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101 Was seconded for three years to the Malaysian Navy as instructor Kenneth GREEN
 
102 Birth registered under the name of Slinn
Death registered under the name of Hague 
Irene Amelia /Slinn HAGUE, Hague/
 
103 NOT the John Hague who died in 1944 in the RAF John HAGUE
 
104 Thomas Hamilton, 6th Earl of Haddington was baptised on 5 September 1680.2 He was the son of Charles Hamilton, 5th Earl of Haddington and Margaret Leslie, Countess of Rothes.2 He married Helen Hope, daughter of John Hope of Hopetoun and Lady Margaret Hamilton, in 1696.2 He died on 28 November 1735 at age 55.2
Thomas Hamilton, 6th Earl of Haddington succeeded to the title of 6th Lord Binning [S., 1613] in May 1685.2 He succeeded to the title of 6th Lord Byres and Binning [S., 1627] in May 1685.2 He succeeded to the title of 6th Earl of Haddington [S., 1627] in May 1685.1 He held the office of Hereditary Keeper of Holyrood Park in 1691.2 He held the office of Representative Peer [Scotland] between 1716 and 1734.2 He was invested as a Knight, Order of the Thistle (K.T.) in 1717.2
Children of Thomas Hamilton, 6th Earl of Haddington and Helen Hope

* Hon. John Hamilton+1 d. 27 Dec 1779
* Lady Margaret Hamilton3 d. 22 Feb 1768
* Lady Christian Hamilton3 d. 30 Jun 1770
* Charles Hamilton, Lord Binning+2 b. 1697, d. 27 Dec 1732
 
Thomas HAMILTON, 6th Earl of Haddington
 
105 Brigadier Jock Hamilton-Baillie
PoW who took part in some of the classic prison-camp breakouts before being accorded the accolade of incarceration in Colditz
Recommend?
At the end of the German offensive through the Low Countries and northern France in 1940, Jock Hamilton-Baillie was wounded and taken prisoner when the 51st (Highland) Division had to surrender at St Valéry-en-Caux on June 12. He spent the rest of the war striving to escape, establishing a formidable reputation as a specialist in the art.

He got beyond the perimeter of five different camps but only once remained at liberty for longer than three days. Finally he was sent to Oflag IVC, Colditz Castle, where he refused to give up, but his lasting memorial in the annals of escaping — and ingenious triumph — was the “Warburg Wire Job” of August 1942.

Only 21 at the time of his capture, “HB” — as he was generally known — was a subaltern in the Royal Engineers. After recovering from his wound in a French hospital in Rouen, he was sent to a prison camp at Péronne, east of Amiens. There, he and another officer scaled the wire and were free for three days before recapture.

His next escape attempt was from Stalag VIIC at Laufen, close to the old Austrian border. With a small coterie of fellow escape enthusiasts, he dug a short tunnel under the outer wall from a basement to a pigsty across the external road, but the tunnel entrance was discovered before the exit could be widened sufficiently to permit the tunnellers to escape.

This resulted in his being moved to Oflag VIID at Tittmoning, a medieval castle standing on the Salzach river which, before the Anschluss, marked the Austro-German border. He decided to make his next attempt alone and, having found a way through the wire, followed the course of the River Inn on foot to the Swiss frontier, a distance of almost 200 miles. He slept rough in the woods avoiding all human contact until the tenth day, when he crossed over to what his rough map indicated was the Swiss side of the river. But the map was wrong and he was recaptured by a border guard just yards from freedom.

On his return to Tittmoning the German commandant congratulated him on his enterprise, then sent him to Oflag VIB at Warburg, a hutted camp east of the Ruhr. Specially constructed to hold prisoners of war, the camp stood on an isolated plateau three miles from Warburg railway station. Several tunnels were being dug secretly and HB was prompt in putting his experience at the disposal of one of the teams.

At the same time he helped to design and build three hinged ladders, made from duckboards and roof beams, for crossing over the perimeter wire. One leg of each ladder reached the top of the wire and the second spanned its three-metre width to allow a stream of men to cross and swing down using a trapeze bar at the end.

