Friday 5 June 2015

Grandfather, Joseph Corthorn, far right, outside the pumping station Victoria Embankment Nottingham 1940s

@Oldstuff2: Grandfather, Joseph Corthorn of the AFS far right in Nottingham during WW2. The picture is taken outside the pumping station on Victoria Embankment. The pumping station is no longer there but in the background can be seen the statue of Sir Robert Clifton which remains to this day. #firefighters #fireman #blitz #ww2 http://twitter.com/Oldstuff2/status/605688560902107137/photo/1 Shared via TweetCaster

Uncle Bert Carey early 1920s Nottingham

@Oldstuff2: Great uncle Bert Carey, standing left, at a lorry show in Nottingham early 1920s, possibly Victoria Embankment or the Forest Recreation Ground. #Boots #Nottingham #transport http://twitter.com/Oldstuff2/status/605689782488985600/photo/1 Shared via TweetCaster

Wednesday 15 April 2015

South African Estate Papers arrive

I have now received the Estate Papers of Charles Frederick Ronald Moore and his father Henry Moore. Charles emigrated to South Africa with his family at the age of 2. His father worked for one of the big gold mining companies at the time.

Thursday 2 April 2015

Rose Cheetham2

I have finally found the record of Rose Cheetham's outward journey to Canada in 1927. She made the journey with her daughter, Ethel, and her husband. Another daughter, Edith, was already in Canada. Her son, Horace, followed some months later.

Wednesday 11 February 2015

My search for Gertrude Annie Lacey

I have been searching for a few years now for the daughter of my great aunt and her husband, Gertrude Annie and Ebenezer Moses LACEY. I knew from various sources that they had emigrated to South Africa in the early 1920s and that they had both died there in 1940 and 1944 respectively.
On one Gertrude's visits to England, however, she was accompanied by a daughter, also called Gertrude Annie, aged 14. Also on Ebenezer's Estate Papers from South Africa he left some of his money to a Gertrude Annie MOORE, wife of Ronald MOORE. I had worked out her birth year as being around 1915 and so proceeded to look for her birth in England around this time. I knew Gertrude and Ebenezer were married in Camberwell but could find no record there. I searched baptisms in Gertrude's home County, Nottinghamshire and Ebenezer's in Buckinghamshire but still no luck.
Could she have been born in South Africa? I could find no record.
I read Ebenezer's Estate Papers again. Even more puzzling was the fact that he had stated that he had no surviving children. So had Gertrude Annie died at a young age, and if so, where?
This puzzle carried on for a couple of years, with me regularly checking records both here and in South Africa but to no avail. Then last week I had a moment of serendipity.
I had joined a South African genealogy group on Facebook and at the same time Ancestry was running one of it's free weekends for all UK records.
I had posted a request for help in finding information relating to the family and the whereabouts of young Gertrude Annie.
After a few messages concerning Gertrude and Ebenezer and their immigration I started to look through some of the old records I have for them. One came to my attention for an outbound journey that Gertrude had made in 1921. I noticed that a few lines above her entry was another traveller giving the same address in Camberwell. It turned out to be a Gertrude Annie GRAINGER
Who was Gertrude Annie GRAINGER? She was the daughter of  Gertrude's sister, Edith.
Edith ELLIS had married George William GRAINGER in 1910 but unfortunately George was killed in action in 1918. Edith had married again in 1919 to Arthur BOWLING.
I will probably never find out why, but poor little Gertrude, then aged 3, was taken to South Africa to start a new life. Did she ever see her family again? She did come back, we now know, listed as Gertrude's daughter and not her niece, but did she have any contact with her mother?
Helen Riding of the South African genealogy Facebook group found evidence of a marriage between Gertrude Annie Grainger and Charles Frederick Ronald MOORE thus proving the reason for Ebenezer leaving some of his money to Gertrude Annie MOORE and her family.
Later the marriage entry for them was found by Ellen Stanton, also of the group, in the Familysearch records for the Parish Church of St Augustine. Orange Grove, Johannesburg South Africa.
Also mentioned in Ebenezer's will were two children, Mary Gertrude and Edward MOORE. I have managed to find a baptism at the same church for Mary Gertrude in 1943 but have yet to find one for Edward, although we did find that he was born in 1947 from a later ship's register for a journey to England in 1950.Two years later, however, he did not travel with the family when they made another journey.
I am currently trying to find out what happened to the family after 1952, the last journey I have for them travelling back to South Africa.
Thanks to Helen Riding and Ellen Stanton of the South African Genealogy group on Facebook.















