Family Ties Genealogy

Family Ties Genealogy I have been an amateur genealogist for 25 years, and researched my own family and many others. There are no guarantees with Family Trees but I like a challenge!

I use online resources and subscriptions, register offices and parish records to research.

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04/01/2022

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Earlier this month we were looking at the 1939 Register at work for my residents. One of my ladies had lost her mother w...
17/05/2021

Earlier this month we were looking at the 1939 Register at work for my residents. One of my ladies had lost her mother when she was only 10 weeks old, so finding anything was a bonus.

We not only found her mum in 1939, but we started a journey to uncover her Dutch ancestry . One of the interesting people we found was Franz Donders - 3rd cousin 4x removed. (They share an ancestor born in 1661)

Franciscus (Franz) Cornelius Donders FRS FRSE
(27 May 1818 – 24 March 1889) was a Dutch ophthalmologist. During his career, he was a professor of physiology in Utrecht, and was internationally regarded as an authority on eye diseases, directing the Netherlands Hospital for Eye Patients. Along with Graefe and Helmholtz, he was one of the primary founders of scientific ophthalmology.

Super impressed with the amazing record keeping in the Netherlands 🇳🇱👏

These two lovelies are my Great Aunt & Great Uncle. Mary Galatea Rutherford 1920 - 1927Alfred Brown 1915 - 1922Sadly bot...
30/10/2020

These two lovelies are my Great Aunt & Great Uncle.

Mary Galatea Rutherford 1920 - 1927
Alfred Brown 1915 - 1922

Sadly both were only 7 when they died.

Mary was knocked over by a bus on her way home from school, and Alfie was kicked in the leg during a game of football and developed gangrene and peritonitis.

They were always talked about when I was a child so always felt that I knew them ❤

This time of year thoughts turn to Remembrance Sunday. So many families were affected by the loss of a loved one in Worl...
23/10/2020

This time of year thoughts turn to Remembrance Sunday. So many families were affected by the loss of a loved one in World War 1.

The Commonwealth War Graves Commission has a searchable database for those who lost their lives and a printable certificate.

Welcome to the Commonwealth War Graves Commission. We commemorate the 1.7 men and women of the Commonwealth that died during the First and Second World Wars.

Finally found an A1 size frame for my own family tree. Lots of transcribing to be done 😬
02/09/2020

Finally found an A1 size frame for my own family tree. Lots of transcribing to be done 😬

I know its way, way off but if you are looking for something a little different for Christmas this year why not get your...
19/08/2020

I know its way, way off but if you are looking for something a little different for Christmas this year why not get your family tree researched? Always good to get a head start!

I'm offering personalised research vouchers at £10 each. These can be used for one hour of general research or a one name study.

I'm also offering research and a family tree package for £50. This offer includes a printed A4 family tree and a memory stick with all the records I find, so you can browse at your leisure. I will email you a form to fill in to get the research started.

Money back guarantee if I don't find anything!

Get in touch if you are interested
Ancestreegenealogy@gmail.com

Table Rocks are in Whitley Bay immediately north of Brown's Bay, near Cullercoats. Table Rocks became a popular tourist ...
11/08/2020

Table Rocks are in Whitley Bay immediately north of Brown's Bay, near Cullercoats. Table Rocks became a popular tourist attraction at the turn of the 19th/20th century. The rocks had a natural tidal pool which was extended to 70 feet by blasting in c.1909 to make an outdoor swimming pool. The pool features on a 1929 LNER poster promoting tourism in the Whitley Bay area.

I have a client who asked me to research the area as they remembered a family member saying they 'owned' the rockpool.

After some digging, the gentleman most definitely lived in the area in from 1911 to 1939 so who knows? Sometimes family lore comes true 😊

One of my Clients 5 x Great GrandfatherThe life of James Cartledge (1810 - 1877)James Cartledge was born in Staffordshir...
18/07/2020

