This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: pry60583 Surnames: Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/localities.britisles.england.yks.general/1548.1/mb.ashx Message Board Post: Important Note: The author of this message may not be subscribed to this list. If you would like to reply to them, please click on the Message Board URL link above and respond on the board.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: ericgordon_1 Surnames: Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/localities.britisles.england.yks.general/14874.4/mb.ashx Message Board Post: I would think that "gangonwould" could be "Garton-on-the-Wold", which is a village, about one mile west of Driffield, in the East Riding of Yorkshire, on the road to York. Martin lordship, I don't know, but the Martin could possibly be Marton, as there are two of these in North Yorkshire. Hope this helps. Important Note: The author of this message may not be subscribed to this list. If you would like to reply to them, please click on the Message Board URL link above and respond on the board.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: eworld_2 Surnames: Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/localities.britisles.england.yks.general/14874.3/mb.ashx Message Board Post: Looks a bit like Marton near Easingwold, any chance your looking at some nearly indecipherable writing or optical character recognition (OCR) that's a bit adrift Important Note: The author of this message may not be subscribed to this list. If you would like to reply to them, please click on the Message Board URL link above and respond on the board.
From: "Gary Smith" <garymarian@comcast.net> > A quick placing of the name onto Google search gave reference to > 'Discoveries of America: Personal Accounts of British Emigrants to > North... By Barbara DeWolfe', and this phrase in a letter "addressed > to Mrs. Ann Dill with Mr. Thomas Wilkinson at Martin Lordship near > Easingwould in Yorkshire England". > A look into my 'Handy Road Atlas GREAT BRITAIN A-Z' shows an > Easingwold > (new spelling) North Riding, about 20 miles due East of Ripon and an > equal distance North of the city of York, just east of the A19, if you > are driving. I find nothing remotely resembling 'Ganongwould' in my > copy. > Every western genealogist's home should have this Atlas. > Cheers, > Gary in Berkeley > > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: <gc-gateway@rootsweb.com> > To: <ENG-YORKSHIRE-L@rootsweb.com> > > hello everyone, > > i'm trying to locate a placename in yorkshire called "martin > > lordship". a very small number of "documents" mention it is in > > yorkshire but there is no mention of it in gazetteers i've looked > > at. i've also tried googling for a location but the only reference > > that gives any sort of geographical location is that "martin > > lordship" is near ganongwould (presumably a misspelling) but i can't > > find that either!! i hope you can help??<< As always, the answer is found with Google and at GENUKI's Yorkshire pages. "MARTON CUM MOXBY, (and Marton Lordship) a parish in the wapentake of Bulmer, and liberty of Ripon; 5 miles E. of Easingwold. Here is a small church (see Churches for photograph), wherein divine service is performed once a fortnight from Easter to Michaelmas, but not at all from Michaelmas to Easter; the living is a vicarage, of which the Archbishop of York, is the patron, and the Rev. D. Duck, the incumbent. Pop. including Moxby, 164. Easingwold is a lovely little market town some 10-15 miles north of York, where my own Stockdale/Stockdill ancestors came from. -- Roy Stockdill Editor, Journal of One-Name Studies Guild of One-Name Studies website: www.one-name.org Newbies' Guide to Genealogy & Family History: www.genuki.org.uk/gs/Newbie.html "There is only one thing in the world worse than being talked about, and that is not being talked about." OSCAR WILDE
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: JudyElkington Surnames: Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/localities.britisles.england.yks.general/14874.2/mb.ashx Message Board Post: Hi If you could say which documents you found it in would help. Have you a census entry for this and if so what year and what name and year of birth. This wopuld help in locating the area a bit more. Yorkshire is very large and you need a little more information that you have given. Judy Important Note: The author of this message may not be subscribed to this list. If you would like to reply to them, please click on the Message Board URL link above and respond on the board.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: JudyElkington Surnames: Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/localities.britisles.england.yks.general/14874.1/mb.ashx Message Board Post: Hi If you could say which documents you found it in would help. Have you a census entry for this and if so what year and what name and year of birth. This wopuld help in locating the area a bit more. Yorkshire is very large and you need a little more information that you have given. Judy Important Note: The author of this message may not be subscribed to this list. If you would like to reply to them, please click on the Message Board URL link above and respond on the board.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: jeanlong93 Surnames: Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/localities.britisles.england.yks.general/14875/mb.ashx Message Board Post: my g grandmother died in hunslet workhouse wood lane in 1923 but her husband lived in a house nearby does anybody know if this was also used as a seperate hospital. I know that in the 1930s it was changed into st georges hospital Important Note: The author of this message may not be subscribed to this list. If you would like to reply to them, please click on the Message Board URL link above and respond on the board.
