Robert Scott's will shows that his wife Susannah had died and, as she was named as his executrix, a 16 year-old Susannah Scott was called to be executrix. (There is an administration for Susannah in file too which shows that Watson Hastings was Susannah (the 16 year old) 's maternal Uncle. The will mentions children by Robert's first wife, Hannah and land in South Lynn which he had purchased from Sir William Welby. Robert was a victualler and, looking at the Norfolk Pubs website, he may well have taken the Bull over from his father as Thomas Scott was landlord previous to Robert. Lots of information to be followed up there but I must stop!!! Glynn http://www.norfolk-tours.co.uk
I think I've found him Sue. baptised at Wiggenhall St Peter 17 Jun 1792(although residing in W St Mary) Parents were Thomas and Mary. (as per FreeReg) >________________________________ > From: Sue Coombs <[email protected]> >To: Norfolk List <[email protected]> >Sent: Wednesday, 2 July 2014, 18:03 >Subject: [NFK] Robert Scott born circa 1792 Saddlebow St Mary > > >Hi, > >This is my first request to this list and I hope someone will be able to help me otherwise I am well and truely stuck! > > >I am trying to find the baptism of Robert Scott born circa 1792 in Saddlebow St Mary in order to find his parents and siblings. > > >I believe he married Hannah Jackson on 5th January 1815 at Wiggenhall St Peter and after her death in October 1826 went on to marry Susanna Hastings on 31st January 1827. > >I believe Robert died in January 1848 in Wiggenhall St Mary and is buried at St Mary The Virgin, Wiggenhall. > > >Kind regards, > >Sue > > > > >------------------------------- >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 > > >
I think you need the records from Wiggenhall St Mary, as that parish covered Saddlebow. Try http://www.freereg.org.uk/ as some ATs and BTs are on there for that time period. Best wishes Sheila >________________________________ > From: Sue Coombs <[email protected]> >To: Norfolk List <[email protected]> >Sent: Wednesday, 2 July 2014, 18:03 >Subject: [NFK] Robert Scott born circa 1792 Saddlebow St Mary > > >Hi, > >This is my first request to this list and I hope someone will be able to help me otherwise I am well and truely stuck! > > >I am trying to find the baptism of Robert Scott born circa 1792 in Saddlebow St Mary in order to find his parents and siblings. > > >I believe he married Hannah Jackson on 5th January 1815 at Wiggenhall St Peter and after her death in October 1826 went on to marry Susanna Hastings on 31st January 1827. > >I believe Robert died in January 1848 in Wiggenhall St Mary and is buried at St Mary The Virgin, Wiggenhall. > > >Kind regards, > >Sue > > > > >------------------------------- >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, This is my first request to this list and I hope someone will be able to help me otherwise I am well and truely stuck! I am trying to find the baptism of Robert Scott born circa 1792 in Saddlebow St Mary in order to find his parents and siblings. I believe he married Hannah Jackson on 5th January 1815 at Wiggenhall St Peter and after her death in October 1826 went on to marry Susanna Hastings on 31st January 1827. I believe Robert died in January 1848 in Wiggenhall St Mary and is buried at St Mary The Virgin, Wiggenhall. Kind regards, Sue
As one of the previous responses has indicated, here could be multiple sources of the name WEBB, as it is simply an occupational name meaning Weaver. Given that a common trade in Norfolk was weaving, it could be a surname endemic to Norfolk itself. Your are also going to find that the appearance of the surname goes back well before normal records used for genealogy. In addition to the list identified by Pam, you may want to also look in the NRO catalogue (NROCAT) at http://www.archives.norfolk.gov.uk/ for early references to the name that are explicitly identified there. And also look in discovery at The National Archives to see what that identifies for early WEBB references in the county. (The earliest Norfolk deed there appears to be c.1305, i.e. taking you well back to the time of surname adoption) Another identifier of early sources might be found in early Norfolk books, for which there are a number on books.google.co.uk and archive.org - for example: https://archive.org/details/indexnominumbei01blomgoog Do remember to also check for variant spellings, e.g. WEBBE. regards Keith Drage Swindon UK On 01/07/2014 09:44, Pam Downes wrote: > The answer to question one is 'how long is a piece of string?' :) > Until you can check every known document in existencefor