Home
Search
Print
Login
Add Bookmark
Matches 1 to 50 of 522
| |
Notes |
Linked to |
| 1 |
1 REFN 911
Child Record not found: @I24@ (The program that produced this GEDCOM file is at fault.)ild: CHIL @I24@
Child Record not found: @I23@ (The program that produced this GEDCOM file is at fault.)ild: CHIL @I23@
Child Record not found: @I26@ (The program that produced this GEDCOM file is at fault.)ild: CHIL @I26@
Child Record not found: @I27@ (The program that produced this GEDCOM file is at fault.)ild: CHIL @I27@
Child Record not found: @I32@ (The program that produced this GEDCOM file is at fault.)ild: CHIL @I32@
Child Record not found: @I31@ (The program that produced this GEDCOM file is at fault.)ild: CHIL @I31@
Child Record not found: @I28@ (The program that produced this GEDCOM file is at fault.)ild: CHIL @I28@
Child Record not found: @I29@ (The program that produced this GEDCOM file is at fault.)ild: CHIL @I29@ | Family: F339
|
| 2 |
2 _PREF Y | Family: F52
|
| 3 |
2 _PREF Y | Family: F54
|
| 4 |
2 _PREF Y | Family: F55
|
| 5 |
2 _PREF Y | Family: F57
|
| 6 |
2 _PREF Y | Family: F59
|
| 7 |
29 May 1793
John Reed 21 of Longhorsley to
Jane storey 21 of Brinkburn
Bondsman Thomas Storey of Brinkburn
«b»Source: Sunderland Local History Library, Durham Marriage Bonds 1791-97 p 122
«/b» | Family: F441
|
| 8 |
According to rites of the Presbyterian Church.
Consent of Alexander McLennan (father) noted
Witnessed by John McLennan and Elizabeth Maxwell | Family: F6
|
| 9 |
Assiiigned to Spear on arrival in Sydney 1801 | Family: F84
|
| 10 |
By Banns
Witnesses:
John Mawman and Jane Beall | Family: F341
|
| 11 |
Conducted after Banns
Witnessed by Joseph Joshua Parker and Amelia Crump | Family: F101
|
| 12 |
Federation of Family History Societies - Transcript
Married at Wyke Regis No image available on 21 Nov 1829 Groom William CARTER of - Bride Ann MITCHELL of - Licence or Banns Banns Witnessess STONE Joseph & ALLEN Mary | Family: F155
|
| 13 |
Florence Hicks listed as a sojourner of this parish. Signed with a mark.
Witnesses:
Amelia Hicks, (mark)
John Tregear | Family: F16
|
| 14 |
Groom - James Bielefeld Status - Occupation - Notes - of Parish Newbury Married at Speen by Licence? lic Bride Charlotte Wells Status - of Parish - Notes - on 15 Oct 1818 | Family: F343
|
| 15 |
Identity unknown, but John stated as widower when he married Jemima | Family: F365
|
| 16 |
James Eddy's occupation - Mining Manager | Family: F7
Family: F7
|
| 17 |
James Eddy's occupation - Mining Manager | Family: F7
Family: F7
|
| 18 |
Left Liverpool, England on 18 Jan 1854 aboard 'Indian Queen' as unassisted passengers and arrived in Melbourne 22 April 1854 | Family: F68
|
| 19 |
Marraige witnessed by Henry Crews and Aaron Stevens.
