Thank you, Nivard --- another job for the cold, wet, dark days after Christmas. Janet ----- Original Message ----- From: "Nivard Ovington" <ovington1@sky.com> To: <eng-lincsgen@rootsweb.com> Sent: Friday, November 04, 2011 10:56 AM Subject: Re: [LIN] Admin. note: November theme > Hi Janet > > The official instructions and a downloadable form are here - > > http://www.veterans-uk.info/service_records/service_records.html > > The basics are the more proof of connection and can provide death > certificate if relevant the quicker they can help you > > There is a 30gbp fee and it can take six months although I have heard of > much quicker if all the relevant details are supplied > > Good luck > > Nivard Ovington in Cornwall (UK) > > > >> Hi, Nivard, >> How does one go about applying for service records, please? >> My dad was in the Green Howards during WW2 & was a PoW in Poland >> Janet > > >
www.angelicaromas.co.uk info@angelicaromas.co.uk Tel: 0845 1306355I think that must be the County Hospital on Drury Lane. It was opened in the late 18th Century and continued until the 1870s. THe hospital grounds bordered most of the west side of Michaelgate. The building is still in existence and, following its life as a hospital, became a theological college, I think it is now part of the University of Lincoln Phil > Date: Sun, 6 Nov 2011 18:24:11 +0000 > From: ellis-b@sky.com > To: eng-lincsgen@rootsweb.com > Subject: [LIN] Michaelgate Lincoln > > Hello > On the 1871 census I have an ancestor who is a patient in the Michaelgate > Hospital, Lincoln. > Can anyone tell me anything about this hospital please. > Regrads > Brenda > > -- > ellis-b@sky.com > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to ENG-LINCSGEN-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
Hello On the 1871 census I have an ancestor who is a patient in the Michaelgate Hospital, Lincoln. Can anyone tell me anything about this hospital please. Regrads Brenda -- ellis-b@sky.com
Ah yes, Legsby 1761. The word you have as sun?? is "run". I'm afraid there are a few like that, and some of the railway accidents are even worse. Anne Anne Cole, President, Lincolnshire Family History Society Duncalf(e)/Duncuff/Duncuft One-name Study GOONS member 513 http://www.one-name.org/profiles/duncalf.html Lincolnshire Post 1837 Marriage Index http://mi.lincolnshiremarriages.org.uk/ Lincolnshire Family History Society http://www.lincolnshirefhs.org.uk > -----Original Message----- > From: eng-lincsgen-bounces@rootsweb.com [mailto:eng-lincsgen- > bounces@rootsweb.com] On Behalf Of Chris Hewitt > Sent: 05 November 2011 20:35 > To: eng-lincsgen@rootsweb.com > Subject: Re: [LIN] Unusual inquest > > On 05/11/2011 10:33, Anne Cole wrote: > > I came across this yesterday, perhaps the most unusual cause of death I > have > > come across, apart from the man who died from "drinking from a gourd" in > the > > 1750s, or the lad who fell from the balcony of a theatre onto the > orchestra > > in around 1814. > > > > Warning: don't read if you are squeamish! > > > > A 19 year old youth, Francis Smith of Donington, got onto a wall "better > to > > watch the proceedings of a young girl and a lad". They spotted him so he > got > > off the wall rather quickly and landed on a dahlia stake injuring "the > lower > > part of his person". He died of tetanus about 3 weeks later. > > A distant half-relative of mine (William Barnard aged about 25) went > went along similar lines. The same warning applies! > > "the aforesaid Wm Barnard was upon a Certain Hay Stack in a Close in > Bardney Parish, & was Sliding down often ye said Hay Stack, a Racke > (sic) was stood against the same, & ye shaft of ye said Racke sun?? up > his fundament & wounded & tore the Bowells (sic) of ye said deceas'd on > 21 Instant who Lingering & Languishing died of the said mortall (sic) > wound" > > Nasty! > > Chris > > -- > Chris Hewitt - chris@liquid-diamonds.org.uk - Team AMIGA > Home Page - http://www.liquid-diamonds.org.uk/ > Prisoner: Cell Block H Mailing List - http://www.pcbh.org.uk/ > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to ENG-LINCSGEN- > request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the > subject and the body of the message
