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| Notes | Linked to | |
| 1 | By License. Witnesses: Alfred Harry Evans & Mary Ellen Evans | Family: F12372338
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| 2 | (banns were read on 22 & 29 Mar and 5 Apr). He was of full age and Harriott was recorded as under age, both appeared to have signed the register in their own hands. | Family: F1839
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| 3 | 2009 details of Avon House. Property details for Avon House, London Road, Hartley Wintney, Hook RG27 8RY Detached, Freehold, 4 Beds, 2 Baths, 3 Receps - Zoopla! Estimate: | Family: F12350672
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| 4 | View Larger Map | Family: F11551
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| 5 | View Larger Map Beddington is a settlement between the London Boroughs of Sutton and Croydon. The BedZED low energy housing scheme is located here. In Beddington was a static inverter plant of HVDC Kingsnorth. The village lay within the Anglo-Saxon administrative division of Wallington hundred. The settlement appears in Domesday Book as Beddinton(e). It was held partly by Robert de Watevile from Richard de Tonebrige and by Miles Crispin. Its Domesday Assets were: 6 hides; 1 church, 14 ploughs, 4 mills worth | Family: F4515
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| 6 | View Larger Map Lambeth is a place in the London Borough of Lambeth, although the area is now more commonly known as Waterloo, after the railway station whose viaduct separates the former centre of the village from the River Thames. Lambeth appears in Domesday Book of 1086 as Lanchei. It was held partly by Lambeth Church and partly by Count Robert of Mortain. Its domesday assets were: 2 | Family: F4520
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| 7 | View Larger Map Bermondsey is an area in modern London on the southern bank of the river Thames presently part of the London Borough of Southwark. To its west lies Southwark to its east Rotherhithe. 'Bermondsey' cannot be defined as a place without some reference to a period. The first 'Bermondsey' is that known from later charters to be the area around the ancient Abbey and its manor, which was in turn part of the early mediaeval parish. References in the Rolls describe it as "in Southwark". A later, Victorian, civil parish of 'Bermondsey' did not include Rotherhithe or St Olave's; this was the arrangement under the Metropolis Management Act of 1855. The Southwark parishes of St Olave's and St John's Horsleydown (the latter a 'daughter' of the former) with St Thomas's formed a parish 'union' (' District Board of Works ') known as 'St Olave's' from that date. These were the arrangements within the London County from 1889 . In 1899 St Olave and St Thomas's District was merged as one 'Civil Parish' and the next year, following London government reorganisation, these also were merged with Rotherhithe and part of Deptford to form, with the 'Bermondsey' civil parish, the 'Metropolitan Borough of Bermondsey'. This borough disappeared in the Greater London reorganisation into the London Borough of Southwark in 1964. Parts of Southwark (between London Bridge and Tower Bridge, most notably Hays Galleria), Tooley Street and Camberwell (Old Kent Road) are often mistakenly assigned to 'Bermondsey'. The present council has divided the borough into 'Community Council' areas and has promoted signage for identity. These are based, for convenience, on the current wards and therefore 'Borough and Bankside' (old Southwark) intrudes into Bermondsey Street, the oldest part of ' Bermondsey '. The Community Council named 'Bermondsey' comprises the wards of 'Riverside' (effectively Rotherhithe), 'Grange' and 'South Bermondsey' (areas south of Lower Road). | Family: F11551
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| 8 | View Larger Map Horley is a town in Surrey, England, situated south of the twin towns of Reigate and Redhill, and north of Gatwick Airport and Crawley. In early times the Weald was a densely forested and marshy area. During Saxon times, the Manor of Horley came under the control of the Benedictine Abbey of St Peter at Chertsey. The Manor passed to Henry VIII on the dissolution of the monasteries in 1539 and changed hands several times during the next sixty years. In 1602 it became the property of Christ's Hospital in London and the original map of the manor is now held at the Guildhall in the City of London. This shows that Horley consisted of three hamlets around a huge open common. One was around the area occupied by St Bartholomew | Family: F4515