Bride signed with a mark | Family: F26
|
| 20 |
Marriage by Licence
Witnesses:
George B Pearce - Hotelkeeper, Clunes
R Wolfe - Draper, Creswick | Family: F62
Family: F62
|
| 21 |
Marriage by Licence
Witnesses:
George B Pearce - Hotelkeeper, Clunes
R Wolfe - Draper, Creswick | Family: F62
Family: F62
|
| 22 |
Married according to rites of the Presbyterian Church
Mary signed with a mark. | Family: F292
|
| 23 |
Suggestion of Marriage to Richard Dawkings on this date | Family: F86
|
| 24 |
Thomas lived at:
Woodbines
Alfred Road
Kingston
Surrey
Dorothy at
38 Poplar Grove
New malden
Surrey
Witnessed by Matthew R Johnson and Florence Lovett | Family: F98
Family: F98
|
| 25 |
Thomas lived at:
Woodbines
Alfred Road
Kingston
Surrey
Dorothy at
38 Poplar Grove
New malden
Surrey
Witnessed by Matthew R Johnson and Florence Lovett | Family: F98
Family: F98
|
| 26 |
Was housekeeper to Peaulet | Family: F81
|
| 27 |
Witnessed by William Reed and Elizabeth Mary Davy | Family: F346
|
| 28 |
Witnessed by:
John Bowls and Mary Ann Barker
Frederick signed with a mark (x) | Family: F450
|
| 29 |
witnessed by:
William Reed and Elizabeth Middleton Reed | Family: F444
|
| 30 |
Witnesses were Charles Henry Walter and Amelia Elizabeth Reed
Marriage by banns | Family: F100
|
| 31 |
Transcript of HO107/1511 p41
15 Wellington Street North, Westminster, London
Charles Frederick Bielefeld, Head, Mar, 48, Papier Mache Manufacturer, London
«b»Mrs Bielefeld, Wife, 40, , London Oxford Street«/b»
Julius M Bielefeld, Son, Un, 19, Papier Mache Manufacturer, London, Paddington
Sydney K Bielefeld, Son, 15, , London, Marylebone
Julia Bielefeld, Daur, 11, Scholar, London St Pancras
Clara Bielefeld, daur, 9, Scholar, London St Paul Covent Garden
Ellen Bielefeld, daur, 5, Scholar, London St Paul Covent Garden
Louis Bielefeld, Son, 3, Scholar, London St Paul Covent Garden
Charlotte Hearne, Servant, Widow, Servant, Kent
Caroline Fieeelder, Serv, Un, 20, Servant, London | Elizabeth
|
| 32 |
Transcript of RG13/223 f. 36 p. 68
162 Graham Road, Hackney, London
Arthur Mutlow, Head, Mar, 30, Brewery Accountant, Worker, London Hackney
«b»Emily J Mutlow, Wife, Mar, 29, Asst Mistress School Board, Hants, Portsmouth«/b» | Emily J
|
| 33 |
Transcript of RG13/250 f143 p5
41 Corporation Row, Clerkenwell, London
William Reed, Head, Mar, 48, Furntiture Dealer, employed on own account, London Clerkenwell
«b»Mary Reed, Wife, Mar, 40, , London Walworth«/b»
Blanch Reed, Daur, Single, 18, Small Jewel Case Maker, Worker, London Clerkenwell
Annie Reed, Daur, Single, 16, Gold and Silver Burnisher, Worker, London Clerkenwell
Maud Reed, Daur, Singles, 14, Post office Boy (sic), Worker, London Walworth
Ellen Reed, Daur, Single, 12, , London St Lukes
Celia Reed, Daur, 9, , London Clerkenwell
Maria Reed, Daur, 6, , London Clerkenwell
May Reed, Daur, 4, , London Clerkenwell
William Reed, Son, 5 mths, , London Clerkenwell
Jane Crump, Visitor, 48, Dress maker, Worker, Hants, St Noets (sic) | Mary
|
| 34 |
Transcript of HO107/1769 f285 p10
Church Road, Walthamstowe
Anthony Storey Reed, Haed, Mar, 43, Builder employing 18 men, Northumberland
«b»Sarah Reed, Wife, Mar, 32, , Essex Waltham Abbey«/b»
Ellen Reed, Daur, 7, , Essex Walthamstowe
Jane Reed, daur, 5, , Essex Walthamstowe
James Reed, Son, 3, , Essex Walthamstowe