On 05/11/2011 10:33, Anne Cole wrote: > I came across this yesterday, perhaps the most unusual cause of death I have > come across, apart from the man who died from "drinking from a gourd" in the > 1750s, or the lad who fell from the balcony of a theatre onto the orchestra > in around 1814. > > Warning: don't read if you are squeamish! > > A 19 year old youth, Francis Smith of Donington, got onto a wall "better to > watch the proceedings of a young girl and a lad". They spotted him so he got > off the wall rather quickly and landed on a dahlia stake injuring "the lower > part of his person". He died of tetanus about 3 weeks later. A distant half-relative of mine (William Barnard aged about 25) went went along similar lines. The same warning applies! "the aforesaid Wm Barnard was upon a Certain Hay Stack in a Close in Bardney Parish, & was Sliding down often ye said Hay Stack, a Racke (sic) was stood against the same, & ye shaft of ye said Racke sun?? up his fundament & wounded & tore the Bowells (sic) of ye said deceas’d on 21 Instant who Lingering & Languishing died of the said mortall (sic) wound" Nasty! Chris -- Chris Hewitt - chris@liquid-diamonds.org.uk - Team AMIGA Home Page - http://www.liquid-diamonds.org.uk/ Prisoner: Cell Block H Mailing List - http://www.pcbh.org.uk/
I came across this yesterday, perhaps the most unusual cause of death I have come across, apart from the man who died from "drinking from a gourd" in the 1750s, or the lad who fell from the balcony of a theatre onto the orchestra in around 1814. Warning: don't read if you are squeamish! A 19 year old youth, Francis Smith of Donington, got onto a wall "better to watch the proceedings of a young girl and a lad". They spotted him so he got off the wall rather quickly and landed on a dahlia stake injuring "the lower part of his person". He died of tetanus about 3 weeks later. Anne Anne Cole, President, Lincolnshire Family History Society Duncalf(e)/Duncuff/Duncuft One-name Study GOONS member 513 http://www.one-name.org/profiles/duncalf.html Lincolnshire Post 1837 Marriage Index http://mi.lincolnshiremarriages.org.uk/ Lincolnshire Family History Society http://www.lincolnshirefhs.org.uk
Thank you Ann, all your posts are interesting, but this one in particular is. Sounds like the basis for a novel. I wonder if there is anyone on here who can flesh it out, or maybe it's a skeleton best left in the cupboard! Phil Sent via BlackBerry® from BT -----Original Message----- From: Anne Cole <duncalf@one-name.org> Date: Sat, 5 Nov 2011 10:17:19 To: <eng-lincsgen@rootsweb.com> Subject: [LIN] Bastardy Cases in the Newspaper LRSM = Lincoln, Rutland & Stamford Mercury Full details from the newspaper are given below; I have no further information LRSM 18 January 1856 [Boston] A woman of respectable appearance applied for a summons on the putative father of her illegitimate child. She had, she said, been separated from her husband four years, and she believed he was dead until a few months since, when, on going to Paris with her late paramour, she found that he was living there and had taken another wife. She had co-habited with the father of the child about 18 months, but he had now deserted her, and she was quite destitute. Her husband's name was Wm. ALFORD, and the name of the child's father was Geo. ROBINSON, and he was now a carter on the Great Northern. The summons was granted. [More of this one below] Spilsby Petty Sessions 14 January Mary Ann WRIGHT, of Friskney, v. Thos. HOLDHAM, of Freiston. Affiliation application. Dismissed for want of sufficient evidence. Louth Borough Petty Sessions 11 January John INGOLDMELLS, a porter at Hull, was charged by Martha WEBSTER with being the father of her illegitimate child. Ordered to pay expenses of apprehension, and 1s. 6d. weekly to the child. Eliz. SHAW, servant at Mr. CALTHORPE's, of Withern, charged John RAITHBY, groom, with being the father of her bastard child. Ordered to pay 1s. 6d. per week. LRSM 25 January 1856 Market Rasen Petty Sessions 21 January Eliz. WINN, of Thoresway, singlewoman, obtained an order upon Job PARISH, of Scamblesby, labourer, for the payment of 1s. 6d. per week towards the maintenance of her illegitimate child. Boston Petty Sessions 18 January Euphemia ALFORD, a married woman, applied for an order on Geo. ROBINSON, for the support of an illegitimate child, of which she alleged he was the father. Mr. CHAPMAN appeared for the applicant, and Mr. YORK for the defendant. The case presented peculiar features. The applicant deposed that she was married to Alford in 1847. In 1848 he deserted her, and she believed that he was dead. About the middle of 1854 she became acquainted with the defendant, a porter on the Great