a reference to > Webbs then you will not know for definite. > What you can do is search sites/indexes such as Norfolk Transcription > Archive > http://www.doun.org/transcriptions/index.php > FreeREG - http://www.freereg.org.uk/ > and FamilySearch - > https://familysearch.org/search/collection/list#page=1®ion=UNITED_KINGDOM_IRELAND > > Norfolk FHS also have online searching of their indexes available to > members. > http://www.norfolkfhs.org.uk/ > Membership's a bargain at a tenner a year. (Even cheaper if you sign up > for 10 years!) > > Someone might know the answers to questions 2 and 3. Or you might find > them yourself in your search. > > Pam > > > On 01/07/2014 09:00, Robert Webb wrote: >> hi >> 1. Does anyone know when the WEBB’s first arrived in Norfolk >> 2. Does anyone know when the WEBB’s first arrived in the Kings Lynn area >> 3. Does anyone have any connections to the WEBB families in the Kings Lynn area prior to 1770 or with James WEBB who married Anne Spooner 1795 and their son William born c 1803 >> Regards >> Robert Webb >> >> ------------------------------- > > ------------------------------- > 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
I'm up for the challenge - but may not be equal to it! Ned On 01/07/2014 07:25, Karen Hodges wrote: > I have an entry from an index for administrations, written in Latin in > 1685. The entry is four lines and one word in large bold cursive writing > .I think the first line refers to the date and the second to the person and > location but I have no idea about the other two lines. If anyone is > interested in a translation challenge please send me an email. > > Karen >
I have an entry from an index for administrations, written in Latin in 1685. The entry is four lines and one word in large bold cursive writing .I think the first line refers to the date and the second to the person and location but I have no idea about the other two lines. If anyone is interested in a translation challenge please send me an email. Karen
Hi , usually it says Probatum Londoninum , proved in London , before Mr Somebody Doctor at Law etc, and administration given to X the relict or only son or whatever of the testator , on his or her oath to administer the estate properly . and then dated. Do you want to send a jpg of this and I will see if I can have a go at it. life is hard . soften it with a cat \\\=^..^=/// ----- Original Message ----- From: "Karen Hodges" <[email protected]> To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]> Sent: Tuesday, July 01, 2014 7:25 AM Subject: [NFK] Intestate index 1685 need help with understanding the Latin >I have an entry from an index for administrations, written in Latin in > 1685. The entry is four lines and one word in large bold cursive writing > .I think the first line refers to the date and the second to the person > and > location but I have no idea about the other two lines. If anyone is > interested in a translation challenge please send me an email. > > Karen > > ------------------------------- > 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 >
Webb is I gather like Webster a weaving name-occupational. So it could originate anywhere there was weaving and independently in many different areas. Maybe a case of when it was first used in any one area rather than when it arrived. Not the same as when did Sheringham or Massingham or Filby first appear in London for instance. Since weaving went on all over Norfolk-flax and linen production in North Runcton and other West Norfolk villages -your Webbs might have been in the area from the first time the family used a surname. Rosie On 01/07/2014 09:44, Pam Downes wrote: > The answer to question one is 'how long is a piece of string?' :) > Until you can check every known document in existencefor a reference to > Webbs then you will not know for definite. > What you can do is search sites/indexes such as Norfolk Transcription > Archive > http://www.doun.org/transcriptions/index.php > FreeREG - http://www.freereg.org.uk/ > and FamilySearch - > https://familysearch.org/search/collection/list#page=1®ion=UNITED_KINGDOM_IRELAND > > Norfolk FHS also have online searching of their indexes available to > members. > http://www.norfolkfhs.org.uk/ > Membership's a bargain at a tenner a year. (Even cheaper if you sign up > for 10 years!) > > Someone might know the answers to questions 2 and 3. Or you might find > them yourself in your search. > > Pam > > > On 01/07/2014 09:00, Robert Webb wrote: >> hi >> 1. Does anyone know when the WEBB’s first arrived in Norfolk >> 2. Does anyone know when the WEBB’s first arrived in the Kings