Hi everyone, I have a new found interest in the kingston area: George J. V. NUNN married Charlotte E. ALBERY in 1929. So far I only have one child to this couple, a David G. E. NUNN. Maybe there was only one child? My interest in this family is through Charlotte, who was the daughter of Edmund and Henrietta ALBERY. Charlotte was born at Gosport, Hampshire and was 1st cousin to my father-in-law. I would be very interested to hear from anyone related or connected to this family. Kindest regards to all, Jon
Gerry, Please forgive the late response. The name of LARBY is not a very common one and I recall some references to the surname at Puttenham. Certainly the movement of parishoners between Puttenham and Bramshot is not unheard of, otherwise I would not be here, as several of my ancestors moved between the two parishes. Marr 1819-13-Feb LARBY George m WATERLAND Martha Marr 1820-15-Jan LARBY James m WATERLAND Anne Marr 1812-06-Sep LARBY Lucy m ALEXANDER Richard Marr 1835-17-Oct LARBY Lucy m SIMMONDS James Marr 1797-26-Oct LARBY William m FURLONGER Lucy In Presence of William Strudwick & Sarah Budd Bur 1873-27-Mar James Son of William & Lucy LARBY aged 72 years Bur 1786-26-Mar Mary Dau of William & Mary LARBY Bur 1805-13-Nov Mary Dau of Elizabeth LARBY Bur 1841-08-Dec Rebecca LARBY aged 66 years of Monk Grove Bur 1801-12-Apr William LARBY Bur 1806-13-May William LARBY Bapt 1783-29-Jun Elizabeth dau of William & Mary LARBY Bapt 1801-08-Nov James son of William & Lucy LARBY Bapt 1806-13-May Lucy dau of William &Lucy LARBY Bapt 1785-27-Feb Mary dau of William & Mary LARBY Bapt 1798-24-Jun Mary dau of William & Lucy LARBY Bapt 1803-22-May Sarah dau of William & Lucy LARBY Bapt 1799-24-Nov William son of William & Lucy LARBY These records are all from the Parish of Putteham, and more details of the beautiful village can be found at http://www.puttenham.org.uk/ --- Regards, Julie Goucher anglers.rest@virgin.net http://www.anglers-rest.net ----- Original Message ----- From: "Gwen Sperry" <gwensperry@gmail.com> To: <ENG-SURREY@rootsweb.com> Sent: Monday, November 16, 2009 2:57 AM Subject: [SRY] MILLS/LARBY > Hi, > I am looking for birth information for Ann MILLS md: Edward LARBY 15 > Nov 1757 Bramshott, Surrey. > > Any help greatly appreciated. > > Thank you, > Gwen Sperry >
>From The Times, Friday, Jun 08, 1917; pg. 1; Issue 41499; col B KILLED IN ACTION BROWNING. - Killed in action, on the 3rd May, while flying, Stanley Forrester, Captain, R. F. C., second son of Mr. and Mrs. E. F. BROWNING, Rutleigh, Furze-lane, Purley, aged 21.
as he is designated as 'cousin' in the will of our Captain John Miller [w/this address in 1843] who died Brislington, Somerset Co, July 26. At Brislington, aged 83, Capt. John Miller, R.N. who was a Lieut, in the Queen in Lord Howe's victory, on the 1st of June, 1794. ******************************************************************** And he is also named as executor in the will of Captain John's brother - Major General James Miller whose will was proved at London SOURCE WILL- "Will proved at London 27th April 1825 under oaths of Major Gen'l James Miller's son Lt. William Miller and Mr. George Miller, Esq. of Farnham, Surry Co.... ************************************************* Marriage - MILLER, George, of Farnham, co. Surrey, 25, & Mary Gold, of Chawton, 20, with c. of her f., William Gold, at C, 27 Aug., 1825. ************************************ In srching this books in Google Books online - find the following George Miller entry A topographical dictionary of England, Volume 4 [Fouth Edition - 4 Volumes] published - MDCCXL By Samuel Lewis Subscribers to this book - Miller, George, Esq., Castle Hill, Farnham, Surrey Millers, Rev. George, Ely, Cambridgeshire Miller, Rev. J., D.D., Vicar of Pittinglon, Durham Miller, Robert, Esq., Blackheath Park, Kent Miller, Thomas, Esq., Church-street, Croydon, Surrey -- I am using the free version of SPAMfighter. We are a community of 6 million users fighting spam. SPAMfighter has removed 2546 of my spam emails to date. Get the free SPAMfighter here: http://www.spamfighter.com/len The Professional version does not have this message
Zinery was the daughter of Charles Mason a Sargent who married Henry Roylis Rivers 26 Sep 1842 Camberwell reg district. I cannot connect her to our family but another Charles Mason, currier, had John Thomas Rivers Mason b 15 Nov 1848 in Bermondsey. He was a mariner, she the daughter of Thomas a shipwright. I cannot find her anywhere except on the Ancestry London Parish Marriages [at the Library today timed out before I noted the Church]. Are they in anyone's family? Thanks and Happy New Year to all Jo
