My Owen family is from Duddeston and the link is to St Philip's. HTH Charles charles.henrywood@btinternet.com ----- Original Message ----- From: "Eusebius1" <vhu54423@bigpond.net.au> To: "Warwick Board" <warwick@rootsweb.com> Sent: Tuesday, June 05, 2007 7:20 AM Subject: [WAR] 1838 Burial. > Hello List, > I have an Edward Hudson who died in 1838 at Duddeston in the parish of > Aston. could > someone suggested where he may have been buried. Any assistance wouold be > appreciated. > > Ray 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 >
The LLOYD family lived at Areley Hall, Stourport, WOR, for many years,certainly in 18th C. I think that there is some stuff in NA about them. Perhaps the well respected and ancient gentleman was visiting them and making a leisurely progress towards London from somewhere other than his principal seat in Abercarne. There was a canal thro Abercarne but no idea if you could get from there to Stourport? Anne Paling SHEFFIELD, U.K. >From: "Robert Glover" <glovergen@gmail.com> >To: ct65as@yahoo.com, warwick@rootsweb.com >Subject: [WAR] mail coaches_GLOVER >Date: Mon, 4 Jun 2007 21:11:19 +1000 > >Hello Lynne, Hello list, >Thank you all for the continued interest in my inquiry. My ancestor >died on the 9th of September 1808 and The CAMBRIAN newspaper records >it as follows "Suddenly, yesterday, se'nnight, at Arley-Hall, >Worcestershire, on his journey to London, in his 72nd year, Samuel >Glover, Esq. of Abercarne, Monmouthshire." > >and in the ATHENAEUM Magazine....... under the heading WORCESTERSHIRE >"At Areley-hall, aged 72, Samuel Glover, Esq. of Abercarne, >Monmouthshire" > >I'm now investigating if it was possible that he was travelling by >canal boat to London. > >SG was a past High Bailiff of Birmingham (1786) and a member of the >Birmingham Commercial Committee. > >regards .... Robert Glover > >------------------------------- >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
THANKS! Anne Paling SHEFFIELD, U.K. >From: "Thelma Wigley" <t.wig@btinternet.com> >To: <derbysgen@rootsweb.com> >Subject: [DBY] Ancestry free for 3 days >Date: Mon, 4 Jun 2007 21:31:31 +0100 > >www.ancestry.com is available free for three days - all UK censuses and >lots more. No credit card details required and apparently if you have >more than one e-mail address you can get a further three days with each! > >Thelma > >------------------------------- >To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to >DERBYSGEN-request@rootsweb.com with the word 'unsubscribe' without the >quotes in the subject and the body of the message
Can anyone tell me if there is a specific month the census were taken? Karen
There seem to have been several "Assisted Immigration" schemes. England to Victoria 1839-1871 paid for by Victoria England to NSW 1839-1896 http://proarchives.imagineering.com.au/index_search.asp?searchid=24 http://www.records.nsw.gov.au/archives/assisted_immigrants_1839-96_366.asp http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Immigration_to_Australia 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...." ? Anne Paling SHEFFIELD, U.K. >From: mattrussell79@aol.com >To: WARWICK-L@rootsweb.com >Subject: [WAR] Help understanding assisted immigration >Date: Mon, 04 Jun 2007 21:34:09 -0400 > >Hi, > >I am wondering if someone would be able to explain what exactly assisted >immigration was. > >My ancestors came from Warwick to Australia and they appear on a 'assisted >immigration' index. > > >Who provided the assistance? I am assuming that the assistance was money? > >The ships records give names and dates of arrival. Are there any other >records relating to the immigration that I might be able to obtain? > > >Did a person have to apply to be assisted, if so how was that done? > >Any information would be greatly appreciated. > > > >Kind regards matt > > > >________________________________________________________________________ >AOL now offers free email to everyone. Find out more about what's free >from AOL at AOL.com. > >------------------------------- >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
Hello list, Just to let you know I clicked on the three day free on Ancestory.com that was posted on this list and I received this message: This offer is not available. There's still a lot you can do with Ancestry! Our records show that you have already taken advantage of a 3 days free offer or another similar offer. You can still use our many free services or check out the other offers we have available. Thank you for your interest in Ancestry.com. I do NOT subscribe to Ancestry.com and I only use it when it is free..which has been a long time ago. So as you can see I do not think that you can accept their "gift" more than once Regards, Ezziej Bromwich USA --------------------------------- Now that's room service! Choose from over 150,000 hotels in 45,000 destinations on Yahoo! Travel to find your fit.