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: titan2001 Surnames: Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/localities.britisles.england.yks.general/14874/mb.ashx Message Board Post: hello everyone, i'm trying to locate a placename in yorkshire called "martin lordship". a very small number of "documents" mention it is in yorkshire but there is no mention of it in gazetteers i've looked at. i've also tried googling for a location but the only reference that gives any sort of geographical location is that "martin lordship" is near ganongwould (presumably a misspelling) but i can't find that either!! i hope you can help?? Important Note: The author of this message may not be subscribed to this list. If you would like to reply to them, please click on the Message Board URL link above and respond on the board.
A quick placing of the name onto Google search gave reference to 'Discoveries of America: Personal Accounts of British Emigrants to North... By Barbara DeWolfe', and this phrase in a letter "addressed to Mrs. Ann Dill with Mr. Thomas Wilkinson at Martin Lordship near Easingwould in Yorkshire England". A look into my 'Handy Road Atlas GREAT BRITAIN A-Z' shows an Easingwold (new spelling) North Riding, about 20 miles due East of Ripon and an equal distance North of the city of York, just east of the A19, if you are driving. I find nothing remotely resembling 'Ganongwould' in my copy. Every western genealogist's home should have this Atlas. Cheers, Gary in Berkeley ----- Original Message ----- From: <gc-gateway@rootsweb.com> To: <ENG-YORKSHIRE-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Thursday, October 18, 2007 11:19 AM Subject: [YORKSHIRE] location of a place named "martin lordship" > This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. > > Author: titan2001 > Surnames: > Classification: queries > > Message Board URL: > > http://boards.rootsweb.com/localities.britisles.england.yks.general/14874/mb.ashx > > Message Board Post: > > hello everyone, > i'm trying to locate a placename in yorkshire called "martin lordship". a > very small number of "documents" mention it is in yorkshire but there is > no mention of it in gazetteers i've looked at. i've also tried googling > for a location but the only reference that gives any sort of geographical > location is that "martin lordship" is near ganongwould (presumably a > misspelling) but i can't find that either!! i hope you can help?? > > Important Note: > The author of this message may not be subscribed to this list. If you > would like to reply to them, please click on the Message Board URL link > above and respond on the board. > > > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > ENG-YORKSHIRE-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message >
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: mpanozzo1 Surnames: Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/localities.britisles.england.yks.general/14873.1/mb.ashx Message Board Post: The 1891 census Hunslet, Leeds, Yorkshire John W. O'Neill 35, relieving officer, born Ireland Jane 37, born Ireland Nora 8, born Ireland James 6, William 3, both born Hunslet Nora McGolrick 76, widow, mother-in-law, born Ireland James McGolrick 56, single, brother-in-law, U.S. Army pensioner Let me know if you want more info. Margaret Important Note: The author of this message may not be subscribed to this list. If you would like to reply to them, please click on the Message Board URL link above and respond on the board.
