Notes
Matches 451 to 500 of 2,962
# | Notes | Linked to |
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451 | Ancestry DNA match. 167cM across 12 segments. | MCQUAY, Michelle (I789)
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452 | Ancestry family tree (Andrew Desmond family tree) | Family: TURNOCK, Joseph / BOOT, Sarah (F1555)
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453 | Ancestry family tree (Lara Cunningham Family Tree) | Family: TURNOCK, Samuel / KNIGHT, Mary (F1556)
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454 | Ancestry family tree, Catherine McCallum | Family: COLTMAN, Joseph / ALCOCK, Anne (F1180)
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455 | Ancestry family tree: troost126 (My Family Tree) | GRAY, Hector John (I5122)
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456 | Ancestry family trees. | GRAY, Harold (I5116)
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457 | Ancestry family trees. | BELTON, Frederick (I5154)
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458 | Ancestry family trees. | MCDONALD, Annie (I567)
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459 | Ancestry gives Thomas Hooper as the father of John Hooper. There was originally a question of whether his name was John. | HOOPER, Thomas (I3597)
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460 | Ancestry probate. | BIERLEY, Ann (I1956)
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461 | Ancestry tree | Family: GALBRAITH, Melville George / GILL, Nancy Erica (F1183)
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462 | Ancestry Tree | GREEN, Phoebe (I4802)
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463 | Ancestry tree has photo of gravestone. https://www.ancestry.com.au/mediaui-viewer/tree/58400222/person/34299562695/media/e718c711-ed0b-4069-b9e0-0638ed186460 | WARD, Mabel (I4792)
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464 | Ancestry tree has William Green (1690) / Ann Wilson (1693) as parents. | GREEN, Phoebe (I4802)
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465 | Ancestry tree of DNA match | MASTERS, Henry (I3717)
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466 | Ancestry Tree. https://www.ancestry.com.au/family-tree/person/tree/30677620/person/12776152514/facts | HORNSEY, Clarence Edward (I5153)
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467 | Ancestry trees have him called John "An Saighdear" Finlayson, born 1781, died 1855. | FINLAYSON, John (I1037)
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468 | Ancestry trees seem to have him confused with a George William/Edward Adams who was born in 1889 in Southland and died in 1972. This George married Grace Young in 1912. However I think these must have been 2 separate people as Grace Young lived until 1958. I think George Edward Adams may have been born in 1894 in Wairau (Blenheim) and died in 1965. | ADAMS, George Edward (I3714)
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469 | Ancestry, Australia Electoral Rolls | WALKLEY, Edward Gascoigne (I03876)
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470 | Ancestry, Electoral Roll | PATON, Allan William (I04077)
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471 | Ancestry, Electoral Roll | WARD, Mary (I3812)
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472 | Ancestry, England Select Births and Christenings | HOOPER, Sarah (I3645)
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473 | Ancestry.Com England Select Births and Christenings. John Gill Cain Father Philip Cain Mother Elizabeth Cain | CAIN, John Gill (I3643)
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474 | Ancestry.com. England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2014. | SMITH, Jasper (I302)
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475 | Ancestry.com. England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2014. | SMITH, Jasper (I302)
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476 | Ancestry.com. England, Select Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 [database on-line]. Provo, UT, USA: Ancestry.com Operations, Inc., 2014. | LOWE, Robert (I3687)
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477 | And I think that Glenys had one child. | GUTHRIE, Glenis (I3423)
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478 | And I think that my note means that Claire had three children. | GUTHRIE, Claire (I3422)
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479 | And lives in Australia | GUTHRIE, Claire (I3422)