Wow! nice offer. Does this apply to all areas? or just the UK? I live in Canada and have a US membership which ends in a few weeks, but the UK stuff is not available to me. Would that apply to me as well? she asks with her fingers crossed? Regards, Faith researching CAPNERHURST/CAPENHURST, CHADD, CARRINGTON, SMITH, CLARK(E) & ALLEN >From: "A P L" <annepaling@hotmail.com> >To: t.wig@btinternet.com, derbysgen@rootsweb.com >CC: LEICESTERSHIRE-PLUS@rootsweb.com, warwick-l@rootsweb.com >Subject: Re: [WAR] [DBY] Ancestry free for 3 days >Date: Tue, 05 Jun 2007 08:31:15 +0000 > > > >THANKS! > >Anne Paling >SHEFFIELD, U.K. > > > > > > >From: "Thelma Wigley" <t.wig@btinternet.com> > >To: <derbysgen@rootsweb.com> > >Subject: [DBY] Ancestry free for 3 days > >Date: Mon, 4 Jun 2007 21:31:31 +0100 > > > >www.ancestry.com is available free for three days - all UK censuses and > >lots more. No credit card details required and apparently if you have > >more than one e-mail address you can get a further three days with each! > > > >Thelma > > > >------------------------------- > >To unsubscribe from the list, please send an email to > >DERBYSGEN-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 _________________________________________________________________ Windows Live Hotmail with drag and drop, you can easily move and organize your mail in one simple step. Get it today! www.newhotmail.ca?icid=WLHMENCA153
Karen I think you have got your Taylors mixed up. Richard Taylor (son of Richard & Ann) baptised 22 aug 1859 is enumerated at home with his parents in Birmingham in the 1861 census. The Richard H Taylor with the Green family in Long Itchington was born in Coventry not Birmingham. Are you sure that as Robert & Emma were not married until after the birth of their son that the birth was not registered under her maiden name? There is a richard Henry Green born in September 1859 at Wigan GRO ref 8c 42 who I would think is the person you are looking for Peter R Thompson Bedworth Warwickshire UK ----- Original Message ----- From: "Karen Barnes" <scpatriot@bellsouth.net> To: <WARWICK@rootsweb.com> Sent: Monday, June 04, 2007 7:55 PM Subject: [WAR] Taylor's in Saint Martin, Birmingham > Hello, > I am Karen and I reside in South Carolina. > I am new to this list. > I believe my Great great Grandmother took a child that did not belong to > her and I was wondering if there is a way that this can > be proven. > > 1. Family bible claims date of birth of my Great grand father to be August > 22 1859 in Wigan, Lanchashire. > Went to BMD to order birth certificate, nope! > 2. Ordered his parents : Robert Hodson and Emma Green. She is from St. > Nick', Warwick. > 3. Gathered census in Warwick. Found her with a child : Richard Taylor (to > nurse). I only assume he is Ill. > 4. Emma marries soon after in Lancashire soon after. > > I will be ordering the birth certificate of "Richard Henry Taylor" quite > soon. I have discovered he had a twin named Ann, > > 1. ANN TAYLOR - International Genealogical Index > Gender: Female Christening: 22 AUG 1859 Saint Martin, Birmingham, > Warwick, England > > 2. RICHARD TAYLOR - International Genealogical Index > Gender: Male Christening: 22 AUG 1859 Saint Martin, Birmingham, > Warwick, England > > 3. LOUISA MARIA TAYLOR - International Genealogical Index > Gender: Female Christening: 05 AUG 1863 Saint Martin, Birmingham, > Warwick, England > > 4. GEORGE TAYLOR - International Genealogical Index > Gender: Male Christening: 29 APR 1861 Saint Martin, Birmingham, > Warwick, England > > 5. HENRY TAYLOR - International Genealogical Index > Gender: Male Christening: 28 SEP 1868 Saint Martin, Birmingham, > Warwick, England > > 6. JOHN TAYLOR - International Genealogical Index > Gender: Male Christening: 09 MAR 1863 Saint Martin, Birmingham, > Warwick, England > > 7. SINA EMILY TAYLER - International Genealogical Index > Gender: Female Christening: 24 JUL 1865 Saint Martin, Birmingham, > Warwick, England > > 8. KATE MINNIE TAYLOR - International Genealogical Index > Gender: Female Christening: 30 JUN 1862 Saint Martin, Birmingham, > Warwick, England > > 9. WILLIAM JOSEPH TAYLOR - International Genealogical Index > Gender: Male Christening: 25 JUL 1870 Saint Martin, Birmingham, > Warwick, England > > > > Emma never brought this up. Any suggestions of where else I can > possibly look? > > > > Karen in Carolina > > > ------------------------------- > 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 >