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| 9 | View Larger Map Mitcham is a place in the London Borough of Merton, it is a multiethnic town south of Streatham situated 7.5 miles (12.1 km) south/south-west of Charing Cross. Mitcham is located between Croydon and Morden. The River Wandle bounds the town to the southwest. The original village lies in the west, although expansion has pushed the eastern boundary the furthest. Mitcham Common takes up the greater part of the boundary and area to the south. Mitcham has never been well serviced by railway, due to it being equidistant between the historic lines of Waterloo to Southampton and London Bridge to Brighton. An 18th century milestone on Figges Marsh indicates Mitcham to be 8.5 miles (13.7 km) from Whitehall The name "Mitcham" is Anglo-Saxon in origin and is believed to mean big settlement. Even before the Romans and Saxons were present, there was a Celtic settlement in the area, with evidence of a fort being located in the Pollards Hill area. The discovery of Roman-era graves and a well on the site of the Mitcham gas works evince Roman settlement. The Saxon graveyard, located on the North bank of the Wandle is the largest discovered to date, and many of the finds therein are on display in the British Museum. The area is a possible location for the Battle of Merton, 871, in which King Ethelred of Wessex was either mortally wounded or killed outright. The parish church of St Peter and St Paul dates back to the Saxon era. Although it was mostly rebuilt in 1819 | Family: F4514
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| 10 | View Larger Map Beddington is a settlement between the London Boroughs of Sutton and Croydon. The BedZED low energy housing scheme is located here. In Beddington was a static inverter plant of HVDC Kingsnorth. The village lay within the Anglo-Saxon administrative division of Wallington hundred. The settlement appears in Domesday Book as Beddinton(e). It was held partly by Robert de Watevile from Richard de Tonebrige and by Miles Crispin. Its Domesday Assets were: 6 hides; 1 church, 14 ploughs, 4 mills worth | Family: F11551
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| 11 | View Larger Map Coulsdon is a town in the London Borough of Croydon on the Brighton Road (A23). Part of Coulsdon is the estate marked on maps as Clockhouse but always referred to locally as The Mount after its central road. Administratively The Mount is part of the London Borough of Sutton but to reach the rest of Sutton from The Mount by road one must leave the borough. The village lay within the Anglo-Saxon administrative division of Wallington hundred. Couldson appears in Domesday Book as Colesdone. It was held by Chertsey Abbey. Its domesday assets were: 3 | Family: F4518
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| 12 | View Larger Map Brighton is located on the south coast of England, and together with its immediate neighbour Hove forms the city of Brighton and Hove. Brighton is one of the largest and most notable settlements by the sea in the United Kingdom.[citation needed] The ancient settlement of Brighthelmston dates from before the Domesday Book (1086), but it emerged as an important health resort during the 18th century and became a popular destination for day-trippers after the arrival of the railway in 1841. Brighton experienced rapid population growth reaching a peak of over 160,000 by 1961. Modern Brighton forms part of a conurbation stretching along the coast, with a population of around 480,000 | Family: F3243
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| 13 | View Larger Map Bethnal Green forms a part of Tower Hamlets, centred around the Central Line tube station at the junction of Bethnal Green Road, Roman Road and Cambridge Heath Road. The district was originally a part of the Parish of Stepney, but formed a separate parish in the 19th century, as the population increased. This parish bordered the London Borough of Hackney in the north and west (at Shoreditch), and Mile End in the east. To the south is Whitechapel. | Family: F3243
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| 14 | View Larger Map Stretham is a small village in East Cambridgeshire. It is located 3 miles south of Ely along the A10. Its main attraction is Stretham Old Engine. It also home to a thriving primary school, St James's Church, a pub called the Red Lion and a village store with Post Office. | Family: F2966
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| 15 | View Larger Map Cottenham is a village in Cambridgeshire, England. It is close to The Fens. Before the fens were drained in the 19th century Cottenham was on the last contour before the water logged marshes, with Ely being the nearest dry land to the north (some 20 miles away). The village of Cottenham fell victim to a great many fires over the centuries, but none so devastating as that which occurred on 4 April 1850. Starting in the High Street around 8.30 in the evening, the flames spread rapidly and though there was no loss of human life "a vast quantity of poultry and pigeons and a good many pigs were destroyed." Forty to fifty cottages burnt down as well as the Black Horse and White Horse inns and the Wesleyan Chapel which was housed in a barn on what is now Telegraph Street. The arsonist was believed to be one William Hayward, who was lodging at the Lamb Inn whilst doing casual labour for Thomas Graves on the boundary of whose property the fire had started. The landlord of the Lamb was quick to report that Hayward had said to him "I have been a match for old Graves ... damn and blast the fire: I wish it would burn half Cottenham down." Suspicions were fuelled the morning after the fire when the landlord woke to discover Hayward had left town. A rather trumped up case was brought against Hayward for referral to the coming assizes but, presumably for want of hard evidence, the bill was ignored by the Grand Jury | Family: F2966
