Wendy Boland wrote: > Latin lessons for the masochists amongst us! > > G'day All. > > Do you remember how to conjugate a verb or did you flunk Latin as I did? > amo amas amat - is about all I remember- sorry Mr Holland . 8>< snip You're one up on me then <G> I never did Latin at school because my maths wasn't good enough!! I'm still trying to figure out the connection xx years on. I'm doing a couple of short courses at the local record office on both Latin and Paelography later this year but I'll have a look at the links as well. -- Charani (UK)
<<From the book, A History Of England and the British Empire by Walter Phelps Hall, my daughter read the following sentence: "The last of these early invaders were the so-called Celts, the first of five conquerors--Celt Roman Saxon Dane and Norman--about whom there is some written knowledge." First of all, we found this sentence to be a bit confusing--how could they be the last *and* the first?>> The sentence is discussing two separate groups of invaders/conquerors: (1) early invaders and (2) invaders about whom there is some written knowledge. The two groups overlap slightly - the author is saying the Celts were the last of the early group and the first of the group for which there are written records. <<Does anyone know where the Celts came from? Are they Irish? Scots? Welsh? or English? or perhaps their blood flows in all Britts' veins? The book says that no one knows where they came from, but I figured since this was written in 1953 that perhaps something had been discovered since then. Worth a try, right?>> The Celts originated in central Europe (broadly an area centered on south Germany /Switzerland /Austria /Czechoslovakia) and spread out from there in all directions - some got as far as Greece and Turkey, others to Spain and the British Isles. Consequently their blood flows in nearly every European nation, though colloquially the term Celtic is usually used to describe the non-Germanic inhabitants of the western fringe of Europe who speak or once spoke Gaelic languages (the Scottish highlands and islands, Ireland, Wales, Cornwall, Brittany and even northwest Spain). Matt Tompkins ________________________________________________________________________ Get a FREE AOL Email account with 2GB of storage. Plus, share and store photos and experience exclusively recorded live music Sessions from your favourite artists. Find out more at http://info.aol.co.uk/joinnow/?ncid=548.
Hi Listers, My daughter, Brittany, has been reading a thick book of English history, and she has asked me a question that I am not able to answer, so thought I would throw it out to you. While not dealing exclusively with Warwickshire perhaps, it does deal with British origins. >From the book, A History Of England and the British Empire by Walter Phelps Hall, my daughter read the following sentence: "The last of these early invaders were the so-called Celts, the first of five conquerors--Celt Roman Saxon Dane and Norman--about whom there is some written knowledge." First of all, we found this sentence to be a bit confusing--how could they be the last *and* the first? Does anyone know where the Celts came from? Are they Irish? Scots? Welsh? or English? or perhaps their blood flows in all Britts' veins? The book says that no one knows where they came from, but I figured since this was written in 1953 that perhaps something had been discovered since then. Worth a try, right? Any input welcome. Regards, Faith Capnerhurst On floodwatch in hopefully not too sunny Chilliwack, BC, Canada researching CAPNERHURST/CAPENHURST, CHADD, CARRINGTON, SMITH, CLARK(E) & ALLEN >From: "Wendy Boland" <wendy.boland@bigpond.com> >To: <warwick@rootsweb.com> >Subject: [WAR] Latin lessons for the masochists amongst us! >Date: Fri, 8 Jun 2007 11:14:54 +1000 > >Latin lessons for the masochists amongst us! > >G'day All. > >Do you remember how to conjugate a verb or did you flunk Latin as I did? >amo amas amat - is about all I remember- sorry Mr Holland . > >I see the National Archives has a tutorial available online for those who >wish to experience the torture they missed out on in High School! > >http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/latin/beginners/tutorial/default.htm > >There is also a course on Palaeography 1500 to 1800 >http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/palaeography/ > >That should keep you all very busy for the rest of June! > >There will be a twenty minute oral test and a 2 hour written examination >at the end of this email <grin> >Cheers >Wendy >Warwick List Admin. > > >------------------------------- >To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to >WARWICK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes >in the subject and the body of the message _________________________________________________________________ Windows Live Hotmail. Now with better security, storage and features. www.newhotmail.ca?icid=WLHMENCA149