Hi Mike The following site has a large Chippendale family listed, I haven't been able to see if your Chippendales are there as I have forgotten my log in details! But you will possibly be interested in looking. http://wharfegen.org.uk/ Regards Sandra
This is a Message Board Post that is gatewayed to this mailing list. Author: kev1996 Surnames: Classification: queries Message Board URL: http://boards.rootsweb.com/localities.britisles.england.yks.general/14872/mb.ashx Message Board Post: I am having trouble finding members of the McCloughrey family in primarily the North Yorks/ sometimes East Yorks area as the spelling is often a stumbling block. Anyone have strong links to this name in Yorkshire? Important Note: The author of this message may not be subscribed to this list. If you would like to reply to them, please click on the Message Board URL link above and respond on the board.
Thanks for links, Roy. I'll follow them both up. Best wishes, Mike -----Original Message----- From: eng-yorkshire-bounces@rootsweb.com [mailto:eng-yorkshire-bounces@rootsweb.com] On Behalf Of Roy Stockdill Sent: 16 October 2007 20:12 To: eng-yorkshire@rootsweb.com Subject: Re: [YORKSHIRE] Harold CHIPPINDALE, born 1863 Guiseley Take a look at this website run by a chap in Doncaster called Brian Townsley. Click on the Cs and you will see your Chippendales at Otley featured. It appears to take the line back to a John Chippendale born about 1740. http://homepages.tesco.net/~townsleyb/TownsFH/html/index.htm I must say, from long experience of one-name studies, my feeling is that all the Chippendales at Otley were probably ultimately from a common ancestor. Speaking of which, I find from the Guild of One-Name Studies Register that we have a one-name study of Chippendale and variants. Go to our website (URL below in my signature) and you will find the person running it. It's a lady in Kent. -- Roy Stockdill Editor, Journal of One-Name Studies Guild of One-Name Studies website: www.one-name.org Newbies' Guide to Genealogy & Family History: www.genuki.org.uk/gs/Newbie.html
I wonder if one of our Australian friends would mind reposting this message on one or two of their lists for me? I am not very familiar with Oz lists and this may be a quicker way of doing it than my joining them. There is a strong Yorkshire connection. I am interested in contacting any descendants of GEORGE MALCOM and JANE DAVEY, who married on 7th December 1867 at the Register Office at Sandridge, Victoria. I have the register entry printout from the Victoria Archives online and it shows George Malcolm was aged 30, a widower and a ships steward, while Jane Davey was 27, a spinster and a housekeeper. Both were born in London, England, and gave the same address, Dow Street, Sandridge, Victoria. George Malcolms parents were given as John Malcolm, lawyers clerk, and Susan Pearce. Janes parents were Nicholas Davey, greengrocer, and Jane STOCKDALE. George Malcolms previous wife was shown as having died on 16 April 1859 - whether in England or Australia I could not say. Here is my connection and the Yorkshire connection¦.. Jane Daveys mother, JANE STOCKDALE or STOCKDILL, was my great-great-aunt, being an elder sister of my great-grandfather Robert Stockdill (1806-1896). Jane was born at Easingwold, Yorkshire, on 16 June 1797 and baptised there on 16 July 1797. She went to London, probably to join her brother George Stockdill (1803-1886), and married NICHOLAS DAVEY, a greengrocer from Penzance, Cornwall, on 26 September 1830 at St Georges Hanover Square. They appear in all the subsequent censuses at Lambeth until Nicholas died in 1869 and Jane in 1872, both at Lambeth. They had a daughter, the above-mentioned JANE DAVEY, who was born in the June quarter of 1840 at Lambeth. She obviously emigrated to Australia at some date unknown. My suspicion is that as George Malcolm was a ships steward, they may have met on the boat going over there. In 1886 Jane the younger appears as a beneficiary in the will of her uncle George Stockdill, my great-great-uncle, born at Easingwold in 1803, who died in London a very wealthy man. He named her amongst 12 nephews and nieces who