To those who provided information on my request, I offer you my thanks. I had some sketchy details, but the detail I got from this group was most helpful. Thanks again, John Rylatt On Sun, Dec 21, 2014 at 11:38 AM, John Rylatt <[email protected]> wrote: > Could SKS please help me here? > I am looking for details of a marriage between an Elizabeth Gibbs and > George Rilott/Smalley? in Lincoln about 1810. George was the illegitimate > child of George Rilott and Margaret Smalley/Small and was born 1788 in > South Kyme. > I am unsure of his identity at the time of his marriage to Elizabeth. Any > further information would be most welcome. > > Thank you, John Rylatt. >
FreeREG have a marriage for Elizabeth Gibbs and George Smalley on 18th Feb 1810 at St Peter in Eastgate, Lincoln. Ann -----Original Message----- From: John Rylatt via Sent: Sunday, December 21, 2014 4:38 PM To: [email protected] Subject: [LIN] Marriage info Could SKS please help me here? I am looking for details of a marriage between an Elizabeth Gibbs and George Rilott/Smalley? in Lincoln about 1810. George was the illegitimate child of George Rilott and Margaret Smalley/Small and was born 1788 in South Kyme. I am unsure of his identity at the time of his marriage to Elizabeth. Any further information would be most welcome. Thank you, John Rylatt. ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. http://www.avast.com
Third marriage, left-hand side. http://www.lincstothepast.com/Records/RecordDisplayTranscript.aspx?oid=616573&iid=411579 Pam Proud to be a member of Lincolnshire Family History Society http://www.lincolnshirefhs.co.uk/ On 21/12/2014 16:38, John Rylatt via wrote: > Could SKS please help me here? > I am looking for details of a marriage between an Elizabeth Gibbs and > George Rilott/Smalley? in Lincoln about 1810. George was the illegitimate > child of George Rilott and Margaret Smalley/Small and was born 1788 in > South Kyme. > I am unsure of his identity at the time of his marriage to Elizabeth. Any > further information would be most welcome. > > Thank you, John Rylatt. > > ------------------------------- >
Hi, Missing Lincs, If you have web-based e-mail, like I do, you have a limit set on how much storage you can have on your ISP's server. This disk space is called your "quota". Most vendors give you at least 3 million characters (3Mb) of storage. Others give you twice as much or more. Some vendors will be happy to SELL you additional storage because they know that you feel a compulsion to keep everything. Now, if your Quota fills up, what happens? Either your ISP shrugs and says, "OK, let her have another Megabyte" or they just let your incoming e-mail get bounced back to the sender. At this point, no one can contact you to let you know. So what is your Quota? Some systems tell you when you log in: "You have used 80% of your assigned space" or something similar. My ISP doesn't tell me anything. If you are using web-based e-mail, clean out your folders first (you can download some of the important stuff to your local hard drive). And clean out the backlog of e-mail you have read, but not filed. This is your first job for 2015. Cleaning House! Lou
Could SKS please help me here? I am looking for details of a marriage between an Elizabeth Gibbs and George Rilott/Smalley? in Lincoln about 1810. George was the illegitimate child of George Rilott and Margaret Smalley/Small and was born 1788 in South Kyme. I am unsure of his identity at the time of his marriage to Elizabeth. Any further information would be most welcome. Thank you, John Rylatt.