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| 16 | View Larger Map Soham is a small town in the English county of Cambridgeshire. It lies just off the A142 between Ely and Newmarket (Suffolk). Its population is 9,102 (2001 census), and it is within the district of East Cambridgeshire. | Family: F2968
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| 17 | View Larger Map Soham is a small town in the English county of Cambridgeshire. It lies just off the A142 between Ely and Newmarket (Suffolk). Its population is 9,102 (2001 census), and it is within the district of East Cambridgeshire. | Family: F2966
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| 18 | View Larger Map | Family: F2468
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| 19 | View Larger Map Shoreditch is an area of London within the London Borough of Hackney. It is a built-up area of the inner city immediately to the north of the City of London, located 2.3 miles (3.7 km) north east of Charing Cross. It is situated at the point where five postal districts converge. | Family: F3243
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| 20 | View Larger Map Mile End is an area of the London Borough of Tower Hamlets in East London, England. Mile End is 3.6 miles (5.8 km) east north-east of Charing Cross. Mile End takes its name from a milestone signifying the point one mile east of the boundary of the City of London at Aldgate, although historically the stone's position was near Stepney Green tube station. Mile End New Town developed along Bow Road, during the Georgian era. In the modern era Mile End is used to describe the area about half a mile east of Stepney Green, around Mile End tube station. Mile End Gate is at the junction of Mile End Road and Cambridge Heath Road, this was the location of the principal toll gate on the road to Bow Bridge. | Family: F3243
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| 21 | View Larger Map Crondall is a village and large parish in the North East of Hampshire and is all that remains of the old Hundred of Crondall referred to in the Domesday Book of 1086. Various earlier spellings have in common the use of a "u" instead of the "o" and the village is still properly pronounced "Crundel" although some recent incomers prefer to pronounce the "o". The map of Hampshire in the 1722 edition of William Camden's Britannia or Geographical Description of Britain and Ireland shows symbols for habitation in Farnborough, Cove, Ewshot, Aldershot, and Crookham in the Crundhal (Crondall) hundred. Samuel Lewis' A Topographical Dictionary of England of 1831 also describes both Ewshot and Crookham as in the parish and hundred of Crondall. | Family: F2821
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| 22 | View Larger Map The city of Cambridge is a university town and the administrative centre of the county of Cambridgeshire, England. It lies about 50 miles (80 km) north-northeast of London and is surrounded by a number of smaller towns and villages. It is also at the heart of the high-technology centre known as Silicon Fen. In 1209, students escaping from hostile townspeople in Oxford fled to Cambridge and formed a university there. The oldest college that still exists, Peterhouse, was founded in 1284. One of the most impressive buildings in Cambridge, King's College Chapel, was begun in 1446 by King Henry VI. The project was completed in 1515 during the reign of King Henry VIII. | Family: F2968
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| 23 | @F2878@ FAM | Family: F2877
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| 24 | @F2971@ FAM @F2972@ FAM @F2973@ FAM | Family: F2970
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| 25 | @F2972@ FAM @F2973@ FAM | Family: F2971
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| 26 | @F2973@ FAM | Family: F2972
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| 27 | @F3044@ FAM | Family: F3043
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| 28 | @F307@ FAM | Family: F3069
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| 29 | @F3107@ FAM | Family: F3106
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| 30 | @F3216@ FAM | Family: F3215
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| 31 | @F326@ FAM | Family: F3259
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| 32 | @F3301@ FAM | Family: F3300
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| 33 | @F3306@ FAM | Family: F3305
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| 34 | @F4264@ FAM | Family: F4263
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| 35 | @F4289@ FAM | Family: F4288
