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Notes |
Linked to |
351 |
Source Charles Balson | HOLLOWAY, Martha Sarah (I0890)
|
352 |
Source Charles Balson | WOODMAN, Sarah (I0896)
|
353 |
Source Charles Balson | HASKINS, Thomas (I0897)
|
354 |
Source Charles Balson | UNKNOWN, Eleanor (I0902)
|
355 |
Source Charles Balson | HASKINS, John (I0905)
|
356 |
Source Charles Balson | HOLWELL, Henry Frederick (I0908)
|
357 |
Source Charles Balson | HASKINS, Frank (I0911)
|
358 |
Source Charles Balson | REYNOLDS, Sarah A (I0912)
|
359 |
Source Charles Balson | COLLBOURNE, Leah (I0913)
|
360 |
Source Death Mark Milum | RIGLER, John Henry (I0541)
|
361 |
Source Kim Neal | FANCY, Susan (I0920)
|
362 |
Source Kim Neal Genes Reunited | FANCY, Alice (I0923)
|
363 |
Source Kim Neal Genes Reunited | FANCY, Susan (I0924)
|
364 |
Source Kim Neal Genes Reunited | FANCY, David (I0925)
|
365 |
Source Kim Neal Genes Reunited | CROKER, Sarah (I0926)
|
366 |
Source Kim Neal Genes Reunited | FANCY, George (I0928)
|
367 |
Source Kim Neal Genes Reunited | FANCY, Caroline (I0931)
|
368 |
Source Kim Neal Genes Reunited | SKINNER, William (I0933)
|
369 |
Source Kim Neal Genes Reunited | DOMINEY, Barbara (I0934)
|
370 |
Source Kim Neal Genes Reunited | SKINNER, William (I0942)
|
371 |
Source Kim Neal Genes Reunited | FANCY, Sarah (I0943)
|
372 |
Source Mark Milum | RIGLER, Isabella (I0832)
|
373 |
Source Mark Milum | RIGLER, Charles (I0833)
|
374 |
Source Mark Milum | RIGLER, Jessie (I0835)
|
375 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I0840)
|
376 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I0841)
|
377 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I0844)
|
378 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I0846)
|
379 |
Source Mark Milum | Family (F152)
|
380 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I0542)
|
381 |
Source Robert Greenham Friends Reunited
In 1901/02 my grandmother, Mabel Bessie Llewellyn, was in the Salvation Army at Bangor. While there she was made a Captain
She was Housekeeper to JM Barrie and his wife Mary Ansell between 1903 and 1906
In April 1903 my grandmother, Mabel Bessie Llewellyn, was interviewed for the job of housekeeper at Black Lake Cottage, Tilford, by J M Barrie and his brother-in-law, William Winter. who lived at Medstead. This took place over lunch in the Winchester Royal Hotel. This episode will be recounted in my book It Might Have Been Raining, published by Elijah Editions | LLEWELLYN, Mabel Bessie (I0884)
|
382 |
Source Robert Greenham Friends Reunited | SNOOK, Dinah (I0883)
|
383 |
Source Robert Greenham Friends Reunited | JONES, Archibald Ellis (I0885)
|
384 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I0886)
|
385 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I0887)
|
386 |
Source Robert Greenham Friends Reunited | FOSTER, Ellen (I0889)
|
387 |
Sources http://www.cwgc.org/search/casualty_details.aspx?casualty=1620804 | RIGLER, Thomas James (I0454)
|
388 |
Sources http://www.cwgc.org/search/certificate.aspx?casualty=1620804 | RIGLER, Thomas James (I0454)
|
389 |
South York Street is now known as Moffat Street | RAE, John Hallyburton (I0036)
|
390 |
South York Street is now known as Moffat Street. It was part of the infamous Gorbals district of Glasgow. http://www.gorbalslive.org.uk/ The gorbals were slums with poor sanitation and were redeveloped in the 1960's with tower blocks. Unfortunately these produced more problems than they solved and have now been bulldozed themselves.
OS map 1894 here http://maps.nls.uk/townplans/view/?sid=74417043&mid=glasgow_2_southcentre | RAE, John Hallyburton (I0036)
|
391 |
Spinster Helped her mother Isabella in chip shop | CHRISTIAN, Eleanor Gertrude (I0138)
|
392 |
Stated as Branksea Island Dorset | BURGESS, Edith (I0478)
|
393 |
Stated head of family aged 12 alone! ? Aged 19 | CASSON, Mary (I0106)
|
394 |
Stated in Son's (William) Attestation to join Army that mother and father were both Irish | CONNOLLY, Patrick (I2483)
|
395 |
Stated to be a Merchant Seaman in Beatrice's marriage certificate | CHAPMAN, William Henry (I2340)
|
396 |
Staying with mother and step-father Thomas Bound | PICKETT, George (I0057)
|
397 |
Steve Fraser of Thomas Hardye School says Thomas was the brother of Edmund and father of Thomasina. He founded Thomas Hardye School in Dorchster and has a plaque to him in St Peter's church in Dorchester. | HARDYE, Thomas (I2273)
|
398 |
Still with Uncle Anthony | CASSON, Isabella (I0118)
|
399 |
Susan's sister Edith was a witness at her marriage | Family (F157)
|
400 |
Text of Letter from John Rae (Superintendent of Kibble)
To The Scotsman, April 1878
Sir, - The comparison made at the annual meeting connected with the Wellington Reformatory between that institution and the "other six or eight in Scotland", as reported in The Scotsman of the 11th inst., is calculated to produce an unfavourable impression regarding this school, and I believe the others also, which is warranted by neither facts nor figures. I refer to the statement "that the percentage of the boys from the Wellington Reformatory School who turned out well was 91 per cent, and this was equalled by only one other similar institution in Scotland - that of Old Mill, Aberdeen. Of the other six or eight the percentage was a slow as 68 or 74 per cent."
The institution with which I have long been connected is one of the "six or eight" referred to. The above statement does it an injustice, to rectify which allow me only to make two quotations from the twentieth report of the inspector of reformatory and industrial schools, which is the latest published. (The letter then includes a statistical table of figures for Wellington, Old Mill and Kibble) If, business fashion, we deduct the bad from the good, the net percentage of doing well will be ? Wellington, 83; Old Mill, 82; and Kibble, 84. Again, at page 298 of the same report, the number of reconvictions during a year over the total discharges since the opening of each school is - Wellington, 4 per cent; Old Mill, 4.4 per cent; and Kibble, 1.9 per cent.
| RAE, John (I2246)
|