Genealogy Chat
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Help needed
Profile | Posted by | Options | Post Date |
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Yvonne | Report | 1 Feb 2012 13:18 |
Just noticed my type error on the comment left on the 1st Feb....It should have read Rachel not Annie....! |
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Yvonne | Report | 1 Feb 2012 13:17 |
Hi Potty - 1891 Census below, thanks for your help |
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Potty | Report | 1 Feb 2012 13:11 |
Yvonne, can you post the 1891 census with David married to an Annie. The only one I can find is the one posted above by Helen, with a wife Rachel. |
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Yvonne | Report | 31 Jan 2012 16:39 |
Okay...need to trow a few questions and ask your thoughts! |
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Helen | Report | 31 Jan 2012 16:31 |
1891 England Census about Rachael Pullman |
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Researching: |
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Helen | Report | 31 Jan 2012 16:27 |
1871 England Census about Rachel Whitham |
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Researching: |
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Kuros | Report | 31 Jan 2012 14:53 |
In my grandmother's case, she was born in the house where her mother and her grandparents lived in a village in Shropshire. The case was heard in the nearest county court which was Shrewsbury. The confusing thing in this case was that a father's name did appear on her marriage certificate but this was not her birth father. He was the man her mother married when my grandmother was three years old. Were it not for the bastardy order I'd found, we could have assumed, wrongly, that the man named on the marriage certificate was, indeed, her father. Incidentally, her real father was a well-known farmer and landowner in Ratlinghope, Shropshire. The family still owns land there. He was ordered by the courts to pay 2/6d every week towards my grandmother's upkeep until she was sixteen. I don't know if he ever told his wife about it! |
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Potty | Report | 31 Jan 2012 14:36 |
Birth registered as Whittam: |
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Potty | Report | 31 Jan 2012 14:29 |
Yvonne, Lancaster is in Lancashire, in fact it is the county town. Were you thinking of Lanchester? |
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Helen | Report | 31 Jan 2012 14:26 |
1901 England Census about Annie Whitham |
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Researching: |
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Yvonne | Report | 31 Jan 2012 14:02 |
Wow, some fantastic info you have all left me thank you so much :) |
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Kuros | Report | 30 Jan 2012 12:00 |
It may be worth checking court records - usually in record offices - for a bastardy order, as they were then called. My grandmother's birth certificate had a line through the space for father's name but we found him with a bastardy order issued by the court. It's also worth checking parish records. I don't know when you are talking about but, in the past, church officials could be very cruel and, if a father was not named, the baptism entry could read "bastard (or base) child of (mother's name), whore of this parish". Rather than have this, the mother would name the father. Of course, there's always an outside chance she could have made it up but that was unlikely because the church had a great deal of influence and mothers would have been afraid of being caught out lying. |
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+++DetEcTive+++ | Report | 30 Jan 2012 10:54 |
Unfortunately, that normally means she was illegitimate. You’ll have to follow the female line by finding her on census with her mother, or finding her birth record. |
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Researching: |
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Andrew | Report | 30 Jan 2012 10:51 |
If there is no father, then she was most likely born out of wedlock. Unless there is name on her birth cert, the chance of finding him are very slim. |
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Yvonne | Report | 30 Jan 2012 10:49 |
Hi all, wonder if anyone can help! I am trying to research my great grandmothers parents. I have just received her marriage cert and against her fathers name and occupation is just a line!!!!!! Any suggestions on where to go from here? |