times)

Offline KarenM

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Re: Haines england 1800s
« Reply #9 on: Monday 10 April 06 01:12 BST (UK) »
I've got Haines in my (husband really) tree who came to Canada early 1800's, not sure off hand where in England they came from though.

Karen
Gandley (but known as Stanley in Canada)- Ireland to Birmingham<br />Ball, Kempson & Franklin - Birmingham<br />Shorter - Surrey<br />Dyer - Devon<br />Dawkins - Co. Cork, Ireland<br />Heffernan - Ireland
Huck - Alsace, France
Reinhart - Baden, Germany
Bowman & Ellis - England
Etheridge - Gloucestershire

Who all came to Canada in a little row boat, clap clap, clap your hands!!

Offline Emmeline

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Re: Haines england 1800s
« Reply #10 on: Monday 10 April 06 02:16 BST (UK) »
My married name is Haines. My pa/in/law was born in Ballarat in Australia - 1902 -   and came to New Zealand as a small boy with his family.
I have read that Haines means " a viney covered cottage " - guess that's just one meaning of the name.

Offline KarenM

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Re: Haines england 1800s
« Reply #11 on: Monday 10 April 06 14:19 BST (UK) »
Just checked into the Haines family of my husband (mother-in-law's maiden name) and seems the started out in Boxgrove Sussex, England in 1614, the son Richard was born about 1639 in Aynhoe, Northampton and then fled England for religious freedom to New Jersey and Pennsylivania, they were quakers and then eventually up into Canada around 1807. 

http://www.sharontemple.ca/SThistory.html

Karen
Gandley (but known as Stanley in Canada)- Ireland to Birmingham<br />Ball, Kempson & Franklin - Birmingham<br />Shorter - Surrey<br />Dyer - Devon<br />Dawkins - Co. Cork, Ireland<br />Heffernan - Ireland
Huck - Alsace, France
Reinhart - Baden, Germany
Bowman & Ellis - England
Etheridge - Gloucestershire

Who all came to Canada in a little row boat, clap clap, clap your hands!!

Offline thaines

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Re: Haines england 1800s
« Reply #12 on: Thursday 01 April 10 02:24 BST (UK) »
My family was in Leicestershire until 1884 when they moved to the US. My gggrandfather  moved to Hitchin and died there in 1878.
Haines


Offline Karenski8

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Re: Haines england 1800s
« Reply #13 on: Thursday 10 November 22 15:04 GMT (UK) »
My own Haines ancestors are all from Norfolk, around the western corner of the Broads (Wroxham, Salhouse, Coltishall, etc), and I'd be happy to hear from anyone with similar interests.  It's a widespread and common name I think, but the Haines spelling seems to have been less common in early 1800s and quite rare earlier.  The spellings Haynes and Hayns (also Hayn and Hain) seem to be more frequent in older records.


Hi. My family is Haines from Wroxham. I'd love to get in touch and swap infomation

Offline sarah

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Re: Haines england 1800s
« Reply #14 on: Thursday 10 November 22 20:17 GMT (UK) »
Hello Karen welcome to RootsChat :)

I am sorry but blinky has turned off all email notification on their topics, we are no longer able to make contact with them for you.

Regards

Sarah
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