My Gossling family were from Pinchbeck which is very close to Spalding FYI Ron Wingrove -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Barbara & Dusty Miller via Sent: Wednesday, December 17, 2014 4:27 PM To: [email protected] Subject: [LIN] Peck Family Hi List, I am trying to find my 4x Great grandfather & family John PECK bn 1801 married 13 May 1822 in Spalding, Lincolnshire to Mary nee WHITAKER bn 1806 they had 10 children all bn Spalding, Lincolnshire William bn 1824 John bn 1826 Mary Ann BURT nee PECK bn 1830 died 1921 Joseph bn 1833 Fanny bn 1834 James bn 1836 Thomas bn 1838 Matthew W bn 1840 Martha Baker bn 1845 Eliza bn 1845 I would appreciate any help on this family. Nicole Marton, New Zealand [email protected] ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
Hi List, I am trying to find my 4x Great grandfather & family John PECK bn 1801 married 13 May 1822 in Spalding, Lincolnshire to Mary nee WHITAKER bn 1806 they had 10 children all bn Spalding, Lincolnshire William bn 1824 John bn 1826 Mary Ann BURT nee PECK bn 1830 died 1921 Joseph bn 1833 Fanny bn 1834 James bn 1836 Thomas bn 1838 Matthew W bn 1840 Martha Baker bn 1845 Eliza bn 1845 I would appreciate any help on this family. Nicole Marton, New Zealand [email protected]
Hello Nicole You don't say exactly what you want to find about your 4x ggf John PECK and family. They are easily found on line by going to (and paying to join) either Find My Past or Ancestry.co.uk. >From the 1851 census I see that John PECK claims to have been born in Deeping St James so you could go to Lincs to the Past (a free website) and working your way through the site find the Deeping St James parish records to see the entry for his baptism (assuming he was baptised) - and then see who his parents were and from there possibly their marriage and other siblings of his. Free Reg also has a lot of PECK family information - and with a little bit of lateral thinking and assumption you can find John's parents' marriage too (it was easy to do but I will not spoil your enjoyment of finding it for yourself). After finding anything on Free Reg you will then be able to verify that information is correct by finding the relevant entries in the Parish Records via Lincs to the Past. Through Free BMD you can find the records of the births of some of his children and send away for copies of their birth certificates, but you could also probably find the baptism entries through Lincs to the Past and save a bit of money. You can follow the family through on-going censuses and maybe marriages of the children. Civil registrations of births, marriages and deaths didn't start till after September 1837 so you will only find the younger children registered - and at the start of registration many were not registered. If you are totally new to genealogy - beware! You are possibly embarking on a very exciting and addictive hobby! Good luck, and have fun! Regards Elizabeth Pugh Whitehorse Yukon Canada -----Original Message----- From: Barbara & Dusty Miller Sent: Wednesday, December 17, 2014 1:27 PM To: [email protected] Subject: [LIN] Peck Family Hi List, I am trying to find my 4x Great grandfather & family John PECK bn 1801 married 13 May 1822 in Spalding, Lincolnshire to Mary nee WHITAKER bn 1806 they had 10 children all bn Spalding, Lincolnshire William bn 1824 John bn 1826 Mary Ann BURT nee PECK bn 1830 died 1921 Joseph bn 1833 Fanny bn 1834 James bn 1836 Thomas bn 1838 Matthew W bn 1840 Martha Baker bn 1845 Eliza bn 1845 I would appreciate any help on this family. Nicole Marton, New Zealand [email protected]
Many thanks to Ann & Nivard for finding the real Sarah. I am most grateful. Will correct my tree and add a reference point. After I've eaten humble pie with the new found cousin! June
Hi Anne I would certainly agree with MANKELL but threw the option in for the requester to look at & decide Nivard Ovington in Cornwall (UK) On 14/12/2014 11:21, Anne Cole wrote: > :-) If you compare his "n"s in banns with his "r"s I think it's definitely > MaNkeLL. > > Anne
