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LANCASHIRE FAMILY HISTORY AND HERALDRY SOCIETY
Rossendale Branch Newsletter April 2004
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Programme: 2004 |
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Wednesday 7th April
AGM and Heirlooms. |
Wednesday 5th May
D Day - 60th Anniversary.
Clifford Barcroft. |
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Wednesday 2nd June
Researching the mariner Miles Standish
Rev. Dr. John Cree. |
Wednesday 7th July
Research Evening |
Did you
miss.....
Jonathan Ali’s talk
on how to trace your army ancestors?
Jonathan gave us a
remarkable talk. Without benefit of slides, he kept us entralled
with his knowledge of his subject. His initial research was based on
the village of Hawkshaw, which lies between Bury and Bolton. He
discovered that during the Great War 1914 - 1918, 162 men had
enlisted to fight.
Jonathan has
researched not only the men who died but also those who had
survived. He knew all their names, regiments and family
circumstances, In the process of this research he has gained a
breadth of knowledge about WWI. He was able to answer a variety of
questions on graves, sources, regiments and medals.
Coming Events
Saturday 22nd May
LFHHS One Day
Conference and AGM
at the Foster
Theatre, University of Central Lancashire, Preston. 10.00am - 5.00
pm
3 Eminent Speakers.
"Then and Now"
a Swiss Tour - Family Connections. Victorian Lady Climbers by
Peter Marshall.
"The Blackpool
Landlady" 19th Century by John Walton
" Barking up
the wrong tree" cautionary tales and examples by John Titford.
Full details and
application form in your February magazine. Send completed form to
to AD Walton, 2 Butterlands, Preston, PR1 5TJ before 1st May 2004.
Full conference and
AGM with lunch £15.50 each.
Saturday 26th June
York Family History
Fair. York Racecourse.
Saturday 2nd
October
NW Family History
Fair.
Manchester
Veladrome.
WATERFOOT -
BOROUGH MINERAL MANUFACTURING COMPANY LTD.
I have received an
enquiry from Pat Smith (now living in Giggleswick) Member 4886. She
says
" Among possessions
brought from my father-in-law's house in Baxenden is a heavy glass
bottle with THE BOROUGH MINERAL WATER MANUFACTURING COMPANY CO LTD.
WATERFOOT embossed on it. It carries a registered trade mark which
appears to be a squirrel in the branches of a tree, enclosed within
a circle.
We wondered if
someone in the Rossendale branch of LFHHS knows anything of this
Company, which might possibly help us to date the bottle".
Email:
patdeesmith@totalise.co.uk
St Mary’s RC
Church, Haslingden
submitted by Mary
Davison
Last month I told
you how the first Catholic Mission had been started at Back High
Street, Haslingden in 1854. The congregation consisted almost
entirely of Irish Immigrants.
They all seemed to
have settled in streets to the north of the town near to the Parish
Church of St. James, chiefly Wilkinson Street and Rakefoot. Most of
this property has now been demolished in post war slum clearance
schemes.
The Irish probably
came here to join relatives or friends who had preceeded them and
could offer accommodation. They were of course escaping from the
potato famine.
Most of the houses
consisted of only four rooms (2 up and 2 down), some were cellar
dwellings. The 1851 census shows that these premises were often
shared by two or more families as well as lodgers.
My own great
grandparents the TONRA /TONNY/ TONDRAS lived in Church Street in
1851. They had five children aged between 12 years and 2 years. Also
in the house was my great grandmother’s brother (30 years) and
sister (14 years); lodging with them was the TIMLIN Family, parents
and five children aged from 20 years to 11 years - a total of eight
adults and eight children.
Fortunately there
was plenty of work in cotton mills and the stone quarries.
Some of the
immigrants could be classed as "self employed" mainly as hawkers. My
great grandfather was a salt hawker. How much salt would he have to
hawk to keep his family?
Martin DAVITT
father of Michael DAVITT (who bacame an Irish patriot, MP and
founder of the Irish Land League) was a fruit hawker. They lodged
with the Eagan family making a household of fourteen.
The EAGANS and the
MURRAYS, neighbours in Wilkinson Street were cap makers and cap
hawkers.
Also in the town
were three rush chair bottom makers but the Irish man with the
poshest job (in a house with 17 other lodgers) was described as a
"Surveyor’s Assistant". He probably held the pole.
On 3rd September
2004, the descendants of these early immigrants will be able to
remember their history and their heritage, when the Church of the
Immaculate Conception (St. Mary’s) celebrates 150 years of
Catholicism in Haslingden.
Rossendale
Ancestry
GREENWOOD
David Jones (member
no. 7883) writes "I have just joined the LFHHS. Several years ago I
did some work on my father's side of my family, and found many
pointers to Haslingden and nearby places. I'm now picking up the
threads. I have rechecked some data, and looked for new information
on the IGI. I have found some oddities which really need checking
against the original registers, and I'm looking for help regarding
them.
1. My
g-g-grandfather Edward GREENWOOD is in the IGI as having been
christened on 22 July 1806 at King St. Wesleyan Methodist Church,
Haslingden. His parents were James GREENWOOD and Margret. I have
found a marriage between James GREENWOOD and Margaret HAWORTH (no
church specified) at Haslingden on 2 Feb 1813. On the face of it,
the parents married nearly 7 years after the birth of their son, but
I may simply have got the wrong parents' marriage, GREENWOOD being
such a common name in the area. Alternatively, one or both of the
dates may have been transcribed incorrectly. Yet another possibility
is that "Margret" died and James remarried a "Margaret". I am a bit
suspicious of the 1813 marriage, there being no church mentioned,
and wonder if the entry comes from a secondary source, such as a
will. Local help would be much appreciated.
I do hope someone
can help me on at least some of the above. It would be nice to get
going again. I have spent the last few years bogged down on another
branch of my family on my mother's side, which has been very
interesting, but not got me very far in terms of results". email:
davidjones@buxtonhouse.freeserve.co.uk
I have told David
that the 1813 marriage is probably an irrelevance, especially as it
appears that James and Margaret Greenwood had earlier children
baptised at King Street and before that two children baptised at the
Parish Church in Haslingden. It is difficult to check as Rossendale
Library Service does not have microfilm of these early Methodist
registers.
Where to find
the records of Haslingden’s Wesleyan Methodist Churches:
King Street
Wesleyan Church: (merged with Manchester Road, reopened in 1868)
Bap.1796 - 1837; Lancs. R.O. Man.City Libr. Mfilm. Bap.1869 - 1961;
Mar. 1905 - 1961 Bur. 1885.- 1921 original registers Lancs. R.O.
Monumental Inscriptions (only 20 stones remain) available in
Libraries. Record Offices etc. on ‘fiche.
Manchester Road
Wesleyan Church: (formerly King Street W.M. until 1857 ) Bap. 1837
1962; Mar. 1885 - 1947 Lancs. R.O. Blackburn Rd Wesleyan Church,
Bap. 1885 - 1971; Mar. 1905 - 1961. original registers Lancs R.O.
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