At the risk of bringing the theme on topic - the closest Black Country equivalent to haggis would be faggotts or savoury ducks. (Is the term "savoury duck" used in the BC or is it a Potteries expression?). Roughly similar ingredients to haggis but without the oatmeal. And much tastier. The ingredients (most of which, nowadays, many people would throw away) are stuffed into an abdominal membrane called "caul" rather than into a sheep's stomach. My grandmother used to call this "kell". A relative of mine who is now in his eighties, in Hallam Street, West Bromwich, still makes a batch of these occasionally. Ron S Original Message: ----------------- From: john/tina edwards jedwards14@neo.rr.com Date: Fri, 28 Apr 2006 08:22:26 -0400 To: ENG-BLACK-COUNTRY-L@rootsweb.com Subject: [B.C.] OFF TOPIC:Haggis I apologize for being off topic. You can send me answers off list but I have to ask.On a other list I'm on there is the question of: 101 Things to do with Haggis. First off do people really eat this?! It just doesn't sound very ummmm good. Also what would you do with it? Some suggestions have been doorstop,cat food,dog food, and so on. Again you can answer off list at jedwards14@neo.rr.com Thanks all for reading this Tina in Ohio ==== ENG-BLACK-COUNTRY Mailing List ==== The B.C. List Admin is Dave Ogden :- d.ogden@blueyonder.co.uk -------------------------------------------------------------------- mail2web - Check your email from the web at http://mail2web.com/ .
Army would have been Chelsea pensioner not the Royal Navy's Greenwich pensioner. Regards Mark ___________________________________________________________ NEW - Yahoo! 360 Your one place to blog, create, publish and share! http://uk.360.yahoo.com
I apologize for being off topic. You can send me answers off list but I have to ask.On a other list I'm on there is the question of: 101 Things to do with Haggis. First off do people really eat this?! It just doesn't sound very ummmm good. Also what would you do with it? Some suggestions have been doorstop,cat food,dog food, and so on. Again you can answer off list at jedwards14@neo.rr.com Thanks all for reading this Tina in Ohio
Many thanks to everybody who replied on this confirming my guess. This now leaves me with the potential issue of deciding which of the children came from Hannah and husband John and which if any might have come from her previous marriage or possibly his, if he was also widowed. As the list of children is in the 1841 census I don't have any relationships and most of the children were born pre 1837 so it looks like a parish register search if I can decide where to look! By 1851 John is dead and only 3 of the children are still with Hannah. The older ones having moved on. Thanks again Peter >I would appreciate some help on interpreting the mothers names on a birth > certificate. It gives the mother as: > > Hannah Foster late Malow formerly Sheldon. Should I take this to be a > widow > Malow who married a Foster and whose original name was Sheldon? > >
Is anyone else having problems getting onto Rowley Regis online website? Chris ___________________________________________________________ Switch an email account to Yahoo! Mail, you could win FIFA World Cup tickets. http://uk.mail.yahoo.com
Hi Listers I've just added a story from Judy Mellowes concerning the accidental death of a teenage boy in Gospel End village entitled "Death of John Grainger at Gospel End in 1865" See http://www.sedgleymanor.com/stories/stories.html#7 All the best Ian -- Ian Beach Bunbury, Western Australia ian@sedgleymanor.com Website "The Ancient Manor of Sedgley" in Staffordshire at http://www.sedgleymanor.com Listowner ENG-STS-SEDGLEY at http://lists.rootsweb.com/index/intl/ENG/ENG-STS-SEDGLEY.html Researching: Sedgley, Staffordshire : ADDIS(S), BEACH, CASWELL, GUTT(E)RIDGE, HOPKINS, FLAVELL, MILLARD & TURLEY Darlaston, Staffordshire : FOSTER, ORME & YATES Shropshire : ADDIS(S), BEACH/BACHE, CASWELL