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480 | And yet her date of death is given as the 9th of September in Cyrus Haskell's probate (in an affidavit added some years later). https://www.familysearch.org/ark:/61903/3:1:3Q9M-C9PK-23PR-Y?i=161&cc=1865481 This is the date the death was registered (CS Clarke's notes in his diary). It's most likely the date must have been confused with her death date as some stage. | MATHESON, Ann (I70)
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481 | Andrew grew up with his 2 older brothers in Coulsdon, Surrey. Like his brothers he attended Chipstead Valley Primary School, then Woodcote Boys School and on to Purley High School for Boys. After sitting his GCSE exams, he spent three years in retailing before moving into insurance, where he now specialises in winding up occupational pension schemes. Andrew joined the Cub Scouts but never took to Scouting. Instead, he was an excellent swimmer and held school records for a number of years, also swimming for Surrey Schools team. He belonged to Woodside Swimming Club and competed in a number of regattas, including exchanges with clubs in Hamburg in Germany and Holland. Andrew played Sunday league football for Coulsdon Athletics, he played Rugby for his school and later in his adult life for Hove RFC. He also threw the discus for Surrey Schools. Andrew married Sharon in 1990 and their daughter, Bryony, was born in 1993, followed by a son, Harrison, in 1997. Andrew and Sharon divorced in 2003, whereupon Andrew moved to live in Brighton where he met Katie. They now live together in Hove, Sussex, facing the sea front, where Andrew enjoys sea fishing and wind sailing. Their daughter, Lily Ann, was born in August 2008. | JEFFERIES, Andrew David (I03921)
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482 | Angus Matheson was the owner and builder of the brigantine 'Vistula' of 86 tons at Baddeck in 1853 with money borrowed from W B Fairbanks and C and D Allison. He was able to sell the vessel profitably in Newfoundland and pay back the money. | MATHESON, Angus (I61)
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483 | Anne Milton was born in 1947. She attended primary school and secondary school in Christchurch .The family travelled to Norfolk Island and many holidays to the North Island to meet the Walkley family. She graduated as a State School Dental Nurse and was appointed to schools in Christchurch. She married Michael John McMillan in 1968. Michael graduated with a B.Sc from Canterbury University, and was appointed to a teaching position in Christchurch. | WALKLEY, Anne Milton (I03848)
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484 | Annie was born on 2 April 1856 at Henry & Hannah's home in Newington, Croydon, London. As far as we know, Annie never married. | WALKLEY, Annie (I03914)
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485 | Annie, born 1878? | CAMPBELL, Queenie (I570)
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486 | AnnOlvier34's family tree on Ancestry (DNA match) | KAVANAGH, Bernard (I3544)
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487 | Another brother Edmond Parkes was Assistant Physician at ... [the note is incomplete] | PARKES, Charles Henry (I1248)
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488 | Another burial for Elizabeth Read, wife of Thomas from Epworth. This was before Richard Atkinson Read was born though, so can't be this Elizabeth, unless something very unexpected is going on. First name(s) Elizabeth Last name Read Sex Female Birth year - Burial year 1781 Burial date 14 May 1781 Spouse's first name(s) Thomas Burial place Epworth County Lincolnshire Country England Page 153 Archive Lincolnshire Archives Record set Lincolnshire Burials Category Life Events (BDMs) Subcategory Deaths & burials Collections from United Kingdom | ATKINSON, Elizabeth (I4808)
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489 | Apparently a son of Betty Dunn's. | DUNN [OR BECKER], Thomas Richard Anthony (I3332)
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490 | Appears in the UK Electoral Register 2003-2004 at 15, Begbroke Crescent, Begbroke, OX5 1RW. | SHISHTAWI, Ahmed (I1061)
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491 | April 1878 according to birth certificate of Sarah Matilda Cain. | Family: CAIN, John Gill / SHIELDS, Sarah Anne (F1155)
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492 | Archive is from the Parish of Northern Wairoa, R.C. | DUNN, Arnold Charles (I3060)
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493 | Aririves back in Auckland. | SMITH, Victor Harvey (I19)