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| 36 | @F4316@ FAM | Family: F4315
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| 37 | @F4367@ FAM | Family: F4366
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| 38 | @F4385@ FAM | Family: F4384
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| 39 | @F4406@ FAM | Family: F4405
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| 40 | @F4471@ FAM | Family: F4470
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| 41 | @F4731@ FAM | Family: F4730
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| 42 | A Charles Sheppard married a Henrietta Charlotte Crickiss?? in Islington 1857 | Family: F12372334
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| 43 | A possible marriage and Mother for Jane. CHARLES COOK Male Family Event(s): Marriages: Spouse: SARAH HUNT Family Marriage: 06 NOV 1826 Bromyard, Hereford, England | Family: F2583
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| 44 | A possible marriage on IGI CHARLES ILSLEY Male Family Event(s): Marriages: Spouse: SARAH APPLETON Marriage: 24 OCT 1812 Pamber, Hampshire, England | Family: F4290
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| 45 | Abingdon is a market town in Oxfordshire in Southern England. It is the seat of the Vale of White Horse district. Previously the county town of Berkshire, Abingdon is one of several places which claim to be Britain's oldest continuously occupied town. Abingdon was the county town of Berkshire and the magnificent county hall and court house, now the museum, was supposedly designed by Christopher Wren. However, Abingdon's failure to engage fully with the railway revolution, accepting only a branch line, sidelined the town in favour of Reading. The corporation was reformed, under the Municipal Reform Act 1835 and was abolished under the Local Government Act 1972. In 1974, under local government reorganisation, Abingdon became part of the non-metropolitan shire county of Oxfordshire and the seat of the new Vale of White Horse District Council, with Abingdon becoming a civil parish with a town council. | Family: F4646
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| 46 | Actual date from WW1 Records | Family: F11610
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| 47 | Ada listed as married | Family: F12372455
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| 48 | Alverstoke is a village, now within the boundaries of Gosport, Hampshire, England, that encompasses land stretching from Haslar to Stokes Bay. The village lies within half a mile of the shore of Stokes Bay and near the head of a creek which extends a mile westward from Portsmouth Harbour. Fort Gilkicker, a nineteenth century coastal battery fort, is located just to the south of Alverstoke, on the west end of Stokes Bay.[1] 'Alverstoke' is a corruption of the name Alwara, a former Lady of the Manor, and Stoke, a settlement on the area of Alverstoke known as the Marsh Ground.[2] Alverstoke is mentioned in the Domesday Book as Alwarestock.[3] The Institute of Naval Medicine (INM), one of the sites of the MoD Defence Science and Technology Laboratory, is located here. Residents of Alverstoke are sometimes called "The Alverstocracy" by Gosportonians in a tongue-in-cheek fashion, due to the perceived higher social status of the area. | Family: F3149
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| 49 | Ancestry have transcribed the family, however the page does not link to the family | Family: F1829
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| 50 | Annie Deuchars 3 Water Vennel Perth .... Witness | Family: F4773
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| 51 | APPLETON, FREDERICK, HEAD, MARRIED 11, M, 38, WOOD DEALER AND BESAW MANUFACTER, HAMPSHIRE APPLETON, BLANCHE, WIFE, MARRIED 11, F, 37, BAUGHURST APPLETON, WILFRED H, SON, M, 10, SCHOOL, BAUGHURST APPLETON, LILY C DAUGHTER F 8 BAUGHURST | Family: F12350328
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| 52 | At the time of adding only the husband had been transcribed | Family: F4499
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| 53 | Banns 17 Sep 1826 Groom Philip CONSTABLE condition bac residence otp Bride Hannah SABBERTON condition sp residence otp Parish Witchford Witnesses: Thomas Constable & William Haylock | Family: F182
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| 54 | Banns at St. James Stretham (No marriage transcribed) 1938 May 1 ACRED George Sindall bac otp KING Florence Elizabeth sp otp | Family: F12350147
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| 55 | At least one living individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Family: F12347168
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| 56 | Banns called 8th & 15th March Married by William Williams. Witnesses: Thomas Branch & William Hunt | Family: F12372429
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| 57 | Banns called Coton & Madingley | Family: F12350227
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| 58 | Banns called in Coton & Madingley | Family: F12350220