Hi, I am wondering if someone would be able to explain what exactly assisted immigration was. My ancestors came from Warwick to Australia and they appear on a 'assisted immigration' index. Who provided the assistance? I am assuming that the assistance was money? The ships records give names and dates of arrival. Are there any other records relating to the immigration that I might be able to obtain? Did a person have to apply to be assisted, if so how was that done? Any information would be greatly appreciated. Kind regards matt ________________________________________________________________________ AOL now offers free email to everyone. Find out more about what's free from AOL at AOL.com.
Hello Lynne, Hello list, Thank you all for the continued interest in my inquiry. My ancestor died on the 9th of September 1808 and The CAMBRIAN newspaper records it as follows "Suddenly, yesterday, se'nnight, at Arley-Hall, Worcestershire, on his journey to London, in his 72nd year, Samuel Glover, Esq. of Abercarne, Monmouthshire." and in the ATHENAEUM Magazine....... under the heading WORCESTERSHIRE "At Areley-hall, aged 72, Samuel Glover, Esq. of Abercarne, Monmouthshire" I'm now investigating if it was possible that he was travelling by canal boat to London. SG was a past High Bailiff of Birmingham (1786) and a member of the Birmingham Commercial Committee. regards .... Robert Glover
They were enumerated if they were serving in the United Kingdom. There are plenty of barracks, dockyards, etc., to be found in the enumerators sheets. I have an idea that they were not enumerated if they were serving abroad, but I'm not sure why I think that. However, there is a tremendous amount of material in the National Archives about soldiers records, just enter the soldier's name and record series WO97 to start with. You may need to pursue other record series. If your man was an officer, you should hit the jackpot, but there's a substantial amount of information about other ranks. I have several documents relating to my ancestor who fought, and was wounded, at Talavera during the Peninsula war. In fact I know more about him during his army service than I do after he was discharged. He had a son who also served in the army, but I have no idea who the wife/mother was except that her name was Mary! There's also a substantial amount of army births, marriages and deaths on Ancestry. David D. Roger Timms wrote: > Can anyone tell me if members of the army were enumerated in the 1851, 1861, > and 1871 censuses? What if they were serving in India. > > Roger Timms > > > > > ------------------------------- > 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 > -- DF Consultancy 10 Searle Street Cambridge CB4 3DB
Hello, I am Karen and I reside in South Carolina. I am new to this list. I believe my Great great Grandmother took a child that did not belong to her and I was wondering if there is a way that this can be proven. 1. Family bible claims date of birth of my Great grand father to be August 22 1859 in Wigan, Lanchashire. Went to BMD to order birth certificate, nope! 2. Ordered his parents : Robert Hodson and Emma Green. She is from St. Nick', Warwick. 3. Gathered census in Warwick. Found her with a child : Richard Taylor (to nurse). I only assume he is Ill. 4. Emma marries soon after in Lancashire soon after. I will be ordering the birth certificate of "Richard Henry Taylor" quite soon. I have discovered he had a twin named Ann, 1. ANN TAYLOR - International Genealogical Index Gender: Female Christening: 22 AUG 1859 Saint Martin, Birmingham, Warwick, England 2. RICHARD TAYLOR - International Genealogical Index Gender: Male Christening: 22 AUG 1859 Saint Martin, Birmingham, Warwick, England 3. LOUISA MARIA TAYLOR - International Genealogical Index Gender: Female Christening: 05 AUG 1863 Saint