Caroline Whittaker, Lodger, Un, 32, , Westminster
Fanny Ward, Lodger, 9,Scholar, London
George Pinckerton, Lodger, Un, 25, , St Petersburg illegible
Annie Burrell, Serv, Un, 14, , London | Sarah
|
| 35 |
Transcript of RG10/1636 f156 p33
Church End, Walthamstowe
Anthony S Reed, Head, Mar, 62, Builder employing 31 men, Northumberland Wingates
«b»Sarah Reed, Wife, Mar, 52, , Essex Waltham Abbey«/b»
James G Reed, Son, Un, 23, Builders son, Essex Waltham Abbey
Thomas Reed, Nephew, Un, 34, Bank clerk, Northumberland, Byker
Maria Hutchings, Servt, Un, 20, General Domestic Servant, Essex Stanford Rivers | Sarah
|
| 36 |
Transcript of RG11/1139 f.103, pp. 7-8
58 Amelia Street, Portsea, Hampshire
William Carter, Head, Mar, 47, Shipwright, Dorset, Weymouth
«b»Sarah Carter, Wife, Mar, 50, Tailoress, Dorset, Piddlethrenthide«/b»
William H Carter, son, Unm, 18, Shipwright Apprentice, Hants, Landport
Thomas F Carter, son, Unm, 15, Shipwrights Apprentice, Hants, Landport
Laura B Carter, Daur, 10, Scholar, Hants Landport
Ann M Carter, Mother, Wid, 74, formerly Tailoress, Dorset, Portland
Jospeh Warren, Lodger, Unm, 17, Pastry Cook, Dorset, Charmouth | Sarah
|
| 37 |
Transcript of RG9/1061 f78 p32
Church End, Walthamstowe
Anthony Reed, Head, Mar, 52, Builder employing 23 men, Northumberland Longhorsley
«b»Sarah Reed, Wife, Mar, 42, , Essex Waltham Abbey«/b»
Ellen Reed, Daur, Un, 17, , Essex Waltham Abbey
Jane Reed, daur, Un, 15, , Essex Waltham Abbey
James G Reed, Son, , 13, Scholar, Essex Waltham Abbey
Rebecca haywood, Serv, Un, 19, House Servant, Cambridge Abington | Sarah
|
| 38 |
Transcript of HO107/1857 pp. 61-62
Quay, South Parade, Melcombe Regis, Dorset
David Cady, Head, Mar, 62, Boatman, Dorset Weymouth
«b»Susan Cady, Wife, Mar, 65, , Dorset, Portland«/b»
Mary Cady, Daur, 25, , Dorset Weymouth
Edward Cady, Son, Un, 28, Yachtman seaman
William Cady, Son, Un, 20, Boatman, Dorset Weymouth
Maria Cady, Grand Daur, 10, , Dorset Weymouth
James Symes, Grandson, 6, , Dorset Weymouth | Susan
|
| 39 |
Transcript of HO107/295/16 p. 26
Littel Friary, Melcombe Regis, Dorset
David Cady, 52, Boat fisherman, Dorset
«b»«sup»Susanna Cady, 55, , Dorset«/b»
«/sup»Mary Cady, 26, , Dorset
Susanna cady, 22, , Dorset
Elizabeth Cady, 16, , Dorset
Edward Cady, 18, ,Waterman, Dorset
William Cady, 6, , Dorset
Mary Cady, 9 mths, , Dorset | Susan
|
| 40 |
Transcript of RG9/1350 f.4
3 South Parade Quay, Melcombe Regis, Dorset
David Cady, Head, Mar, 72, Waterman, Dorset, Melcombe Regis«b»
Susan Cady, Wife, Mar, 75, , Dorset, Portland, Blind«/b»
Mary Cady, Daur, Un, 45, , Channel Islands, Guernsey
William Cady, Son, Un, 30, Waterman, Dorset, Melcombe Regis
James Syms, Grandson, Un, 16, Waterman, Dorset, Melcombe Regis | Susan
|
| 41 |
This individual was found on GenCircles at: http://www.gencircles.com/users/sandy123/1/data/280 | (Mother)
|
| 42 |
«b»Famine Orphan Girls
The Fate of Mary Allingham «/b»
In what may be a final attempt to ascertain the fate of Mary Allingham, niece of the poet William Allingham, who was orphaned following the deaths of her parents during the period of the Great Famine in Ireland 1840-46, the following is published in the hope that some descendants may see it and have family knowledge of Mary and of what became of her.