The plan was for a mass escape of about 40 prisoners, at night, in three minutes, while 50 others created a diversion to distract the sentries. The perimeter lights were short-circuited by using a string through a hole in the window of a locked workshop to pull a spanner across an open switch. As soon as the lights went out, the 50 diversionists staged a decoy escape on the opposite side of the camp. Forty-one prisoners escaped and three of them made a home run.

Hamilton-Baillie and his group of tunnellers had planned to escape in the general confusion, but a tragedy led to their tunnel being discovered. While working in the tunnel, one member of the team — John Du Pré, of the Seaforth Highlanders — was knocked out by a roof fall and a shock from the tunnel’s electricity supply. The guards had to be called to help to dig him out from above, but he was dead by the time they reached him.

Sobered by this incident but not deterred from further escape attempts, HB and other British officers were transferred to Oflag VIIB at Eichstätt in Bavaria. There, a well-organised escape committee was being aided by MI9, the War Office branch in secret communication with a number of prison camps. He joined a tunnelling team and helped to design a long route under the wire to a building beyond it. A mass break out of 65 prisoners, including HB, was made on June 3, 1943, but the Germans reacted by deploying a 50,000-strong force of police, troops, Home Guard and Hitler Youth to search for them. All were recaptured within two weeks, HB within two days, and sent to Colditz, the prison camp for persistent escapers.

After his arrival at Colditz in June 1943, Hamilton-Baillie made a detailed survey of all parts of the castle to which he could gain access to update the plan secretly provided by MI9. This led him to try, as had others, to find a way from the prisoners’ courtyard through the line of buildings separating it from the outer courtyard used by the German guards. Entering via the roof cavity he found a way into a clothing store containing German uniforms, invaluable for would-be escapers. He made a return visit intending to collect some of the uniform, but an unlucky chance return of the German storeman led to his discovery, but not the route by which he had come.

Ever restless to find a new way out, HB remained a prisoner until Colditz was liberated by the 69th (United States) Division on April 16, 1945. He was awarded the Military Cross in December 1945 in recognition of his resolute escape attempts and efforts on behalf of other prisoners in the camps where he was held before being sent to Colditz.

John Robert Edward Hamilton-Baillie was educated at Clifton College and the Royal Military Academy, Woolwich, where he won the Pollock Medal for the most distinguished cadet of his intake. He was commissioned into the Royal Engineers in January 1939 and went to France with 26 Field Company RE, initially serving with the 1st Division of the British Expeditionary Force and later with the 51st (Highland) Division.

After release from Colditz, he joined the staff of the School of Military Engineering, Roorkee, in India but returned to England to take a First in the Mechanical Sciences Tripos at Cambridge and then attend the Staff College, Camberley.

A conventional career of alternating regimental and staff appointments followed until he became chief instructor of the Army Apprentices School, Chepstow, in 1959. Senior administrative planning appointments in the Middle East and Germany followed until, in 1970, he became head of a new branch of the Royal Engineers’ staff which was to take over responsibility for airfield construction when this task was switched to the Army from the RAF.

His final appointment as a serving officer was as Brigadier Engineer Plans in the Ministry of Defence. He was an ADC to the Queen, 1972-74.

He left the Army in 1974 to teach soil mechanics at the Royal Military College of Science, Shrivenham, and to devote more of his time to the history of fortifications. He was for several years the chairman of United Kingdom Fortress Study Group and wrote a number of papers on the subject.

He married Lettice Pumphrey in 1947. She predeceased him; he is survived by two sons and two daughters.

Brigadier J. R. E. Hamilton-Baillie, Mc, persistent prison camp escaper, was born on March 1, 1919. He died on April 16, 2003, aged 84.