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| 59 | Banns Called St. John the Evangelist August 16th, 23rd and 30th | Family: F12351211
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| 60 | Banns called. 30 Aug, 6 Sep & 13 Sep 1840, but no marriage recorded | Family: F12364114
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| 61 | Banns Called: 1847 07 February 14 February 21 February | Family: F12350766
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| 62 | Banns/Marriage in Cambs Marriage Index | Family: F12351065
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| 63 | Banns: 18 Dec 1870 Groom Josiah KNOWLES condition bac residence otp Bride Mary Ann EARITH condition sp residence otp Parish Ely, Holy Trinity | Family: F11679
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| 64 | Banns: 1827 Apr 15 LANGFORD Benjamin widr otp MORRIS Elizabeth wid otp | Family: F11752
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| 65 | Banns: 1894 Mar 4 KNIGHTS George widr otp MURFITT Amy Ann sp otp [in margin - m 7/4] | Family: F12346921
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| 66 | Banns: 1912 Sep 22 LANGFORD Percy bac otp PEACOCK Emma Rebecca sp of Holy Trinity Ely | Family: F12347197
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| 67 | Banns: Date 11 Apr 1790 Groom Robert RUSSEL condition bac residence otp Bride Mary CHAPMAN condition sp residence of Witcham Parish Ely, St Mary, CAM | Family: F11675
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| 68 | Banns: Date 29 Sep 1878 Groom Charles CRISP condition bac residence otp Bride Emma PARR condition sp residence otp Parish Swaffham Prior, St Mary, CAM | Family: F12347114
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| 69 | Banns: Date 4 Oct 1807 Groom John BIGLEY condition bac residence of Yarmouth Co Norfolk Bride Mary SMITH condition sp residence otp Parish Chatteris, CAM Notes [marriage solemnized at Yarmouth on [blank] | Family: F2044
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| 70 | Based on Census entries, I believe the transcription or parish entry to be wrongly written up. | Family: F12350115
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| 71 | Battersea is a place in the London Borough of Wandsworth. It is an inner-city district located 2.9 miles (4.8 km) south west of Charing Cross. It has a population of 75,651 people (April 2001). Battersea is an area of London lying on the south bank of the River Thames. Vaguely triangular in shape, its northern boundary is the Thames, as it runs first north-east, and then east, before turning north again to pass Westminster. Its north eastern corner is one mile (1.6 km) due south of the Palace of Westminster; the north western corner is demarcated by Wandsworth Bridge and Battersea tapers south to a point roughly three miles (5 km) from the north eastern corner and two miles (3 km) from the north west. | Family: F670
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| 72 | Black Nest Cottages are near the Pineapple public house which is where Ashford Hill borders Brimpton Common | Family: F387
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| 73 | BMD has the following entry George Elias Benson 1901 Apr-May-Jun Kingsclere (1837-1932) Hampshire Maria Martin 1901 Apr-May-Jun Kingsclere (1837-1932) Hampshire Mary Smith 1901 Apr-May-Jun Kingsclere (1837-1932) Hampshire Volume: 2c Page: 519 | Family: F11652
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| 74 | Both of Parish married by the curate William Perry Witnesses: Edward Ive & Ann Branch | Family: F3578
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| 75 | Both of Parish Moses was single at time of marriage so throws doubt on his parentage, as ther are several baptisms of children to a Moses & Mary between 1780 & 1794 | Family: F2651
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| 76 | Both Widowed at time of marriage @F4341@ FAM | Family: F4340
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| 77 | Both Widows. Witnesses: P Lyons & H Rogers | Family: F12372286
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| 78 | botp by banns | Family: F11496
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| 79 | Bounstone Road, Wrecclesham View Larger Map | Family: F11606
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| 80 | Bounstone Road, Wrecclesham View Larger Map | Family: F11612
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| 81 | Browning Hill Sherborne, is in the hamlet of Ramsdale (Ramsdell) and links two parishes St. Peter's Tadley & Christchurch Ramsdell | Family: F12351054
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| 82 | By Banns Witnesses: Henry Lavender & Hannah Bearman. | Family: F3524
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| 83 | by Banns.ww.Ed Goold, Ann Pritchard | Family: F3398
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| 84 | By Licence Witnesses: Mary Ann Gazzard.Frances Osbourne | Family: F3881
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| 85 | By Licence | Family: F2681