One of my Clients 5 x Great Grandfather

The life of James Cartledge (1810 - 1877)
James Cartledge was born in Staffordshire (The Potteries District), 13 Feb 1810, is Brother John was born 13 Jun 1813 in Staffs. The family later moved to Manchester, sometime in the 1820s. Northern England at that time was a cauldron of social change, the nursery of socialism on the one hand, and the benevolent friendly co-operatives on the other. In 1837 James married Margret Shearer (after the death of his first wife Hannah Chidlow in 1837 they had a 2 year old daughter Matilda) – Marriage document James & Margaret 10 Sept. Manchester Cathederal. James Res. 4 Ashton St. Manchester (Schoolmaster/widower) (Father William, gardener.) Margaret Res. 36 Lomax St. Man. (Father, William Shearer, bricklayer. Mother, Margaret.) Witnesses John & Sarah Dumbill (Margaret & Sarah illiterate(?), signed with X) [Margaret was born in Ulster Ireland, 22 Nov 1809.] Two of the children born in Manchester, James and William George, died in infancy. The surviving sons were; John born March 27 1841 and George August 6 1843. In the prevailing social conditions, James, a schoolmaster, became an active member of the Chartist Movement, under Feargus O'Connor. Margaret’s father, a bricklayer, and brother were also active Chartists. Though committed to social and political change, by 1843, James was at odds with the often radical and violent leadership of the movement. Following a series of violent riots across the North, many Chartists were arrested and tried for various offences.
James was prevailed on to give evidence against a number of Chartists, including O'Connor. We can only speculate on why he would turn on the movement, but given is later activities I suspect James would now be classed as a social democrat and many of the ‘radical’ ideas he supported are nothing less than basic expectations now. It seems part of the deal for James’ testimony was relocation, and a government post in Van Diemen's Land. James and his wife Margaret, children John and George and his brother John arrived in Hobart Town in 1844 on the transportation ship ‘The London’. James was employed as secretary to the ship’s commandant. It is said that John was simply on an adventure, and intended to return to England. As the records show, he established himself comfortably in the colony. Although active in politics in England, James never spoke publicly on political issues after leaving Manchester. In 1843 James appointed Superintendent of the Launceston Treadmill. It was an ironic twist, as some of the convicts in his charge were Chartists. He is credited, in family oral history, with stopping the lash as a punishment while Superintendent of the Launceston. However, apart from the records showing the lashings stopped during his tenure, there is no proof of his direct involvement. The family story has it that as Magistrate James was sickened at having to sentence the awful punishment.
The legend has it that during one court session James had said something to the effect that he wished the [whipping] triangle would disappear. At least, according to the records, while the lash endured elsewhere in the colony none were recorded in Launceston. It is also said that when the treadmill was finally demolished the dreaded implement of punishment was found in the rafters of the old building. Needless to say, James found government work odious, and doubtless John saw an opportunity for them both as millers. They acquired a lease on the Supply River Mill, further down the Tamar River. However while John operated the mill James stayed in Launceston to operate another venture, the Union Water Supply.
The Supply River story is covered here. The Union Water Supply enterprise was based at another mill (see right), at the head of the Tamar and confluence with the South Esk River. This mill was powered by water fed by wooden flume, down the gorge from the cataracts. The Tamar at this point was brackish and something of a cesspool, but busy shipping needed fresh water. The Union Water Supply collected the water used to drive the mill, supplying it to ships plying this river port. This connection with shipping could we answer another conundrum, it has always been a curious point that there had not been any previous history of ships in the family – until James. Of course they needed and acquired a ship for the Supply River mill. The Tamar Maid was essential to deliver wheat to the mill and flour to the market, essentially contracts with the colonies government. But James went further and had another ship, the Cousins, built at the mill site. Then he went on to become a ‘ships master’. It is unfair of course to employ the Cromwellian phrase here - right but repulsive, wrong but romantic. However it is clear in their business ventures that James chose a more romantic path while brother John built a close relationship with the growing business class of the colony. John forged ahead with is Supply Mill apprentice Tommy Monds, while James remained close to the dreamer, ‘Philosopher Smith’. When James followed John to the gold rush (1854), though staying in Melbourne to establish a building supplies business he soon recruited Smith (left) to provide quality timber from the Forth/Mersey area of Tasmania. The tall, straight eucalypts of this region produced a bounty of smooth straight split palings for building needs. But whatever happened, in 1856 James moved back to Tasmania – to Torquay now known s East Devonport – and the source of his timber business. He had a small store there and also returned to teaching, but he was still shipping out palings. In 1861 James sold he Cousins to budding shipping magnate, William Holyman, however 1866 his world fell apart when oldest son John died when the Tamar Maid capsized at the rip, the entrance to Port Phillip Bay. That was the end of James’ seafaring, though the tradition lived on in the family. But then on the other side of the world it seems James could not altogether escape his Chartist past. It has been a matter of some speculation as to why others write of James' time on the North West Coast, as he was a prominent citizen, James Fenton should totally ignore him. The discovery that a close friend of James Fenton's, Zephaniah Williams, was an exiled Chartist suggests that James might have been suffering for his past. Although Williams had been transported in 1840, he still appeared to have some knowledge of events in the movement. To him, James would have been a traitor, and the fact that he gave evidence against one James Fenton (certainly not a close relative of Fenton) would be enough to cause bad blood. James and John were total abstainers throughout their lives. Williams on the other hand had been a publican both in Wales and in Devonport. In the small community of the time it is easy to surmise the two groups being hostile to each other. Even after his return to Launceston and to his death in 1877 James remained committed to his Primitive Methodist background and remained active in organisations like the Rechabites and other abstinence groups. More than that he remained true to his belief in social reform.
Chartist historians still claim James Cartledge was a traitor, and they might well be right. From his actions James was less interested in the politics of the situation and far more concerned about the reality. He was an ‘ordinary’ businessman, but his involvement is establishing banking, housing and other essentials, within the reach of the common man, was relentless. Perhaps the subject of another post.
Cartledge Chronicles – Website https://cartledgechronicles.blogspot.com/
Fragments of the Cartledge family story.

