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Potty
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14 Jul 2015 13:24 |
Trying to find the record you posted, I came across this:
DDR/EJ/CCD/3/1852/6 1852 plaintiff: Ann Welsh (formerly Allison) of Durham City, County Durham defendant: William Welsh of Red Hurworth, Kelloe, County Durham, farmer matrimonial cause - divorce for cruelty and adultery proctor: John Burrell - prosecuting Documents - citation, acts of court and folder label 1 folder, 6 ff.
This is on Durham University's site,
http://reed.dur.ac.uk/xtf/search
There is an email contact; click on "maintainers of this page.
I can find a marriage for William and Ann Welsh in 1823 and can find them in the 1841 but not after that;
Name:William Welsh Age:45 Estimated birth year:abt 1796 Where born:Durham, England Civil Parish:Kelloe
Name:Ann Welsh Age:45 Estimated birth year:abt 1796 Where born:Durham, England
William Welsh 45 Ann Welsh 45 William Welsh 13 Henry Little 15 Jane Hutchinson 15
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sean
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10 Jul 2015 21:32 |
can anyone advise me on this cheers again
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sean
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5 Jul 2015 20:37 |
thanx malyon but if they actually married it would it have been around 1820 ish i think,,,,,
i am stuck for things to try for actual leads...it would be great if someone could advise me on my previous post with regards to the diocess record cheers thou sean
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malyon
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5 Jul 2015 19:20 |
there is this marriage for a mary robinson
Burns mentioned in the record of Burns and Mary Robinson Name: Mary Robinson Event Type: Marriage Registration Registration Quarter: Apr-May-Jun Registration Year: 1941 Registration District: Durham South Eastern County: Durham Event Place: Durham South Eastern, Durham, England Spouse Name (available after 1911): Burns Volume: 10A Page: 381 Line Number: 133 Burns probably married one of the following people Name: Frederick M H Burns
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sean
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5 Jul 2015 10:14 |
can anyoneadvise me on the above??? it seems it is a court record and from 1852 and it could possible have a current address in the record itself, as i am unable to find her in 1851
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sean
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3 Jul 2015 11:05 |
Would I be able to read the documents/files anywhere??? Would these be accessible in the local history centre or would I have to goto Durham records office ;-)
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sean
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3 Jul 2015 09:25 |
still getting no where with this brick wall... but i have found something i think..
i was typing various wordings and names etc in google and this popped up..
[PDF]catalogue of records of episcopal jurisdiction and courts endure.dur.ac.uk:8080/fedora/get/UkDhU:EADCatalogue.0542/PDF Loose depositions removed to constitute DDR/EJ/CCD/1/1. Other loose depositions ...... defendant: Mary Burn of Sunderland, County Durham, wife of James Burn defamation - whoredom ...... DDR/EJ/CCD/3/1852/6 1852 plaintiff: Ann Welsh
ive looked through the records but carnt seem to find anything...could someone help
regards sean
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sean
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27 May 2015 21:14 |
hi all still hitting a brick wall as far as the burn family go... i have marriage certs for both mary ann and her sister elizabeth robinson burn.
mary ann burn married alexander scott in 1851 elizabeth robinson burn (spelt BYRNE) married john sinclair in 1854
on elizabeth and johns marriage cert her father (james burn) is deceased. it does not state that on mary anns marriage cert, yet i am unable to find a death for him which adds up between 1851 and 1854
again unable to find them on the 1851 census records but their mother mary burn living with her daughter mary ann in the 1861 census(widowed)
any help with james death would be apprechiated (again this could be burn, byrne, burns)
cheers sean
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sean
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6 Apr 2015 16:15 |
been it contact with durham county records and they carnt help me either, apparently no records of them at the poorhouse and no marriage regoistered in durham so either they were married elsewhere or she just took his name on,,,anyone have any other ideas??? cheers sean
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sean
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29 Mar 2015 15:15 |
thanx again potty
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Potty
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28 Mar 2015 20:45 |
This site
http://www.workhouses.org.uk/Durham/
says this about the records held:
Records •Durham County Record Office, County Hall, Durham DH1 5UL. Limited holdings include: Guardians' minutes (1837-1902, with gaps); Register of inmates (1925-42); Creed registers (1925-40); Deaths register (1866-1914); etc.
So no records as far back as 1821.