Martin, Birmingham, Warwick, England 4. GEORGE TAYLOR - International Genealogical Index Gender: Male Christening: 29 APR 1861 Saint Martin, Birmingham, Warwick, England 5. HENRY TAYLOR - International Genealogical Index Gender: Male Christening: 28 SEP 1868 Saint Martin, Birmingham, Warwick, England 6. JOHN TAYLOR - International Genealogical Index Gender: Male Christening: 09 MAR 1863 Saint Martin, Birmingham, Warwick, England 7. SINA EMILY TAYLER - International Genealogical Index Gender: Female Christening: 24 JUL 1865 Saint Martin, Birmingham, Warwick, England 8. KATE MINNIE TAYLOR - International Genealogical Index Gender: Female Christening: 30 JUN 1862 Saint Martin, Birmingham, Warwick, England 9. WILLIAM JOSEPH TAYLOR - International Genealogical Index Gender: Male Christening: 25 JUL 1870 Saint Martin, Birmingham, Warwick, England Emma never brought this up. Any suggestions of where else I can possibly look? Karen in Carolina
Hi Robert, While feeling to a degree impelled to mention that this thread would seem to have little connection with Warwickshire (beyond the unfortunate deceased having been High Bailiff of Birmingham some 20 years earlier) it's nevertheless Intriguing... While accepting that the Press Report was accurate ("It MUST be True - it was all in the Papers") the big question here is what he might be doing in Areley Kings "on his journey to London", when the only adress given for him was in South Wales. Areley Kings isn't on any 'sensible' route - by land or water; then or now - from either Ebbw Vale OR Birmingham to London... Water just *might* be feasible - with several transhipments - but it'd've been very slow and (in the earlier parts at any rate) dangerous and uncomfortable. The Monmouthshire Canal ran from just up the hill from Abercarne to Newport - but it didn't connect with the River Usk (and thence to the Severn Estuary) until 1818. I don't know when it opened, but its Enabling Acts were passed in 1792 and 1797. The Severn was navigable from Newport to beyond Stourport (WOR) by Sailing Trow - but the lower reaches are dangerous and treacherous, with fierce tides, and the Severn Bore. But, yes, he could've done it, although it'd probably've been an Interesting Experience. >From there, the Staffordshire and Worcestershire Canal would've taken him to Wolverhampton; and the Birmingham Canals navigations through to the East of Birmingham, and thence via the Coventry and then the Oxford Canals to Oxford. Finally, down the Thames to London. With fair wind and weather it'd've taken around 3 to 4 weeks, in probably minimal comfort! If he'd *really* wanted to go from Abercarne to London by water (involving Canals) his far better bet would've been to sail up the Severn Estuary and turn right at Saul/Framilode, taking the Thames and Severn Canal to Lechlade, and then down the Thames again. It'd've probably saved him a couple of weeks! [He couldn't've used the Kennet and Avon Canal [Bath to Newbury] as that didn't open until just over 2 years after his death...] Preliminary Conclusions... 1) he wasn't starting from South Wales; and 2) wherever he *did* start from, he'd've been unlikely to've gone by water. Gus ----- Original Message ----- From: "Robert Glover" <glovergen@gmail.com> To: <ct65as@yahoo.com>; <warwick@rootsweb.com> Sent: Monday, June 04, 2007 12:11 PM Subject: [WAR] mail coaches_GLOVER Hello Lynne, Hello list, Thank you all for the continued interest in my inquiry. My ancestor died on the 9th of September 1808 and The CAMBRIAN newspaper records it as follows "Suddenly, yesterday, se'nnight, at Arley-Hall, Worcestershire, on his journey to London, in his 72nd year, Samuel Glover, Esq. of Abercarne, Monmouthshire." and in the ATHENAEUM Magazine....... under the heading WORCESTERSHIRE "At Areley-hall, aged 72, Samuel Glover, Esq. of Abercarne, Monmouthshire" I'm now investigating if it was possible that he was travelling by canal boat to London. SG was a past High Bailiff of Birmingham (1786) and a member of the Birmingham Commercial Committee. regards .... Robert Glover ------------------------------- 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