Hi, My earlier reply to Ray was based on the fact that Batch number 041795 on familysearch.org shows St Philip's baptisms for my OWEN family who lived in Duddeston. (Sarah Ann - 1830; William - 1832). As this was around the date identified by Ray I was suggesting that hatching and despatching may have taken place in the same church and might merit some examination. HTH Charles charles.henrywood@btinternet.com ----- Original Message ----- From: "Gus Tysoe" <gustysoe@tiscali.co.uk> To: "Eusebius1" <vhu54423@bigpond.net.au>; "Warwick Board" <warwick@rootsweb.com> Sent: Thursday, June 07, 2007 8:02 AM Subject: Re: [WAR] St. Philip,s Church, Birmingham. > Hello Ray, > > It may be no more than a quibble, but I'm wondering why a (presumed) > resident of Duddeston might be buried in Birmingham St Philip's graveyard. > > Duddeston was in Aston [St Peter & Paul], and was created a separate > Ecclesiastical Parish in 1842 - and although I don't know when its church > [St Matthew] was built there's a possibility that it may've been "open for > business" 3 or 4 years earlier. > > Gus > > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Eusebius1" <vhu54423@bigpond.net.au> > To: "Warwick Board" <warwick@rootsweb.com> > Sent: Thursday, June 07, 2007 1:47 AM > Subject: [WAR] St. Philip,s Church, Birmingham. > > > Hello List, > If a list member has access to St. Philip's Church, burial records would > they look > for an Edward HUDSON who died 15 December 1838 at Duddeston. Help > appreciated. > > Ray Hudson Perth, Western Australia. > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > WARWICK-request@rootsweb.com 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 > WARWICK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message >
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LDS IGI has transcribed records from St Thomas, Coventry. Diane < original message > Please does anyone know if the records for St Thomas's Church, which used to be situated on the corner of Albany Rd. and Queen's Rd. have been transcribed or are available either on microfiche or CD. I live in France so cannot visit the record office. Any pointers will be gratefully received. Betty. _________________________________________________________________ Like puzzles? Play free games & earn great prizes. Play Clink now. http://club.live.com/clink.aspx?icid=clink_hotmailtextlink2
My thanks to the respondents to my query about Rougham/Roughton in Warks. Of the various suggestions only Wroughton in Wilts seems a possibility, being on the extreme range of C17th Nason events. However, I suspect, without any real justification, that 'Rougham' may refer to a small farm or house in Warwickshire . . . MN PS for Anne Paling - the C20th Norfolk Nasons you cite came from Wandsworth London some time after 1903 . . .
<<In a transcript of the 1633 Visitation of London there is a reference to 'Joyce, daughter of Nason of Rougham', who married Walter Aston in 1619? In Aston genealogies there are references to 'Nason of Roughton'. I can find Rougham/Roughton in Norfolk, which has never been Nason territory. The Astons were Midlands gentry and lived in Staffs; Nason was, particularly circa 1600, a Warwickshire name. Will anyone hazard a guess at a possible Warwickshire location for Rougham or its sound-a-like? A Joyce Nason was baptised in 1560 in Wellesbourne but would have been rather long in the tooth at marriage? - it is reported that Joyce was Walter's 2nd wife, so a possibility.>> Hello Mike, I've looked in Place-Names of Warwickshire, which lists many names of places smaller than parishes and gives their past forms, but haven't been able to find any place which has ever taken a form close to Rougham or Roughton except one - Wrautam, a place on the boundary between Walsgrave-on-Sowe parish and Combe Abbey extra-parochial district. Wrautam appears on early large-scale OS maps, and is mentioned in the VCH chapter on Walsgrave, but in both cases only as a field name - whether anyone was living there in the 17th century I do not know. The latest references to it mentioned in Place-names of Warwickshire are 1356 and 1411. I see the Aston entry in the Visitation of London says 'Rougham, co. Warwick', so I suppose there is not much use in looking at places outside the county, but I did also check the Place-Name volumes for Worcs, Gloucs, Oxon and Northants, but with no success. A look in Ekwall's English Place-names did throw up not just the Roughams and Roughtons in Norfolk and Suffolk (and Roughton in Lincs), plus the Wroughton in Wilts, but also a Roughton in the parish of Worfield in southeast Salops (between Bridgnorth and Wolverhampton), and two Rowtons in the same county (one near High Ercall, the other west of Shrewsbury). If the Visitation statement that Rougham was in Warwicks is disregarded, Worfield and High Ercall are closer than any of the other possibilities to the Astons' seat at Tixall in Staffs. Regards, Matt Tompkins ________________________________________________________________________ Get a FREE AOL Email account with 2GB of storage. Plus, share and store photos and experience exclusively recorded live music Sessions from your favourite artists. Find out more at http://info.aol.co.uk/joinnow/?ncid=548.