Hello Chris, Many thanks for the explanation. That will teach me to keep my mouth shut without all the facts. Or if you prefer not to join in a conversation in the middle of a thread Regards Ted ----- Original Message ----- From: "chris" <edwards05@blueyonder.co.uk> To: <ENG-BLACK-COUNTRY-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Monday, April 24, 2006 8:58 AM Subject: [B.C.] Stepchildren etc. > Hi Ted and everybody, > In their every day conversation when referring to a relative our ancestors > (just as we do today) would have described the relationship e.g. "the > wife's brother" or "my sister's son." The difference being that whereas we > know the formal terminology used to define each of our relations in many > cases our ancestor's did not know nor in fact did they need to know. > Most working class people rarely had cause to write and often signed their > own name with a cross so the only time they had to go through the > inconvenience of coming up with unfamiliar words would be every ten years > for the census. > I have found that stepchildren were often entered on the census as > son-in-law or daughter-in-law. It is easy to understand the heads of > household's reasoning. After all if the wife's brother was the > brother-in-law and the wife's father was father in-law then surely the > wife's son was son-in-law. > In my own tree I have a genuine daughter-in-law simply listed as "son's > wife" and the grandchildren listed as "son's daughter" or "son's son." > In another extended family the son's children are listed correctly as > grandson/granddaughter but in the same large household the daughter's > children have been listed as nephew or niece. > Best wishes, > Chris > > > ==== ENG-BLACK-COUNTRY Mailing List ==== > The Assistant List Admins are Jean Morgan and Jan Ross > (Couldn't do it without those two great ladies) > > > > -- > No virus found in this incoming message. > Checked by AVG Free Edition. > Version: 7.1.385 / Virus Database: 268.4.6/324 - Release Date: 25/04/2006 > >
Mark: I have had exactly the same problem in the last couple of years, and have had quite a bit of success in tracing my ancestor. The first thing to say is that the records you need are only available at the Public Record Office in Kew, and you'll have to go there to search them. If that's OK, read on! If your man was a Greenwich Pensioner then he was either a sailor or a Royal Marine. If he was a Sergeant, then he must have been a marine. Take a look at the TNA site. There's some useful research guides there on tracing a Royal Marine. The marines were divided into 3 divisions, based at Chatham, Plymouth and Portsmouth. These divisions were then further divided into companies. The number of companies varied across time, but was often around 150. These weren't arranged in the obvious way of companies 1-50 being at Plymouth (say), but rather 1, 4, 7, 10 etc were at Chatham, 2, 5, 8 etc at Portsmouth and 3, 6, 9 etc at Plymouth. (It's possible this arrangement varied over time). It will greatly simplify your work if you can find out what company your man was in. The research leaflets give a number of ways of doing this, but in my case none of them worked. In the end I simply chose a year when I was fairly sure when my man was in the marines and then searched all of the pay records starting with the 1st company. This is actually much easier than it sounds, and it only took me about an hour to find him in the 72nd company, which is one of the Plymouth ones. The pay records are in ADM96, and called "Royal Marines Effective". There's one large sheet per company per quarter year. Unfortunately the indexes of exactly what records are to be found where aren't all that good, so there's a bit of trial and error needed to get going. But once you've found him in one pay record, you can track him forward and backwards in time. In each quarter's records., it states what happened to each man when he transferred in or out of barracks, usually from or to a ship. You then get the ship's records at the PRO etc. There's lots more, and if you're still with me and want to give it a go then email me off-list and I'll fill in more detail. Good luck Paul Prescott ----- Original Message ----- From: "Mark Jennings" <m_jenningsuk@yahoo.co.uk> To: <ENG-BLACK-COUNTRY-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Thursday, April 27, 2006 12:36 PM Subject: [B.C.] military records > Hi, > > Has anyone any experience of where to look for a > military number. > > I have a Greenwich pensioner 1851 born abt 1785, who > states on his sons marriage certificate, that he was a > staff sergeant. > > Presumably this was Royal Marines, he was not at > Trafalgar though. > > Has anyone any thoughts on what documentation to > request. I assume he would not be on an officers list. > > Has anyone any thoughts, or experience of this. > > Regards. > > Mark > > > > ___________________________________________________________ > Switch an email account to Yahoo! Mail, you could win FIFA World Cup > tickets. http://uk.mail.yahoo.com > > > ==== ENG-BLACK-COUNTRY Mailing List ==== > Wherever possible (except for personal messages) > please post replies to the list.Other people can learn from them! > >
