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The most useless piece of census info??

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ProfilePosted byOptionsPost Date

Unknown

Unknown Report 29 Aug 2006 15:34

this must be it!

Unknown

Unknown Report 29 Aug 2006 15:43

1841 Census 107/1031/17 Folio 10 page 12 Hanger About His wife One child One child Very useful that!! lolol Bev x

Unknown

Unknown Report 29 Aug 2006 15:45

Well, I see this is why we can't find people. We should be looking under 'wife' or 'one child' instead of foolishly typing in names! I did find one the other day - 'adult male - refused to co-operate'. nell

Mandy

Mandy Report 29 Aug 2006 15:45

Bev, When I did a GR search of people with the same names as me, I searched each surname by place. The places people were born included a house a hospital a road somewhere in town I kid you not!

MaryfromItaly

MaryfromItaly Report 29 Aug 2006 15:46

That reminds me of a similar one that I posted on another thread a while ago. I forget which census it was, but it said something like 'a man, a woman, a boy, a girl, slept in empty house overnight, gone in the morning'. Their rellies aren't going to be finding them in a hurry...

Joy

Joy Report 29 Aug 2006 15:56

* checks feverishly to see if I have that surname ... :-) * ................................................................................. Hello, cousin Bev ... :-) When searching a parish register, I came across a named person with ''a stranger'' next to his name. I thought - that's sad, did no one know him ? Joy

Mandy

Mandy Report 29 Aug 2006 15:56

Mary, I nearly LOL to someone on the other end of the phone when I read that one! I have a census of who I think is my rellie in an assylum. The inmates were referred to as their initials, in my case, JC (no, not THE JC!) I wonder why they refered to them by initials only? Surely it couldn't be because they wanted to protect them from prying rellies generations down?

Unknown

Unknown Report 29 Aug 2006 16:09

One of the addresses I've found says 'near the woods'!!!

MaryfromItaly

MaryfromItaly Report 29 Aug 2006 16:13

On the 1851 census: 'Girl not named Davis'. That only leaves about 30 million possible names, then.

Jess Bow Bag

Jess Bow Bag Report 29 Aug 2006 17:53

wonder 'what' colour? Name: Man of Colour Age: 30 Estimated Birth Year: abt 1831 Relation: Lodger Gender: Male Where born: St Luke Civil parish: St Luke Ecclesiastical parish: Charterhouse St Thomas County/Island: Middlesex Country: England

Debi Coone

Debi Coone Report 29 Aug 2006 18:00

My husbands tree has an ancestor in 1871 John Clements HARTLEY as head of the house the lady living with him Eliza PENN a widow is recorded as COHABITATING!! Bet they were well pleased with that LOL

An Olde Crone

An Olde Crone Report 29 Aug 2006 18:12

The endless search for my mysterious 2 x GGP turned up the following family. I have high hopes it's him.. James Holding 70 Margaret Holding 70 James Holding 15 James Holding 15 James Holding 15. Another wild goose chase found me a James Holding rightish sort of age, with a wife and Jane Holding - age NOT KNOWN. I screeeeeamed! OC

TinaTheCheshirePussyCat

TinaTheCheshirePussyCat Report 29 Aug 2006 18:51

Wow, OC, triplets born when mother was 55! Well, I know the chances of multiple births go up as you get older, but ............? Mind you, good idea to name them all James. I mean to say, what were the chances of triplets all surviving. I suppose they could call them Jim, Jimmy and Jamie. Surely one of that lot must be yours? But how would you ever know which one? Tina

Clare

Clare Report 29 Aug 2006 19:49

my gt gt grandfather and gtgt grandmother are on the 1861 census as a man and woman! why couldnt the man taking the census details have written down their names? all the details around them show they are the people i am looking for: right employer right place time etc;

Unknown

Unknown Report 29 Aug 2006 19:54

I do wonder if the enumerators in incidences like these just couldn't be bothered to find out the names, or whether the people involved refused to give their names! Bev x

An Olde Crone

An Olde Crone Report 29 Aug 2006 20:35

Tina My thoughts entirely - one of them must be mine - which one, though!? This is of course the 1841 where the ages were rounded up and down and I know by the address given who James and Margaret are. I also know they have umpteen grandsons called James..... OC

Sharon

Sharon Report 29 Aug 2006 21:35

Not useless census but usless parish records. The vicar that recorded alot of my ancestors births and marriages was left handed and had a leaky pen and no blotting paper! lol

Uncle John

Uncle John Report 29 Aug 2006 23:27

'Ere you, us left-handers have a lot to put up with. I learned?? to write with a dipper pen (suck the new nib before using) and horrible ink made up from powder. The basins in the boys' toilets were always stained bright blue. The nib stuck in the paper and made blots, which the side of my little finger then smoothed out into a pale blue wash. It was only many years later that I read that pen nibs came in RH and LH varieties. My brother, 2 years younger, was taught to write with a ball-point pen. And just try cutting anything with scissors in your left hand. The hand-holes are the wrong shape and the blades are forced apart instead of together. It's a good thing that most hand tools are ambidextrous (if that term can be applied to an inanimate object). J

An Olde Crone

An Olde Crone Report 29 Aug 2006 23:30

John A useless fact Did you know that genticists now believe that left-handed people are the surviving identical twin? (So called Mirror Image Identical Twins) OC

Sharon

Sharon Report 29 Aug 2006 23:42

awww John *hugs* I wasn't being a meaney , It really brought it home how hard it was and is for lefties! ( quite lucky around here we have a lefties shop :D ) And much better than the vicar who seemed to have popped a spider in the inkwell and just let it run over the page ;)