Mitchell Families Online

GENEALOGY OF MY MITCHELL FAMILIES - AND A LOT MORE BESIDES!

Notes


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Matches 801 to 900 of 4,249

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801 Death Certificate lists John as a Market Gardener, late of Screen, John (I5203)
 
802 Death duty records indicate that the Binsteads lived at Curdridge Common, in the Parish of Bishop's Waltham Binstead, Peter (I29961)
 
803 Death is unconfirmed but is the only one found that comes close to fitting. Winkworth, James Wicks (I28404)
 
804 Death record indicates that Ivor was a retired Tea Planter. Etherington, Ivor (I25066)
 
805 Death recorded as "George Skevings" Skeving, George (I3886)
 
806 Death recorded as "Grace Skivings" Dowell, Grace (I3887)
 
807 Death recorded as William SNARKY Snarey, William (I12190)
 
808 Death recorded as: Caroline Elizabeth Nicholson. Hughes, Catherine Elizabeth (I19764)
 
809 Death recorded as: Cecil E Steer Steer, Ewart Cecil (I18572)
 
810 Death recorded as: Esther BENNETT Fluck, Esther (I19372)
 
811 Death recorded as: Henry W Goulding. (NB. This name also used throughout census entries) Goulding, Henry William (I19709)
 
812 Death recorded as: Joshua Kivell Nancekivell, Joshua (I16250)
 
813 Death recorded as: Mary Jane Nance-Kivell Pengelly, Mary Jane (I16254)
 
814 Death recorded as: Rose Craythorne Ather, Rosina (I20293)
 
815 Death recorded in BMD as: GEARY, Albert ET Gearey, Albert Edward T (I16811)
 
816 Death records as: Norman E Marmion Marmion, Ernest Norman (I905)
 
817 Death register gives Annie's birth as 14 April 1899 but this is not correct. Wooster, Annie (I8927)
 
818 Death registered as James DIPPLE Dible, James (I12649)
 
819 Death registered as Jeanetta L Dodimead. Herrington, Jeannette Louisa (I941)
 
820 Death registered in South Manchester Registration District, Lancashire Theophilus, Esta M (I16953)
 
821 Death was reported in the "Hampshire Advertiser" (newspaper). Wooster, Emma Elizabeth (I24169)
 
822 Death year and place is unconfirmed Breakspeare, James (I1063)
 
823 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. You must register/log in to see this item. Living (I26899)
 
824 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. You must register/log in to see this item. Family F5530
 
825 Definition - Warp Dresser: "Preparation of the long worsted threads for weaving. This consisted of sizing the warp threads with "paps" - a flour and water mix - which strengthened the warp threads and lessened the possibility of them breaking during weaving."

"Dressing: Yarn from the spools on the warp creel pass through a warp "dresser" and are wound onto a wide reel. Threads are "drawn" in through eyelets called "heddles" in the harnesses, and placed on the loom for weaving." 
Wooster, Frank (I11633)
 
826 Dennecia arrived from Bermuda aboard the ship "SS Orcoma" on 25 July 1932. She is aged 7 and is accompanied by her mother Amanda. From the travel arrangmemts of her mother, it appears that Dennecia may have been brought to England for her education. Their UK address is given as: 56, Llandaff Road, Cardiff
From Place: Bermuda, West Indies 
Watts, Dennecia (I27013)
 
827 Dennecia sailed aboard the ship "SS Carare" bound for Bermuda. She is described as aged 13 and a Student, Her address in the UK was given as: 5, Sunnyside Road, Hornsey.
Into Place: Bermuda, West Indies 
Watts, Dennecia (I27013)
 
828 Described as "grand-daughter" to James Snell and Phoebe in 1851 census Snell, Elizabeth (I10377)
 
829 Described as "grand-daughter" to James Snell and Phoebe in 1851 census Snell, Sarah (I10376)
 
830 Described as part of a 'Salvation Army Party', Fanny and 5 of her children departed from Liverpool on board the SS Regina bound for Canada. The voyage was scheduled to take 21 days and so they would have arrived on, or around 15 June 1923. Fanny gives her last UK address as: The Grove, Loddon, Near Norfolk.
Into Place: Montréal, Québec, Canada 
Mathews, Fanny (I16367)
 
831 Described in 1861 census as Cousin to Mary Ann Mogridge Tozer Tozer, William (I4985)
 
832 Described in 1861 census as Visitor to Mary Ann Mogridge Tozer Winsor, Elizabeth (I4986)
 
833 Described in the 1861 census as an Invalid, Elizabeth died a spinster, although she did have a son. Rayner, Elizabeth (I25350)
 
834 Described in the Passenger Manifest as a "Plumber's Mate", aged 18, Earnest set off for his new life in Australia on 2 April 1927. He sailed from the Port of London on board the 6728 ton ship "Orsova", a ship of the Steamship Orient Line. The voyage was scheduled to take 35 days.
Into Place: Brisbane, Queensland, Australia 
Hunter, Earnest William Albert (I7915)
 