Hi folks, St Matthew Duddeston hatches, 1840; matches, 1850; despatches, 1841 Alf FANTHAM Kings Norton Gus Tysoe wrote: > Hello Ray, > > It may be no more than a quibble, but I'm wondering why a (presumed) > resident of Duddeston might be buried in Birmingham St Philip's graveyard. > > Duddeston was in Aston [St Peter & Paul], and was created a separate > Ecclesiastical Parish in 1842 - and although I don't know when its church > [St Matthew] was built there's a possibility that it may've been "open for > business" 3 or 4 years earlier. > > Gus > > > ----- Original Message ----- > From: "Eusebius1" <vhu54423@bigpond.net.au> > To: "Warwick Board" <warwick@rootsweb.com> > Sent: Thursday, June 07, 2007 1:47 AM > Subject: [WAR] St. Philip,s Church, Birmingham. > > > Hello List, > If a list member has access to St. Philip's Church, burial records would > they look > for an Edward HUDSON who died 15 December 1838 at Duddeston. Help > appreciated. > > Ray Hudson Perth, Western Australia. > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > WARWICK-request@rootsweb.com 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 WARWICK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message > > > >
Please does anyone know if the records for St Thomas's Church, which used to be situated on the corner of Albany Rd. and Queen's Rd. have been transcribed or are available either on microfiche or CD. I live in France so cannot visit the record office. Any pointers will be gratefully received. Betty. _________________________________________________________________ Express yourself instantly with MSN Messenger! Download today it's FREE! http://messenger.msn.click-url.com/go/onm00200471ave/direct/01/
Hello List, If a list member has access to St. Philip's Church, burial records would they look for an Edward HUDSON who died 15 December 1838 at Duddeston. Help appreciated. Ray Hudson Perth, Western Australia.
Hello Ray, It may be no more than a quibble, but I'm wondering why a (presumed) resident of Duddeston might be buried in Birmingham St Philip's graveyard. Duddeston was in Aston [St Peter & Paul], and was created a separate Ecclesiastical Parish in 1842 - and although I don't know when its church [St Matthew] was built there's a possibility that it may've been "open for business" 3 or 4 years earlier. Gus ----- Original Message ----- From: "Eusebius1" <vhu54423@bigpond.net.au> To: "Warwick Board" <warwick@rootsweb.com> Sent: Thursday, June 07, 2007 1:47 AM Subject: [WAR] St. Philip,s Church, Birmingham. Hello List, If a list member has access to St. Philip's Church, burial records would they look for an Edward HUDSON who died 15 December 1838 at Duddeston. Help appreciated. Ray Hudson Perth, Western Australia. ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to WARWICK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
Every three months, a famous genealogist appears on my local BBC radio stations of BBC Shropshire, BBC Stoke and BBC Hereford & Worcester but can also be heard via the internet and I have just found out that he is due on the networked show again this coming Sunday. "On the Sunday Night Extravaganza, on 10th June, Keith Middleton will be joined by genealogist, Anthony Adolph. He will be looking at issues associated with starting your family tree and how the internet can connect people with their ancestors and lost relatives, as well as, answering any queries you want to discuss about anything genealogical. If you would like to ask a question, whether it be about getting started or how to get around a brick wall you have found, Anthony will do his best to point you in the right direction. However, whenever Anthony appears on the show, he proves to be very popular so if you would like to ask his help, please book your call NOW by emailing the presenter, Keith Middleton at keith.middleton@bbc.co.uk. In addition to this, you can call/text him from 10pm on Saturday or Sunday evening (BST). The phone number is 0845 303 9303 (+44 845 303 9303 if outside the UK); The text number is 0778 620 0096 (or +44 778 620 0096 if outside the UK)" TO LISTEN... To listen to BBC Shropshire go to http://www.bbc.co.uk/england/radioshropshire/ and click on the LISTEN LIVE button; Or, listen via 96fm and DAB radio To listen to BBC Stoke go to 94.6 and 104.1fm and DAB radio To listen to BBC Hereford & Worcester go to 104, 104.9, 94.7fm and 738, 1584 mw CONTACT... To phone - call +44 (0)845 303 9303 To text - text + 44 (0)778 620 0096 To email - email keith.middleton@bbc.co.uk More info - www.keithmiddleton.com or groups.msn.com/keithmiddleton
