The Internet is a great place for #genealogy records, but not everything is on-line. #FamilyHistory societies have some unique record sets. In my mail today were books from @anesfhs, with monumental inscriptions & parish records from some of the places where my ancestors lived.
Now, @anesfhs are very helpful and make the indexes from their memorial inscriptions available on-line at anesfhs.org.uk/databank/miind…, but an index isn’t the same as a transcription, so it’s always a good idea to buy the book, if you can :-)
The ancestral gravesites the Parish of Skene I want aren’t yet photographed on-line, so until I can get there to take some photos, having a transcription of the headstone is invaluable.
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Since September 2021, I've been busy photographing, transcribing, and documenting the gravestones at my local churchyard, St Nicholas, Sutton Parish, Surrey (now Greater London). 👉 Here's a thread about 15 months spent in a #graveyard. [1/25] #AncestryHour
This entire project started as an excuse to get outside and get some exercise. “Why not photograph a few gravestones and add them to @FindaGrave?” I said... [2/25] #AncestryHour
Yeah, right. Like an enthusiastic #genealogist is just going to take a few gravestone photos. Absolutely NO chance that it might lead to a compulsion to photograph EVERY. SINGLE. GRAVESTONE. I mean, AS. IF. [3/25] #AncestryHour
I’ve spent hours researching my #FamilyHistory, but don’t have anyone to leave it too. #WikiTree provides a place to record information for others to read and critique (now and in the future). #AncestryHour [2/17]
I won’t be around for ever, so I need somewhere that my #FamilyHistory research will survive long after I’ve gone. #WikiTree provides that. It’s free, so no need to worry about subscription fees when I’m not around to pay them. #AncestryHour [3/17]
I’ve spent hours researching my #FamilyHistory, but don’t have anyone to leave it too. #WikiTree provides a place to record information for others to read and critique (now and in the future). #AncestryHour [2/17]
I won’t be around for ever, so I need somewhere that my #FamilyHistory research will survive long after I’ve gone. #WikiTree provides that. It’s free, so no need to worry about subscription fees when I’m not around to pay them. #AncestryHour [3/17]
Reply from a @FindaGrave volunteer: “Not accurate - Their data conflicts with my data". OK, so the two contemporary newspaper reports about the deceased‘s fatal road accident giving the correct year of death that I sent ya not good enough, huh? findagrave.com/memorial/21448…
In the interests of providing visitors to his @FindaGrave page with the *correct* information about John Smith Shireffs (1900-1955), I've added a picture of the press cuttings with dates, which just happen to match his entry in the statutory Register of Deaths. Images: @BNArchive
There is a John Ellis F Sherriffs, who died in Forfar in 1949, but John Smith Shirreffs who died in the road accident at Stirling and was buried at the Campsie-Lennoxtown Cemetery died in 1955.
Yesterday I posted official extracts of my birth and adoption records to @HighlandCouncil with the hope that the burial lairs of my birth mother, grandparents and great grandparents in #Gairloch’s New Cemetery can be assigned to me, the only living descendant. [1/3]
The graves concerned are the middle and right-hand ones in the photo above. I want to have the graves cleaned & the lettering re-done. When the time comes, I may join them there, as there is still space. [2/3]
More people to whom I am related are buried in this cemetery than anywhere else on earth, with more distant ancestors and relatives buried in the adjacent Old Burial Ground. [3/3]
Researching a C19th branch of my direct line from New Pitsligo in Aberdeenshire, who seem to have been extremely poor souls. Quite a few premature deaths from communicable diseases (mostly TB + 1xtyphoid). Very different to most of my middling (and usually long-living) relatives.
None of my ancestors made it above the level of tenant farmer, apart from the ones who owned a small cargo ship, but is a rather sad to think about the hard-up lot in New Pitsligo. Impression is they seem to have been close, and looked after each other with what little they had.
Oh dear. Looking across the 1861, ‘71 & ‘81 censuses, one of my 3x gt aunts in New Pitsligo may have had 7 illegitimate children (all with different surnames) before she married a man 13 years her junior. That’s going to take some working out...