Perhaps you have other evidence that he died in an accident, which is not mentioned in the newspapers, but if not, have you considered that he died of natural causes while breaking his journey, staying overnight with the local worthy who owned Areley Hall? From his status, I should have thought it likely he had his own coach and probably a coachman to drive him to London. MAR in France. > Message du 04/06/07 13:12 > De : "Robert Glover" > A : ct65as@yahoo.com, warwick@rootsweb.com > Copie à : > Objet : [WAR] mail coaches_GLOVER > > Hello Lynne, Hello list, > Thank you all for the continued interest in my inquiry. My ancestor > died on the 9th of September 1808 and The CAMBRIAN newspaper records > it as follows "Suddenly, yesterday, se'nnight, at Arley-Hall, > Worcestershire, on his journey to London, in his 72nd year, Samuel > Glover, Esq. of Abercarne, Monmouthshire." > > and in the ATHENAEUM Magazine....... under the heading WORCESTERSHIRE > "At Areley-hall, aged 72, Samuel Glover, Esq. of Abercarne, > Monmouthshire" > > I'm now investigating if it was possible that he was travelling by > canal boat to London. > > SG was a past High Bailiff of Birmingham (1786) and a member of the > Birmingham Commercial Committee. > > regards .... Robert Glover > >--- > 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
According to the IGI there were two weddings in Snitterfield on 28 April 1801. Richard HUTCHINS to Elizabeth WHITEWARD Richard HUTCHINGS to Elizabeth MILLWARD Something seems wrong in the "County of Warwickshire" to paraphrase the immortal bard. Is anyone able to help me find if there were actually two weddings that day? If not which is correct. Thanks. Mike in a hot winter day in Whakatane NZ.
I am always VERY cautious about member submissions on the IGI. The current discussion about HUTCHIN(G)S demonstrates the situation. The marriage of Richard to Mary WHITEWARD is a *member submission*. That David cannot find this marriage in the transcribed documents he has would make me inclined to disregard it. My suspicion is that the member read MILLWARD as WHITEWARD. There are also errors on the *extracted entries* on the IGI - some parishes demonstrate accurate transcribing but this cannot be said for all. Some instances, where I have checked an item in the originals, have not produced an original that was difficult to read: "human error" was the only explanation. It happens - as researchers, we have to check originals for peace of mind. But Listers, please, when using the IGI, scroll down and check if an entry is "member submission" or "extracted", and, as Diane pointed out in an earlier post, order the PR film at the local LDS family history centre and check so you don't climb the wrong tree. Jacqui - wishing she too was in Whakatane...!!!!! According to both the Phillimore transcript and my own transcript the marriage was between Rich. Hutchings and Eliz. Millward. There is, of course, no marriage on the same day to a Whiteward. The groom's family also appear in the Snitterfield registers as Hutchins, both before and after 1801. His baptism may be that of Rich. Hutchins, baptised 14 July 1765, parents John and Mary Hutchins (from my own transcript). However, if so this would make him 37 when he married, which is a bit late. My typed-up transcript on my computer doesn't say that he was a widower, but it doesn't say that he was a bachelor, either, nor does it say whether Elizabeth Millward was a spinster or a widow. Next time I am at Warwick Record Office I will check up. It may not be for some time, so if you desperately need to know, you could get the WRO to send you a printout. There's no baptism of Elizabeth Millward in my Snitterfield transcript at any appropriate time (of course, I might have missed it). There's also no marriage of John Hutchins or Hutchings to a Mary at Snitterfield, (nor is there in Phillimore, so I probably didn't miss that one!). People named Millward also appear as Millard (but not in the Snitterfield registers). Many Millwards/Millards were catholics, by the way. Best wishes, David Mike wrote: > According to the IGI there were two weddings in Snitterfield on 28 April 1801. > > Richard HUTCHINS to Elizabeth WHITEWARD > Richard HUTCHINGS to Elizabeth MILLWARD > > Something seems wrong in the "County of Warwickshire" to paraphrase the immortal bard. > > Is anyone able to help me find if there were actually two weddings that day? If not which is correct. > > Thanks. > > Mike in a hot winter day in Whakatane NZ. >