shared his estate as Jane Malcolm of the Village Bell Hotel, Collingwood, Australia, so presumably by 1886 George and Jane Malcolm had taken over this establishment - no doubt a logical business step for a former ships steward. Jane would then have been aged 46. I have not found any children of George Malcolm and Jane, if indeed they had any. But I would welcome contact from anyone who may know more of them in Australia. I am aware Collingwood is now a suburb of Melbourne and would be interested in anything at all about the Village Bell Hotel there. I Googled and discovered something called the Village Belle [sic] Hotel but Im not at all sure its the same thing. -- Roy Stockdill Editor, Journal of One-Name Studies Guild of One-Name Studies website: www.one-name.org Newbies' Guide to Genealogy & Family History: www.genuki.org.uk/gs/Newbie.html "There is only one thing in the world worse than being talked about, and that is not being talked about." OSCAR WILDE
From: "Mike Gould" <mike.gould@ndirect.co.uk> > Hi Roy & Judy, > > Thank you both for your interest in the CHIPPINDALE family. I realise > that to tie in with Thomas CHIPPENDALE needs the > generation-to-generation links, but before I spent a lot of time doing > the research, I wanted to check whether anyone else had done it before > me. I chose to post the information about Harold because I had > sufficient information about him to be able to confirm that it was the > same person if he turned up on a tree of the CHIPPENDALE family, > especially if that tree included the famous Thomas CHIPPENDALE. > > In my research so far, I belive that Harold was the son of Benjamin > CHIPPINDALE (1835 - 1880) and Isabella ABBOTT (1836 - ?). > > Bejamin was the son of Joseph CHIPPINDALE (b. 1810, Yeadon) and > Catherine BRAYSHAW (b. 1814, Rawdon) > > I also then ran into the problem of which Joseph CHIPPINDALE is the > right one ! > > I was interested to know whether there is a published genealogy of the > furtiture-making CHIPPENDALEs. If not, and no-one can tie in with the > above details, then I'll knuckle down to work and try to build up the > tree ;-) > > Once again, thanks for the help and advice. > > Any further information that anyone can provide will be most welcome.> Take a look at this website run by a chap in Doncaster called Brian Townsley. Click on the Cs and you will see your Chippendales at Otley featured. It appears to take the line back to a John Chippendale born about 1740. http://homepages.tesco.net/~townsleyb/TownsFH/html/index.htm I must say, from long experience of one-name studies, my feeling is that all the Chippendales at Otley were probably ultimately from a common ancestor. Speaking of which, I find from the Guild of One-Name Studies Register that we have a one-name study of Chippendale and variants. Go to our website (URL below in my signature) and you will find the person running it. It's a lady in Kent. -- Roy Stockdill Editor, Journal of One-Name Studies Guild of One-Name Studies website: www.one-name.org Newbies' Guide to Genealogy & Family History: www.genuki.org.uk/gs/Newbie.html "There is only one thing in the world worse than being talked about, and that is not being talked about." OSCAR WILDE
Hi Roy & Judy, Thank you both for your interest in the CHIPPINDALE family. I realise that to tie in with Thomas CHIPPENDALE needs the generation-to-generation links, but before I spent a lot of time doing the research, I wanted to check whether anyone else had done it before me. I chose to post the information about Harold because I had sufficient information about him to be able to confirm that it was the same person if he turned up on a tree of the CHIPPENDALE family, especially if that tree included the famous Thomas CHIPPENDALE. In my research so far, I belive that Harold was the son of Benjamin CHIPPINDALE (1835 - 1880) and Isabella ABBOTT (1836 - ?). Bejamin was the son of Joseph CHIPPINDALE (b. 1810, Yeadon) and Catherine BRAYSHAW (b. 1814, Rawdon) I also then ran into the problem of which Joseph CHIPPINDALE is the right one ! I was interested to know whether there is a published genealogy of the furtiture-making CHIPPENDALEs. If