Friday 15 August 2014

Rose Cheetham

Just discovered from the British Newspaper Archive that one of my ancestors, Rose Cheetham, was dicovered floating in the canal at Nottingham after attempting suicide by cutting her throat. Luckily she was spotted by a passing policeman and taken to hospital. Unluckily, after spending a few weeks in the General Hospital she was in court on a charge of attempted suicide.
On her first appearance she was remanded by the magistrates, but I can find no further information about the case.

Sunday 11 November 2012

The weekend

I've just finished downloading all the WWI documents I can find on Ancestry that are relevant to my family history. Some of their UK WWI records have been free this weekend as part of a campaign to commemorate Remembrance Day.
I already have some of them, but now I have them all in the same file on one computer. I must remember to back them up to another drive, of course.
I did the same with the 1911 census while that was free last month. If you are on a budget, like me, it pays to  look out for these special offers on all the family history sites. It does mean that you have to register on the sites, but it's free.
Anyone who uses Google Chrome for there Ancestry searches, as I do, might be interested in an extension that is available. Called Ancestry Family Search Extension 2.5. The blurb on the web page says"This extension takes the vital information from an Ancestry Family Tree person page and searches FamilySearch.org using those details. (An Ancestry subscription is required to view other people’s Ancestry Family Trees.)
The extension can be found at the Chrome Web Store.

Thursday 1 November 2012

Lest We Forget.....

On 4th November 1918, just 8 days before the end of World War 1, 204439 Private Lewis George Ellis and his best man and brother-in-law, 31385 Private George William Grainger, both of 9th Battalion Sherwood Foresters, were killed in Action at the Battle of The Sambre.
Both men are buried at the St Roch Communal Cemetery at Valenciennes in France.


My thanks to Stephen Morse for taking the photographs and placing the crosses for me


Also remembered, my grandfather, 1917 Private James Ellis Royal Guernsey Light Infantry who survived the war.
2619350 Guardsman Lewis George Ellis 1st Battalion Grenadier Guards died 18th April 1944 aged 30 who is buried at Leabrooks Cemetery Alfreton Derbyshire. From the records at the Grenadier Guards barracks it would seem that Lewis wasn't killed in action but died in hospital in England.



Both Lewis's are commemorated on the War Memorial at St Thomas's Church Somercotes Derbyshire.

Sunday 6 May 2012

Missing Cheetham

Further to my finding the death of Robert CHEETHAM in the St Mary's Nottingham Parish Registers, living at a place just known as Coppice, I am now looking for the death of his wife Ellen. I have found one of their sons, John, living nearby, on the 1841 and 1851 census but no sign of Ellen.
I am assuming she would be living in the same area as Robert but she may have pre-deceased him. (I have checked St Mary's from 1810 up to Robert's death in 1838).

I would be keen to hear from anyone who has any information about DUNKIRK FARM in Lenton Nottinghamshire. The CHEETHAM family were farming here from the very early 1800s up until the death of Frances CHEETHAM in 1881, when the land was sold for building development.

I plan to check the British Newspaper Archives as soon as I have a weekend to spare. I want to see what other information I can find about my families on there. Last time I searched was quite fruitful, although once again, the CHEETHAM entries are more prolific than the ELLIS's

I have recently bought a book entitled "The Dictionary of Slang" so as a bit of entertainment does anyone
know the meanings of these old slang words. All are English
bluey-cracking (mid 19C)
botanical excursion (mid 19C)
couch a hogshead (mid 16-early 19C)
curby hocks (mid 19C-1900s)
fake a pin (early 19C UK underworld)

Answers next post

Friday 20 April 2012

It's been a long time since I made an entry in my blog but that doesn't mean that I haven't been carrying on with my research. At the moment I am concentrating on the CHEETHAM side of the family as they seem to have left more of a footprint in history.
I have now discovered that they were simultaneously farming land in Orston, Flintham, Lenton, Whatton and also in the St Anns area. Some of this land they owned, some of it they were tennants.
I know that they sold some land in Flintham to Thomas Blackborne Thoroton Hildyard for £900 in 1867. By that time I think the CHEETHAM's were no longer farming in Flintham. 
By 1881, and the death of Frances CHEETHAM, wife of William at Dunkirk Farm in Lenton the family's connection with farming was all but finished, although the family continued in the Lenton area until only recently.
I would be interested to hear from anyone connected to the family and may be able to provide any more information.