835 Details from marriage certificate, courtesy Wooster Families website, are as follows:

Register Office, Wycombe Union, Bucks.
John Eggleton of full age, Widower, Farmer, Monks Risborough, Bucks.
Father: John Eggleton, Yeoman.
Ann Wooster of full age, Widow, Farmer, Ilmer, Bucks.
Father: James Ives, Farmer.
Witnesses: Ellen Emma Harman & William Taplin 
Family F2402
 
836 Details of the Will of Sir Walter Calverley Trevelyan where published in the 'Illustrated London News'. The will was complicated as it had 16 codicils and many alterations in the bequests over numerous years. However, David was a beneficiary, as this clip from the will defines:
".. to David Wooster, all his (sic) house property at Ipswich, subject to his paying £300 thereout to the Natural History Society of that town." 
Wooster, David (I24135)
 
837 Devon and Exeter Female Reformatory School was an institution for the industrial training of juvenile offenders – that is, for girls up to the age of 16 years, who had been convicted of a crime punishable by imprisonment. They spent a short time in an adult prison, followed by a period of up to 5 years in Devon and Exeter Reformatory, which was a certified Reformatory School. The order for detention was made by the Court, and the maximum limit for a Reformatory School was the age of nineteen. The premises also housed a refuge for discharged prisoners which had moved in 1858 from Lawn Lodge, Sidwell Street. Exeter. Until recently, the building was the Nichols Centre for special needs adult training. Benjamin, Georgina (I187)
 
838 Dictionery,net describes an Apothecary thus: One who prepares and sells drugs or compounds for medicinal purposes; a druggist; a pharmacist. [1913 Webster]

Note: In England an apothecary is one of a privileged class of practitioners, licensed to prescribe medicine -- a kind of sub-physician. The surgeon apothecary is the ordinary family medical attendant. One who sells drugs and makes up prescriptions is now commonly called in England a druggist or a pharmaceutical chemist. [1913 Webster]
 
Bullen, Robert (I11508)
 
839 Died a spinster Turl, Mary Ann (I23642)
 
840 Died a spinster Duckett, Joan Elizabeth (I21542)
 
841 Died a spinster Pearce, Priscilla (I21530)
 
842 Died a spinster Pearce, Elizabeth (I21529)
 
843 Died a spinster Trigg, Stella Margaret Irene (I18134)
 
844 Died a spinster de Rusett, Ursula Clara (I14579)
 
845 Died a spinster Stokes, Charlotte Ann (I9277)
 
846 Died a spinster Wooster, Queenie Olive Ivy (I8584)
 
847 Died a Spinster Tonkin, Sylvia Thirza (I3131)
 
848 Died a spinster Dodimead, Maria (I958)
 
849 Died a spinster. Holmden, Ann Frances (I22161)
 
850 Died a spinster. de Vesian, Eleanor (I22068)
 
851 Died a spinster. Ellis, Dorothy (I22067)
 
852 Died a spinster. De Vesian, Olive Elaine (I15790)
 
853 Died a spinster. De Vesian, Sylvia Ellis (I15789)
 
854 Died a Spinster. Mouring, Dorothy Rose (I29679)
 
855 Died a spinster. Chambers, Freda Annie Vance (I29320)
 
856 Died a spinster. Dodimead, Agatha Elizabeth (I27131)
 
857 Died a spinster. Hyne, Beatrice Drucilla (I24536)
 
858 Died a spinster. Stubbs, Margaret Edith Primrose (I22474)
 
859 Died a spinster. Henton, Annie Sarah (I21639)
 
860 Died a spinster. Millson, Evelyn Primrose (I20208)
 
861 Died a spinster. Millson, Ada Malvina (I20206)
 
862 Died a spinster. Axford, Elsie Isabel L (I19418)
 
863 Died a spinster. Harding, Elizabeth Isabella (I19401)
 
864 Died a spinster. Pembrey, Dorothy Kathleen (I18747)
 
865 Died a Spinster. Pembrey, Annie Ethel (I18707)
 
866 Died a spinster. Steer, Tryphena (I18615)
 
867 Died a spinster. Steer, Salome Winifred Linna (I18567)
 
868 Died a spinster. de Rusett, Irene Marguerite Fanny (I14577)
 
869 Died a spinster. Mitchell, Elizabeth Dorothy Oatley (I9615)
 
870 Died a spinster. Wooster, Alice Maud (I8581)
 
871 Died a spinster. Pile, Adeline Wilmot (I3882)
 
872 Died a spinster. Pile, Gertrude Louise (I3881)
 
873 Died a spinster. Cleaver, Blanch Amelia (I346)
 
874 Died at the home of his daughter, Rebecca Veater (nee Maggs). Maggs, James (I13635)
 
875 Died before 1765 Leonard, Elizabeth (I665)
 
876 Died during WW2 Evans, Frank (I2878)
 
877 Died whilst serving with the 15th Battalion, Lancashire Fusiliers Wooster, Lindon Edward (I26659)
 
878 DIPPAM: Documenting Ireland: Parliament, People and Migration Repository Source: (R26)
 
879 Distinguished Service Medal: "For the operations round Antwerp from the 3rd to the 9th October.". "Naval Brigade: Chief Petty Officer Bernard Henry Ellis, No. 748, B.Co., R.N.V.R., London."
Source: Supplement to the London Gazette, 1 January 1915. 
Ellis, Bernard Henry D.S.O., D.S.M. (I22101)
 