I have looked at the National Archives, only knowing an approximate date of Birth abt 1785 name Joseph Attwood makes him difficult to tie down. It costs about £8.50 a document which is pricey when you are not sure where to look. It seems 3 divisions existed Portsmouth, Plymouth and Chatham, but they were only admin divisions, much of the organisation was by unit number or ship, the MOD historian has not replied as of yet. Regards Mark ___________________________________________________________ Switch an email account to Yahoo! Mail, you could win FIFA World Cup tickets. http://uk.mail.yahoo.com
Hi, Has anyone any experience of where to look for a military number. I have a Greenwich pensioner 1851 born abt 1785, who states on his sons marriage certificate, that he was a staff sergeant. Presumably this was Royal Marines, he was not at Trafalgar though. Has anyone any thoughts on what documentation to request. I assume he would not be on an officers list. Has anyone any thoughts, or experience of this. Regards. Mark ___________________________________________________________ Switch an email account to Yahoo! Mail, you could win FIFA World Cup tickets. http://uk.mail.yahoo.com
> Presumably this was Royal Marines Why should this be the Royal Marines? Ron S Original Message: ----------------- From: Mark Jennings m_jenningsuk@yahoo.co.uk Date: Thu, 27 Apr 2006 12:36:15 +0100 (BST) To: ENG-BLACK-COUNTRY-L@rootsweb.com Subject: [B.C.] military records Hi, Has anyone any experience of where to look for a military number. I have a Greenwich pensioner 1851 born abt 1785, who states on his sons marriage certificate, that he was a staff sergeant. Presumably this was Royal Marines, he was not at Trafalgar though. Has anyone any thoughts on what documentation to request. I assume he would not be on an officers list. Has anyone any thoughts, or experience of this. Regards. Mark ___________________________________________________________ Switch an email account to Yahoo! Mail, you could win FIFA World Cup tickets. http://uk.mail.yahoo.com ==== ENG-BLACK-COUNTRY Mailing List ==== Wherever possible (except for personal messages) please post replies to the list.Other people can learn from them! -------------------------------------------------------------------- mail2web - Check your email from the web at http://mail2web.com/ .
I'm not sure about the distance but one of my folks owned Sellmans Undertakers which was/is in Cannock. Not sure if this is too far away from Oldbury to be a maybe. Jaquie "Keith Millinson" <km004d7392@bluey onder.co.uk> To ENG-BLACK-COUNTRY-L@rootsweb.com 26/04/2006 20:07 cc Subject RE: [B.C.] Re:Undertakers I,m given to understand that Webb and Sons are undertakers in West Bromwich - New Street. Keith -----Original Message----- From: ROGER [mailto:roger@rhmiddleton.fsnet.co.uk] Sent: 26 April 2006 16:25 To: ENG-BLACK-COUNTRY-L@rootsweb.com Subject: [B.C.] Re:Undertakers Hello Cassy Just had a squint at some family funeral cards in my possession. The family was from Rounds Green, Oldbury and the funerals took place in the late 1930's. The burials were at Rood End Cemetery and the Funeral Directors were Jack Lee and Sons of Oldbury. One of the cards has Webb and Sons Oldbury on it but I don't know if that was the funeral director or the printers. I don't know if Jack Lee & Sons are still trading but they certainly were up to the late seventies when my Nan died. I have a brother in the trade I'll ask if he knows. All the best Pat ==== ENG-BLACK-COUNTRY Mailing List ==== The Assistant List Admins are Jean Morgan and Jan Ross (Couldn't do it without those two great ladies) -- No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG Free Edition. Version: 7.1.385 / Virus Database: 268.5.0/325 - Release Date: 26/04/2006 ==== ENG-BLACK-COUNTRY Mailing List ==== Wherever possible (except for personal messages) please post replies to the list.Other people can learn from them!