It was compiled by the indefatigable Soinbhe Lally, whose name is well known to long-time readers of this web site.
On a visit to Belfast in December 2000 she visited the Linenhall Library in that city, and in the card index of births, deaths, and marriages published in the Belfast Newsletter between 1800 and 1857, checked for Allingham entries. Two entries in particular were intriguing, those of John James Allingham and his wife Jessie, who were married in the Australian gold rush town of Ballarat on August 2, 1885.
The marriage entry records:
Allingham John James Formerly of Dublin to Jessie Niven Dublin at Ballarat, Melbourne Australia, married 2 August 1855
The second entry poignantly records:
Mrs. John James Allingham Ballarat Australia Formerly of Drumcondra d. 25-11-1856
Surprisingly, the name James Allingham, without the first name John, turned up in a third entry:
James Allingham of Capel St. Dublin died 5-6-1860
The puzzle these three entries present is that if John James Allingham was really from Dublin, why were his announcements published in a Belfast newspaper?
All other Allingham announcements of the period related to deaths in and around the neighbourhood of Ballyshannon, the birthplace of the poet William. One other is of some significance in that it records the death of a centenarian:
George Allingham aged 100 Boa Island nr. Pettigo d. 5-7-1842
It is known that the surname Allingham is frequently associated with the Armidale district in New South Wales. It is fervently to be wished that one or both local newspapers, The Armidale Express and The Armidale Independent, each of which publishes editions on the World Wide Web, may assist in the hunt for any record or family anecdote that may shed light on Mary Allingham's ultimate fate.
The story of Mary and her fifteen co-emigrants from Ballyshannon is told in fuller detail in Girls Orphaned by the Irish Famine.
Girls Orphaned by Irish Famine
Australian Monument Lists Four Hundred Names
«b»The Fate of Mary Allingham--Further Clues«/b»
It is with a sense of heartfelt gratitude to a small number of people in Ireland, Australia and Canada, that "A Home Page with an Irish Flavour" is able to place on the Internet a list of four hundred names of Irish Famine female orphans inscribed on a monument unveiled in Sydney, Australia, commemorating their arrival there in the late 1840s under what was known as the Earl Grey scheme. This was a scheme whereby 4,114 young girls in Irish workhouses were selected for transportation to Australia, where there was a desperate need for their services both as domestic workers and prospective wives.
In 1997 this Home Page published two articles titled "Workhouse Famine Records", which were compiled by a local history group in the town of Ballyshannon, Co. Donegal, under the guidance of local historian Mr. Anthony Begley. The second article stated that some 16 orphan girls, aged between 14 and 16 years, were picked from among the inmates of the Ballyshannon Workhouse, and in the company of 148 orphan girls from other Irish workhouses, sailed on October 30, 1847, from Plymouth, England.
The article continued:
"They landed in Sydney on the 13th January 1849, but what became of them has not been recorded. Did they view their arrival in Australia as a great adventure? Did they feel disorientated?"
Thanks to painstaking research by Dr.Trevor McClaughlin, Modern History Department, Macquarie University, Sydney, whose book "Barefoot and Pregnant" is widely embracing in scope, we now know that what became of some of them has been recorded. For many, instead of great adventures they faced great hardships.
That second article under "Workhouse Famine Records" gave the names of the sixteen orphans from Ballyshannon Workhouse who were transported to Australia as follows:
ALLINGHAM Mary
CARBERRY Jane
CARLETON Jane
FEELY Margaret
LENNON Sally
MAGUIRE Mary
McBRIDE ANN
McBRIDE Margaret
McCREA Letty
McCREA Mary
McDERMOTT Mary Anne
McDERMOTT Sally
REID Rose
ROONEY Anne
SMITH Biddy
SWEENEY Margaret
It concluded with this paragraph:
"Among the many intriguing questions raised by the list of orphan girls transported from Ballyshannon to Australia is one connected with the name Mary Allingham. Why was this orphan girl not reclaimed by the poet Allingham's family? To what branch did she belong? Mayhap a clue will be found by some Australian reader of this Home Page."
