Hi Joyce, No Featherstone in my book but I only have one book and there are quite a few. cheers Gladys
Thank you Gladys. Not sure if any are mine. Sandie ----- Original Message ----- From: <Gladhall@aol.com> To: <ENG-NORTH-YORKS-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Saturday, August 09, 2003 5:14 PM Subject: [N'Yorks] Green Parnell > Hi Sandie, > No Parnells but 4 Greens. > > Charlotte Green Tees Tilery, Wife, Assaulted. Assaulted by husband, they > compromised. > > Joseph Green Castleton Tailor Assault. Assaulted by John Tindall. > > Robert Green Lingdale. Miner, Accident. Lived in Wilson Street, Lingdale, > legs crushed by fall of large quantity of stone at Messrs Bolckow, Vaughan > and Co's Boosbeck Mines/ > > > (the spelling Bolckow is how it appears in the book and not me getting my > fingers in a twist) > > > William Green, Tees Tilery. Beerhouse keeper. Assault. Assaulted his > wife, they compromised. > > Hope these help. > cheers > Gladys > > > ==== ENG-NORTH-YORKS Mailing List ==== > ----------> ALL CAPS or UPPER CASE Letters Permissible Use <---------- > When typing a surname? YES! Absolutely! A must! For general text? NO! > It's shouting, bad manners (Netiquette) and hard to find surnames. > > ============================== > To join Ancestry.com and access our 1.2 billion online genealogy records, go to: > http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=571&sourceid=1237 >
Hi Sandie, No Parnells but 4 Greens. Charlotte Green Tees Tilery, Wife, Assaulted. Assaulted by husband, they compromised. Joseph Green Castleton Tailor Assault. Assaulted by John Tindall. Robert Green Lingdale. Miner, Accident. Lived in Wilson Street, Lingdale, legs crushed by fall of large quantity of stone at Messrs Bolckow, Vaughan and Co's Boosbeck Mines/ (the spelling Bolckow is how it appears in the book and not me getting my fingers in a twist) William Green, Tees Tilery. Beerhouse keeper. Assault. Assaulted his wife, they compromised. Hope these help. cheers Gladys
Hi Lola, I have a directory of Cleveland Ironstone Miners and their associates. It is made up of pieces from newspapers. There are no Husbands but three Agars. Barker Agar Lingdale Miner 2nd June 1908 Drunk at Lingdale Hotel. Ralph Agar Marske Farmer 9th Feb. 1866 Assaulted servant. /ettled out of court. Thomas Agar Saltburn Builder 4th Aug 1883. Property owner of 13 houses which subsided in Boosbeck. This is one of several books collated by Peter Tuffs. Hope this is of some help to you. cheers Gladys
Posting Interests : AGAR and HUSBAND families, Lingdale, Liverton, Lofthouse,Skinningrove, Goathland, Staithes - all ironstone miners !850 onwards only early research just now. >From Lola Husband Fremantle, Western Australia.
Apologies - Emigration date for Francis & Susannah Allison should read 1822 not 1882. Regards. Linda
Hi All, I'm new to the list and note my surname interests:- 1. Allison 2. Race Both families from the Hauxswell, Robin Hoods Bay, Whitby area. Specifically researching Captain Francis Allison, Master Mariner, and his wife Susannah Race who were married at the Church of England, Folkton, near Bridlington, Yorkshire, on 16 May, 1811. They had four children in Whitby, William Race Allison, Harriette Race Allison, Ann Race Allison and Francis Thomas Allison before emigrating to Australia in 1882 on board the Christiana. It is believed that Susannah was the daughter of William Race and Hannah Coates. I would be extremely appreciative of any advice as to how to research these families further - and/or in fact any information regarding the name of the Church - actually anything at all. !!! In appreciation Linda New South 'Wales, Australia
Gladys, I'm wondering if the directory contains any GREENS or PARNELLS Thanks Sandie ----- Original Message ----- From: <Gladhall@aol.com> To: <ENG-NORTH-YORKS-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Saturday, August 09, 2003 4:38 PM Subject: [N'Yorks] Agar and Husband > Hi Lola, > I have a directory of Cleveland Ironstone Miners and their associates. It is > made up of pieces from newspapers. > There are no Husbands but three Agars. > > Barker Agar Lingdale Miner 2nd June 1908 Drunk at Lingdale Hotel. > > Ralph Agar Marske Farmer 9th Feb. 1866 Assaulted servant. /ettled out of > court. > > > Thomas Agar Saltburn Builder > 4th Aug 1883. Property owner of 13 houses which subsided in Boosbeck. > > This is one of several books collated by Peter Tuffs. > Hope this is of some help to you. > cheers > Gladys > > > ==== ENG-NORTH-YORKS Mailing List ==== > Have you visited the *NEW* RootsWeb/Ancestry Message Boards yet? Take a > tour soon & learn how time-saving those "Gateway" messages are compared > to trying to find the *new* ones on your own. > > ============================== > To join Ancestry.com and access our 1.2 billion online genealogy records, go to: > http://www.ancestry.com/rd/redir.asp?targetid=571&sourceid=1237 >
Looking for any information about John Snowdon, licencee of the Lingdale Tavern, Lingdale born 1843 in Newfield, Byers Green, Durham, married to Elizabeth Clayton they had 9 children only 6 survived, Clara Elizabeth 1871, Edith 1872, Meggie 1873, Laura 1875, Thomas Fredrick 1877, George Ernest 1879, Dora 1882, Lauretta 1883 and Lillian 1886. Also looking for information on Thomas Ranson, his brother Robert and their families, they were also born in Durham, but moved to Skelton about 1875, Thomas was the mine manager and Robert was the under manager, their mother was Isabella (Peel) married to Robert Ranson, Spencer Kell and then James Robinson any information however small would be most appreicated Thank you Alison