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| 86 | By License Witnesses: John D Bathwick JP & John Neill | Family: F12372317
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| 87 | By License Witnesses: David ROWLEY, Ann LAMB, Jno NEWITT | Family: F4611
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| 88 | By License | Family: F4585
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| 89 | By License Witnesses: Henry Porter & Lois Langford | Family: F12347222
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| 90 | By License Witnesses: John Crow & Levi Langford | Family: F12347104
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| 91 | By License, Witmesses: H Porter Junior & Susanna Langford | Family: F12347208
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| 92 | By License. Witnesses: Richard Seamor & Rebecca Wright | Family: F3004
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| 93 | By License: Witnesses: Mary Barber & F Ellwood | Family: F12347175
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| 94 | Can find no marriage date and on the 1861 Census wife is Listed as Sarah, but can find no evidence that he had two wives, and continuity of childrens births suggest it may just be an error. | Family: F2119
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| 95 | Carole Smith adds: Family memories :- Margaret remembers visiting them at the Bricklayers Arms, and it was a very dark house. Jim is remembered for his fairy cake sandwiches, and also his somersaults and cartwheels along the road. Violet Westwood said he was as 'daft as a brush'. Albert (Tony) Westwood, remember visiting the Bodley's. They had a flat near the Bricklayers Arms, it was on the third floor. | Family: F804
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| 96 | Census 1891 & 1901 is only what possibly may have happened to Charles | Family: F12350132
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| 97 | Census 1900 states married 10 years | Family: F12372292
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| 98 | Census 1911 Notes 2 of the 10 children have died | Family: F3434
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| 99 | Census 1911 States the family had 3 children prior who died | Family: F12350551
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| 100 | Census day 1881 was the day they found Annie dead in bed. | Family: F4835
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| 101 | Census lists 2 children born & died. The two children I have listed are from the Berks Burial Index | Family: F12350930
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| 102 | Census Transcription Translated by Google from the website of Peter Bj | Family: F12355278
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| 103 | Charles & Jane were Step Cousins | |
| 104 | Chatteris is one of four market towns in the Fenland district of Cambridgeshire, situated in The Fens between Whittlesey, March and Ely. It is reputed to have been the last refuge of Boudica as she fled from the Romans. Its name derives from the Anglo-Saxon Caeteric - Ceto meaning a wood and Ric, a river. It was mentioned in the Domesday Book as Ceterig or Caterig | Family: F11620
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| 105 | Chelsham is a village in Surrey in the borough of Tandridge. It is within the civil parish of Chelsham and Farleigh. The village lay within the Anglo-Saxon administrative division of Tandridge hundred. Chelsham appears in Domesday Book as Celesham. It was held by Robert de Wateville from Richard Fitz Gilbert. Its domesday assets were: 1 church, 11 ploughs, from customary dues 1 hog. It rendered | Family: F12346467
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| 106 | Child Record not found: @I1375 @ (The programme that produced this GEDCOM file is at fault.)ild: CHIL @I1375 @ | Family: F4662
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| 107 | Child Record not found: @I6147@ (The programme that produced this GEDCOM file is at fault.)ild: CHIL @I6147@ | Family: F1351
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| 108 | Chipstead, Surrey is a commuter village primarily in the north-eastern corner of the county. In reality it spreads across the administrative border with the London Borough of Croydon. Neighbouring villages include: Woodmansterne, Banstead, Coulsdon, Hooley and Kingswood. The village lay within the Reigate hundred. Chipstead appears in Domesday Book as Tepestede. It was held by William de Wateville. Its domesday assets were: 3 hides; 7 ploughs, 1 mill worth | Family: F12346467
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| 109 | Common Law | Family: F4433
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| 110 | Could not marry as his wife was still alive & resident in a mental hospital | Family: F473
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| 111 | Could this be the marriage? Possibly a little early! Name: John Sutton Gender: Male Spouse's Name: Jane Wells Marriage Date: 5 Apr 1778 Marriage Place: Upavon, Wiltshire, England | Family: F12350266