Almost three years later a kind Australian reader did find a clue. On July 2, 2000, Joan Robinson of Australia sent an e-mail in which she stated that she read the workhouse articles with great interest. After giving some background to research already done on the fate of the Irish orphan girls, she revealed that at the end of their voyage they were taken Hyde Park Barracks, "the old convict barracks", in Macquarie Street, Sydney, which was used as a female refuge and a labour exchange, cryptically adding, "The girls were indentured as domestic servants."
Jo Robinson continued to delve into the fate of Mary Allingham, and in August forwarded the following details from the book by Dr. McClaughlin:
"Mary Allingham. 16. Billig. Fermanagh. Parents Robert and Fanny both dead. Religion C of E. Relations in colony...William Allingham."
She included two marriage records for a Mary Allingham, and one for a Mary Martha Allingham.
Mary was coming into focus. While she may have been an inmate of Ballyshannon Workhouse, her birthplace "Billig. Fermanagh" was undoubtedy Belleek, Fermanagh, some four miles from Ballyshannon, site of the world famous Belleek pottery.
On July 19, Dr. McClaughlin provided further details. Mary, apparently, had been indentured to Brisbane Water, a location just outside Sydney. He added that "there are two references to Immigration Correspondence where she is mentioned as having police protection for her return to Sydney from Brisbane."
As Jo Robinson had written earlier, "her story might be quite a sad one".
Further research by Soinbhe Lally has yielded the latest clue to the Allingham family connection with New South Wales. The following extract is from the Fermanagh Millennium web page:
----- ALLINGHAM, CHRISTOPHER (1829-1876), explorer and pastoralist, was born at Hillgrove, County Fermanagh, Ireland, the youngest son of William Allingham, farmer, and his wife, Elizabeth, nee MARTIN. He was a near relative of the poet, William Allingham (1824-1889), and came of a Protestant Hampshire family who had settled in Ulster in the sixteenth century. His brother Edward emigrated to Armidale, New South Wales, in 1841, and was followed, probably in 1846, by Christopher and two other brothers.
"It adds a little more to the picture," writes Soinbhe
Another correspondent, Jon Martin of the University of Melbourne, Australia, reveals that the above mentioned William Allingham, Mary's relative, was an innkeeper at Carlisle's Gully in New South Wales.
As other details emerge they will be added to "A Home Page with an Irish Flavour."
For the present that appears to be the end of the story of Mary Allingham, but if readers will persist to the end of the table of names, a more recent connection with the Allingham family of Ballyshannon has come to light.
The Australian monument at Hyde Park Barracks in Sydney is the work of Adelaide artists Angela and Hossein Valmanesh. It is a bronze-cast table, complete with a meal setting, intersecting a museum wall. Two glass panels bear sandblasted inscriptions of 400 girls' names, and as described by Courtney Kidd, "it is compelling art, starring important history.".........
When I was in my teens, there were still Allingham descendants living in the family house on The Mall in Ballyshannon. They were two spinster ladies, and beyond that fact I knew nothing of their lives. But, going into Belleek pottery records available on the Internet, lo and behold there appeared the following entry:
ALLINGHAM. LOUISE and MAUDE. Daughters of William Allingham (half brother of the poet Allingham). They lived in Ballyshannon, only four miles from the Pottery, and earned a little money painting on porcelain which they would bring to the Pottery to be fired. They also painted on Belleek blanks. Their work was mostly signed.
Thanks to Soinbhe Lally of Rossnowlagh, who had the foresight to enable the Ballyshannon Workhouse Records to be placed on the Internet, sparking an interest in them which has grown with each passing year, it can now be disclosed that a gift of a full table service of Belleek ware was made to Father Connolly of St. Joseph's on the Rock by the two Miss Allinghams. What was the occasion or reason for their gift is unrecorded, but it was a truly unique presentation. Incidentally, it was Father Connolly who presided at the nuptials of my brother Charlie and his bride, Mary Connolly, and the same Father Connolly who appears in the tale "Of processions and celebrations" in "The Kindly Spot" series.