Lynn area >> 3. Does anyone have any connections to the WEBB families in the Kings Lynn area prior to 1770 or with James WEBB who married Anne Spooner 1795 and their son William born c 1803 >> Regards >> Robert Webb >> >> ------------------------------- > > ------------------------------- > 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 answer to question one is 'how long is a piece of string?' :) Until you can check every known document in existencefor a reference to Webbs then you will not know for definite. What you can do is search sites/indexes such as Norfolk Transcription Archive http://www.doun.org/transcriptions/index.php FreeREG - http://www.freereg.org.uk/ and FamilySearch - https://familysearch.org/search/collection/list#page=1®ion=UNITED_KINGDOM_IRELAND Norfolk FHS also have online searching of their indexes available to members. http://www.norfolkfhs.org.uk/ Membership's a bargain at a tenner a year. (Even cheaper if you sign up for 10 years!) Someone might know the answers to questions 2 and 3. Or you might find them yourself in your search. Pam On 01/07/2014 09:00, Robert Webb wrote: > hi > 1. Does anyone know when the WEBB’s first arrived in Norfolk > 2. Does anyone know when the WEBB’s first arrived in the Kings Lynn area > 3. Does anyone have any connections to the WEBB families in the Kings Lynn area prior to 1770 or with James WEBB who married Anne Spooner 1795 and their son William born c 1803 > Regards > Robert Webb > > -------------------------------
Morning Robert I think the questions you should be asking are relative to *your* WEBBs Not all WEBBs are related and not all WEBBs will in fact be WEBBs No one will be able to tell you when all WEBBs arrived in Norfolk much less Kings Lynn You need to take it one step at a time backwards, proving each link along the way In familysearch the earliest WEBBE I can see is a baptism of Richard WEBBE in 1542, father Hughe but there may be others Have you checked for wills, in newspapers, etc Nivard Ovington in Cornwall (UK) On 01/07/2014 09:00, Robert Webb wrote: > hi > 1. Does anyone know when the WEBB’s first arrived in Norfolk > 2. Does anyone know when the WEBB’s first arrived in the Kings Lynn area > 3. Does anyone have any connections to the WEBB families in the Kings Lynn area prior to 1770 or with James WEBB who married Anne Spooner 1795 and their son William born c 1803 > Regards > Robert Webb
hi 1. Does anyone know when the WEBB’s first arrived in Norfolk 2. Does anyone know when the WEBB’s first arrived in the Kings Lynn area 3. Does anyone have any connections to the WEBB families in the Kings Lynn area prior to 1770 or with James WEBB who married Anne Spooner 1795 and their son William born c 1803 Regards Robert Webb
I haven't really researched the WEBB's, but, I have a connection to a Frederick William Webb who married Margaret Goodrum. Frederick was born in Chatham, Kent. Margaret was born in Fundenhall, Norfolk. She is my great grandmother's sister. His folks may have come from Sheerness, Kent, I am not sure. There were visits back and forth from Kent to Norfolk. Helena On Tue, Jul 1, 2014 at 4:00 AM, Robert Webb <[email protected]> wrote: > hi > 1. Does anyone know when the WEBB’s first arrived in Norfolk > 2. Does anyone know when the WEBB’s first arrived in the Kings Lynn area > 3. Does anyone have any connections to the WEBB families in the Kings Lynn > area prior to 1770 or with James WEBB who married Anne Spooner 1795 and > their son William born c 1803 > Regards > Robert Webb > > ------------------------------- > 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
Exhibition in St Edmund church Horningtoft, 19th & 20th July 2014. Names researched Annison, Baker, Beven, Chamberlain, Claxton, Davey, Drew. Drury, Frost, Gant, George, Jarred, List, Mickleburgh, Moore, Nix, Riches, Simmons, Thurlow, Williamson. Heather Gooch Horningtoft Heritage Society
I came across these two interesting entries in the Wells-Next-the-Sea Parish register (Familysearch web site – Baptisms, Marriages, Burials 1548-1649). ------------------------------------------------------------- 1583 - Burials December. Perished upon the west coast coming from Spaine Richard WALLER, Christopher DODD, John BUNTYNG, Willm. CRAVEN, George PAGE, Gregory BAXTER, Christopher BAXTER, Thomas AYRE, Henrye GOULDSMITH, Walter MARSHALL, Robert ARCHER, Oliver COBB, Wm. BARRET, Rich: DYE whose deathes were brought about by the detestable woorking of an execrable witch of Kings Lynn whose name was Mother GABLEY <or GABLE> by the Boyling or rather labouring of certayne eggs in a payle full of colde water, afterward approved sufficientlye at the araignement of the saide witch. <A note has been added to the page ‘....ed for BBC Jan 1954 W.A. STEPHENS Rector.’ There are several references on the internet stating that Mother Gabley was found guilty of witchcraft and hanged. Poor old lady. ------------------------------------------------------------- 1587 - Buriings . October 8 and 13. George MATHEWE a shoemaker being an Adulterer was stabbed into with a knife by the husband of the Adultress evene as the filthie deede was in dooing & soe kilde, oute of hande whoute speaking of any woorde the eighte daye of October betwixt the howers of fyve & six of the Clock in the morninge, was buried the thirtene day of October betwixt ye howers of 2 & 3 after noon. <At foot of page> The life of the murtherer whose name was Andrewe TOMSON a northe contry man was through the ----- of his kinsmen & freindship of some townsmen stayed ------- the ------ murther not soe much as p----ted into the chapittle (?) ------ the revenge god ------ the towne --- twoe yeres is --- pleasing ------- at ---- to –....... ------------------------------------------------------------- I would be very grateful if someone could please double check my transcription for the second item and hopefully fill in some blanks. The page becomes illegible towards the bottom. The URL is https://familysearch.org/pal:/MM9.3.1/TH-267-12383-4078-98?cc=1416598&wc=M66B-LW5:30389701,29358102,30599901 (image 30 of 149). The registers record losses at sea of hundreds of men from Wells in the 16th & 17th centuries, mostly while en route to/from Newcastle and Iceland. Best regards ................ Bill Atkins http://www.oldshuck.webspace.virginmedia.com/
Years ago when the IGIs were used these contained a cross section of records and therefore not all the information. As far as I know they are digitally uploading their films which would cover all that was in the records that they found. Be careful to check all records available for a location which normally include original parish records, transcripts for both Archdeacon and bishop transcripts. You may find an entry is recorded in one record but not in another this has nothing to do with family search but with the records themselves. If you find something wrong in an entry on there site email and they will investigate it. Karen On Mon, Jun 16, 2014 at 2:01 PM, Cascadian <[email protected]> wrote: > Like many, I suspect, I utilize Familysearch for much of my pre 1841 > research and had always assumed (I know-never assume) that these had > been transcribed fully, recent reference to Brampton and Burgh next > Aylsham records leads me to believe that is not the case. Understand > this is not criticism, it is just a desire to learn more. > > Does anybody here know if the bishop and archdeacon transcriptions have > been fully transcribed that link christening/marriage/burial data to > their respective villages, towns, cities? Or do all/some/none of the > data come under the catch-all Norfolk, England geographic location > during the search? > > I understand this is a question that might be better answered at > Familysearch, however the members here have such a wealth of knowledge > directly applicable to Norfolk I am hoping that some may have come > across this situation and can offer some advice. > > > Alan Kendell, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada > researching KINDLE KENDLE KENDAL KENDALL KENDALE & KENDELL in the > general area of Aylsham, Norfolk > > --- > This email is free from viruses and malware because avast! Antivirus > protection is active. > http://www.avast.com > > > ------------------------------- > 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 , to add to Carolynn`s very useful information , Easter Daines is in the 1841 census for Deopham, Nr Chapel is the address . and is living with Stephen Bell and his wife Susan , they are shopkeepers, Easter is 88 yrs old . Further on the Green still in Deopham is Thomas Daines, 49 , dealer, Y, with Elizabeth , 50, Y, Eliza, 20, Easter, 16, Elizabeth, 12, and William , 8. I would think it fairly safe to assume these are relatives of Esther and William . Deopham marriages have been transcribed from 1725 - 1811 and there is a John Dains marriage to Elizabeth Purple in 1774. life is hard . soften it with a cat \\\=^..