Hi Peter I think it does mean she was married twice , but check the West Midlands Site for marriages and if she was marriage before it will give you the names Sandwell Registration office is great and Alan who works there is always ready to help and advice a really nice and helpful man Cassy ----- Original Message ----- From: "Peter Wharton" <peter@wharton-family.org> To: <ENG-BLACK-COUNTRY-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Thursday, April 27, 2006 12:53 AM Subject: [B.C.] Names on birth certificate >I would appreciate some help on interpreting the mothers names on a birth > certificate. It gives the mother as: > > Hannah Foster late Malow formerly Sheldon. Should I take this to be a > widow > Malow who married a Foster and whose original name was Sheldon? > > > > I would also like to congratulate Sandwell Registration Office; I posted > my > request for this certificate on Monday this week and it arrived on > Wednesday! > > > > Regards > > > > Peter Wharton > > > > ==== ENG-BLACK-COUNTRY Mailing List ==== > The B.C. List Admin is Dave Ogden :- > d.ogden@blueyonder.co.uk > > >
Hi Peter >>Hannah Foster late Malow formerly Sheldon. Should I take this to be a >>widow Malow who married a Foster and whose original name was Sheldon?<< Yes exactly right, and you are lucky to have this reference to her former marriage. As the instructions to Registrars were to enter the maiden name of the mother, not all bothered with intervening names, making the tracing of the marriage(s) difficult if not impossible as you are looking for the marriage of a couple who "never married" - at least under thaat name! Kind regards Polly Polly Rubery List admin: MIDMARCH-L@rootsweb.com A genealogy and local history list covering the Counties of Brecon, Hereford, Monmouth, Shropshire, Stafford and Worcester. ENG-HEREFORD@rootsweb.com A genealogy and local history list covering the County of Hereford ROWBERRY-L@rootsweb.com ROWBERRY/RUBERY ONS - GOONS #278 rowberry@one-name.org http://www.rowberry.org Webmaster for the Herefordshire Family History Society http://www.rootsweb.com/~ukhfhs/index.html
Sense and Sensibity was written on-and-off between 1796 and 1811. The point here is that "son-in-law" was in normal use for what we would now call "step-son" well before census taking began. This was not a quirk or mistake on the part of the census-takers. Ron S Original Message: ----------------- From: snape@cix.co.uk snape@cix.co.uk Date: Wed, 26 Apr 2006 07:12:00 -0400 To: ENG-BLACK-COUNTRY-L@rootsweb.com Subject: Re: [B.C.] stepchildren etc. So Mrs Dashwood's son-in-law is her step son. Ron S Original Message: ----------------- From: Tracy Little jandt@cennick.fsnet.co.uk Date: Wed, 26 Apr 2006 10:25:05 +0100 To: ENG-BLACK-COUNTRY-L@rootsweb.com Subject: Re: [B.C.] stepchildren etc. I've only just caught up on messages so probably someone has already answered this, but in Sense & Sensibility the 2nd wife and her daughters are leaving their home because the inheritance has passed to the son of the first wife. So John Dashwood is Mrs Dashwood's step son Tracy > ----- Original Message ----- > From: <snape@cix.co.uk> > To: <ENG-BLACK-COUNTRY-L@rootsweb.com> > Sent: Tuesday, April 25, 2006 8:55 AM > Subject: RE: [B.C.] stepchildren etc. > > >> And what are we to make of the relationship in this quotation: >> >> No sooner was her answer dispatched, than Mrs. Dashwood indulged herself >> in >> the pleasure of announcing to her son-in-law and his wife that she was >> provided with a house, and should incommode them no longer than till > every >> thing were ready for her inhabiting it. They heard her with surprise. > Mrs. >> John Dashwood said nothing; but her husband civilly hoped that she would >> not be settled far from Norland. She had great satisfaction in replying >> that she was going into Devonshire.--Edward turned hastily towards her, > on >> hearing this, and, in a voice of surprise and concern, which required no >> explanation to her, repeated, "Devonshire! Are you, indeed, going there? >> So >> far from hence! And to what part of it?" She explained the situation. It >> was within four miles northward of Exeter. >> >> Jane Austen, Sense and Sensibility >> >> What was Mrs Dashwood's relationship to her son-in-law's wife? >> >> Ron S >> > > > > > > ==== ENG-BLACK-COUNTRY Mailing List ==== > The B.C. List Admin is Dave Ogden :- > d.ogden@blueyonder.co.uk > > > > -------------------------------------------------------------------- > mail2web - Check your email from the web at > http://mail2web.com/ . > > > > > ==== ENG-BLACK-COUNTRY Mailing List ==== > The Assistant List Admins are Jean Morgan and Jan Ross > (Couldn't do it without those two great ladies) > > ==== ENG-BLACK-COUNTRY Mailing List ==== The Assistant List Admins are Jean Morgan and Jan Ross (Couldn't do it without those two great ladies) -------------------------------------------------------------------- mail2web - Check your email from the web at http://mail2web.com/ . ==== ENG-BLACK-COUNTRY Mailing List ==== The B.C. List Admin is Dave Ogden :- d.ogden@blueyonder.co.uk -------------------------------------------------------------------- mail2web - Check your email from the web at http://mail2web.com/ .