Those who have contributed in making this information available on the World Wide Web through the medium of "A Home Page with an Irish Flavour" include the aforementioned Joan Robinson and Professor McClaughlin, Australia; Soinbhe Lally, Ireland; and Mark Ward, Australian High Commission, Ottawa, Canada.
«b»The riddle of Mary Allingham solved«/b»
Eight years ago a question was posed on this web site about the fate of Mary Allingham, one of the fourteen to sixteen year-old female orphans selected from the inmates of Ballyshannon Workhouse under the Earl Grey scheme for settlement in Australia as a result of the Great Famine in Ireland in the mid 1800s.
Since then many people have provided information on details concerning her appearance in official records both in Ireland and Australia, and these have been gratefully acknowledged as they were received. Now, thanks to Australian reader Margaret Barnes, who undertook exhaustive research into what she calls the "Adventures of Mary", a fuller, more definitive story is revealed. And for the first time we have a have a word picture of Mary who is described as "very small and thin, about 5 feet tall, had a very fair complexion and extremely red hair."
An e-mail from Margaret Barnes is reproduced exactly as received just two days before publication of this issue (April 2005) of the Canadian Vindicator e-zine:
The first mention I can find of Mary is in the Bench of Magistrates Cases for Wollombi, a rural area to the north of Sydney. On 28th July 1848 the Police Magistrate wrote to Francis Merewether, Immigration Agent, referring him to "the enclosed Affidavit relating to the conduct of the employers of Mary Allingham."
The Police Magistrate asked the Immigration Agent to remove Mary from the service of Mr. John Waugh Drysdale and cancel her apprenticed articles, and "place her in servitude where her morals and her religious instruction (she being a member of the Protestant Church of England) may be attended to; at the same time it may be necessary to mention that four out of seven of the parties who made the Affidavits are of the Roman Catholic Church".
Mary's apprenticeship to the Drysdales had been made on the recommendation of a Roman Catholic Clergyman of Maitland.
On 3rd September 1849 the Police Magistrate again wrote to the Immigration Agent acknowledging receipt of a Memorandum from the Orphan Immigration Committee. The Magistrate had the honour to solicit that in consequence of Mary having accompanied her employer Mr. Drysdale to the district of Brisbane Water that he may be excused from proceeding under the Apprenticing Act at his Bench. He begged leave to recommend that that the matter be communicated to the Gosford Bench (Brisbane Water district) that it may give the necessary instructions for the Police to protect "that unfortunate female from being led into scenes of immorality and vice at Mangrove Creek, the present place of residence of Mr. Drysdale."
On 27th September 1849 the Police Magistrate at Gosford wrote to the Immigration Agent referring to previous correspondence (as above). The Magistrate reported that "they had given their constable at Mangrove Creek express instructions to keep a strick (sic) surveillance over the parties and he had informed them that they have conducted themselves since their arrival in the district with every propriety. He begged to decline entering into any enquiries with the case initiated by the Police Magistrate at Wollombi."
An extract from the Diocese of Newcastle - Gosford to St. Albans - Register reveals that "Mary Allingham of this Parish, Spinster and John Elem of this Parish, Bachelor were married in this Parish (Church of England, Gosford) by banns with consent of Parish and guardians on 2nd August 1852 by Alfred Glennie in the presence of John and Harriett Ferguson of Mangrove Creek." Both John and Mary signed with their mark
I quote from a book written by a member of the Ellem family:
"John and Mary farmed growing corn and rearing cattle until in 1871 John decided to join his brothers on the long trek northward to the Clarence River. John and Mary raised a family of nine which eventually spread over many of the northern rivers
Mary, very small and thin, about 5 feet tall, had a very fair complexion and extremely red hair.
Mary died on 8th December 1917 and is buried in the old South Grafton cemetery."
In this book it states that Mary's family came from an area around the Warrewarren-Mangrove Creek junction where they were amongst the earliest settlers. I don't believe this to be true as I can find no trace of any Allingham family anywhere near that area.