According to both the Phillimore transcript and my own transcript the marriage was between Rich. Hutchings and Eliz. Millward. There is, of course, no marriage on the same day to a Whiteward. The groom's family also appear in the Snitterfield registers as Hutchins, both before and after 1801. His baptism may be that of Rich. Hutchins, baptised 14 July 1765, parents John and Mary Hutchins (from my own transcript). However, if so this would make him 37 when he married, which is a bit late. My typed-up transcript on my computer doesn't say that he was a widower, but it doesn't say that he was a bachelor, either, nor does it say whether Elizabeth Millward was a spinster or a widow. Next time I am at Warwick Record Office I will check up. It may not be for some time, so if you desperately need to know, you could get the WRO to send you a printout. There's no baptism of Elizabeth Millward in my Snitterfield transcript at any appropriate time (of course, I might have missed it). There's also no marriage of John Hutchins or Hutchings to a Mary at Snitterfield, (nor is there in Phillimore, so I probably didn't miss that one!). People named Millward also appear as Millard (but not in the Snitterfield registers). Many Millwards/Millards were catholics, by the way. Best wishes, David Mike wrote: > According to the IGI there were two weddings in Snitterfield on 28 April 1801. > > Richard HUTCHINS to Elizabeth WHITEWARD > Richard HUTCHINGS to Elizabeth MILLWARD > > Something seems wrong in the "County of Warwickshire" to paraphrase the immortal bard. > > Is anyone able to help me find if there were actually two weddings that day? If not which is correct. > > Thanks. > > Mike in a hot winter day in Whakatane NZ. > > ------------------------------- > 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
Can anyone tell me if members of the army were enumerated in the 1851, 1861, and 1871 censuses? What if they were serving in India. Roger Timms
MAR wrote: Perhaps you have other evidence that he died in an accident, which is not mentioned in the newspapers, but if not, have you considered that he died of natural causes while breaking his journey, staying overnight with the local worthy who owned Areley Hall? From his status, I should have thought it likely he had his own coach and probably a coachman to drive him to London. Just thought I'd add my two penn'orth and say that I think MAR is correct in saying that he was enjoying a stopover with friends at Areley Hall. But was he travelling by coach? The alternative is that he was riding on horseback and taking his sheep from Wales to London. I'm not sure of the route but could it be that he was following the old Drovers Road? Pam T
The one that is extracted from the records is likely to be the most accurate. You can rarely trust entries submitted anonymously by people incapable of deciphering the writing, especially with no knowledge of the area. Just look at some of the place names submitted and the counties where they are supposed to be located! Another clear indication is that the IGI shows lots of Millwards in Warwickshire and absolutely no Whitewards, except the one you mention. That is a dead giveaway. MAR in France. > Message du 04/06/07 02:32 > De : "Mike" > A : WARWICK@rootsweb.com > Copie à : > Objet : [WAR] HUTCHIN(G)S Snitterfield > > According to the IGI there were two weddings in Snitterfield on 28 April 1801. > > Richard HUTCHINS to Elizabeth WHITEWARD > Richard HUTCHINGS to Elizabeth MILLWARD > > Something seems wrong in the "County of Warwickshire" to paraphrase the immortal bard. > > Is anyone able to help me find if there were actually two weddings that day? If not which is correct. > > Thanks. > > Mike in a hot winter day in Whakatane NZ. > >--- > 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 > > >