^=/// ----- Original Message ----- From: "Carolynn Langley" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Sunday, June 15, 2014 10:37 PM Subject: Re: [NFK] DAINES > National Burial Index for England & Wales Transcription > First Name ESTHER > Last Name DAINES > Year Of Birth 1752 > Year Of Death 1841 > Burial Day 3 > Burial Month 10 > Burial Year 1841 > Age 89 > Place DEOPHAM > County Norfolk > Extended Information - > Church Denomination ANGLICAN > Church Description ST ANDREW > Country England > Record set National Burial Index for England & Wales > Category Birth, Marriage, Death & Parish Records > Record collection Deaths & burials > Collections from Great Britain > Mid-Norfolk Family History Society > Transcriptions © Mid-Norfolk Family History Society > > > > On Sun, Jun 15, 2014 at 10:34 PM, Carolynn Langley > <[email protected]> > wrote: > >> National Burial Index for England & Wales Transcription >> First Name WILLIAM >> Last Name DAINES >> Year Of Birth 1748 >> Year Of Death 1824 >> Burial Day 19 >> Burial Month 3 >> Burial Year 1824 >> Age 76 >> Place WOODRISING >> County Norfolk >> Extended Information - >> Church Denomination ANGLICAN >> Church Description ST NICHOLAS >> Country England >> Record set National Burial Index for England & Wales >> Category Birth, Marriage, Death & Parish Records >> Record collection Deaths & burials >> Collections from Great Britain >> Mid-Norfolk Family History Society >> Transcriptions © Mid-Norfolk Family History Society >> >> >> On Sun, Jun 15, 2014 at 9:03 PM, <[email protected]> wrote: >> >>> No I don’t know but I did have a villaghe that Esther was in I think >>> after William died but I can’t think of it so you wont be any help to >>> me >>> sorry to say Thanks for replying, margaret >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> Sent from Windows Mail >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> From: elizabeth howard >>> Sent: Sunday, 15 June 2014 10:07 p.m. >>> To: [email protected] >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> Hi, near Woodrising could be a number of villages, do you >>> have >>> any idea which , and where the 4 boys and 1 girl were bapt ? and when ? >>> late 1700s ? >>> >>> >>> >>> >>> life is hard . soften it with a cat \\\=^..^=/// >>> ----- Original Message ----- >>> From: <[email protected]> >>> To: <[email protected]> >>> Sent: Sunday, June 15, 2014 5:18 AM >>> Subject: [NFK] ? >>> >>> >>> >I am wanting information on a William Daines who married an Esther? >>> >They >>> >lived near Woodrising about the late 1700’s. They had 4 boys and I >>> think >>> >1 girl. Can anyone help at all please. Margaret >>> > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>> > >>> > Sent from Windows Mail >>> > >>> > ------------------------------- >>> > 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 >>> >>> ------------------------------- >>> 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
Hi, the NFHS has a good list of all transcriptions of parish registers.......and NROCAT will if you click on set searches, give you all the existing PRs and BTs etc for each parish. life is hard . soften it with a cat \\\=^..^=/// ----- Original Message ----- From: "Julie Harold" <[email protected]> To: <[email protected]> Sent: Monday, June 16, 2014 8:36 AM Subject: Re: [NFK] Familysearch transcriptions-Norwich bishop transcriptions > You need to be aware as well the ATs are generally very patchy - often > run from 1725-1812 on the familysearch images (even though the existed > outside that period as well). > > Many of the ATs have been included in the FreeREG database. > > Julie > > On 16 June 2014 05:01, Cascadian <[email protected]> wrote: >> Like many, I suspect, I utilize Familysearch for much of my pre 1841 >> research and had always assumed (I know-never assume) that these had >> been transcribed fully, recent reference to Brampton and Burgh next >> Aylsham records leads me to believe that is not the case. Understand >> this is not criticism, it is just a desire to learn more. >> >> Does anybody here know if the bishop and archdeacon transcriptions have >> been fully transcribed that link christening/marriage/burial data to >> their respective villages, towns, cities? Or do all/some/none of the >> data come under the catch-all Norfolk, England geographic location >> during the search? >> >> I understand this is a question that might be better answered at >> Familysearch, however the members here have such a wealth of knowledge >> directly applicable to Norfolk I am hoping that some may have come >> across this situation and can offer some advice. >> >> >> Alan Kendell, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada >> researching KINDLE KENDLE KENDAL KENDALL KENDALE & KENDELL in the >> general area of Aylsham, Norfolk >> >> --- >> This email is free from viruses and malware because avast! Antivirus >> protection is active. >> http://www.avast.com >> >> >> ------------------------------- >> 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 > > > > -- > Julie Harold > FreeREG Norfolk Coordinator > [email protected] > http://www.freereg.org.uk/parishes/nfk/frontpage.shtml > > ------------------------------- > 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 >