Mary's Death Certificate states her parents as Robert Allingham (occupation unknown) and Fanny Marshall. Mary was said to have been born in Belfast, Ireland, and had been in the Colony 67 years.
Kind regards,
Margaret Barnes
If Mary was between 14 and 16 when she was taken from the Ballyshannon Workhouse, she would have been 81 or 83 years old at the time of her death in 1917. It is likely that some of her descendants still reside in Australia.
Starting with a mere mention of her name in those workhouse records, the story of Mary Allingham has intrigued readers throughout the world of cyber space. It is to be hoped that it will provide inspiration to some future poet, novelist, opera lyricist or film writer.
Interested readers may find further reading in Workhouse Famine Records--A Local History Group's Findings as well as http://www.vindicator.ca/history/famine/orphans.asp and in
http://www.vindicator.ca/vindicator/maryAllingham.asp
Source: http://www.vindicator.ca/vindicator/2005_04_ir_1.asp | Mary Allingham
|
| 43 |
Emma appears to ahve signed her name on teh marriage certificate but signed with a mark (X) on her son Frederick's birth certificate. | Emma Barker
|
| 44 |
Inheritance included:
40 pounds of Bank of England stock | Alfred Bielefeld
|
| 45 |
Transcript of HO107/1515 f136 p20
45 Kirby Street, Finsbury, London
James Bielefeld, Head, Mar, 62, Book Binder, Middx Marylebone
Charlotte Bielefeld, Wife, Mar, 51, , Berks Newbury
Celia Bielefeld, Un, 20, , Middx Clerkenwell
«b»Alfred Bielefeld, Son, 18, Engineers Apprentice, Middx Clerkenwell«/b» | Alfred Bielefeld
|
| 46 |
Ineritance included:
250 pounds of Bank of England stock
Mahogany chairs, 2 cane chairs, chimney glass, fire irons and brass fender, Pembroke table, carpet, hearth rug, largest pair of drawers, 4-poster bedstead, bed and bedding and mattress, 1 round table, one cupboard, moving glass, night table, bedpan, copper coal scuttle, 1 knife case, 12 knives and forks.
All remaining personal estate and effects after other bequests made.
Present or future husband(s) not permitted to use inheritance. | Amelia Bielefeld
|
| 47 |
Transcript of RG9/190 pp. 28-29
6½ Bishops Court, Clerkenwell, London
John M Reed, Head, Mar, 33, Undertaker, Middlesex, Clerkenwell
Celia S Reed, Wife, Mar, 28, , Middlesex, Clerkenwell
William J Reed, Son, 9, Scholar, Middlesex, Clerkenwell
Henry Reed, Son, 5, Scholar, Middlesex, Clerkenwell
Amelia Reed, Daur, 7½, , Middlesex, Clerkenwell
«b»Amelia Crump, Head, Wid, 41, Book Folder, Berkshire, Newbury«/b»
George Crump, Son, 7, Scholar, Middlesex, Clerkenwell | Amelia Bielefeld
|
| 48 |
1. Name Mrs Amelia STAGGEMEIER Date 30 Jan 1846 Parish Reading Broad Street Independent aged 75 Occupation - Address Reading,St Mary, - Status - Relationship - Relation - BT - Additional info -
Source: Family History Online (Federation of Family History Societies | Amelia Bielefeld
Amelia Bielefeld
|
| 49 |
1. Name Mrs Amelia STAGGEMEIER Date 30 Jan 1846 Parish Reading Broad Street Independent aged 75 Occupation - Address Reading,St Mary, - Status - Relationship - Relation - BT - Additional info -
Source: Family History Online (Federation of Family History Societies | Amelia Bielefeld
Amelia Bielefeld
|
| 50 |
1. Name Mrs Amelia STAGGEMEIER Date 30 Jan 1846 Parish Reading Broad Street Independent aged 75 Occupation - Address Reading,St Mary, - Status - Relationship - Relation - BT - Additional info - | Amelia Bielefeld
|
|