not, and no-one can tie in with the above details, then I'll knuckle down to work and try to build up the tree ;-) Once again, thanks for the help and advice. Any further information that anyone can provide will be most welcome. Best wishes, Mike -----Original Message----- From: eng-yorkshire-bounces@rootsweb.com [mailto:eng-yorkshire-bounces@rootsweb.com] On Behalf Of Roy Stockdill Sent: 16 October 2007 15:50 To: eng-yorkshire@rootsweb.com Subject: Re: [YORKSHIRE] Harold CHIPPINDALE, born 1863 Guiseley From: JJupar@aol.com > In a message dated 16/10/2007 07:43:14 GMT Standard Time, > mike.gould@ndirect.co.uk writes: > > Can anyone tell me anything about Harold CHIPPINDALE/CHIPPENDALE, > born 1863 Guiseley. He was an architect and the son of Benjamin and > Isabella. I'm trying to find out whether he was any relation to the > well-known furniture maker, Thomas CHIPPENDALE. > > > > Hi > > You would need to know a lot about the family. It would be nice to > make a connection but you need to trace family back generation by > generation. > > You can read quite a lot about him on the Internet and you need to > find out if he had children or brothers and brothers and sisters. > > Certainly there were Chippendale's in Guiseley in the 1600s but you > have to try and related them by research. Who were Harold > Chippendale's parent and grandparents. You need to get his > relations back for about 150 years before you could prove this.> In the 1861 census, BENJAMIN CHIPPINDALE (spelt with an "I") was aged 26, living at Guiseley but born at Otley and working as a clogger. His wife Isabella was aged 25 and born at Yeadon. They then had just one child, a daughter Emma, aged 5, born at Guiseley. The marriage of Benjamin and Isabella ABBOT is found with FreeBMD at Otley in the June quarter of 1855, vol 9a page 177. Living with the family in 1861 was a Hannah Abbott, aged 16, described as a niece-in-law. Going to the IGI, Benjamin CHIPPENDALE was baptised at Guiseley on Aug 17 1834, son of Joseph and Catharine Chippendale (batch no. CC009382, source the Guiseley BTs). You then find the marriage of Joseph Chippendale and Catharine BRAYSHAW at Guiseley on 28 June 1832. Going back to the 1861 census, Joseph Chippendale, Benjamin's likely father, was also a clog maker and living at Yeadon. He was aged 51 and suppposedly born at Yeadon, making his birth about 1809/10. Unfortunately the IGI offers a couple of possibles for a Joseph Chippendale both baptised in 1809, one at Otley and one at Guiseley and a third possible (just) baptised at Otley in 1805. Over to you! -- Roy Stockdill Editor, Journal of One-Name Studies Guild of One-Name Studies website: www.one-name.org Newbies' Guide to Genealogy & Family History: www.genuki.org.uk/gs/Newbie.html "There is only one thing in the world worse than being talked about, and that is not being talked about." OSCAR WILDE ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to ENG-YORKSHIRE-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
From: JJupar@aol.com > In a message dated 16/10/2007 07:43:14 GMT Standard Time, > mike.gould@ndirect.co.uk writes: > > Can anyone tell me anything about Harold CHIPPINDALE/CHIPPENDALE, > born 1863 Guiseley. He was an architect and the son of Benjamin and > Isabella. I'm trying to find out whether he was any relation to the > well-known furniture maker, Thomas CHIPPENDALE. > > > > Hi > > You would need to know a lot about the family. It would be nice to > make a connection but you need to trace family back generation by > generation. > > You can read quite a lot about him on the Internet and you need to > find out if he had children or brothers and brothers and sisters. > > Certainly there were Chippendale's in Guiseley in the 1600s but you > have to try and related them by research. Who were Harold > Chippendale's parent and grandparents. You need to get his > relations back for about 150 years before you could prove this.