Northern railway, and lived with him as his wife. In April, 1855, the child was born of which he was the father. She and defendant subsequently went to France, and there she accidentally met her husband, who had married again. She and defendant returned to England, and continued to live together till very recently, when the defendant deserted her, leaving her quite destitute. Several letters alleged to be his were put in, in which he alludes to the child in fatherly terms. Mr. York contended that the applicant being a married woman, and her husband being alive, she had no claim - "she could not bastardise her own children". At all events she must prove that her husband was beyond the four seas at the time, and that by other evidence than her own. Mr. Chapman applied for a subpoena for Robinson, who would prove all that was required. Robinson, after some prevarication, admitted that the letters were his: that he had lived with the applicant, &c. He always thought she was a singlewoman up to the time of their going to France. When he found that she had a husband, and that she therefore could not be his, he withdrew. The Bench made an order for 2s. a week. The defendant signified he should appeal. ------------- It is worth mentioning that by the Poor Law Amendment Act of 1834, husbands were bound to maintain illegitimate children of their wives. Whether this included children born after the marriage is an interesting question. Perhaps the appeal will be reported and we shall find out. Anne Anne Cole, President, Lincolnshire Family History Society Duncalf(e)/Duncuff/Duncuft One-name Study GOONS member 513 http://www.one-name.org/profiles/duncalf.html Lincolnshire Post 1837 Marriage Index http://mi.lincolnshiremarriages.org.uk/ Lincolnshire Family History Society http://www.lincolnshirefhs.org.uk ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to ENG-LINCSGEN-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
LRSM = Lincoln, Rutland & Stamford Mercury Full details from the newspaper are given below; I have no further information LRSM 18 January 1856 [Boston] A woman of respectable appearance applied for a summons on the putative father of her illegitimate child. She had, she said, been separated from her husband four years, and she believed he was dead until a few months since, when, on going to Paris with her late paramour, she found that he was living there and had taken another wife. She had co-habited with the father of the child about 18 months, but he had now deserted her, and she was quite destitute. Her husband's name was Wm. ALFORD, and the name of the child's father was Geo. ROBINSON, and he was now a carter on the Great Northern. The summons was granted. [More of this one below] Spilsby Petty Sessions 14 January Mary Ann WRIGHT, of Friskney, v. Thos. HOLDHAM, of Freiston. Affiliation application. Dismissed for want of sufficient evidence. Louth Borough Petty Sessions 11 January John INGOLDMELLS, a porter at Hull, was charged by Martha WEBSTER with being the father of her illegitimate child. Ordered to pay expenses of apprehension, and 1s. 6d. weekly to the child. Eliz. SHAW, servant at Mr. CALTHORPE's, of Withern, charged John RAITHBY, groom, with being the father of her bastard child. Ordered to pay 1s. 6d. per week. LRSM 25 January 1856 Market Rasen Petty Sessions 21 January Eliz. WINN, of Thoresway, singlewoman, obtained an order upon Job PARISH, of Scamblesby, labourer, for the payment of 1s. 6d. per week towards the maintenance of her illegitimate child. Boston Petty Sessions 18 January Euphemia ALFORD, a married woman, applied for an order on Geo. ROBINSON, for the support of an illegitimate child, of which she alleged he was the father. Mr. CHAPMAN appeared for the applicant, and Mr. YORK for the defendant. The case presented peculiar features. The applicant deposed that she was married to Alford in 1847. In 1848 he deserted her, and she believed that he was dead. About the middle of 1854 she became acquainted with the defendant, a porter on the Great Northern railway, and lived with him as his wife. In April, 1855, the child was born of which he was the father. She and defendant subsequently went to France, and there she accidentally met her husband, who had married again. She and defendant returned to England, and continued to live together till very recently, when the defendant deserted her, leaving her quite destitute. Several letters alleged to be his were put in, in which he