 
Brigadier John Robert Edward HAMILTON-BAILLIE
 
106 Obituaries
Jock Hamilton-Baillie (1919-2003)

When at a meeting of the Fortress Study Group in 1978 founder member Anthony Kemp announced his retirement, Jock Hamilton-Baillie was unanimously elected in his place. He was at the time lecturing at the Military College of Science at Swindon, and had published on 19th century fortification. The confidence then expressed that " he will make an ideal chairman " were fully realised. In his 17 years in that post he set the tone and direction of the Group and its interests. Conservation efforts was one of the most important, as was clear from his request for information and a resume of one year's events which included an optimistic view (an example was Crownhill Fort). He replied to an address by our Patron the Duke of Gloucester in 1990
"Apart from our serious interest in conservation, the Group likes to clamber over old forts ".
His idea of Regional Correspondents to report on developments in different areas may have been based on that of the Stichting Menno van Coehoom in the Netherlands, where a strong and organised system operates. He was not one to throw out an idea and leave it to others: he had already worked out the details with list of names, map and assessment of how many forts/members there would be in each area. He followed up with a call for overseas correspondents in 19 countries, offered his gratitude to volunteers and apologised if he had used anyone's name by mistake. Such a scheme relies on willing volunteers: reports appeared in Casemate very soon after, and at the 1992 AGM, six Regional Correspondents spoke. Similarly, when it was proposed to make all subscriptions payable from the same date, he worked out an ingenious scheme to allow for those who had already paid for part of the year (I know of at least one other group where this was not even thought of, let alone organised). In 1986 he proposed the names for nearly all the new committee.

The Group claims to be international, and its publications reflect this: the key point was cooperation. The FSG was represented at the first meeting of the International Fortress Council in 1989, and has continued to attend meetings ever since. Jock was particularly involved with overseas visits, starting with Gibraltar in 1979 - he knew the Governor.

The Fortress Study Group 
Brigadier John Robert Edward HAMILTON-BAILLIE
 
107 Wanda Holden held the office of Member of Parliament (M.P.) for Bath between 1929 and 1931. Wanda HOLDEN
 
108















 
Bertha HOPKIN
 
109 In 1901 was working as a baker and not counted in 1901 census. Note on enumerators page states " baker-not sleeping at home" Benjamin HORSCRAFT
 
110 Working with William Tidy? Benjamin HORSCRAFT
 
111 Is this the daughter Howarth referred to in the will of Richard Towneley. Edmund HOWARTH
 
112



Grisell took care of the management of the house of Mellerstain, which contained a few hundred souls. Her daughter Grisell gives account of her mother working very long days, getting up early to do the books, attending problems before they could arise and solving problems were they did occur. Grisell was well involved in the decision making around the place. Her daughter mentions that her father practically always asked advise for major and more minor decisions from his wife, and hardly made inquiries about the state of things and how things where being managed. As a rare exception to this rule, he sometimes asked her ‘whether his debts were being paid’ (Murray of Stanhope 1824). She also took care of the books and business of her father. She went up to Scotland once every two years, and then worked days and nights to get the books in order. “Often I wondered how she found the way to compass so much business, since she was called from it every moment, and got to it but by starts; but she was indefatigable at all times, and even at her great age, to set very thing in a clear light, for the ase of those that were to come after her; and left all things, to the greatest trifles, and memorandums from friends, so marked and write upon, as I found them, in a way that is a sure proof that she never expected to see them again’ (Murray 1824, 96). She also took care of the business and education of the children of Alexander, Lord Polworth, the brother of her husband. She brought his two sons from Scotland to London and found a school for them, arranged their affairs until they were old enough to go to Holland, and hired them a tutor as well.




































Grisell Hume was born December 25 in 1665 at Redbreas Castle as the daughter of Sir Patrick Hume, the eighth Baron of Polwarth, and her mother Grisell Kerr, daughter of Sir Thomans Kerr of Cavers (Anderson 1857, 547). Grisell Hume was the eldest of eighteenth children, two of which two died in childhood. Her father was a patriot and strongly involved in the religious upheaval and resistance against the rules Charles II had set for the church in Schotland. In 1674 Hume was one of those who went with the Duke of Hamilton to London to protest the treatment of the Scots by the Duke of Lauerdale. His friend Robert Baillie was later imprisoned in Edinburgh. Polwarth himself was arrested and imprisoned for four months in Stirling Castle in June 1676. Back in his country house, he sent Grisell to Edinburgh to hand over messages to Robert Baillie, which she could do without raising suspicion. In 1678 Patrick Hume was made prisoner again and taken to the Edinburgh Toolbooth. Later he was brought over to Dumbarton Castle, where he stayed for more than a year. Also in this period Grisell acted as go-between and exchanged intelligence between the two men. In 1683 Robert Baillie was again arrested for his involvement in the patriotic movement. Hume was left alone this time until the next year, when they decided to arrest him as well. He went into hiding in a vault under ground of Polwarth Church, where Grisell brought him his victuals and clothing during the night. When this became untenable and his friend Robert Baillie was executed, Hume left for Holland.
from Political and Feminist Economists