Hello to all Listers, I'm a first timer on your list, I'm looking for my 3x great grand father William Sich (Sych/Such)who on the 1851 census says he was born at Shottery in about 1775. I can't fine a parish church there, can any one help with information? Was there a church there or if not were would he likely to go to be baptised. William married Jane Drinkwater in 1804 at Ipsley. They went on to have 8 children Thomas 1802, Ann 1805, William 1809 my 2xgreat grandfather,Joseph 1812, John 1814, Harriet 1818, Caroline Jane 1821 and Eliza 1824. I am hoping to be able to find parish records for William to extend my family tree. Any help welcome Barb In not so sunny South Australia,it's actually raining!!
What were conditions like in Warwickshire in the 1860's that led to significant migrations? My wife's great great grandfather - John Huggins - farmed 270 acres at Avon Dassett at the time of the 1861 census with his son George. By 1866 John and his wife have a bank account with the New York Emigrant Bank and live in Glen Oak, NY and he works as a groom. His son George moved to Australia, initially to Victoria - gold fields? One son moved to London as a doctor and another was a solicitor - those moves I understand but what changes a man that farms 270 acres and employs several men and boys to a groom in New York? Cheers Steven Bliim Sydney, Australia -----Original Message----- From: warwick-bounces@rootsweb.com [mailto:warwick-bounces@rootsweb.com] On Behalf Of Jacqui Simkins Sent: Wednesday, 6 June 2007 5:32 PM To: Wendy Boland; warwick@rootsweb.com Subject: Re: [WAR] From Warwickshire to Australia Maybe Warwickshire should have a week-long "home coming" like some of the Scottish Islands do; when descendants of those who left Warwickshire are encouraged to come and visit, join together, participate in local events for family historians and generally see Warwickshire of today...a far cry from the rural place it was when many left. Even Wendy will be surprised at the changes...!!!! (South Warwickshire is less "developed" than the north...though not all would necessarily call it development). J. ----- Original Message ----- From: Wendy Boland To: warwick@rootsweb.com Sent: Wednesday, June 06, 2007 8:02 AM Subject: [WAR] From Warwickshire to Australia G'day Trying to keep us focused on Warwickshire - although it is probably of use to many researchers as this URL has info re many of the schemes for the different states and also to other destinations such as Canada and Jamacia http://www.hotkey.net.au/~jwilliams4/emigrate.htm snip<<< Emigration to Queensland 1890. Free passages to Queensland The following news articles were published in Warwickshire, England, in 1890, and were kindly made available by Viv Pritchard in Warks, England. "Wanted. Queensland.Australia. Free passages given. Single farm labourers and female domestic servants 17 - 35. Men must be country resident and wholly agricultural. LAND ORDERS value £20 granted to each fee-payng passenger. For particulars, forms of application, & etc, write to (if possible see) MR W.A ARCHER. 70 Regent St.Leamington." (Leamington- Leamington Spa - Warwickshire) src: Rugby Advertiser, 25th Jan 1890. "Free Passage to Queensland, Australia Farm labourers and Female Domestic Servants GEORGE RANDALL, ESQ. Emigration Commissioner From Queensland will visit Warwickshire next week, accompanied by the authorised Agent for the Midlands, Mr W.R. Archer, of Leamington, to answer enquiries, see applicants personally, and give full information, and will be in attendance at the following places:- Rugby Leamington Fenny Compton Kineton Alcester Banbury Those who wish to go to Queensland free, should not fail to come to the nearest of above named places, and so save expense of coming to Leamington. Apply for forms etc by post to W.R. Archer, 70, Regent Street, Leamington" src: Rugby Advertiser 2nd Jan 1889,>>>>>>>>> There is a great deal of information online about migrants including passenger listings------ google! Good hunting Wendy Boland Warwick List Admin ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to WARWICK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message -- No virus found in this incoming message. Checked by AVG Free Edition. Version: 7.5.472 / Virus Database: 269.8.9/834 - Release Date: 05/06/2007 14:38 ------------------------------- To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to WARWICK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message