alludes to the child in fatherly terms. Mr. York contended that the applicant being a married woman, and her husband being alive, she had no claim - "she could not bastardise her own children". At all events she must prove that her husband was beyond the four seas at the time, and that by other evidence than her own. Mr. Chapman applied for a subpoena for Robinson, who would prove all that was required. Robinson, after some prevarication, admitted that the letters were his: that he had lived with the applicant, &c. He always thought she was a singlewoman up to the time of their going to France. When he found that she had a husband, and that she therefore could not be his, he withdrew. The Bench made an order for 2s. a week. The defendant signified he should appeal. ------------- It is worth mentioning that by the Poor Law Amendment Act of 1834, husbands were bound to maintain illegitimate children of their wives. Whether this included children born after the marriage is an interesting question. Perhaps the appeal will be reported and we shall find out. Anne Anne Cole, President, Lincolnshire Family History Society Duncalf(e)/Duncuff/Duncuft One-name Study GOONS member 513 http://www.one-name.org/profiles/duncalf.html Lincolnshire Post 1837 Marriage Index http://mi.lincolnshiremarriages.org.uk/ Lincolnshire Family History Society http://www.lincolnshirefhs.org.uk
Hi Joan Don't overlook The Times Digital Archive - many libraries have subscriptions now. I have had a couple of inquests reprinted in The Times just because the case was interesting, though the deceased was quite an ordinary labourer. Mary ________________________________ From: "eng-lincsgen-request@rootsweb.com" <eng-lincsgen-request@rootsweb.com> To: eng-lincsgen@rootsweb.com Sent: Friday, 4 November 2011 8:00 PM Subject: ENG-LINCSGEN Digest, Vol 6, Issue 360 ----- Forwarded Message ----- Today's Topics: 1. Inquests - AYSCOUGH (Joan Van Daalen) 2. Re: Inquests - AYSCOUGH (Anne Cole) 3. Re: Inquests - AYSCOUGH (Joan Van Daalen) 4. Messingham burial records on free reg Henry george wilson and Mary Jane (june wilson) 5. Re: Messingham burial records on free reg Henry george wilson andMary Jane (Maria Borrill) 6. Re: Messingham burial records on free reg Henry george wilson andMary Jane (june wilson) 7. Re: Broughton By Brigg (Harold Scott) 8. Re: Broughton By Brigg (Peter and Jean Swinbank) Can anyone tell me if inquests from the late1840's or so be on-line anywhere? What newspaper might be in print in Louth around that time? I'm trying to find out what became of George AYSCOUGH b 1818 who seems to have disappeared from the face of the earth sometime around the death of his wife at the age of 27 in 1849 and that of his younger daughter aged 15 months in 1850. I'm wondering if we're looking at a suicide which in the circumstances might be a possibility. He can't be found in the 1851 census. The death of George AYSCOUGH listed on FreeBMD in 1858 is his father. Suggestions gratefully received. Joan in Newmarket, Canada. He's not on the Inquests Vol. 2 CD that covers the Stamford Mercury 1844-1851, so not in the Mercury unless I missed it! Anne Anne Cole, President, Lincolnshire Family History Society Duncalf(e)/Duncuff/Duncuft One-name Study GOONS member 513 http://www.one-name.org/profiles/duncalf.html Lincolnshire Post 1837 Marriage Index http://mi.lincolnshiremarriages.org.uk/ Lincolnshire Family History Society http://www.lincolnshirefhs.org.uk > -----Original Message----- > From: eng-lincsgen-bounces@rootsweb.com [mailto:eng-lincsgen- > bounces@rootsweb.com] On Behalf Of Joan Van Daalen > Sent: 03 November 2011 10:11 > To: Lincs List > Subject: [LIN] Inquests - AYSCOUGH > > Can anyone tell me if inquests from the late1840's or so be on-line > anywhere? What newspaper might be in print in Louth around that time? > > I'm trying to find out what became of George AYSCOUGH b 1818 who seems to > have disappeared from the face of the earth sometime around the death of > his wife at the age of 27 in 1849 and that of his younger daughter aged 15 > months in 1850. I'm wondering if we're looking at a suicide which in the > circumstances might be a possibility. He can't be found in the 1851 > census. > > The death of George AYSCOUGH listed on FreeBMD in 1858 is his father. > > Suggestions gratefully received. > > Joan in Newmarket, Canada. > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to ENG-LINCSGEN- > request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the > subject and the body of the message Thank you so much, Anne. I'm clutching at straws I'm afraid, but that's one thing I can cross off my list. Joan. Hi list been a long time , anyway was wondering if someone could help me, I've been doing my family tree since 20000 and found out many things as you do, i never knew my dad or his family that well so hence starting all this, one thing that has bugged me though all these years is the where about of my grandparents graves could be, they lived and farmed around messingham mostly East Butterwick and Susworth, granddad died in 1928 in East Butterwick and gran died 1950 in Wrawby , i haVE there actual dates of death , a cousin of mine has searched many church yards and the crem but nothing, it wasn't till last eve i saw a posting about free reg that made me look myself and there listed in burials for messingham was both gran and granddad Mary Jane wilson nee shucksmith and Henry George Wilson with the death dates i had found, so my query is does this mean they are actualy buried in Holy Trinity at Messingham it would be great to know at last, lots of my ancestors aret here too sorry it's a bit long winded kind regards june wilson >From Lincs to the past http://www.lincstothepast.com/Records/RecordDisplayTranscript.aspx?oid=777869&iid=371014 and http://www.lincstothepast.com/Records/RecordDisplayTranscript.aspx?oid=777869&iid=371064 Though it states Mary Jane was from Susworth. Maria Hi Maria hope your well, thank you so much for your kind help , granparents did live at Susworth also my dad was born there they had a small holding when granddad was alive best wishes june On Thu, Nov 3, 2011 at 4:01 PM, Maria Borrill <maria.borrill@ntlworld.com>wrote: > >From Lincs to the past > > http://www.lincstothepast.com/Records/RecordDisplayTranscript.aspx?oid=777869&iid=371014 > > and > > > http://www.lincstothepast.com/Records/RecordDisplayTranscript.aspx?oid=777869&iid=371064 > > Though it states Mary Jane was from Susworth.. > Maria > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > ENG-LINCSGEN-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message > Dear Nivard Ovington Thank you for your kind reply. I did not say as I did not it would be correct at that stage. I am trying to research the maternal side or my family the Nelson's I have a Charlotte Nelson marrying a Thomas Burton Charlotte born 3 Mar 1797 to William Nelson in Broughton by Brigg and this is the family I would love to research. So Nelson Broughton by Brigg 1800 as far back as I can go.. I have tried the www.lincstothepast.com but could not find my way in or find any Broughton by Brigg registers. Kind regards Harold -----Original Message----- From: Nivard Ovington Sent: Wednesday, November 02, 2011 4:13 PM To: eng-lincsgen@rootsweb.com Subject: Re: [LIN] Broughton By Brigg Hi Harold You don't say what it is or when so it may not help but are you aware there Parish Registers on www.lincstothepast.com Nivard Ovington in Cornwall (UK) Dear eng-lincsgen Listers, Please can anyone help with research in St Mary’s Parish Church of Broughton by Brigg. Kind regards Harold ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to ENG-LINCSGEN-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message Harold, Here is a link to some of the Broughton by Brigg registers. I found it simply by searching on Lincstothepast using the search term "Broughton Brigg", then going through the results list and clicking on likely links. http://www.lincstothepast.com/Records/RecordDisplaySearchResults.aspx?oid=561732&mode=c Peter On 3 November 2011 19:50, Harold Scott <harold.scott1@ntlworld.com> wrote: > > I have tried the www.lincstothepast.com but could not find my way in or > find > any Broughton by Brigg registers. > > Kind regards > > Harold > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > ENG-LINCSGEN-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > ENG-LINCSGEN-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message > To contact the ENG-LINCSGEN list administrator, send an email to ENG-LINCSGEN-admin@rootsweb.com. To post a message to the ENG-LINCSGEN mailing list, send an email to ENG-LINCSGEN@rootsweb.com. __________________________________________________________ To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to ENG-LINCSGEN-request@rootsweb.com with the word "unsubscribe" without the quotes in the subject and the body of the email with no additional text.