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| 112 | Could this be the parents of Mary, Census 1871: Mary Taylor Robert, Jane abt 1861 Grunty Fen, Cambridgeshire, England Daughter Grunty Fen, Cambridgeshire | Family: F12350049
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| 113 | Details as entered by Albert Browne. Will need PR's at later date to research further | Family: F149
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| 114 | Details of family from living grandchild | Family: F12350320
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| 115 | Did his missionay work take them overseas as there is no sign of John & Martha after 1881? | Family: F3583
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| 116 | Did not Marry Based on the Census transcriptions I am adding the two children on census 1881 as John Allen's as are clearly stated as Son & Daughter. Census 1891 leaves no doubt that Egbert Nash is the son of John Allen | Family: F4629
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| 117 | Did not marry Possible father of Henry Heaps Bigley is Henry Heaps born c1825 Doddington | Family: F4614
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| 118 | Did Not Marry | Family: F12350268
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| 119 | Did not marry | Family: F1474
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| 120 | Did not Marry | Family: F1962
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| 121 | Did Not Marry | Family: F1964
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| 122 | Did not marry | Family: F2191
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| 123 | Did Not marry | Family: F2265
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| 124 | Did Not Marry | Family: F3109
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| 125 | Did Not Marry | Family: F3123
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| 126 | Did Not Marry | Family: F3395
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| 127 | Did not marry | Family: F11565
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| 128 | DID NOT MARRY | Family: F11588
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| 129 | DID NOT MARRY | Family: F11602
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| 130 | DID NOT MARRY | Family: F11595
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| 131 | Did not marry | Family: F12346564
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| 132 | Did Not Marry | Family: F12350431
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| 133 | Did Not Marry | Family: F12350639
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| 134 | DID NOT MARRY | Family: F12350651
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| 135 | Did Not Marry | Family: F12351092
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| 136 | Dorothy McLean writes: On Mary Binge (Lithel death certificate, under, where born, is given Streatham, Cambridgeshire, England. I guess Streatham is just a misspelling of Stretham. The certificate also says she was married at Waterbeach. | Family: F12350890
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| 137 | Due to the fact that Mother & Children are seperated and the large number of Whitehead's in Kent, it is not possible for me to add further children at this point. | Family: F2001
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| 138 | Due to the names of Charles & Joseph, I am assuming Frederick is the father of all the children | |
| 139 | E Barnes (Gt Granddaughter) Writes Their marriage certificate reads as follows - Marriage solemnized at the Church in the parish of Bucklebury in the county of Berks Entry No. 137 Sept 26th 1858 Henry Rabbitts, age 28, Bachelor, Labourer, Res at marriage Bucklebury Father: Daniel Rabbitts Labourer Sarah Leach, age 22 Spinster, -- Bucklebury, Father: James Leach Cordwainer Witnesses: John Leach and Charlotte Leach - both signed with a X, as did Henry but Sarah signed her name. | Family: F3386
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| 140 | Earnest Arthur Constable & Harriet G Cockshott | Family: F12350062
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| 141 | Edward | Family: F3807
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| 142 | Ely has been informally accounted a city by virtue of being the seat of a diocese, its status was confirmed by Royal Charter in 1974; at that time the parish council of the single civil parish that makes up Ely was formed during a reorganisation of local government. With a population of 15,102 in 2001, Ely is the third smallest city in England (after Wells (Somerset) and the City of London) and the sixth smallest in the United Kingdom | Family: F11682