Song-writer and heroine. Born at Redbraes Castle (Scottish Borders). She concealed her covenanting father, Sir Patrick Hume (1641 - 1724), in the church vaults in the Border town of Polwarth (1684) and also supported another Covenanter, Robert Baillie of Jerviswood (c.1634 - 1684), whose son George she later married. She is noted for the song And werena my heart licht I wad dee. Her household notebook was published as The Household Book of Lady Grisell Baillie (edited by R. Scott-Moncrieff, Edinburgh, 1911) and gave a remarkable insight into household management in the 18th C.

Lady Grisel Baillie was the first deaconess of the Church of Scotland and the Deaconess Hospital in Edinburgh, now the headquarters of Lothian Health, commemorates this fact.


Gazetteer for Scotland 1995-2009 
Lady Grissell HUME
 
113 In 1674 Hume was one of those who went with the Duke of Hamilton to London to protest the treatment of the Scots by the Duke of Lauerdale. His friend Robert Baillie was later imprisoned in Edinburgh. Polwarth himself was arrested and imprisoned for four months in Stirling Castle in June 1676. Back in his country house, he sent Grisell to Edinburgh to hand over messages to Robert Baillie, which she could do without raising suspicion. In 1678 Patrick Hume was made prisoner again and taken to the Edinburgh Toolbooth. Later he was brought over to Dumbarton Castle, where he stayed for more than a year. In 1683 Robert Baillie was again arrested for his involvement in the patriotic movement. Hume was left alone this time until the next year, when they decided to arrest him as well. He went into hiding in a vault under ground of Polwarth Church but when this became untenable and his friend Robert Baillie was executed, Hume fled to France and travelled on by foot to Holland.

After another expedition, this time with the Earl of Argyll to Scotland, after the death of Charles II, he took up residence in Utrecht under the name of Dr. Peter Wallace, a surgeon, and lived there with his family under the protection of the Prince of Orange. Patrick Hume as well as the Baillie family had their estates forfeited by the Crown. The Hume family lived with other protestants involved in the movement, and were supported by them when necessary. Patrick Hume and George Baillie - Robert’s son - accompanied the Prince of Orange, William III and Queen Mary when they shipped themselves in and went to England to take over the Throne.

After the Revolution, Patrick Hume was restored in his function, regained his house, became Earl of Marchmont and was assigned the position of Chancellor of Scotland. 
Sir Patrick HUME, 8th Baron of Polwarth
 
114 Elizabeth Kay was older than her second husband with a family of six sons and nine daughters by her previous husband, John Nowell of Read, who died in 1525. Elizabeth KAYE
 
115 The word "white" describing John's occupation refers to the different types of smith- blacksmiths and whitesmiths. John LUCKMAN
 
116 Was this her in 1851?

Barbara McKay
Age: 20
Estimated birth year: abt 1831
Relationship: Niece
Gender: Female
Where born: Glasgow, Lanarkshire
Parish Number: 644/1
Civil parish: Glasgow St Paul
County: Lanarkshire
Address: 6 Balmano Street
Occupation: Dress Maker
ED: 30
Page: 4
Household schedule number: 15
Line: 4
Roll: CSSCT1851_158
Household Members:
Name Age
Elizabeth Fergusson 40
Barbara McKay 20
John Fergusson 44 
Barbara McDougall MACKIE
 
117 christened when aged 2 Augustus Frederick MAIS
 
118 He died aged 24 on 24/8/1862 in Dunedin of inflammation of the bowels. His
occupation was licensed victualler. There is no spouse or partner recorded
on his death record.

