Ancestry / family research

Page may contain affiliate links. Please see terms for details.

Flying_Monkey

Recyclist
Location
Odawa
I was wondering if anyone else has done any ancestry / family research here (or is interested in it).

My father was struggling with doing this, so I decided to get involved over the winter break and discovered all kinds of things that seemed unlikely at first, but which have now turned out to be confirmed by independent sources.

The short version: my dad's side of the family comes from several generations of 'illegitimate' children, or if you like from families that were the second, 'unofficial' family of the man concerned. This means also that we have discovered that our wider family is much bigger than we had thought and we have all kinds of cousins and so on that we never knew about.

This is all because my great-great grandfather and great-grandfather were part of a (quite well-known) traveling theatre / music hall family in the mid-to-late nineteenth century. They were singers, musicians and comedians, mostly but not exclusively blackface minstrels, originally from the edge of Yorkshire and Lancashire (Saddleworth near Oldham), although they all moved to south London eventually, the centre of the music hall universe. Each of them had two families, the first from marrying young, and the second from when several years later, they met a much younger woman who was involved with the theatre, and just left their wives and started new families.

My great-grandfather in particular seems to have very irresponsible - as when his second partner died very young in the early 1920s, he upped and went back to his first family, leaving my grandfather to be raised by his older sisters (the oldest two of whom also seem to have come from a previous marriage that my great-grandmother had - whether she left her husband or he left her or he died, we don't know yet). The two families did actually know each other for some time and even were friendly to some extent, but they fell out and never talked to each other again at some point (perhaps following my great-grandfather's death in the mid-1930s).

Anyway, it's all fascinating (along with all the professional, career stuff I've found), and it's totally blown our family away, and at the same time has explained a lot of resentments, hints, gaps and silences in the stories my grandfather told.

Has anyone else discovered any skeletons in their family closets?
 

dan_bo

How much does it cost to Oldham?
Lend us a tenner cuz.
 
D

Deleted member 35268

Guest
Using the interwebs, I discovered exactly where my Great Grandfather died in WW1. I was shocked to discover that (apologies for my lack of WW1 knowledge) that he died in Kut, Mesopotamia - and is laid to rest in Basra, IRAQ. Did I know we fought in the middle east in WW1, no I did not. I managed to get a hold of his handwritten will which he penciled days before his inevitable death. Sorry to be morbid. I have uncovered many many other family gems like this.
 
OP
OP
Flying_Monkey

Flying_Monkey

Recyclist
Location
Odawa
Gone back 1500 on one side & 1100 years on the other side of the family. Even been able to visit the graves of some of the earliest ones known.

Really? How have you managed that? And how certain can you be? (sorry to bombard you with questions, but this seems unusual unless you are royalty...)
 

classic33

Leg End Member
Really? How have you managed that? And how certain can you be? (sorry to bombard you with questions, but this seems unusual unless you are royalty...)
Time and research, often shared then checked. As for how certain, fairly.

Some of what was been looked up was also being looked for by others, so research was shared. The first two hundred years were easy enough, looking back, not when starting out though.

Your piece about "Black Sheep" being found, is one reason I feel all these packs/sites should have a clear warning on them that you may find out something you'd rather not have known.
 

twentysix by twentyfive

Clinging on tightly
Location
Over the Hill
My mother has done our family tree. Nothing startling. I come from a long line of boringly "normal" ancestors.
 

pawl

Legendary Member
Time and research, often shared then checked. As for how certain, fairly.

Some of what was been looked up was also being looked for by others, so research was shared. The first two hundred years were easy enough, looking back, not when starting out though.

Your piece about "Black Sheep" being found, is one reason I feel all these packs/sites should have a clear warning on them that you may find out something you'd rather not have known.





Never checked on one of these sights but my dad reconed we had a highwaymen in are family.
Is that why I have this occasional urge to cycle in a three cornered hat and a mask.
 

EltonFrog

Legendary Member
I did a bit last year and lost interest after about 200 years, it was as boring as feck. The only thing vaguely interesting was my maternal grandfather married his stepmothers daughter.

My paternal grandfather was a WW2 hero, but they all were then weren't they.
 
Last edited:

annedonnelly

Girl from the North Country
Location
Canonbie
Other people have done bits of ours. I'm frightened to get too involved as I think it could be fascinating and time-consuming :smile:

One of my great-great-grandmothers came from Shetland to Tyneside. The original story was that she travelled south as a herring gutter - fairly common in those days. However, it turns out that she gave birth to an illegitimate son while in prison in Lerwick. She was convicted of stealing a pound of butter. The sentence was 60 days hard labour - she was obviously pregnant as that point! She left Shetland shortly after that so I suspect that either the baby or the imprisonment had something to do with her leaving.

I think she must've been quite an interesting character - it was only after she died and her husband tried to claim the insurance to bury her that he found she'd lied about her age!

I do a little bit to help genealogists - I transcribe records for the FreeBMD website - births, marriages and deaths info.
 
Top Bottom