I have been looking for Woods Buildings Newington in 1851 and have checked those on FMP but the numbers leave obvious gaps - John Fraser wife Mary, Charles a b 1845 & Celia / Eliza b 1849 John's occupation most likely 'equestrian'. Found in all later census in Lambeth but he was in Woods Buildings until at least Feb 1854. Thanks Jo
Answered off list. Judy London, UK -----Original Message----- From: Lawrence Pearse [mailto:lawrencepearse@msn.com] It turns out that the family were actually living in Kent - well, Lewisham/Plumstead/Woolwich - around the time of the 1861 census (info from a birth cert 10 days before the census was taken)
Thanks, Judy. It turns out that the family were actually living in Kent - well, Lewisham/Plumstead/Woolwich - around the time of the 1861 census (info from a birth cert 10 days before the census was taken), so forgive me if I follow up on the Surrey site! Their 1861 address was 14 Brook Hill Road, Woolwich. An 1861 census address search on Brook Hill gives only 2 results - numbers 1 and 6 - in Plumstead, Lewisham, which makes me think something is missing from the census, or from the transcription. I tried the tunyurl.com site but found no evidence for it. Can you or anyone else help, or have any suggestions? The family's name was Cook (more details of individuals available if required). Will the Kent site be eng-kent@rootsweb,com? Lawrence _________________________________________________________________ Have more than one Hotmail account? Link them together to easily access both http://clk.atdmt.com/UKM/go/186394591/direct/01/
There are streets and parts of streets missing from Southwark and Newington in both censuses. I don't know of any substantial losses from Newington in particular, in either year, though the street indexes do show gaps. In general, 1851 is more "complete" than 1861. If you have known addresses, from other censuses or from certificates, you can check whether individual streets are missing in the census street indexes on TNA's Your Archives site (1841-1871 currently available). http://tinyurl.com/mmj86f To find your folks, try some clever search techniques first, as suggested. Or post to the list with full details of names, ages, places of birth, other known addresses etc., to see if anyone else can help? HTH Judy London, UK -----Original Message----- From: eng-surrey-bounces@rootsweb.com [mailto:eng-surrey-bounces@rootsweb.com] On Behalf Of Lawrence Pearse I am having trouble finding ancestors (born in the 1830's) in the 1851 and 1861 censuses. They were living in Newington, Southwark in the 1871 and 1881 censuses. I seem to recall someone on the list mentioning that parts of those censuses were missing. Before I try all sorts of clever search techniques to try and locate a possible mistranscription, can someone tell me if my memory is right and whether the Newington area is one of those affected?
I too, spent several years in Streatham. I lived with my parents in "The High", in the late 1040's, before moving to Norbury. The high was a very modern block of flats on the main London-Brighton Road, which are still there today. Many celebrities lived there. I came across several wonderful sites for Streatham history. A History of Suburban Streatham - this has wonderful photos. and Streatham Society The Streatham Society were extremely helpful when I wrote to them, asking for more information concerning "the High". Chris (now in California)
I am having trouble finding ancestors (born in the 1830's) in the 1851 and 1861 censuses. They were living in Newington, Southwark in the 1871 and 1881 censuses. I seem to recall someone on the list mentioning that parts of those censuses were missing. Before I try all sorts of clever search techniques to try and locate a possible mistranscription, can someone tell me if my memory is right and whether the Newington area is one of those affected? Lawrence _________________________________________________________________ Have more than one Hotmail account? Link them together to easily access both http://clk.atdmt.com/UKM/go/186394591/direct/01/
>From The Morning Chronicle ( London, England ), Monday, October 6, 1856; Issue 28012. DIED On the 1st inst., at Gosden, near Guildford, the residence of C. H. PILGRIM, Esq., aged 47, Colonel Frederick George SHEWELL, C.B., 8th Hussars, and late Brigadier-General of the Hussar Brigade in the Crimea.