We already knew that in 1853 he had travelled to Australia on the
"Glentanner" with his brother, Winchester, and John, presumed to be his half
brother. We also have later references to Winchester that associate him
with Dunedin/Otago - in 1865 he was a ship's master who captained the "Hero"
on its voyage between Otago and Melbourne and he had last been heard of in
Dunedin when a firm of Bristol solicitors placed an advertisement in the
Times seeking information on his whereabouts in 1877.
Howard Mais
 
Ernest Cleland MAIS
 
119 Family?

Born Carlton.
Carlton,Dumfries and Galloway?
Carlton Perth?
Carlton Highland?
Carlton,West Dumbartonshire,
Carlton,Orkney Islands?
Carlton,Biggar ,South Lanarks?
Carlton,Selkirk?
Carlton,Banchory,Kincardineshire


Date Surname Forename Parent Names/Frame No. Sex Parish City/County GROS Data Image Extract
1 04/02/1797 MCKAY GEORGE HUGH MCKAY/MARGARET LAIDLAW FR76 M Sanquhar /DUMFRIES 848/ 0010 0082
2 21/12/1804 MCKAY GEORGE JAMES MCKAY/MARGARET COLTART FR258 M Graitney or Gretna /DUMFRIES 827/ 0010 0274
3 15/12/1831 MCKAY GEORGE JOHN MCKAY/JEAN LORIMER FR236 M Torthorwald /DUMFRIES 850/ 0020 0033
4 24/03/1840 MCKAY GEORGE JAMES MCKAY/AGNES SCOTT FR492 M Graitney or Gretna /DUMFRIES 827/ 0020 0117
5 25/04/1852 MCKAY GEORGE BELL PETER MCKAY/JANET JOHNSTON FR643 M Annan /DUMFRIES 812/ 0020 0432
6 24/09/1852 MCKAY GEORGE DONALD DAVID MCKAY/AGNES DONALD FR173 U Cummertrees /DUMFRIES 817/ 0020 0062 
George MCKAY
 
120 In 1939 traded as a Family Butcher as E Mercer (Family Butcher) Ltd at 10 Crowne Street,8 Grove Road,47 Green St and 131 Seaside.

also as farmer

E Mercer,Cliffe Farm,Priory Rd. 
Ernest MERCER
 
121 Ann NEWTON
 
122 Death record not definitely relating to this Annie Newton Annie NEWTON
 
123 Could this be his son?

Marriages, Easington District - Record Number: 17979.1
Location: New Seaham
Church: St. Cuthbert Roman Catholic
Religion: Roman Catholic
8 Jul 1939 George Newton, son of Charles Newton married Mary Seeley, daughter of Thomas Seeley

Is this him?

Army Roll of Honour 1939-1945 - soldier details

Name: Charles NEWTON


Branch at death: Other Corps, Etc
Regiment, Corps etc.: Royal Engineers
Branch at 01/09/39:
Regiment, Corps etc.:
Last name: Newton
First name(s): Charles
Initials: C
Birthplace: Durham (City)
Residence: Durham (City)
Rank: Sapper...
Number: 2134218
Date died: 6 June 1941
Theatre of war: United Kingdom
 
Charles NEWTON
 
124 May be the Charlotte Newton who married in Easington dist 1905
Vol 10a P 837? Sept qtr. 
Charlotte NEWTON
 
125
Eppleton Colliery, the property of the Hetton Coal Company, Limited, consists of three pits. The Caroline, down-cast, was commenced in 1824, but after sinking a short distance, so much sand and water were met with that the project was condemned by the leading viewers of the day. Another effort was, however, made, and, after overcoming 22 fathoms of sand and a feeder of water, which made 1200 gallons per minute, the Main coal was reached, at a depth of 140 fathoms, on the 1st of August 1833. The Jane pit down-cast shaft was sunk in 1837. The New pit up-cast was commenced in April 1870, and finished in 1873. The shaft is 16 feet in diameter. There is a very powerful winding-engine at this shaft, capable of raising 150 tons per hour. The following seams are worked: the Main coal, at a depth of 140 fathoms, 6 feet in thickness; the Maudlin, 151 fathoms, feet 1 inch in thickness, at the shaft scarcely workable, owing to bands and splint ; but to the east becomes valuable and about 7 feet thick, separated from the Low Main by a band of about 8 inches, making a section of 11 feet 11 inches. The Low Main is unworkable. The Hutton is 174 fathoms deep, and 4 feet 8 inches in thickness at the shaft, tapering to 2 feet 11 inches at the extreme north and east points of the royalty. The pits are ventilated by furnaces and boiler fires, producing 300,000 cubic feet of air per minute. The number of men and boys employed under ground is 1100, above ground, 304. The output averages 3000 tons per day.