G'day form Western Australia, My grandfather served in 1918 with Lincolnshire regiment and then apparently Staffordshire Reg't before transferring to the (R)ASC. Ancestry gives me a copy of his medals card but I understood that his other service records were destroyed during the WW2 bombing of London. However, I've heard that there is a duplicate/alternative source of records further north - perhaps even in Scotland> Can anyone verify that especially by giving some web address or a postal address of the (Scottish ?) location? Peter Holmes Western Australia. Skype ; p.g.holmes [HOLMES (Witham on the Hill, Manthorpe, Spalding, Pinchbeck, Donington then Leicestershire)]. [DAVISON (Spalding, Donington, Ingoldmells, Skegness)]. [CRAGG (Lincolnshire, Leicestershire & Nottinghamshire)] [FREER (Leicestershire)]. [RYLOTT & WITHERINGTON (Anwick, N & S Kyme, N & S Rauceby, Surfleet, Gosberton Clough etc., Spalding)] [RYLOTT (Ontario Canada & some in New York & Florida USA)] Villages are in Lincolnshire unless stated. PLUS 4 DUTCH surname lines - from Rotterdam area (in Dutch). -----Original Message----- From: eng-lincsgen-bounces@rootsweb.com [mailto:eng-lincsgen-bounces@rootsweb.com] On Behalf Of Louis Mills Sent: Wednesday, 2 November 2011 6:25 AM To: Eng Lincsgen Subject: [LIN] Admin. note: November theme Let's devote November to our military kin, men AND WOMEN who served and were from Lincolnshire.
Hi Peter I am sorry to tell you but you are misinformed for those whose service finished before 1921 If they served before 1921 and continued in service after their service records should be with the ministry of defense in Glasgow Service records for those whose service ended before 1921 will be at Kew and largely fall into two groups, available on Ancestry and on film at the LDS The burned records which are the surviving pages of those records which were two thirds destroyed in WW2, the remainder that survived vary from complete files to a charred page and anything inbetween The second which Ancestry call the Pension records, are largely those service records which were not with the first lot, mainly due to being in other departments and offices, you can find duplicates in both files Apart from those the Guards kept their own records (some of which were destroyed in WW2 due to bomb damage) and the household cavalry whose records survived intact as they held them separately Nivard Ovington in Cornwall (UK) G'day form Western Australia, My grandfather served in 1918 with Lincolnshire regiment and then apparently Staffordshire Reg't before transferring to the (R)ASC. Ancestry gives me a copy of his medals card but I understood that his other service records were destroyed during the WW2 bombing of London. However, I've heard that there is a duplicate/alternative source of records further north - perhaps even in Scotland> Can anyone verify that especially by giving some web address or a postal address of the (Scottish ?) location? Peter Holmes
Hi Janet The official instructions and a downloadable form are here - http://www.veterans-uk.info/service_records/service_records.html The basics are the more proof of connection and can provide death certificate if relevant the quicker they can help you There is a 30gbp fee and it can take six months although I have heard of much quicker if all the relevant details are supplied Good luck Nivard Ovington in Cornwall (UK) > Hi, Nivard, > How does one go about applying for service records, please? > My dad was in the Green Howards during WW2 & was a PoW in Poland > Janet
Hi, Nivard, How does one go about applying for service records, please? My dad was in the Green Howards during WW2 & was a PoW in Poland Janet ----- Original Message ----- From: "Nivard Ovington" <ovington1@sky.com> To: <eng-lincsgen@rootsweb.com> Sent: Wednesday, November 02, 2011 10:09 AM Subject: Re: [LIN] Admin. note: November theme > Hi Terry > > The records would probably be the service records of the man concerned and > as such are still with the M.O.D. > (records after 1921) > > Next of kin can apply for copies for a fee with proof of connection and > proof of death of the serviceman > > Nivard Ovington in Cornwall (UK) > > > >> Lou says his mother was "primarily handling the records of deceased >> airmen" during WWII. >> >> I wonder if these records still exist - they are probably the very same >> records that many family historians would love to see today! >> >> Terry M Wells > > >
Harold, Here is a link to some of the Broughton by Brigg registers. I found it simply by searching on Lincstothepast using the search term "Broughton Brigg", then going through the results list and clicking on likely links. http://www.lincstothepast.com/Records/RecordDisplaySearchResults.aspx?oid=561732&mode=c Peter On 3 November 2011 19:50, Harold Scott <harold.scott1@ntlworld.com> wrote: > > I have tried the www.lincstothepast.com but could not find my way in or > find > any Broughton by Brigg registers. > > Kind regards > > Harold > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > ENG-LINCSGEN-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > ENG-LINCSGEN-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message >