FRANCES CRESSWELL GREENLEY Any information about this lady would be most welcome. She appears on the 1881 Census in Skelton Cleveland, married to Thomas ELLSMORE with a son Francis Benjamin Greenly and a daughter Alice Maud Mary Ellsmore We know that she had Francis in Thornton le dale, 1871, single parent, but we cannot find anything about her before this date. According to census records she was born in Lebberston, North Yorkshire, but in every census she is a different age, when she married Thomas Ellsmore she was 29, 5 years older than him, but when she died 2 years after him in 1930 she was 2 years younger? I cannot seem to find her birth, her parents or any siiblings if any many thanks Alison
Hi I have found Annie THOMPSON born 1866 RIPON father Thomas THOMPSON farm labourer, William H THOMPSON born THIRSK 1883 and Arthur THOMPSON (or WILKINSON) born THIRSK 1885 Annie married Andrew WILKINSON in MIDDLESBROUGH 1886 He was my Ggdad. Looking forward to hearing from any one Wendy Melbourne Australia
Martin Thanks for your explanation of the law on copyright. It would seem that the letters could be added to my site if Mike wishes to do so. Regards Bob Sanders -----Original Message----- From: Martin Willcocks [mailto:martinwill2@comcast.net] Sent: 06 August 2003 04:55 To: ENG-NORTH-YORKS-L@rootsweb.com; Sanders, Robert (DfTE - LLD1b) Subject: Letters from 1831 Bob and listers all: I too enjoyed the letters from those people who braved the ocean crossing so long ago. My ancestors didn't come to America, but I did - by 747 jet! A lot quicker and safer! According to my understanding of copyright law, the copyright on a written work is valid for 75 years after the author's death. Since these letters were written by adults and at least one of them in around 1831, they were unlikely to have lived until 1928, so one might presume that any copyright that may have existed would by now be long expired. So perhaps it is legitimate to post them on Bob Sanders' web site, always, of course, stating the source. If they were still in copyright and held in a private collection it might not have been legitimate to send them to the general public (or at least that part of the public that reads these lists.) Furthermore, unless they were published for a commercial purpose yielding monetary gain, copying them for one's own research is a legitimate use of copyrighted material. In some situations, such as copying published papers by professional societies, you may be charged a small fee for such copying - some publications I've purchased show a fee scale at the bottom of the page, usually 10 cents/page. Also the laws may be different in other countries, but I think America had to change its laws to come into conformity with the norm in other countries, not the other way around. It used to be required to file a copyright, but now it's automatic, and in any case copyright protection is much narrower than patent protection for those items that are patentable (not books, letters, etc.) I regret I don't have any such fascinating episodes to recount, but thanks to those who did publish them. Martin Willcocks Salt Lake City, UT, USA Researching: N YKS: HILL, LAW(S), SAWDON, WELLBURN, WINSPEAR, and others. PLEASE NOTE: THE ABOVE MESSAGE WAS RECEIVED FROM THE INTERNET. On entering the GSI, this email was scanned for viruses by the Government Secure Intranet (GSI) virus scanning service supplied exclusively by Cable & Wireless in partnership with MessageLabs. GSI users see http://www.gsi.gov.uk/main/notices/information/gsi-003-2002.pdf for further details. In case of problems, please call your organisational IT helpdesk
I have been in contact with this site recently. They sent me this e-mail. <A HREF="mailto:Register@middlesbrough.gov.uk">Register@middlesbrough.gov.uk</A> To: <A HREF="mailto:JacquiMWhite@aol.com">JacquiMWhite@aol.com</A> Sent from the Internet (Details) Dear Jacqui, Thank you for your note, the index site you refer to is our site, and we are in the process of enlarging this site, it will be called the Tees Valley Site and will take in Stockton, Hartlepool, Redcar and Cleveland indexes. It should be on line in about a month +/- You can still us the old address as there will be an automatic link to the new site. Regards Wendy Atkinson sincerely, Jacqui White
Bob and listers all: I too enjoyed the letters from those people who braved the ocean crossing so long ago. My ancestors didn't come to America, but I did - by 747 jet! A lot quicker and safer! According to my understanding of copyright law, the copyright on a written work is valid for 75 years after the author's death. Since these letters were written by adults and at least one of them in around 1831, they were unlikely to have lived until 1928, so one might presume that any copyright that may have existed would by now be long expired. So perhaps it is legitimate to post them on Bob Sanders' web site, always, of course, stating the source. If they were still in copyright and held in a private collection it might not have been legitimate to send them to the general public (or at least that part of the public that reads these lists.) Furthermore, unless they were published for a commercial purpose yielding monetary gain, copying them for one's own research is a legitimate use of copyrighted material. In some situations, such as copying published papers by professional societies, you may be charged a small fee for such copying - some publications I've purchased show a fee scale at the bottom of the page, usually 10 cents/page. Also the laws may be different in other countries, but I think America had to change its laws to come into conformity with the norm in other countries, not the other way around. It used to be required to file a copyright, but now it's automatic, and in any case copyright protection is much narrower than patent protection for those items that are patentable (not books, letters, etc.) I regret I don't have any such fascinating episodes to recount, but thanks to those who did publish them. Martin Willcocks Salt Lake City, UT, USA Researching: N YKS: HILL, LAW(S), SAWDON, WELLBURN, WINSPEAR, and others.