Hi All I seem to have been removed from the list so using my other address Is any one going to Sandwell Archives who could do me a look up in the laocal paper for the death of my grandmother Emily Franklin , she was buried on the 6th of May 1939 at Rood End graveyard I am trying to find who the undertakers where and who attendend Will be grateful for any help Cassy ROGER <roger@rhmiddleton.fsnet.co.uk> wrote: Hello Cassy Just had a squint at some family funeral cards in my possession. The family was from Rounds Green, Oldbury and the funerals took place in the late 1930's. The burials were at Rood End Cemetery and the Funeral Directors were Jack Lee and Sons of Oldbury. One of the cards has Webb and Sons Oldbury on it but I don't know if that was the funeral director or the printers. I don't know if Jack Lee & Sons are still trading but they certainly were up to the late seventies when my Nan died. I have a brother in the trade I'll ask if he knows. All the best Pat ==== ENG-BLACK-COUNTRY Mailing List ==== The Assistant List Admins are Jean Morgan and Jan Ross (Couldn't do it without those two great ladies) Looking for Franklin ,Hughes, Juggins, Whitehouses.Cash, Walker, Hand, Griffiths,Proverbs,Hussleby,Round, All from the Blackcountry, Hughes,and Franklin, London Sayers, Taylor, Franklin from Lanc Franklin and Hughes London --------------------------------- How low will we go? Check out Yahoo! Messengers low PC-to-Phone call rates.
There are no dates given here for the marriage but All Saints, West Bromwich is always good for a lucky dip. And the transcribed registers are available on-line. Ron S Original Message: ----------------- From: Centric centric@rea-alp.com Date: Wed, 26 Apr 2006 17:29:00 -0500 To: ENG-BLACK-COUNTRY-L@rootsweb.com Subject: Re: [B.C.] RE: ENG-BLACK-COUNTRY-D Digest V06 #170 Hi Kay, Yup I think you're right. Have you done anything more on the JEWKES line? I cannot locate anything on the marriage of James PLANT & Sarah JEWKES. No-one seems able to locate their marriage certificate. If they were both from Tipton (close to Burnt Tree area), where would they probably have gotten married? Perhaps at St. Michael's or St. Edmund's perhaps? What would've been the closest church to Tipton area not considered in the Dudley Registration District? My certificate guy has done a search but Dudley says that they cannot locate the marriage certificate on the day that is mentioned in the IGI. Another mystery! Oh well, keep on trucking! All the best, Marion ----- Original Message ----- From: "kay-uk" <kay-uk@btconnect.com> To: <ENG-BLACK-COUNTRY-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Sunday, April 23, 2006 3:57 PM Subject: [B.C.] RE: ENG-BLACK-COUNTRY-D Digest V06 #170 > Hi Marion > > > > I think we may have been in touch before re the Jewkes link, or am I > mistaken? > > > > Regards > > Kay > > > > BILSTON (Whitwick, Leics) CANNEY (Witcham, Cambs) > > > CLUFF/CLOUGH (Whaplode Drove, Lincs/Helpston, Northants) > > HARDING (Tydd St Giles/St Mary, Cambs/Mildenhall, > Suffolk/Eckington/Doncaster ) HESELWOOD (Beighton, Derbyshire/Attercliffe > Sheffield/Doncaster) > > HOLROYD (Attercliffe Sheffield/Doncaster) HULL (Welshes > Dam, Cambs/Whitkirk. Leicestershire) JEWKES, (Dudley) > JONES (Dudley, Worcs/Eckington/Doncaster) MALTPRESS (Witcham, Cambs) > MAW(E) (Thorpe Hesley/Salvin, Notts/Attercliffe Sheffield) MINETT > (Ely, Cambs) > > MOAKES (Eckington, Derbyshire/Treversall, Nottinghamshire) MORTON > (Sheffield) > > NEWELL/NOWELL/NOWILL/NOEL (Walsall, Staffs./Eckington, > Derbyshire/Doncaster) > > OKEY (Ely, Cambs) PAINTER (Wednesbury) PASHLEY > (Swallownest/Parkgate > Rotherham) > > PEMBLETON (Teversal/Farnsfield, Notts) REYNOLDS (Bury St Edmonds, > Suffolk) > > ROBINSON (Walsall, Staffs) ROLLASON (Dudley) > > > RUMBELOW (Cambridgeshire/Suffolk) SAXTON > (Whiston, Yorks) > > SIMPKINS/SIMPKIN/SIMKINS (Witcham/Woodditton, Cambs.) > > SMITH (Maxey, Northants/ Whaplode Drove, Lincs/Doncaster) > > STUBLEY (Lincs/Cambs) SWANN (Sheffield) > TURNER (Stokesley, Sheffield) > > WALLIS (Witham, Cambs) > > > > _____ > > From: ENG-BLACK-COUNTRY-D-request@rootsweb.com > [mailto:ENG-BLACK-COUNTRY-D-request@rootsweb.com] > Sent: 16 April 2006 21:00 > To: ENG-BLACK-COUNTRY-D@rootsweb.com > Subject: ENG-BLACK-COUNTRY-D Digest V06 #170 > > > > > > > -- > No virus found in this outgoing message. > Checked by AVG Free Edition. > Version: 7.1.385 / Virus Database: 268.4.5/322 - Release Date: 22/04/2006 > > > > ==== ENG-BLACK-COUNTRY Mailing List ==== > The Assistant List Admins are Jean Morgan and Jan Ross > (Couldn't do it without those two great ladies) > > > > -- > No virus found in this incoming message. > Checked by AVG Free Edition. > Version: 7.1.385 / Virus Database: 268.4.5/322 - Release Date: 4/22/2006 > > ==== ENG-BLACK-COUNTRY Mailing List ==== Wherever possible (except for personal messages) please post replies to the list.Other people can learn from them! -------------------------------------------------------------------- mail2web - Check your email from the web at http://mail2web.com/ .
I would appreciate some help on interpreting the mothers names on a birth certificate. It gives the mother as: Hannah Foster late Malow formerly Sheldon. Should I take this to be a widow Malow who married a Foster and whose original name was Sheldon? I would also like to congratulate Sandwell Registration Office; I posted my request for this certificate on Monday this week and it arrived on Wednesday! Regards Peter Wharton
Cassy If you have a funeral date and can get to the archives at Smethwick ask them for the Oldbury Weekly News. You can see the original copy to. I found my gr grandad's death notice, a public notice and details of the funeral in it over a couple of weeks in 1939. Even down to listing who all the mourners were and who sent the wreaths. It also thanked H Pugh Undertaker of 37 Stone Street. Gaye Does anyone know who the local undertakers where in the early 1900-1940s in Oldbury Trying to find out who buried my grandmother at Roodend or has any one got any idea how I could find out ==== ENG-BLACK-COUNTRY Mailing List ==== The B.C. List Admin is Dave Ogden :- d.ogden@blueyonder.co.uk -- No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG Free Edition. Version: 7.1.385 / Virus Database: 268.4.6/323 - Release Date: 24/04/2006
I,m given to understand that Webb and Sons are undertakers in West Bromwich - New Street. Keith -----Original Message----- From: ROGER [mailto:roger@rhmiddleton.fsnet.co.uk] Sent: 26 April 2006 16:25 To: ENG-BLACK-COUNTRY-L@rootsweb.com Subject: [B.C.] Re:Undertakers Hello Cassy Just had a squint at some family funeral cards in my possession. The family was from Rounds Green, Oldbury and the funerals took place in the late 1930's. The burials were at Rood End Cemetery and the Funeral Directors were Jack Lee and Sons of Oldbury. One of the cards has Webb and Sons Oldbury on it but I don't know if that was the funeral director or the printers. I don't know if Jack Lee & Sons are still trading but they certainly were up to the late seventies when my Nan died. I have a brother in the trade I'll ask if he knows. All the best Pat ==== ENG-BLACK-COUNTRY Mailing List ==== The Assistant List Admins are Jean Morgan and Jan Ross (Couldn't do it without those two great ladies) -- No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG Free Edition. Version: 7.1.385 / Virus Database: 268.5.0/325 - Release Date: 26/04/2006