> In the 1861 census, BENJAMIN CHIPPINDALE (spelt with an "I") was aged 26, living at Guiseley but born at Otley and working as a clogger. His wife Isabella was aged 25 and born at Yeadon. They then had just one child, a daughter Emma, aged 5, born at Guiseley. The marriage of Benjamin and Isabella ABBOT is found with FreeBMD at Otley in the June quarter of 1855, vol 9a page 177. Living with the family in 1861 was a Hannah Abbott, aged 16, described as a niece-in-law. Going to the IGI, Benjamin CHIPPENDALE was baptised at Guiseley on Aug 17 1834, son of Joseph and Catharine Chippendale (batch no. CC009382, source the Guiseley BTs). You then find the marriage of Joseph Chippendale and Catharine BRAYSHAW at Guiseley on 28 June 1832. Going back to the 1861 census, Joseph Chippendale, Benjamin's likely father, was also a clog maker and living at Yeadon. He was aged 51 and suppposedly born at Yeadon, making his birth about 1809/10. Unfortunately the IGI offers a couple of possibles for a Joseph Chippendale both baptised in 1809, one at Otley and one at Guiseley and a third possible (just) baptised at Otley in 1805. Over to you! -- Roy Stockdill Editor, Journal of One-Name Studies Guild of One-Name Studies website: www.one-name.org Newbies' Guide to Genealogy & Family History: www.genuki.org.uk/gs/Newbie.html "There is only one thing in the world worse than being talked about, and that is not being talked about." OSCAR WILDE
Hello Heather My immediate request was to find out if there was anyone on the list who was researching the CROSS family name....BUT here are a few details Joseph CROSS and his wife Mary Ann moved to Yorkshire from Staffs some time after the 1881 census. Joseph born 1852 in Salop. have census and birth records. His brother Thomas CROSS born 1864 and his Wife Maria, also arrived in Yorkshire about the same time, but do not know much about their family. Have found them in 1891 census, so know what family they had Is there anyone out there related in any way with these two families ??? would be pleased to hear from them Many thanks Jean BAKER nee CROSS
In a message dated 16/10/2007 07:43:14 GMT Standard Time, mike.gould@ndirect.co.uk writes: > > Can anyone tell me anything about Harold CHIPPINDALE/CHIPPENDALE, > born 1863 Guiseley. He was an architect and the son of Benjamin and > Isabella. I'm trying to find out whether he was any relation to the > well-known furniture maker, Thomas CHIPPENDALE.> If you use Google, there is extensive information on Thomas Chippendale. He was baptised at Otley on June 5 1718, son of John, a carpenter. Virtually nothing is known of his early life but he married Catherine Redshaw in London in 1748, so it seems very likely that if Harold Chippendale was related in any way he would have been distant. As Judy says, there were Chippendales in the area in the 1600s. As it happens, I have the Otley parish registers from 1750 to 1812 on a CD published by the Yorkshire Parish Register Society and in a number of booklets from 1813 to 1837 from the Wharfedale Family History Group. I had Otley ancestors myself called MOODY and there is a Chippendale- Moody marriage somewhere in the registers. I don't normally do look-ups but if you want to post how far back you have got before Benjamin I will see what I can do, since I am sufficiently interested in any possible Chippendale connection to my own family. -- Roy Stockdill Editor, Journal of One-Name Studies Guild of One-Name Studies website: www.one-name.org Newbies' Guide to Genealogy & Family History: www.genuki.org.uk/gs/Newbie.html "There is only one thing in the world worse than being talked about, and that is not being talked about." OSCAR WILDE
Hello J. Welcome to the list Please can you supply more details about what you are looking for? What have you already found? Where have you already looked? Have you traced them through the census returns? Have you found everyone's birth, marrage, death records? Is there a specific person/close family which is proving elusive? Names, ages, towns/villages, etc? "CROSS in Yorkshire approx 1880s" doesn't give anyone much to go on ;-) Heather Q F&J Baker wrote: > Hello, > > I am new to this list, and wonder if anyone is researching the CROSS family name. > > Would be pleased to hear from them, as my CROSS family moved to Yorkshire approx 1880's. > > Thanks > > J . BAKER nee CROSS > > >