Whellan's 1894 Directory of County Durham


Possible baptisms

Baptisms, Gateshead District - Record Number: 336029.0

Location: Ryton
Church: Holy Cross
Religion: Anglican
1785 George Newton, son of George Newton

OR
Baptisms, Houghton-le-Spring District - Record Number: 546377.0

Location: Penshaw
Church: All Saints
Religion: Anglican
1 Jul 1792 George Newton, of Biddick, son of John Newton & Jane 
George NEWTON
 
126 IGI Individual Record FamilySearch™ International Genealogical Index v5.0
British Isles


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


GEORGE NEWTON
Male


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Event(s):
Birth:
Christening: 15 JAN 1797 Cockfield, Durham, England


:


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Parents:
Father: GEORGE NEWTON Family
Mother: MARGARET


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Messages:
Extracted birth or christening record for locality listed in the record. The source records are usually arranged chronologically by the birth or christening date.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source Information:
Batch No.: Dates: Source Call No.: Type: Printout Call No.: Type:

P000451 1578 - 1812 0090788 IT 1 Film 6904869 Film


Sheet: 00

OR

IGI Individual Record FamilySearch™ International Genealogical Index v5.0
British Isles
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------


GEORGE NEWTON
Male


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Event(s):
Birth:
Christening: 20 APR 1797 Aycliffe, Durham, England

Death:
Burial:


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Parents:
Father: THOMAS NEWTON


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Messages:
Extracted birth or christening record for locality listed in the record. The source records are usually arranged chronologically by the birth or christening date.


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Source Information:
Batch No.: Dates: Source Call No.: Type: Printout Call No.: Type:

P000041 1560 - 1812 0091092 Film 6904858 Film

P000041 1560 - 1812 0091092 Film NONE


Sheet: 00
 
George NEWTON
 
127 The child considered to be partly responsible for the explosion was the 10 years old trapper named Anthony Cummings from Downs Lane. Was he of the same family as Eleanor Cummings who married George's son. A trapper was a little boy whose employment consisted in opening and shutting a trap-door for ventilation when required. George NEWTON
 
128 The gravestones of the period have been flattened and the churchyard has become a park and a venue for crag climbing. George NEWTON
 
129 The occupation "Blacksmith" was stated by his son George for his marriage certificate. Yet George senior was killed while working in the Downs Pit. Did he have another occupation or were blacksmith employed in the mines.? George NEWTON
 
130 The Parish priest of the Catholic community in Houghton le Spring from 1833 to 1844 was Rev James Augustine McAvoy.

Administrative History
A Catholic mission was started at Houghton in 1831, with the first priest being Father Macevoy. At first mass was said in a hired room, but St Michael's Church was opened on 9 November 1837. Schools and a cemetery followed, on land adjacent to the church and presbytery, in 1842.
From the National Archives 
George NEWTON
 
131 The job of putter has considerable longevity in the history of mining. Primarily a coal mining term, it means someone who transports the coal or mineral away from the workings and out of the mine. In the early days, this meant taking baskets of coal called corves on sledges, and pulling them out of the mine. Later, when rails were used, the corves were mounted on bogeys (sets of wheels) and trammed out. Later still, metal tubs built on wheels were used. In each case, the putter was the man or boy who moveed the container. It does not include the process of getting the coal up a shaft (the job of the onsetter) and usually did not mean the deliver of the caol to the screens in a drift mine (the job of the banskman).
In some cases, putting also meant the process of shovelling the coal or mineral into the container prior to transport.
Putting requies more stamina but less strength than hewing. Therefore, boys were noramlly employed as putters, and they progressed to become hewers once they had developed the strength to so so. 
James W NEWTON
 
132 James William Newton 1864 married Sarah Edwards in June 1882 at Chester le Street Durham.
Sometime between 1882 and 1885 the family moved to Barnet in Hertfordshire England as on 27/04/1885 he joined the Metropolitan Police.
Joined MP: 27/4/1885
Warrant number: 70619
Retired MP: 2/5/1910 as a PC on 'S' division (Barnet/Hampstead)
Age: 46 years
Pension: £54 3s 10d (MEPO 21 ledger 38 or 39)


Angie
amw3@sky.com 
James William NEWTON
 
133 Could have been a son of Ann Newton,daughter of Ann Newton nee Watson.
Was brought up by Ann senior 
Thomas NEWTON
 
134 Lady Norman made over the estate to her elder son Simon Towneley Worsthorne in 1952. Lady NORMAN
 
135 received the Hapton part of the Towneley estate after the death of Charles Towneley through his marriage to the late Caroline Lord NORREYS
 