:-) If you compare his "n"s in banns with his "r"s I think it's definitely MaNkeLL. 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 http://duncalfonenamestudy.tribalpages.com/ Lincolnshire Post 1837 Marriage Index http://mi.lincolnshiremarriages.org.uk/ Lincolnshire Family History Society http://www.lincolnshirefhs.org.uk -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Nivard Ovington via Sent: 14 December 2014 11:13 To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [LIN] George JACKSON / Sarah MANTLEY marriage Hi June The marriage you mention in 1810 is available on lincstothepast http://www.lincstothepast.com/ Use advanced search, enter Saxby All Saints Par1 Scroll through the hits for the marriage in that period Hopefully this will take you there, its seventh on the page <http://www.lincstothepast.com/Records/RecordDisplayTranscript.aspx?oid=8110 02&iid=364660> It looks like MANKELL or MARKELL to me Note, she makes her mark, so the name could be written as the cleric heard it, rather than how it actually was usually spelled (if in fact there was a usual spelling) They are both of this parish, so you are going to need other information to confirm this is your couple Nivard Ovington in Cornwall (UK) On 14/12/2014 10:47, June Metcalfe via wrote: > Could I borrow the expertise of members on this list to solve a > mystery please? Some years ago on Ancestry I found my Gt x 3 > Grandfather George Jackson a farmer in Horkstow, Lincolnshire. He > was born in 1787. I quickly put together a family for him via all > the usual searches, but the surname of his wife Sarah - born 1788 - > was elusive. This couple was on several Ancestry trees, with Sarah's > surname varying from Mansell/Mantle/Mankell etc, but none having > proof in any form for the choice they had made. Lots of > correspondence ensued, heated debates and fallings out but no-one > could prove anything. I adopted the Mansell variation, just to have > something concrete on file. In recent years I actually found what I > thought was the correct version - Mantley - and a marriage of 1810 > for the pair, in Horkstow, though Sarah was born in Winterton. > Recently I made contact with a fellow researcher in the United States > who is actually of my family. We share the same George JACK! SON. > He has challenged my version of Sarah's surname and when I went to > pull the 'evidence' from my file I find that I have omitted to > record it. I've spent a long while searching for the record again, > but can't locate it anywhere. Does anyone have any ideas how I can > go about this, where to search etc? > > > Many tia ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message ----- No virus found in this message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 2015.0.5577 / Virus Database: 4235/8732 - Release Date: 12/14/14 ----- No virus found in this message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 2015.0.5577 / Virus Database: 4235/8732 - Release Date: 12/14/14
Snap!! <g> Nivard Ovington in Cornwall (UK) On 14/12/2014 11:10, Anne Cole via wrote: > According to our marriage index (Volume 5 covering Yarborough, Manlake, > Westwold, Grimsby & Clee and Haverstoe Deaneries 1700-1837) George Jackson > married Sarah MANKELL at Saxby All Saints on 15 May 1810. This marriage will > have been taken from both the parish register and bishops transcripts, > assuming that both are extant. There is no indication that either record has > a different spelling of the surname which would be noted if that was the > case. > > There is no entry for this marriage in the index to Marriage Bonds and > Allegations (covering the whole of Lincolnshire from 1628-1837). > > Anne
Hi June The marriage you mention in 1810 is available on lincstothepast http://www.lincstothepast.com/ Use advanced search, enter Saxby All Saints Par1 Scroll through the hits for the marriage in that period Hopefully this will take you there, its seventh on the page <http://www.lincstothepast.com/Records/RecordDisplayTranscript.aspx?oid=811002&iid=364660> It looks like MANKELL or MARKELL to me Note, she makes her mark, so the name could be written as the cleric heard it, rather than how it actually was usually spelled (if in fact there was a usual spelling) They are both of this parish, so you are going to need other information to confirm this is your couple Nivard Ovington in Cornwall (UK) On 14/12/2014 10:47, June Metcalfe via wrote: > Could I borrow the expertise of members on this list to solve a > mystery please? Some years ago on Ancestry I found my Gt x 3 > Grandfather George Jackson a farmer in Horkstow, Lincolnshire. He > was born in 1787. I quickly put together a family for him via all > the usual searches, but the surname of his wife Sarah - born 1788 - > was elusive. This couple was on several Ancestry trees, with Sarah's > surname varying from Mansell/Mantle/Mankell etc, but none having > proof in any form for the choice they had made. Lots of > correspondence ensued, heated debates and fallings out but no-one > could prove anything. I adopted the Mansell variation, just to have > something concrete on file. In recent years I actually found what I > thought was the correct version - Mantley - and a marriage of 1810 > for the pair, in Horkstow, though Sarah was born in Winterton. > Recently I made contact with a fellow researcher in the United States > who is actually of my family. We share the same George JACK! SON. > He has challenged my version of Sarah's surname and when I went to > pull the 'evidence' from my file I find that I have omitted to > record it. I've spent a long while searching for the record again, > but can't locate it anywhere. Does anyone have any ideas how I can > go about this, where to search etc? > > > Many tia