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494 | Arrived NZ 16 Mar 1858. | MEIKLEJOHN, James Strange (I2558)
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495 | Arrived NZ about 1850. See 'The Birdsalls and Bonds', my xx of a typescript. | ROOSE, Elizabeth Jolliffe (I2164)
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496 | Arthur Bingham Walkley had a very interesting career. He was born at Bedminster, Bristol, on 17 December 1855 and died 8 October 1926, He was an English dramatic critic and essayist. An only child of Arthur Hickman Walkley, a book¬seller, and Caroline Charlotte Bingham. He attended Warminster School and Balliol College, Oxford, entering October 1873 and being admitted as scholar of Corpus Christi College the following January. He took honours in mathematics. In June 1877 he became a third class clerk in the Secretary's office of the General Post Office rising in the course of time to principal clerk. In 1911 he was made assistant secretary in charge of the Telegraph branch. As delegate, A.B. Walkley attended postal congresses in Washington and Rome, He was superannuated in 1919. He was interested in dramatic criticism and became critic for the Star from 1888 to 1890 then switched to the Speaker until it changed hands in 1899. On September 21st 1899 he reviewed Beerbohm Tree's "King John" for the Times and the following March was formally engaged as dramatic critic. Other articles were contributed to the "Wednesday Edition" and to the Literary Supplement after it was founded in 1902. Arthur Bingham Walkley's wit and style were firmly rooted in thought and knowledge. Critics also praised his unfailing urbanity, his trained and disciplined taste and whimsical mellowed irony. He called himself an impressionist coming fresh and unprejudiced to each book and play; he preferred light comedy to the drama of ideas. Widely read in French literature he liked to seem French in appearance and bearing. Fruit growing and rock gardening at his country home in Brightlingsea, Essex, were his favoured hobbies. He married Frances Eldridge in 1881 and they had one daughter. Reference to Arthur Bingham Walkley is made by Colin Simpson in his book "Show Me a Mountain" where he is described as being a Grand Uncle of Sir William Gaston Walkley Kt. C.B.E., the founder of the Ampol Empire in Australia and who was the son of Herbert and Jessie Walkley of Otaki, New Zealand. Arthur Bingham Walkley is described as being quite a delightful man, a close friend of the play write George Bernard Shaw, and also is described in Edith Oliver's book "Without knowing Mr Walkley". He is also mentioned as being present at a dinner-party given by J.M. Barrie, the guests at which included John Galsworthy, Hilaire Belloc, H.G. Wells and General Lord Freyberg and others. Careful research shows that Sir William Gaston Walkley's grandfather and Arthur Bingham Walkley's father were brothers so that Colin Simpson's description of Arthur Bingham Walkley being a Grand Uncle is in error as it is his father, Arthur Hickman Walkley who would be grand uncle to Sir William. _______________________________________________________________________ Arthur Bingham Walkley From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Arthur Bingham Walkley (1855-1926) was an English dramatic critic, born in Bristol, and educated at Balliol and Corpus Christi colleges, Oxford. He held important positions in the British postal service, but it was by his dramatic criticism that he became known over the English-speaking world to all interested in British dramatic and theatrical activities. He proved himself a sound and scholarly critic in his notices for the London Times and in contributions to various journals and reviews. George Bernard Shaw dedicated Man and Superman to him, crediting Walkley in the dedication with giving him the idea of writing a Don Juan play. A defender of the Edwardian new drama, he wrote a number of analyses of Henrik Ibsen's plays. His books include: Playhouse Impressions (1892) Frames of Mind (1894) Dramatic Criticism (1903) Drama and Life (1907) Walkley died in 1926. | WALKLEY, Arthur Bingham (I04328)