136 12. Alexander Nowell of Underley Hall in Westmorland & MP for that county, born 19 Nov 1761 died without issue on 17 Nov 1842. He married twice but died without issue Alexander NOWELL
 
137 sister to the Dean of St Paul's (Chalmers Biographical Dictionary Vol 1) Elizabeth NOWELL
 
138 Ralph Nowell of Gawthorpe Hall afterwards of Eccleston and Coverhead Ralph NOWELL
 
139 Richard Nowell of Essex Street, Strand, attorney at law, born 29 Dec 1764, married but died without issue Richard NOWELL
 
140 Thomas Michael Nowell MD of Blackfriars and later of Eccleston and Coverhead, born 29 Sept 1760 and died 8 August 1807. He married Anne (surname unknown) and had a son Alexander John Nowell born 7 May 1789 and died unmarried in 1814 Thomas Michael NOWELL, MD
 
141 Ellen Oldale
First name: Ellen Known as:
Middle name: Occupation:
Surname: Oldale Date of birth:
Year of birth: 1858 Date of baptism:
Gender: Female Year of death: 1823
Source of data:

Place of birth: SHEFFIELD South Yorkshire England
Place of baptism:
Place of death: Ecclesall Bierlow
Notes: 1861 Sylvester St 1871 246 Sylvester St age 12 domestic 1881 2 ct 6 Sylvester St age 22 married 1891 age 33 1901 age 45 Died age 65

Spouse name: John Luckman
Place of marriage: St Georges Church Sheffield
Date of marriage 
Ellen OLDALE
 
142 George A Oldale
First name: George A Known as:
Middle name: Arthur Occupation:
Surname: Oldale Date of birth:
Year of birth: 1816 Date of baptism:
Gender: Male Year of death: 1883
Source of data:

Place of birth: SHEFFIELD South Yorkshire England
Place of baptism:
Place of death: 140 Rockingham St Sheffield
Notes: 1841 ct 3 Arundel St age 25 1851 no 8 Ellens Yard Sheff age 35 Table knife hafter. 1861 385 Sylvester St age 45 table knife hafter 1871 240 Sylvester St age 55 1881 30 Sylvester St age 65

Spouse name: Mary A Lidster
Place of marriage: Sheffield
Date of marriage: 29.06.1836



Top of Form 1

Bottom of Form 1


















Top of Form 2






Bottom of Form 2



 
George Arthur OLDALE
 
143 Eli Pierce was registered in Glouces

Eli Pierce reg Wellington district Dec qtr 1886 6a 742 
Eli(???) PIERCE
 
144 5 children all died under 2 before marriage to Walter HAGUE? Irene PIERCE
 
145

Possible marriage

Dec qtr 1882

James Pierce Liverpool Vol 8b Page 14 
James E(dward?) PIERCE
 
146 John Edward Wrexham dist 11b 233 Dec qtr 1890

11b covers Anglesey, Brecknockshire, Caernarvonshire, Cardiganshire, Denbighshire,
Flintshire, Merionethshire, Montgomeryshire & Radnorshire 
John Edward PIERCE
 
147 Death?
Name: Elizabeth Pierce
Birth Date: 8 Jan 1901
Death Registration Month/Year: Oct 1986
Age at death (estimated): 85
Registration district: Richmond
Inferred County: Surrey, Yorkshire
Volume: 2
Page: 2219

Death?
Myra Pierce Birth Date: 30 Oct 1902 Death Registration Month/Year: Jul 2002 Age at death (estimated): 99 Registration district: Denbighshire North Inferred County: Clwyd Register number: A123 District and Subdistrict: 8111A Entry Number: 19




 
Myra Elizabeth PIERCE
 
148 At least one living individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. Living
 
149 Mother's maiden name given as Ryder but corrected underneath to Jessimond-Collier Vol 5g see D63. Edwin Michael John POWELL
 
150 Sam used to preach from the back of a pony and trap and at the same time sold Kippers in pairs. However he used to pack them as a large one and a small one. He would put the small one under the larger Kipper!! Samuel PUGH
 

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