According to our marriage index (Volume 5 covering Yarborough, Manlake, Westwold, Grimsby & Clee and Haverstoe Deaneries 1700-1837) George Jackson married Sarah MANKELL at Saxby All Saints on 15 May 1810. This marriage will have been taken from both the parish register and bishops transcripts, assuming that both are extant. There is no indication that either record has a different spelling of the surname which would be noted if that was the case. There is no entry for this marriage in the index to Marriage Bonds and Allegations (covering the whole of Lincolnshire from 1628-1837). 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 http://duncalfonenamestudy.tribalpages.com/ Lincolnshire Post 1837 Marriage Index http://mi.lincolnshiremarriages.org.uk/ Lincolnshire Family History Society http://www.lincolnshirefhs.org.uk -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of June Metcalfe via Sent: 14 December 2014 10:48 To: [email protected] Subject: [LIN] George JACKSON / Sarah MANTLEY marriage Could I borrow the expertise of members on this list to solve a mystery please? Some years ago on Ancestry I found my Gt x 3 Grandfather George Jackson a farmer in Horkstow, Lincolnshire. He was born in 1787. I quickly put together a family for him via all the usual searches, but the surname of his wife Sarah - born 1788 - was elusive. This couple was on several Ancestry trees, with Sarah's surname varying from Mansell/Mantle/Mankell etc, but none having proof in any form for the choice they had made. Lots of correspondence ensued, heated debates and fallings out but no-one could prove anything. I adopted the Mansell variation, just to have something concrete on file. In recent years I actually found what I thought was the correct version - Mantley - and a marriage of 1810 for the pair, in Horkstow, though Sarah was born in Winterton. Recently I made contact with a fellow researcher in the United States who is actually of my family. We share the same George JACK! SON. He has challenged my version of Sarah's surname and when I went to pull the 'evidence' from my file I find that I have omitted to record it. I've spent a long while searching for the record again, but can't locate it anywhere. Does anyone have any ideas how I can go about this, where to search etc? Many tia ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message ----- No virus found in this message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 2015.0.5577 / Virus Database: 4235/8732 - Release Date: 12/14/14 ----- No virus found in this message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 2015.0.5577 / Virus Database: 4235/8732 - Release Date: 12/14/14
Could I borrow the expertise of members on this list to solve a mystery please? Some years ago on Ancestry I found my Gt x 3 Grandfather George Jackson a farmer in Horkstow, Lincolnshire. He was born in 1787. I quickly put together a family for him via all the usual searches, but the surname of his wife Sarah - born 1788 - was elusive. This couple was on several Ancestry trees, with Sarah's surname varying from Mansell/Mantle/Mankell etc, but none having proof in any form for the choice they had made. Lots of correspondence ensued, heated debates and fallings out but no-one could prove anything. I adopted the Mansell variation, just to have something concrete on file. In recent years I actually found what I thought was the correct version - Mantley - and a marriage of 1810 for the pair, in Horkstow, though Sarah was born in Winterton. Recently I made contact with a fellow researcher in the United States who is actually of my family. We share the same George JACKSON. He has challenged my version of Sarah's surname and when I went to pull the 'evidence' from my file I find that I have omitted to record it. I've spent a long while searching for the record again, but can't locate it anywhere. Does anyone have any ideas how I can go about this, where to search etc? Many tia