further to the previous message on Alfred Clark: I've made great advances finding the family through a different search engine to trawl the census. I'd be interested to hear from anybody who has connections or ancillary information. Regards Ross So far: The first address we have for the Clarks as a family is at 72 Castle St, Southwark in 1840 – a couple of blocks from the Globe Theatre, and a couple of blocks from Tower Bridge. The area has undergone several bouts of urban renewal in the intervening period, including the arrival of railway, and Castle St has changed considerably, including being chopped off at one end by the railway and has been renamed Thrale St. William at this stage was a paper dealer. Alfred was born here. It appears the family had moved to Camberwell by the time Sidney was born in 1855, in the St Geroge parish. By 1861 the Clark family had moved to Deptford (5 St James Place) and William had moved from paper to manchester, and the family was middle class by all accounts (owning own business, a maid at home – Caroline Bolton, 20, born Blackfriars in Surrey). By 1861: none of the children had married, even though the eldest, Isabella, was 22; Alfred was a third mate in the merchant service; Clarence was a clerk to his father; Edward was an apprentice chemist; Marion and Sidney were students. By 1871: the family lived at Henley Villa, Fochaber Lodge, Church Rd, Deptford; Isabella…; Alfred was ……..; Elizabeth Mary was still living at home; Clarence had left home and started his own family but was still working with his father as a clerk; Edward…….; Marion was still at home’ Sidney was still at home, working as a clerk, presumably for his father. A different domestic servant – Elizabeth Gosling, born about 1851 in Deptford Clarence and family lived at 158 Malpas St, Deptford. Sarah is the daughter of William Henry Ritherdon. ========== William was born in Maidenhead in 1800. Elizabeth was born in Blandford, Dorset in 1803, but appears connected to the Melcombe Regis Dyers. Begin forwarded message: > From: kotuku media <kotuku.media@xtra.co.nz> > Date: 9 December 2009 6:22:56 PM > To: ENG-SURREY-L-request@rootsweb.com > Subject: sailor relatives > > One of my wife's ancestor, Alfred Clark, Master with the White Star > Line is eluding us and I would welcome any suggestions. > > He was born in Castle St, Southwark in 1840. His father William was > a paper seller. > > Then he disappears. No doubt he was a boy sailor. Unfortunately > White Star records have disappeared, according to Cunard. > > It appears he was on the Thermopylae but I can't find crew records > for that. > > His records at Greenwich do not list what ships he was on. > > Then he pops up in NZ. Marries, returns to England and can be found > for a while. > > > Cheers > Ross > > > Sue and Ross Miller > Kotuku Media Ltd > 64 4 233 1842 > 0274 510 339 - Sue > 027 246 7682 - Ross > 112 Pope Street, Camborne, Wellington 5026 > P O Box 54234, Mana, Wellington 5247 > Sue and Ross Miller Kotuku Media Ltd 64 4 233 1842 0274 510 339 - Sue 027 246 7682 - Ross 112 Pope Street, Camborne, Wellington 5026 P O Box 54234, Mana, Wellington 5247
Hello, I am looking for Information about an Edward Charles Holland born in Lambeth in 1901 who was living in Galpins Rd, Thornton Heath in the 1930s. He may have married an Isabella Smail in Chelsea in Sept 1928. Thank you. Patrick Holland. Perth, Western Australia.