G'day Trying to keep us focused on Warwickshire - although it is probably of use to many researchers as this URL has info re many of the schemes for the different states and also to other destinations such as Canada and Jamacia http://www.hotkey.net.au/~jwilliams4/emigrate.htm snip<<< Emigration to Queensland 1890. Free passages to Queensland The following news articles were published in Warwickshire, England, in 1890, and were kindly made available by Viv Pritchard in Warks, England. "Wanted. Queensland.Australia. Free passages given. Single farm labourers and female domestic servants 17 - 35. Men must be country resident and wholly agricultural. LAND ORDERS value £20 granted to each fee-payng passenger. For particulars, forms of application, & etc, write to (if possible see) MR W.A ARCHER. 70 Regent St.Leamington." (Leamington- Leamington Spa - Warwickshire) src: Rugby Advertiser, 25th Jan 1890. "Free Passage to Queensland, Australia Farm labourers and Female Domestic Servants GEORGE RANDALL, ESQ. Emigration Commissioner From Queensland will visit Warwickshire next week, accompanied by the authorised Agent for the Midlands, Mr W.R. Archer, of Leamington, to answer enquiries, see applicants personally, and give full information, and will be in attendance at the following places:- Rugby Leamington Fenny Compton Kineton Alcester Banbury Those who wish to go to Queensland free, should not fail to come to the nearest of above named places, and so save expense of coming to Leamington. Apply for forms etc by post to W.R. Archer, 70, Regent Street, Leamington" src: Rugby Advertiser 2nd Jan 1889,>>>>>>>>> There is a great deal of information online about migrants including passenger listings------ google! Good hunting Wendy Boland Warwick List Admin
At that time Shottery was in the parish of Old Stratford, i.e. Stratford-on-Avon, so the parish church of Holy Trinity would be the first place to look. I believe you will find that other variants of the name are Souch & Zouch. MAR in France. > Message du 06/06/07 13:46 > De : "barbsuch@internode.on.net" > A : WARWICK@rootsweb.com > Copie à : > Objet : [WAR] William Sich(Sych,Such) > > Hello to all Listers, > I'm a first timer on your list, I'm looking for my 3x great > grand father William Sich (Sych/Such)who on the 1851 census > says he was born at Shottery in about 1775. I can't fine a > parish church there, can any one help with information? Was > there a church there or if not were would he likely to go to > be baptised. William married Jane Drinkwater in 1804 at > Ipsley. They went on to have 8 children Thomas 1802, Ann > 1805, William 1809 my 2xgreat grandfather,Joseph 1812, John > 1814, Harriet 1818, Caroline Jane 1821 and Eliza 1824. I am > hoping to be able to find parish records for William to > extend my family tree. > Any help welcome > Barb > In not so sunny South Australia,it's actually raining!! > >--- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to WARWICK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message > > >
There's Wroughton in Wiltshire (outskirts of Swindon). MAR in France. > Message du 06/06/07 15:10 > De : "M. N." > A : "List, Warwick" > Copie à : > Objet : [WAR] Rougham or Roughton in Warwickshire > > Fellow listers, > in a transcript of the 1633 Visitation of London there is a reference to > 'Joyce, daughter of Nason of Rougham', who married Walter Aston in > 1619? In Aston genealogies there are references to 'Nason of Roughton'. > > I can find Rougham/Roughton in Norfolk, which has never been Nason > territory. The Astons were Midlands gentry and lived in Staffs; Nason > was, particularly circa 1600, a Warwickshire name. > > Will anyone hazard a guess at a possible Warwickshire location for > Rougham or its sound-a-like? A Joyce Nason was baptised in 1560 in > Wellesbourne but would have been rather long in the tooth at marriage? - > it is reported that Joyce was Walter's 2nd wife, so a possibility. > > Thanks. > > > >--- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to WARWICK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message > > > maraix
