On 31 Oct 2010 at 10:02, gc-gateway@rootsweb.com wrote: > I would very much appreciate if you could help me. I am looking for > any information relating to my ancestor Margaret Jane Haysham. She > married a dane (Frederick Gerhardt Reiter) and they moved to Denmark. > I would like to go and visit the places, where the members of the > Haysham family have lived I England but I need some more information > about them. I have found following: Margaret Jane Haysham, birth: 27 > Apr 1810, Christening date: 1 Aug 1810, Place: Ashcott, Somersetshire, > England. Brothers: George Haysham, Burried (as a child) 6 Jan 1801, > Place St. Marylebone, Westminster, Middlesex George Theodore Haysham, > birth 27 Nov 1803, Christening date, 24 Jan 1804, Ashcott, > Somersetshire, England. Thomas Haysham, birth 4 Feb 1806, Christening > date 8 Marts Place: Ashcott, Somersetshire, England. > > Margaret Jane Haysham, spouse: Frederick Gerhardt Reiter, Bans of > Marriage: 1 Jul 1838 - St. Marylebone, Westminster, Middlesex > (Marriage sept 1838 ?) > > Parents: > George Haysham, birth abt 1776, marriage: Ann (?) birth abt 1776. They > lived in (1841) - St Martin in The Fields, Westminster, Middlesex > (sub-registration: Long Acre) > > I am hopeful of being able to go further back in time so I hope you > could look them up and find out who their parents were. Thank you so > much. Tove (reiter.kirk@gmail.com) > Why have you posted this to a Yorkshire list? Neither Somerset nor Middlesex are anywhere near Yorkshire! Somerset is a county in the West of England and Middlesex and Westminster are now part of London. What's the Yorkshire connection? I see none whatsoever. Perhaps being in Denmark you are unfamiliar with the geography of Britain? Yorkshire is the largest county in England and it is in the north - some 200 miles from both Middlesex and Somerset. -- Roy Stockdill Genealogical researcher, writer & lecturer 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