Thanks for the help, I was just wondering if it may have meant that they moved from Bicker parish to Kirton Fen, (Swineshead). Thanks again,Norm On Thursday, December 11, 2014 3:07 PM, Peter and Jean Swinbank via <[email protected]> wrote: The note for the entry above (122) is in the same hand and seems to to be " Private brought into the church April 29" and the entry for 123 seems to read " Brought Private into the church January 2nd 1850". It may well refer to a private christening at home because the child was weak or ill or a stillbirth. See the entry for 127 as well and others further on in the register. Peter On 11 December 2014 at 19:24, Norm Gidcumb via <[email protected]> wrote: > I would appreciate it if someone please go to Bicker Parish > Records-Baptism 1849, image 15, page 16, third name down #123, Alice Capps > and can you make out what the note says? I believe part of it is Kirton > Fen Chuch January 25, 1850. > Thanks very much,Norm > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > [email protected] 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 [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
The note for the entry above (122) is in the same hand and seems to to be " Private brought into the church April 29" and the entry for 123 seems to read " Brought Private into the church January 2nd 1850". It may well refer to a private christening at home because the child was weak or ill or a stillbirth. See the entry for 127 as well and others further on in the register. Peter On 11 December 2014 at 19:24, Norm Gidcumb via <[email protected]> wrote: > I would appreciate it if someone please go to Bicker Parish > Records-Baptism 1849, image 15, page 16, third name down #123, Alice Capps > and can you make out what the note says? I believe part of it is Kirton > Fen Chuch January 25, 1850. > Thanks very much,Norm > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message
Hi Norm I think it says in effect that Alice was baptised privately on 19th April, and received into the church on 28th Jan 1850. Ann -----Original Message----- From: Norm Gidcumb via Sent: Thursday, December 11, 2014 7:24 PM To: Lincs List Subject: [LIN] Lincstothepast I would appreciate it if someone please go to Bicker Parish Records-Baptism 1849, image 15, page 16, third name down #123, Alice Capps and can you make out what the note says? I believe part of it is Kirton Fen Chuch January 25, 1850. Thanks very much,Norm ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message --- This email has been checked for viruses by Avast antivirus software. http://www.avast.com
I would appreciate it if someone please go to Bicker Parish Records-Baptism 1849, image 15, page 16, third name down #123, Alice Capps and can you make out what the note says? I believe part of it is Kirton Fen Chuch January 25, 1850. Thanks very much,Norm
Lincoln Branch is having a talk on George Boole by David Kenyon on the 14th March 2015 at Bracebridge Heath Village Hall 1.30 for 2.00 PM. I'm looking forward to it. He also features on the television display in the foyer at Lincolnshire Archives. 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 http://duncalfonenamestudy.tribalpages.com/ Lincolnshire Post 1837 Marriage Index http://mi.lincolnshiremarriages.org.uk/ Lincolnshire Family History Society http://www.lincolnshirefhs.org.uk -----Original Message----- From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Terry Wells via Sent: 08 December 2014 10:26 To: [email protected] Subject: [LIN] George Boole (1815-1864) Today, 8th December, is the 150th anniversary of the death of one of Lincoln's most famous sons George Boole, the mathematician without whom we would probably not be communicating on this list. <http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Boole> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Boole Next year marks the 200th anniversary of his birth and many events are being organised to commemorate this by University College, Cork (formerly Queen's College) in Ireland where he was the first professor of mathematics. He was my second cousin 5x removed - not that close but an honour to be associated with him. George was born in Lincoln but the family originated in Broxholme, just north of Lincoln. Terry Wells ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to [email protected] with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message ----- No virus found in this message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 2015.0.5577 / Virus Database: 4235/8699 - Release Date: 12/08/14 ----- No virus found in this message. Checked by AVG - www.avg.com Version: 2015.0.5577 / Virus Database: 4235/8697 - Release Date: 12/07/14