Hi, I am searching for the above who lived at 71 Christchurch Mount in Epsom between 1955 & 1961. Helen McNamara NZ
Hello All. ** Volunteers Wanted - Request For Assistance with 1874 Map of Surrey ** I have just uploaded a preview page for an 1874 Map of Surrey. It is a beautiful, hand coloured, highly detailed map. Take a look at the preview page here: Map Of The County Of Surrey From Trigonometrical Survey With The Roads, Parks & Railways, By Jas. Wyld, Geographer To The Queen. 1874. http://archivemaps.com/mapco/surrey1874/surrey1874.htm Preview Section: http://archivemaps.com/mapco/surrey1874/surrey1874preview.htm Following the success of previous transcription projects (see links at end of message) I have decided to include a Place Name Search Engine for this map. This will require the names and details recorded on the map to be fully transcribed, which is quite a large task. If there are any listers who can spare some time to assist with this transcription project it would be greatly appreciated! This will free my time to get on with the job of scanning and preparing the next maps for display. The success of this project will be dependant on the number of volunteers able to assist with transcription of place names from the map. There are about 30 individual sections of the map that require significant work to transcribe, and I would like one transcriber for each of these section. I estimate transcription will take 30-60 minutes on average. I will give full details to any volunteers in a separate email. Please send all replies to this request off list. Thanks. All offers of assistance will be greatly appreciated!! Thank you in advance. While I appreciate this particular subject isn't genealogy in the first instance, it benefits all of our research in the long run. I am still committed to displaying a high quality map of London for every decade from 1700 to 1930, and to continuing to display as many county maps (Middlesex, Essex, Surrey & Kent) as possible. Thank you all for your continuing support for the MAPCO project. It is, and shall remain, FREE! Kind regards, David Hale, Adelaide, South Australia. MAPCO : Map And Plan Collection Online http://archivemaps.com ************* Previous MAPCO Transcription Projects (full Place Name Search Engine): Bowles's Reduced New Pocket Plan Of The Cities Of London And Westminster, With The Borough Of Southwark, Exhibiting The New Buildings To The Year 1775. http://archivemaps.com/mapco/bowles1775/bowles.htm Transcription Project: http://archivemaps.com/mapco/bowles1775/bowles_transcription.htm Map Of Map Of North West Kent 1789 Taken From 'The Country Twenty-Five Miles Round London Planned From A Scale Of One Mile To An Inch' By William Faden http://archivemaps.com/mapco/kent1789/kent1789.htm Transcription Project: http://archivemaps.com/mapco/kent1789/kent_transcription_1789.htm An Entirely New & Accurate Survey Of The County Of Kent, With Part Of The County Of Essex, by William Mudge, 1801. http://archivemaps.com/mapco/preview/1801kent.htm Transcription Project: http://archivemaps.com/mapco/kent1801/kent_transcription.htm **************************************************** MAPCO Transcriptions (full Place Name Search Engine): Map Of Dublin 1798 http://dublin1798.com ****************************************************
Long way from home, but just found on my front verandah a present, a calendar which features Streatham going back to my childhood times.. 1950s... oh boy, someone is going to make me homesick, I can remember Streatham Hill Theatre, but seeing this photograph... mmmm, where is the hankie! The Fifty Shilling Tailors, that was near the Police Station from memory, other end of Streatham High Road... opposite Tyrrells... and St. Leonards Church further on.. Surprising how time passes, we remember places of our childhood, but seeing the traffic, cars, havent they changed in 60 odd years! And looks like tram lines in High st.... any one actually on this list who is in Streatham today please? This gift is from my sister, as other old haunts are featured around Sussex! its done by Frith.. wonderful memories.. often when one is after a photograph of a place, you can find it with Frith.. I was living in Streatham 1943-69, and been back a few times since then.. Just been chatting to a friend here in Carterton, she is from Wimbledon.. small world.. Happy New Year 2010 and hope many of you will find that piece of jigsaw puzzle you so much need for your family history... As someone says, the south Londoner in NZ Adele Clareville NZ
Hi Adele Did you see David Hales latest http://archivemaps.com/mapco/surrey1874/surrey1874preview.htm I thought of you when I saw it Nivard Ovington in Cornwall (UK) > > Long way from home, but just found on my front verandah a present, a > calendar which features Streatham going back to my childhood times.. > 1950s... oh boy, someone is going to make me homesick, I can remember > Streatham Hill Theatre, but seeing this photograph... mmmm, where is the > hankie! The Fifty Shilling Tailors, that was near the Police Station from > memory, other end of Streatham High Road... opposite Tyrrells... and St. > Leonards Church further on.. >
>From Jackson's Oxford Journal, Saturday, May 29, 1824; Issue 3709. DIED At Paris, aged 63, Charlotte, wife of John Poulett THOMSON, Esq., of Waverley Abbey, Surrey. Aged 56, William KELLEY, Esq., of the Exchequer Office, who fell down and expired on Blackfriar's Bridge on Saturday morning.
>From Jackson's Oxford Journal, Saturday, May 29, 1824; Issue 3709. MARRIED At Clapham, Samuel WILSON, Esq., of White Hall, Essex, to Mrs. DEVIS, widow of the late eminent artist of that name.