Looking for a birth of Ann Andrews in 1797 I was excited to find this.. bit sad that the original surname has been inked...
15/07/2020

Looking for a birth of Ann Andrews in 1797 I was excited to find this.. bit sad that the original surname has been inked out as I’m guessing her parents weren’t married and the father refused to have his name included. If you look closely I think it’s Stafford or Chappell under than splodge. What do you think?

A few years ago a bought a printed family tree A0 size...it was huge. Started to continue filling it in and had it on th...
12/07/2020

A few years ago a bought a printed family tree A0 size...it was huge. Started to continue filling it in and had it on the wall for a while.

Took it down and left rolled up in the corner...cats destroyed it 😔

Couldn't find another one the same size so I've opted for 2 A1 size prints (one for me, one for hubby's family) and actually easier to frame.

Note to self - don't leave your family tree rolled up where the cats can get to it 🙄😺

Ooohhhh. The elusive Ethel Lewis!!!  Finally received her marriage certificate today but not really much help 😕.I know f...
06/07/2020

Ooohhhh. The elusive Ethel Lewis!!!

Finally received her marriage certificate today but not really much help 😕.

I know from the 1939 register she was born in 1894 and living in Coventry and there are 2 possible births on Freebmd. One in Staffordshire, but the more likely one in Birmingham.

Her father William is already deceased when she got married in 1916 ( in Coventry) but I can't find any census returns for the family in 1901 or 1911.

Next port of call in the Commonwealth War Graves Commission to see if he died in the Great War or I order both birth certs and hope one of them is her 🤷‍♀️

Captain Tobias Furneaux (21 August 1735 – 18 September 1781) was an English navigator and Royal Navy officer, who accomp...
30/06/2020

Captain Tobias Furneaux (21 August 1735 – 18 September 1781) was an English navigator and Royal Navy officer, who accompanied James Cook on his second voyage of exploration. He was one of the first men to circumnavigate the world in both directions, and later commanded a British vessel during the American Revolutionary War.

In November 1771, Furneaux was given command of HMS Adventure, which accompanied James Cook (in Resolution) on his second voyage. On this expedition Furneaux was twice separated from his leader (8 February 1773 to 19 May 1773; and 22 October 1773 to 14 July 1774, the date of his return to England). On the former occasion he explored a great part of the south and east coasts of Van Diemen's Land (now Tasmania), and made the earliest British chart of the same. Unfortunately he mapped several place names incorrectly. He glimpsed the opening to D'Entrecasteaux Channel and thought that was Storm Bay. He thought he had rounded Cape Pillar and was on the east coast just south of Cape Frederick Hendrik, whereas he had turned left one stop early and was at Bruny Island, where he named Adventure Bay for his ship. The cape to his north he assumed to be Cape Frederick Hendrik, with Frederick Hendrik Bay on the other side of it - so put both names on his chart. Off to the north-east, Furneaux could see where Maria Island should be, but there seemed to be a few extras, so he changed the name to Maria Isles.
Most of his names here survive; Cook, visiting the shore-line on his third voyage, confirmed Furneaux's account and delineation of it, with certain minor criticisms and emendations, and named after him the Furneaux Group at the eastern entrance to Bass Strait, and the group now known as the Low Archipelago. After Adventure was finally separated from Resolution off New Zealand in October 1773, Furneaux returned home alone, bringing with him Omai of Ulaietea (Raiatea). This first South Sea Islander to travel to Great Britain returned to Tahiti with Cook on 12 August 1777.

He is also my husband's cousin 8x removed on his maternal Grandmothers side..an ancestor of the Rowland family ❤

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