880 DOB calculated from age at Christening. Tozer, Matthew William (I18404)
 
881 DOB calculated from age at Christening. Tozer, Matthew (I18403)
 
882 DODIMEAD Edward Albert of 7 King William Walk Greenwich London SE10 died 12 July 1947. Probate London 27 September to Constance Edith Hilliard, married woman. Effects: £484 12s.
(Note: Constance was Edward's wife's sister, née Turnbull) 
Dodimead, Albert Edward (I1973)
 
883 Donald must have joined the Royal Navy but it is not knwon when. we do know that he was awarded a "Long Service and Good Conduct" medal on 15 December 1942. At that time, he was serving aboard HMS Victory and his service was defined as "Excellent". Dodimead, Donald Albert (I8540)
 
884 Doris and Henry had 4 children from this marriage. Family F3915
 
885 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. You must register/log in to see this item. Family F5689
 
886 Dorothy died a spinster but she is remembered by her great-niece, Kaye, who recalls....

"My mother wrote regularly to my great aunt Dorothy for much of my childhood. I remember her house was left to her lifelong friend, a neighbour, Mrs Smith who had cared for Dorothy in her old age. I was told that eventually as she aged, she had dementia and was in a home for some time." 
Bassett, Dorothy Louisa (I20590)
 
887 Dorothy registered as a teacher on 1 December 1919 but she had already been teaching since 1914. Ellis, Dorothy (I22067)
 
888 Double Wedding on Christmas Day 1902 (with her sister Elizabeth) Family F773
 
889 Double Wedding on Christmas Day 1902 (with her sister Mary Ann) Family F774
 
890 Ebenezer and Jane married almost immediately following the death of Maria. Family F5579
 
891 Edith drowned in the River Thames near Oxford. Broadway, Edith Elise (I10746)
 
892 Edith was the daughter of Elijah Marsh and Eliza Dixon. Elijah was a Timber Merchant. Dixon, Edith Martha (I22066)
 
893 Edith was the twin sister of William (b.1795) Monger, Edith (I2612)
 
894 Editors note: Could he be a "Meadows"? See the baptism record for Charles Henry J Baker.
DOB Source: Copy of birth certificate supplied by 
Baker, Charles Henry John (I14481)
 
895 Edmond's death was recorded in The Brisbane Courier on Thursday 27 September 1928. Sheahan, Edmond Francis (I21483)
 
896 Edmund, along with his parents and siblings, sailed aboard the ship "Berkshire" on a 4 month gruelling voyage to their new life in Australia. They arrived on 3 October 1848. Also making the same voyage were two of Ann's siblings (James and Mary) and their families.
Into Place: Point Henry, Victoria, Australia 
Strange, Edmund (I28817)
 
897 At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. You must register/log in to see this item. Living (I13997)
 
898 Educated in Sydney and at Rugby, England, Anthony toured Europe and at 18 entered his father's firm.

In 1878 Hordern and his brother Samuel, signed a formal deed of partnership for thirty years. According to the Bulletin, 22 May 1880, they 'fairly rule[d] the retail trade of the metropolis and the colony in general'. They adopted the trade-mark of the spreading oak over the motto, 'While I live, I'll grow'.

In 1878 Anthony had visited America and London, and in 1879 opened the 'Palace Warehouse' and the 'Palace Emporium' in the Haymarket. In 1881-82 he opened offices in Britain, the Continent, America and China. Interested in Western Australia, he put to the Colonial Office in 1873 a scheme for 10,000 settlers and in 1883 proposed to the Legislative Council a land-grant railway; later he formed a syndicate in England to construct the line and encourage migration.

Leaving an estate of £190,800, Hordern died at sea from brain fever on 16 September 1886 and was buried at Albany where in 1889 an obelisk was erected to his memory. He was survived by four children and his wife Elizabeth, nee Bull, whom he had married in 1864.

An article at the Historic Houses Trust of new South Wales summarises the life and significance of the business. 
Hordern, Anthony (I14817)
 
899 Edward (Albert), signed up as a Gunner in the Royal Field Artillery. He spent much on his service in France and was wounded twice. The first time, on 24 July 1916, was a gunshot wound to his right arm but the second, which was more serious, was a shell wound to his right foot which he received on 16 August 1918. He spent some time in hospital and was brought before the Invaliding Board at Lewisham Military Hospital on 12 March 1919. He was fomally discharged as physically unfit on 19 March 1919. He was awarded the Silver War Badge for his service. Dodimead, Albert Edward (I1973)
 
900 Edward Boucher, a descendant, writes in an email dated 4 March 2009 - "... He (John Passmore) suffered from an hereditary disease, as I do, called Charcot-Marie-Tooth which is a wasting of the nerve endings and muscles especially in the hands and lower legs. He had to make his own boots as he could never get any to fit and he also did his gardening on his hands and knees." Passmore, John (I3029)
 

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