Dear Nivard Ovington Thank you for your kind reply. I did not say as I did not it would be correct at that stage. I am trying to research the maternal side or my family the Nelson's I have a Charlotte Nelson marrying a Thomas Burton Charlotte born 3 Mar 1797 to William Nelson in Broughton by Brigg and this is the family I would love to research. So Nelson Broughton by Brigg 1800 as far back as I can go. I have tried the www.lincstothepast.com but could not find my way in or find any Broughton by Brigg registers. Kind regards Harold -----Original Message----- From: Nivard Ovington Sent: Wednesday, November 02, 2011 4:13 PM To: eng-lincsgen@rootsweb.com Subject: Re: [LIN] Broughton By Brigg Hi Harold You don't say what it is or when so it may not help but are you aware there Parish Registers on www.lincstothepast.com Nivard Ovington in Cornwall (UK) Dear eng-lincsgen Listers, Please can anyone help with research in St Mary’s Parish Church of Broughton by Brigg. Kind regards Harold ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to ENG-LINCSGEN-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
Hi Maria hope your well, thank you so much for your kind help , granparents did live at Susworth also my dad was born there they had a small holding when granddad was alive best wishes june On Thu, Nov 3, 2011 at 4:01 PM, Maria Borrill <maria.borrill@ntlworld.com>wrote: > >From Lincs to the past > > http://www.lincstothepast.com/Records/RecordDisplayTranscript.aspx?oid=777869&iid=371014 > > and > > > http://www.lincstothepast.com/Records/RecordDisplayTranscript.aspx?oid=777869&iid=371064 > > Though it states Mary Jane was from Susworth. > Maria > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > ENG-LINCSGEN-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message >
>From Lincs to the past http://www.lincstothepast.com/Records/RecordDisplayTranscript.aspx?oid=777869&iid=371014 and http://www.lincstothepast.com/Records/RecordDisplayTranscript.aspx?oid=777869&iid=371064 Though it states Mary Jane was from Susworth. Maria
Hi list been a long time , anyway was wondering if someone could help me, I've been doing my family tree since 20000 and found out many things as you do, i never knew my dad or his family that well so hence starting all this, one thing that has bugged me though all these years is the where about of my grandparents graves could be, they lived and farmed around messingham mostly East Butterwick and Susworth, granddad died in 1928 in East Butterwick and gran died 1950 in Wrawby , i haVE there actual dates of death , a cousin of mine has searched many church yards and the crem but nothing, it wasn't till last eve i saw a posting about free reg that made me look myself and there listed in burials for messingham was both gran and granddad Mary Jane wilson nee shucksmith and Henry George Wilson with the death dates i had found, so my query is does this mean they are actualy buried in Holy Trinity at Messingham it would be great to know at last, lots of my ancestors aret here too sorry it's a bit long winded kind regards june wilson
He's not on the Inquests Vol. 2 CD that covers the Stamford Mercury 1844-1851, so not in the Mercury unless I missed it! Anne Anne Cole, President, Lincolnshire Family History Society Duncalf(e)/Duncuff/Duncuft One-name Study GOONS member 513 http://www.one-name.org/profiles/duncalf.html Lincolnshire Post 1837 Marriage Index http://mi.lincolnshiremarriages.org.uk/ Lincolnshire Family History Society http://www.lincolnshirefhs.org.uk > -----Original Message----- > From: eng-lincsgen-bounces@rootsweb.com [mailto:eng-lincsgen- > bounces@rootsweb.com] On Behalf Of Joan Van Daalen > Sent: 03 November 2011 10:11 > To: Lincs List > Subject: [LIN] Inquests - AYSCOUGH > > Can anyone tell me if inquests from the late1840's or so be on-line > anywhere? What newspaper might be in print in Louth around that time? > > I'm trying to find out what became of George AYSCOUGH b 1818 who seems to > have disappeared from the face of the earth sometime around the death of > his wife at the age of 27 in 1849 and that of his younger daughter aged 15 > months in 1850. I'm wondering if we're looking at a suicide which in the > circumstances might be a possibility. He can't be found in the 1851 > census. > > The death of George AYSCOUGH listed on FreeBMD in 1858 is his father. > > Suggestions gratefully received. > > Joan in Newmarket, Canada. > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to ENG-LINCSGEN- > request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the > subject and the body of the message
Thank you so much, Anne. I'm clutching at straws I'm afraid, but that's one thing I can cross off my list. Joan.