Genealogy Chat
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Family Stories
Profile | Posted by | Options | Post Date |
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Caz | Report | 14 May 2009 02:07 |
Fiona, |
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Anne | Report | 12 May 2009 19:53 |
My great grandparents emigrated to the US in 1904 with my grandmother aged 7 months. The story we were always told was that while my great grandmother was giving birth to her second child my great grandfather was in another room dying of an appendicitus. It wasn't until last year when someone from the US was in touch and went to the archives where they had lived and found the newspaper article with the head line " Husband Dead Wife Demented" She had recently given birth and he died in hospital of pneumonia, so there was a grain of truth in it, but very sad that my great grandmother had to be hospitalised as she became mentally unstablewhen great grandfather took ill. Two months later she and her two daughters arrive back in Liverpool. |
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Denise | Report | 30 Apr 2009 21:37 |
My dad told me the story of how my grandad was born in America but had no birth certifcate. It proved to be correct. My great grandad emigrated to Sherrardsville, Illinois in 1906 and his fiance joined him in 1907. My grandad was born in 1908 in sherrardsville, however, the doctor that delivered my grandad committed suicide before he registered the birth and so my Grandad did not have a birth certificate. Apparent;y they came back to Scotland in 1909 because my gr gran hated it there. My grandad when he was older, had to apply for a birth certificate to the American government using a cradle roll from the church where he was christened. |
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Jooleh | Report | 30 Apr 2009 20:17 |
Hi Fiona |
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jeannie | Report | 30 Apr 2009 14:08 |
we had great fun with great grandmother (bless her cotton sox) who died at 93 refusing to accept that HER grand father had been born in australia. even though we knew he was not a convict ( more's the pitty) she was not impressed and swore to her grave that he was born in london. |
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Researching: |
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Loopylou | Report | 30 Apr 2009 00:25 |
oh yes ..My husband told me his family was french canadian,and they had 2 children. they were german,&guess what l found 13 children.my mother in law told me that my father in law died of TB in 1941 wrong again.he died in a mental hospital. now l dont trust anything untill l can prove it.oh what fun it is. |
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maggiewinchester | Report | 28 Apr 2009 23:06 |
My gran told me my grandad must have scottish roots - because he was always singing 'I belong to Glasgow' LOL |
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Researching: |
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Jill 2011 (aka Warrior Princess of Cilla!) | Report | 28 Apr 2009 20:56 |
I've managed to prove all of my mum's stories - even the one that had slipped a generation. What's lovely about the last one was that I know that my gr gr gr grandmother, having been abandoned by the man who "got her into trouble" then married "the chap who'd been sweet on her for years - and he brought the child up as if it were his own". This couple were born way back in the 1820s so it's lovely to have a story about them! |
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Researching: |
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Jooleh | Report | 28 Apr 2009 20:04 |
My great aunt (no longer alive) filled my mum in with great detail about the family and nearly all of it has proved accurate. It has enabled me to find info between the census' and verify it with birth and death certificates despite one birth and two deaths being registered under a mispelt surname. Glad my mum has a good memory and my great aunt was so informative! |
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Battenburg | Report | 28 Apr 2009 04:30 |
My mum told me her mother was a Darby from Derby. She ended up being born in Middlesbrough where the family lived. |
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Madmeg | Report | 28 Apr 2009 01:19 |
Treat em as you would any research - find out for yourself. |
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Kerin | Report | 27 Apr 2009 16:56 |
one of the best stories that my great grandad told my gran is that the way his mum died. he told my gran that she fainted and hit her head on the fire grate and died. double tragedy is that she was holding his little sister at the time and fell on top of her and she was smothered. |
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Bren from Oldham | Report | 27 Apr 2009 15:16 |
My husbands Gran always insisted that the family were Scottish and all the family maintained that this was correct and they were entitled to wear a clan tartan |
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Janet | Report | 27 Apr 2009 14:35 |
Hi Kerin-I have a written note from a niece of my grandmother who told me my great grandmother's maiden name was Brailsford and that she was related to the owners of a printing firm in Sheffield.For several years I kept looking and couldn't find anything . Eventually I found out her maiden name was Nixon and she had come from Bradfield area of Sheffield. Apart from getting my brain round the 'new ' name I couldn't believe where such a story came from. So in my case it hindered me for several years. I can empathise with you!- JLe |
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Researching: |
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Kerin | Report | 27 Apr 2009 13:04 |
I was wondering if throughout everyones research into their family that if anyone has come across an old 'family story' that has proved right or even partially right and have they hindered or helped your research |