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Interesting Places you have found/or might find re

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ProfilePosted byOptionsPost Date

Guinevere

Guinevere Report 16 Sep 2007 18:06

Here's another one where I didn't post what is beside my name and Dee's posts have been credited to others.

Gwynne

Lancsliz

Lancsliz Report 6 Sep 2007 10:30

Hi Bunny - It includes streets names lost to slum clearnance too. Liz

Bunny

Bunny Report 5 Sep 2007 21:22

Hi Liz

Will look out for that book..my family from camden town....

carol

Lancsliz

Lancsliz Report 4 Sep 2007 13:20

Hi This book explained why my ancestors moved from Pancras to Tottenham, London.

The Railways came!

'Streets of St Pancras, Somers Town and the Railway Lands. A survey of streets, buildings and former residents in a part of Camden.'

Camden FHS.

Has pictures and very readable. Obtained it through inter library loan scheme. Liz

Dee the Bibliomaniac

Dee the Bibliomaniac Report 4 Sep 2007 09:10

My thread on the life of my family was also allocated to someone else Karen

Oh well, it's water under the bridge I guess

;-(((

Dee the Bibliomaniac

Dee the Bibliomaniac Report 4 Sep 2007 08:49

I am totally fed up.

Way back I was on here and let my membership lapse.

Now I find that all the books that I had written about have been 'allocated' to different board members

Dee
(bemused and totally disheartened)

Dee the Bibliomaniac

Dee the Bibliomaniac Report 24 Jun 2007 09:41

If any of you have ancestors that may have been involved in the building of the railway line between Settle and Carlisle the church at Chaple le Dale has a fascinating book about the Railway Years, which includes details of the burials that took place at that church when the viaduct was being built One of the saddest entries must be the burial of 3 day old triplets Dee x

Dee the Bibliomaniac

Dee the Bibliomaniac Report 18 Apr 2007 10:57

The Light in The Window – June Goulding A moving and inspirational memoir written from inside the walls of a Catholic home for unmarried mothers in 1950s Ireland. A good description of the cruelty to, and harsh treatment of, unmarried mothers in Ireland

Ladylol Pusser Cat

Ladylol Pusser Cat Report 18 Apr 2007 10:12

my gr gran maggie ohare married bulmer was one of the last know fishwifes in sunderland, her interesting life was used as a story in a book called the stoney path by rita bradshaw set in the north east of england , she writes very simular to catherine cookson.

Dee the Bibliomaniac

Dee the Bibliomaniac Report 18 Apr 2007 10:05

nudged,

Animal Lover

Animal Lover Report 8 Jun 2006 22:44

I have just been told that some of my relatives came from St Helena. One of our security guards at work comes from there and he's offered to pass the info to his relatives out there to research for me. AL

Janet in Yorkshire

Janet in Yorkshire Report 8 Jun 2006 14:43

Just by googling a surname on a2a, I got details of the copy of a will dated 1810, deposited at the local record office by a firm of solicitors, who had had a clear out. The a2a ref mentioned each beneficary, and as the deceased was a childless widower, it listed lots of nephews & nieces of both himself and his wife. It was a great find because the refs to brothers & sisters proved that the family had moved from one village to another, with some being born in one village and the younger ones in the other. A nephew of the wife had the same surname as her husband - her sister had married a man of the same name as her own husband. Turns out the deceased's ancestor was married twice - he was descended from the second marriage, whilst the wife's nephew was descended from the first. And all that from a brief will abstract on a2a! Jay

Dee the Bibliomaniac

Dee the Bibliomaniac Report 8 Jun 2006 13:13

Witchfinders – Malcolm Gaskill This book has the names of some of the people, mostly in the Essex area, who were thought to be witches in the 1600's Dee ;-))

fraserbooks

fraserbooks Report 2 Apr 2006 22:01

update. I recently googled a relative's name and found someone had written his biography in 1920. I managed to get a copy of it from a bookseller in America through Amazon. Fascinating stuff as he was the first parson to become an M.P. and it included family photos. I also found an ancestor on a website modestly called descendents of William the conquerer. I am hoping to get hold of a book called Killed in a coalmine as I have a lot of relatives who were coalminers in Somerset and the book gives details of all the inquests on miners. The place I would most like to visit where I have found a relative is a cray fishing village 40 miles North of Perth Australia.

Chris in Sussex

Chris in Sussex Report 2 Apr 2006 21:42

This is preety obscure but.... Anyone with links to the 'PECULIAR PEOPLE' Religion in Essex during the 1800/1900s. I have Mark Sorrell's book 'The Peculiar People' and am happy to look up names in the index. Please PM me. Chris

Barbara

Barbara Report 2 Apr 2006 21:35

Oh and I am proud of great great uncles son, c.s.m. Robert Hamilton, m.m. and D.c.m, who was killed in action on 23rd march 1918. he was described as the bravest man who ever wore boots. And for those with w.w.1 ancestors who were protestant northern irish two good books are'The history of the 36th Ulster Division' by Cyril Falls, a bit flowery but full of info, and one which can be got through the libraries 'Three cheers for the Derrys' which is a history of the 10th Royal Iniskilling Fusiliers in 1914 to 18.

Trish Devon

Trish Devon Report 2 Apr 2006 21:32

Anyone interested in Somerset. I have a book called Tales of Watchet Harbour (the somerset port of a thousand years) author W.H.(ben) Norman. Old photographs,coastguards,different stories of a lot of Somerset families. Captains,pictures of Schooners,Ketch,the old piers. There is a story of my own ggrandfather who was a master mariner,his ship went down in a storm,all hands lost. It names the crew on board .1883. I could go on forever about this book,it has a wealth of information. Ships companies,also Minehead.

Barbara

Barbara Report 2 Apr 2006 21:19

For Grandpa Jim, the book will have been by Marie Hartley and either Joan Ingilby or Ella Pontefract, they wrote books about Yorkshire places and traditions,long gone now. The books are little gems.

Unknown

Unknown Report 2 Apr 2006 20:51

Red Alert –Lewis Blake South East London 1939-1945 ‘Red Alert’ is intended essentially as a factual local history of the war years. It looks in detail at the former metropolitan boroughs of Deptford, Greenwich, Lewisham and Woolwich and the later edition covers Bromley as well. An interesting book for anyone who had ancestors in that area Dee x

Unknown

Unknown Report 20 Mar 2006 09:51

Bob Ogley has done several books under the title A Chronicle of the Century, covering the Kent area. There are snippets from newspaper reports covering all sorts of events, the famous and the not so famous You might just find something about the area your relatives lived in, or if you are lucky a piece about one of them. Dee x