You need to be aware as well the ATs are generally very patchy - often run from 1725-1812 on the familysearch images (even though the existed outside that period as well). Many of the ATs have been included in the FreeREG database. Julie On 16 June 2014 05:01, Cascadian <[email protected]> wrote: > Like many, I suspect, I utilize Familysearch for much of my pre 1841 > research and had always assumed (I know-never assume) that these had > been transcribed fully, recent reference to Brampton and Burgh next > Aylsham records leads me to believe that is not the case. Understand > this is not criticism, it is just a desire to learn more. > > Does anybody here know if the bishop and archdeacon transcriptions have > been fully transcribed that link christening/marriage/burial data to > their respective villages, towns, cities? Or do all/some/none of the > data come under the catch-all Norfolk, England geographic location > during the search? > > I understand this is a question that might be better answered at > Familysearch, however the members here have such a wealth of knowledge > directly applicable to Norfolk I am hoping that some may have come > across this situation and can offer some advice. > > > Alan Kendell, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada > researching KINDLE KENDLE KENDAL KENDALL KENDALE & KENDELL in the > general area of Aylsham, Norfolk > > --- > This email is free from viruses and malware because avast! Antivirus protection is active. > http://www.avast.com > > > ------------------------------- > 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 -- Julie Harold FreeREG Norfolk Coordinator [email protected] http://www.freereg.org.uk/parishes/nfk/frontpage.shtml
National Burial Index for England & Wales Transcription First Name ESTHER Last Name DAINES Year Of Birth 1752 Year Of Death 1841 Burial Day 3 Burial Month 10 Burial Year 1841 Age 89 Place DEOPHAM County Norfolk Extended Information - Church Denomination ANGLICAN Church Description ST ANDREW Country England Record set National Burial Index for England & Wales Category Birth, Marriage, Death & Parish Records Record collection Deaths & burials Collections from Great Britain Mid-Norfolk Family History Society Transcriptions © Mid-Norfolk Family History Society On Sun, Jun 15, 2014 at 10:34 PM, Carolynn Langley <[email protected]> wrote: > National Burial Index for England & Wales Transcription > First Name WILLIAM > Last Name DAINES > Year Of Birth 1748 > Year Of Death 1824 > Burial Day 19 > Burial Month 3 > Burial Year 1824 > Age 76 > Place WOODRISING > County Norfolk > Extended Information - > Church Denomination ANGLICAN > Church Description ST NICHOLAS > Country England > Record set National Burial Index for England & Wales > Category Birth, Marriage, Death & Parish Records > Record collection Deaths & burials > Collections from Great Britain > Mid-Norfolk Family History Society > Transcriptions © Mid-Norfolk Family History Society > > > On Sun, Jun 15, 2014 at 9:03 PM, <[email protected]> wrote: > >> No I don’t know but I did have a villaghe that Esther was in I think >> after William died but I can’t think of it so you wont be any help to me >> sorry to say Thanks for replying, margaret >> >> >> >> >> >> >> Sent from Windows Mail >> >> >> >> >> >> From: elizabeth howard >> Sent: Sunday, 15 June 2014 10:07 p.m. >> To: [email protected] >> >> >> >> >> >> Hi, near Woodrising could be a number of villages, do you >> have >> any idea which , and where the 4 boys and 1 girl were bapt ? and when ? >> late 1700s ? >> >> >> >> >> life is hard . soften it with a cat \\\=^..^=/// >> ----- Original Message ----- >> From: <[email protected]> >> To: <[email protected]> >> Sent: Sunday, June 15, 2014 5:18 AM >> Subject: [NFK] ? >> >> >> >I am wanting information on a William Daines who married an Esther? They >> >lived near Woodrising about the late 1700’s. They had 4 boys and I >> think >> >1 girl. Can anyone help at all please. Margaret >> > >> > >> > >> > >> > >> > >> > >> > >> > >> > >> > >> > Sent from Windows Mail >> > >> > ------------------------------- >> > 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 >> >> ------------------------------- >> 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 >> > >