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497 | Arthur Reginald and Frederick Douglas Walkley (Doug) who was my Grandfather, continued in the family business in the Strand until Arthur Reginald was advised to moved to the seaside due to ill health, Doug was then left to wind up the business, the dates of this I'm not sure of. Then during this time or shortly afterwards he enlisted with the Army to fight in the First World War, however, he was captured in Belgium and was a POW for the duration of the war, although they were allowed home visits I believe during this time. On his return to England he moved up to the Midlands, where he met my Grandmother Catherine (Kitty) and moved to Selly Oak in Birmingham where they had 2 children, only one of whom survived, that being my Father, John. I believe that Arthur Reginald and Dorothy Margaret moved with their Mother to the coast, the location and further details I will need to get from my Father and will let you know in due course. EMAIL from Carol Walkley [walkleycarol@hotmail.com] Hi Pat Thank you for the information that you sent to myself and Liz. I've managed to speak to Liz today to confirm my connection to the family. The information that I have so far is: Arthur Reginald and Frederick Douglas Walkley (Doug) who was my Grandfather, continued in the family business in the Strand until Arthur Reginald was advised to moved to the seaside due to ill health, Doug was then left to wind up the business, the dates of this I'm not sure of. Then during this time or shortly afterwards he enlisted with the Army to fight in the First World War, however, he was captured in Belgium and was a POW for the duration of the war, although they were allowed home visits I believe during this time. On his return to England he moved up to the Midlands, where he met my Grandmother Catherine (Kitty) and moved to Selly Oak in Birmingham where they had 2 children, only one of whom survived, that being my Father, John. I believe that Arthur Reginald and Dorothy Margaret moved with their Mother to the coast, the location and further details I will need to get from my Father and will let you know in due course. John Walkley stayed in Birmingham, he met Sheila Joyce Booth (known as Joyce) around 1958/59 and they married in Harborne in 1961. They moved to Warley, 6 miles or so outside of Birmingham where they had 4 children, David in 1964, Anne Claire and Janet Susan in 1968 and myself Carol Mary in 1970. My Father is still alive and we hope to meet up with Liz and her sister Jill in the near future at Walkley Woods. I'll email you again with the documents and photos of family, past and present soon. I realise it may be a long shot, but if you know any more about Arthur I'd loved to hear it and how he ended up marrying someone from Australia. I'm now going to try to get my head around all of the information I now know and work out who is who in the Walkley Family. Kind regards Carol > From: pathere@ihug.co.nz > To: liz.walkley@btopenworld.com; walkleycarol@hotmail.com > Subject: 1901 England Census > Date: Wed, 16 Sep 2009 14:15:33 +1200 > > Kia ora Liz & Carol, > Here's a copy of the 1901 England Census. Arthur & Mary were still residing > in London with a servant "Ethel Smith", and a family of Arthur R; Frederick > D; and Margaret D Walkley. > Hope the information helps to clarify matters. > Regards > Pat | WALKLEY, Frederick Douglas (I04689)
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498 | Arthur was born about 1830 in Chelsea, Middlesex, England Arthur married Caroline Charlotte Bingham in 1855 and they had a son called Arthur Bingham Walkley. The people listed as residents at Arthur's home at the time of the 1861 Census in England were: Arthur, as "head" of the residence [31 years of age], Caroline Walkley his wife [31 years of age] born about 1830 at Bristol, St Ewen, Gloucestershire, England, Fanny Walkley was listed as his sister [23 years of age] born about 1838 in Chelsea, Middlesex, England, Arthur Bingham Walkley his son [5 years of age] born about 1856 at Bristol, Mary Bingham his wife's mother [60yrs of age] born 1801 at Cleve, Surrey, England and Jane Milton as the servant of the household. | WALKLEY, Arthur Hickman (I04045)
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499 | Article from Leicester University about John Coltman. "The reluctant businessman: John Coltman of St Nicholas Street, Leicester (1727-1808) by David L. Wykes https://www.le.ac.uk/lahs/downloads/WykesvolumeLXIX-6sm.pdf Some biographical information included too. (added by Raewyn) | COLTMAN, John (I1220)
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500 | Articles from Papers Past: Shocking accident: http://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&cl=search&d=NZH18820328.2.21 Died at hospital: http://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&cl=search&d=NZH18820330.2.18 The late Captain Matheson: http://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/cgi-bin/paperspast?a=d&cl=search&d=NZH18820330.2.21 | MATHESON, Duncan (I64)
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