Genes Reunited Blog
Welcome to the new Genes Reunited blog!
- We regularly add blogs covering a variety of topics. You can add your own comments at the bottom.
- The Genes Reunited Team will be writing blogs and keeping you up to date with changes happening on the site.
- In the future we hope to have guest bloggers that will be able to give you tips and advice as to how to trace your family history.
- The blogs will have various privacy settings, so that you can choose who you share your blog with.
Official Blogs
Love knows no bounds
There is no better excuse than Valentine’s Day to start exploring our Marriage records. They are an invaluable tool when it comes to uncovering details about the lives of your ancestors.
The chances are, your ancestors were probably married in their twenties. Historically, people, particularly women, married much younger than they did today. While this was very much the norm, a couple of rather unusual marriages in the parish records from our parish register prove that people continued to marry much later in life.
Daniel Broadbent proved love conquers all when he married Martha Cheetham in Mottram-in-Longendale on 9 March 1780. It is an example of a very peculiar marriage, as Daniel Broadbent was aged just twenty-three when his bride, a Miss Martha Cheetham was aged eighty-three!
Another ‘peculiar marriage’ can be found in the parish registers of St Oswald, Chester. George Harding and Jane Darlington married on 6 May 1776 and a note on the record informs us that ‘George Harding is in the 105th year of his age and Jane Darlington in her 75th’.
There are plenty of surprising discoveries to be made in our Marriage records. We have also discovered a pair of real star-crossed lovers in the marriage records: in 1971, a Romeo married a Juliet in Lambeth, London. We found the marriage records of Oscar Fingal Wilde and Constance Lloyd in Kensington, London in 1884, Jude Law and Sadie Frost in Westminster, London in 1997 and Kate Winslet and Jim Threapleton, in Reading, Berkshire in 1998.
So get into the romantic spirit this Valentine’s day and see what our marriage records can tell you about the love lives of your ancestors -
http://www.genesreunited.co.uk/articles/world-records/full-list-of-united-kingdom-records/births-marriages-and-deaths/marriages-and-divorces
Comments
Send Message |
Why do so many marriage records not show possible spouses? They used to show on the old system.
|
Send Message |
I agree with Clifford. This used to give us potential spouses where now there is nothing. It also confirms marriages when we know the names of both parties, but not the year or place they married. This often results in spending a fortune on marriage certificates or deciding to accept guesses into our trees to avoid these costs.
Please bring back the system showing possible spouses. |
Send Message |
I thought it was just me. The old system was very helpful.
|
Send Message |
Agree with Clifford. Also when I allow my family overseas access to VIEW my tree ONLY some cannot open the tree because our site is http and not https which has a higher security especially with adverts etc. What should they do to open the tree?
From a little bit behind the times :-) :-) |