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| 143 | Ely is a cathedral city in the East Cambridgeshire district of Cambridgeshire in the east of England and 14 miles (23 km) north north-east of Cambridge. Ely has been informally accounted a city by virtue of being the seat of a diocese, its status was confirmed by Royal Charter in 1974; at that time the parish council of the single civil parish that makes up Ely was formed during a reorganisation of local government. With a population of 15,102 in 2001, Ely is the third smallest city in England (after Wells (Somerset) and the City of London) and the sixth smallest in the United Kingdom (with St David's, Bangor, and Armagh also smaller). The city is very attractive, retaining many historic buildings with its winding shopping throughfares. There is a market on Thursday and Saturday each week. Ely is on the River Great Ouse and was a significant port until the 18th century when the Fens were drained and Ely was not an "island" anymore. The river is a popular boating area with a large marina. The University of Cambridge rowing team has a boathouse on the bank of the river and train here for the annual Boat Race against Oxford University. | Family: F153
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| 144 | Ely is a cathedral city in the East Cambridgeshire district of Cambridgeshire in the east of England and 14 miles (23 km) north, north-east of Cambridge. Ely has been informally accounted a city by virtue of being the seat of a diocese, its status was confirmed by Royal Charter in 1974; at that time the parish council of the single civil parish that makes up Ely was formed during a reorganisation of local government. With a population of 15,102 in 2001, Ely is the third smallest city in England (after Wells (Somerset) and the City of London) and the sixth smallest in the United Kingdom (with St David's, Bangor, and Armagh also smaller). The city is very attractive, retaining many historic buildings with its winding shopping throughfares. There is a market on Thursday and Saturday each week. Ely is on the River Great Ouse and was a significant port until the 18th century when the Fens were drained and Ely was not an "island" anymore. The river is a popular boating area with a large marina. The University of Cambridge rowing team has a boathouse on the bank of the river and train here for the annual Boat Race against Oxford University. | Family: F11619
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| 145 | Ely is a cathedral city in the East Cambridgeshire district of Cambridgeshire in the east of England and 14 miles North-northeast of Cambridge. Ely has been informally accounted a city by virtue of being the seat of a diocese, its status was confirmed by Royal Charter in 1974; at that time the parish council of the single civil parish that makes up Ely was formed during a reorganisation of local government. With a population of 15,102 in 2001, Ely is the third smallest city in England | Family: F176
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| 146 | Ely Union workhouse was built in 1836-7 to a design by William Donthorn, who was also responsible for Aylsham in Norfolk amongst a number of others in eastern England. It was built to accommodate 300 inmates and cost | Family: F11619
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| 147 | Family name is possibly Elliot, and also a daughter Ellen baptized 1598 | Family: F12348925
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| 148 | Fletton is a residential area and electoral ward of the city of Peterborough, Cambridgeshire in the United Kingdom. Lying south of the River Nene, the area was historically part of Huntingdonshire (although not the present district of that name), rather than the Soke of Peterborough in Northamptonshire. It was divided into Old Fletton, which prior to the Local Government Act 1972 formed a separate town with its own council (Old Fletton Urban District) and New Fletton, which was administered as part of Peterborough Municipal Borough. Some maps still show New Fletton (on the south bank of the river) as well as Old Fletton (further to the south) with the boundary at Fletton Spring, which rises to the west near Celta Road. The parish church, which is situated on Fletton Avenue, is dedicated to Saint Margaret. The sub-soil is Oxford Clay, the character of which led to the establishment of large brickworks. The area gave its name to the Fletton Brick Company and to Fletton Brick in the nineteenth century, when a large area of land was auctioned off to investors; this eventually became the London Brick Company, now owned by Hanson Plc. The dominance of London Brick in the market during this period gave rise to some of the country's most well known landmarks, all built using the ubiquitous Fletton. | Family: F4404183
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| 149 | Follow this link for a photo of the Brewers Arms taken Feb 2009. http://pubsinuk.com/Cambridgeshire/Cambridge/BrewersArms.shtml | Family: F12347199
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| 150 | For researchers. pasted below does not appear to be the 3rd marriage for this Robert Lambe as this occurred after the census of 1841, and Robert is decribed as Single, and a pot maker. 1. Date 18 Aug 1839 Groom Robert LAMB condition bac residence otp Bride Sarah HOWELL condition sp residence otp Parish Ely, Holy Trinity, CAM Notes |