Hi Michael, I seem to have missed this one, could you send me a copy off list please. //Colin Parlor [Leeds]// ----- Original Message ----- Subject: [N'Yorks] Dixon Family Letter > Hello everyone: > > Please find transcribed below a letter written by Mr. J. Dixon during his > voyage on the Columbus from Whitby to Quebec in April 1832. > > I would be interested in hearing from any descendants of Mr. Dixon as a > subsequent letter describes William Harrison - my great great great > grandfather - as a distant relation. This letter was written to Mr. George > Dixon of Darlington. > > The following is the letter: > > To: Mr. R. Frankland, Whitby
Hello, Would someone with access to 1861 census for Middlesbro.please be able to tell me if a George Wilson was living at Thomas Street, Middlesbro.If so could you either list other members of family or census reference number. Thankyou Nancy - Aus. _________________________________________________________________ Hotmail is now available on Australian mobile phones. Go to http://ninemsn.com.au/mobilecentral/signup.asp
Mike Very interesting letters. I was on the point of asking you if you would mind them being placed on my Family Letters from the Past Website when I realised that they are not your own copyright as they are in collections. If anyone has any letters which are their own copyright I would be very pleased to add them to my site at http://www.angelfire.com/ga/BobSanders/Lettershome.html Regards Bob Sanders > -----Original Message----- > From: ENG-NORTH-YORKS-D-request@rootsweb.com > [mailto:ENG-NORTH-YORKS-D-request@rootsweb.com] > Sent: 04 August 2003 17:00 > To: ENG-NORTH-YORKS-D@rootsweb.com > Subject: ENG-NORTH-YORKS-D Digest V03 #175 > > << Message: Untitled Attachment >> << Message: Re: [N'Yorks] Dixon & > Young Family letters >> << Message: [N'Yorks] Dixon Family Letter >> << > Message: [N'Yorks] 1861 census m'Bro. >>
I am a new lister... My G.G.Grandfather - Benjamine HARRISON b. 1795-6. Lived in Bossall when Robert & Stephen were born. His wife's name was Ann (1841 census). Children on the 1841 census:- John ...................22 bap. July 17, 1819 Elvingtron (also on I.G.I.) Benjamine ..........12 bap. Aug.22, 1829 Elvington (also on I.G.I.) Robert ............... 9 born 1832-33 ....... Bossall (1861 census for Wilberfoss, married). Stephen.............. 6 bap. July 26, 1835 Bossall (also on I.G.I.) My Grt.Grandfather was Robert HARRISON married Ann Duggleby, of Bishop Wilton, 1857. There are possibly more children to this family. Is there anyone connected to the above? Willing to share. Bill & Ellen Harrison, Ontario, Canada.
May I just say that although i have no connection with the family concerned it was a delight to read such an interesting letter of that period of time. Thank you. Jacqui Checked by AVG anti-virus system Version 6.0 (http://www.grisoft.com)
Thankyou for posting these letters Michael, I enjoyed reading them though they are nothing to do with my research I found them very interesting and could imagine the passengers being on board during the storms etc,. I have mariner ancestors one of whom died when he was lost overboard during a Cyclone somewhere off the coast of New Orleans USA in 1882 so anything to do with life on board a ship is interesting to me. Thankyou once again for taking the trouble to type out the letters for us all to read. Regards Jenny DeAngelis. Spain. Subject: [N'Yorks] Dixon Family Letter > Hello everyone: > > Please find transcribed below a letter written by Mr. J. Dixon during his > voyage on the Columbus from Whitby to Quebec in April 1832. > > I would be interested in hearing from any descendants of Mr. Dixon as a > subsequent letter describes William Harrison - my great great great > grandfather - as a distant relation. This letter was written to Mr. George > Dixon of Darlington. > > The following is the letter: > > To: Mr. R. Frankland, Whitby