War Brides ....? FREE. :-) betty ----- Original Message ----- From: "Wendy Boland" <wendy.boland@bigpond.com> To: "A P L" <annepaling@hotmail.com>; <WARWICK-L@rootsweb.com> Sent: Wednesday, June 06, 2007 9:15 AM Subject: Re: [WAR] Help understanding assisted immigration > G'Day > > Yes there were quite a few schemes to bring people over to Oz. > > The infamous "let's dump the felons Scheme"- then the "bring wives for the > felons Scheme" > <grin> > > In the later years it seemed a good idea to send the surplus ag labs > over. > Then of course it was "orphans" and other unwanted children who were sent > over. > Various people recruited potential migrants in the UK. > Caroline Chisholm was actively helping young women find employment and > lodgings in Sydney and Wollongong > NSW in the early years (1850s 60s I think) > > The Agricultural Labourers Union paid their members fares and actively > recruited families in Warwickshire in the 1880s . > > Some Parishes also paid the fares as it was cheaper to send a poverty > stricken family over here than to pay > for their long term upkeep in the UK. > There were various other schemes around too and I think you will find that > copies of the some recruiting posters are extant. > There were Agents who visited, gave talks and recruited in the towns and > villages. > >>From past reading- I seem to remember that a family had to have a certain >>amount of goods - i.e. clothes etc. > before they were allowed to board the ship. > > My husband and I were ten quid tourists in the 1960s when emigration was > much easier than it is now for UK citizens. > We came to God's Own Country and stayed ! > > The Populate or Perish slogan was a scare tactic to ward off the invading > hordes from neighbouring countries > - they are still trying to scare us into having more children! > > Cheers > Wendy Boland > Warwick List Admin > > > > T > > Apparently people have been immigrating to Australia for over 40,000 > years! > Must be a nice place .... > > Apparently you thought that "Australia must populate or perish...." ? > > > > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > WARWICK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the > quotes in the subject and the body of the message >
What about Rowton, Shropshire. Roughton would probably be pronounced as Rowton in the midlands. David ramaix wrote: > There's Wroughton in Wiltshire (outskirts of Swindon). > MAR in France. > > > > > > >> Message du 06/06/07 15:10 >> De : "M. N." >> A : "List, Warwick" >> Copie à : >> Objet : [WAR] Rougham or Roughton in Warwickshire >> >> Fellow listers, >> in a transcript of the 1633 Visitation of London there is a reference to >> 'Joyce, daughter of Nason of Rougham', who married Walter Aston in >> 1619? In Aston genealogies there are references to 'Nason of Roughton'. >> >> I can find Rougham/Roughton in Norfolk, which has never been Nason >> territory. The Astons were Midlands gentry and lived in Staffs; Nason >> was, particularly circa 1600, a Warwickshire name. >> >> Will anyone hazard a guess at a possible Warwickshire location for >> Rougham or its sound-a-like? A Joyce Nason was baptised in 1560 in >> Wellesbourne but would have been rather long in the tooth at marriage? - >> it is reported that Joyce was Walter's 2nd wife, so a possibility. >> >> Thanks. >> >> >> >> --- >> To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to WARWICK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message >> >> >> >> > maraix > > ------------------------------- > To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to WARWICK-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the quotes in the subject and the body of the message -- David Franks, Cambridge, England Researching Castle and Tallis, Warwickshire and Oxfordshire, and Thomas Castle, convict transported to Van Diemen’s Land Warwickshire Online Parish Clerks http://www.hunimex.com/warwick/opc/opc.html