This site has details of the records held - the Overseers records might have some info:
http://www.durhamrecordoffice.org.uk/Pages/PoorLaw.aspx
Overseers' Accounts
Information about Overseers’ Accounts in Durham County Record Office.
The Poor Law was established by Acts of 1597 and 1601, and placed responsibility for the poor in the hands of the parish with churchwardens or parish overseers collecting poor rates and allocating relief.
Overseers of the poor were appointed in each parish. They had the responsibility for collecting poor rates from occupiers of land and property, and for using the money to relieve the destitute, apprentice poor children, and set the able-bodied unemployed to work.
You will find details of payments to pauper families in the accounts of the parish where they were legally settled and not where they were living. Many disputes over who was responsible for maintenance were held in Quarter Sessions Courts.
The Overseers were supposed to keep accounts of the money they had spent on poor relief. Many paupers received payments for food, clothing, rent, fuel, medicines, medical care, coffins and funeral expenses. Overseers also paid travel expenses for journeys undertaken on behalf of the parish and for the transport of paupers in and out of the parish. They also made payments to unmarried mothers, wives of militia and strangers passing through the parish.
These records were usually kept in the Parish Chest and have been transferred to the Record Office. Search the Catalogue and type overseers accounts in the Keywords box. .
You will find more information on the history of the Poor Law on the The Workhouse website.
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sean
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28 Mar 2015 18:17 |
hi all with regards to this post ive hit a brickwall. i have even checked durham records online and no marriage found for james burn and mary so unable to prove that her maiden name was robinson.. i dont know how i can validate it.
would durham county records have info of them being in the poorhouse???as mary ann (marian) was born there in 1821 or were these destroyed? any help would be apprechiated cheers
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sean
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18 Jan 2015 15:23 |
ahhh thanx potty...dont know what to do now cheers
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Potty
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18 Jan 2015 13:29 |
No, Sean. An English death cert wouldn't have a maiden name. The name and relationship of the informant would be given.
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sean
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18 Jan 2015 11:09 |
carnt remember if ive asked this before but would a death certificate have a ladies maiden name on it??? thanx
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sean
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18 Jan 2015 11:06 |
hi all.. no gravestone on the plot...so i can rule that out :-( as above i found another ,Baptisms, Chester-le-Street District - Record Number: 710864.0 Location: Washington Church: Holy Trinity Denomination: Anglican 8 Jan 1826 James Burns, of Washington, son of James (paper maker) & Mary Burns
i know it states burns as the surname but it seams to range from burn,byrne, and burns....but cvarnt seam to finf a marriage for him only record that seams to fit is this one James Burn Age: 55 Estimated birth year: abt 1826 Relationship to Head: Head Gender: Male Where born: Fatfield, Durham, England Civil Parish: Washington County/Island: Durham Country: England Street address: 29 Colliery Cottages Marital Status: Widow Education:
Employment status: View image Occupation: Coal Miner Registration district: Chester Le Street Sub registration district: Harraton
can anyone help cheers
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sean
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2 Jan 2015 16:36 |
well went to the cemetry and may aswell have put a blindfold on...only found 1 grave according to the plans and wasnt her and took me 2 hrs haha.. neway just rang cemetries office and they gonna ring me in next 3 working days..prob should have done that first..
just wish i could find her marriage to james burn/byrne/burns.
i have also found another birth Baptisms, Chester-le-Street District - Record Number: 710864.0 Location: Washington Church: Holy Trinity Denomination: Anglican 8 Jan 1826 James Burns, of Washington, son of James (paper maker) & Mary Burns
could be the same family i suppose and elizabeth was born in washington also!!!!
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Potty
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2 Jan 2015 10:16 |
I doubt that the cemetery record would have her maiden name but the gravestone might mention her as being a widow and give her husband's name and the names of any children.
According to this site, there are very few remaining records for the workhouse and none earlier than 1837.
http://www.workhouses.org.uk/Durham/#Records
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sean
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2 Jan 2015 00:09 |
Going back to cemetry record...would there be any other information like maiden name etc on the burial/cemetry register????
also the baptism record for marian burn(mary ann) st nicholas poor house durham if i rang them would they check the records for other information (mothers maiden name etc) cheers
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sean
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1 Jan 2015 22:47 |
forget that last question its in surrey :-|
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