Post by J. P. Gilliver (John)[]
Post by Colin BignellPost by J. P. Gilliver (John)What did he say in the 1911 census? That might also give who (if
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Post by Colin BignellThanks for the reply. I'm using Ancestry to build my family tree and
(Make sure you have a copy of all data independent of Ancestry.)
Thanks for the tip. I'm not sure I could manage that for everybody in my
tree. There are over 4,000 of them and the number is increasing as I
drill down some side branches, to discover where my DNA matches fit in.
It would be probably be practical for my direct ancestors, of whom I
have so far found 383, out of possible 4,096 if I were able to trace
them all back as many generations as my direct male line.
I am sure that some of my early entries are a bit dubious, but I have
rechecked the main trunk and the most important side branches in light
of experience. I'm not sure whether it was the posthumous marriage or
the ancestor who lived to 135 that alerted me to the fact that a lot of
people don't check the data they put in their trees, which Ancestry then
shares with others.
Post by J. P. Gilliver (John)Post by Colin Bignellhadn't noticed that it didn't offer the 1911 census for him, although
I've hardly ever relied on Ancestry to find census entries in that way -
I've nearly always searched the census(es) for the person.
As I said, I am new at this and haven't got into much independent
research yet, other than looking through British newspaper archives
online, which have been quite useful at times.
Plans for later in the year are for a trip to a couple of records
office, one possibly with my cousin. She gave me a head start on my main
family line from a tree she researched several years ago. That was all
done by visiting records offices and looking up original documents.
However, she is particularly interested in tracking down more
information about our great-grandfather and those records are probably
in Buckinghamshire, which she didn't visit. I also hope to visit a few
graveyards and to see any surviving places my ancestors lived. Google
street view has confirmed that some of them are still there.
Post by J. P. Gilliver (John)Post by Colin Bignellit did offer it for his father, who has exactly the same first and
middle names. (I do wish some of my ancestors had been a bit more
Tell us about it (-:. It's a common problem!
Post by Colin Bignellcreative with names). Searching for the 1911 census entry, having read
your reply, it gives the much clearer description of House Demolisher.
Glad to help!
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Post by Colin BignellAs you can probably tell, I've not been at this very long.
Welcome to the hobby - we all started somewhere!
I started by accident. My partner of almost 50 years, Barbara, died last
August and her cousin, who has a comprehensive family tree on
MyHeritage, asked if I could help with some questions that she was not
willing to answer. Probably because she was sure that he wouldn't stop
asking questions if she answered even one. I could tell him the date of
her birth, but not things like when her father died. However, he gave me
full access to his tree and revived an interest in working out just how
many cousins I have (I'm still missing a few). It has grown from there.
Post by J. P. Gilliver (John)(When your Ancestry sub runs out, give FindMyPast a go. Both have quirks
[and when you get back to using parish records etc., each has areas the
other doesn't]. Some people alternate between them.)
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I use Ancestry because it is the platform one of Barbara's friends uses.
She has been using it for years and has been very helpful in guiding me.
--
Colin Bignell