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PricklyHolly
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1 Nov 2014 21:43 |
You need to purchase a copy of the marriage cert to set you on the right track Raymond. :-)
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patchem
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1 Nov 2014 21:16 |
Unfortunately Raymond does not have a place of birth for Charles J HIll in his tree on here.
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PricklyHolly
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1 Nov 2014 19:15 |
Umm, apparently born 1894 Ann.
3 born in 1894.........
Which one??
Births Jun 1894 (>99%)
Hill Charles James Greenwich 1d 1018 Hill Charles John Edmonton 3a 346
Births Dec 1894 (>99%) Hill Charles John Kensington 1a 115
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AnnCardiff
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1 Nov 2014 19:03 |
????????????/
Name: Charles J Hill Event Type: Other Event Date: 1897 Event Place: Borough of Wandsworth, London, England GS Film Number: 002354784 , Digital Folder Number: 007591470 , Image Number: 01490
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AnnCardiff
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1 Nov 2014 19:02 |
Name: May Fisk Event Type: Marriage Registration Quarter: Oct-Nov-Dec Registration Year: 1916 Registration District: Willesden County: Middlesex Event Place: Willesden, Middlesex, England Spouse Name (available after 1911): Hill Volume: 3A Page: 631 Line Number: 113 Hill probably married one of the following people Name: Charles J Hill
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AnnCardiff
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1 Nov 2014 18:59 |
where did this happen Raymond?
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Raymond
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1 Nov 2014 18:19 |
Hi, Can anyone help me find out more info on a Charles J Hill. Born in 1894, Married to May fisk in 1916. May was born on 18th June 1891. They had 5 children Charles, Maisie, Ada Eileen And Muriel
Many Thanks Ray Hill
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PricklyHolly
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1 Nov 2014 08:04 |
I am pleased it makes sense to you!
:-D
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AnnCardiff
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31 Oct 2014 22:41 |
watch it!! I was on a roll - I think we have landed gentry on the board :-D :-D :-D :-D
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PricklyHolly
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31 Oct 2014 21:45 |
What the............
:-S :-S :-S
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AnnCardiff
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31 Oct 2014 16:27 |
Baptism: 21 Jul 1822 All Saints, Wigan, Lancashire, England James Ackers - 2 Son of Robert Ackers & Ann Born: 17 May Abode: Pemberton Occupation: Farmer Baptised by: Edwd. Hill Curate Register: Baptisms 1822 - 1825, Page 7, Entry 52 Source: LDS Film 1885677
Lancashire OnLine Parish Clerk Project
www.lan-opc.org.uk/Wigan/Wigan/allsaints/baptisms_1822s.html
... Wigan, Lancashire, England James Ackers - 2 Son of Robert Ackers & Ann Born: 17 May ... Wigan, Lancashire, England John Melling - 3 Son of John Melling ...
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AnnCardiff
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31 Oct 2014 16:16 |
go on this site and see the picture of this enormous house!!!!
Ackers of Great Moreton Hall The Great Moreton estate was bought for £57,107 in 1793 by James and Holland Ackers of Bank House, Manchester, the sons of a fustian manufacturer from Bolton (Lancs), who had made a fortune from land speculation in Manchester. Holland Ackers died in 1801, leaving a young son, and during his minority James lived at Great Moreton. In 1809, when his nephew came of age, James built Lark Hill House, Salford as an alternative residence, and Great Moreton passed to Holland’s descendants. His grandson, George Holland Ackers (1812-72) inherited in 1836 and employed Edward Blore to build a large new house on a new site in 1841-46. On the expiry of his widow’s life interest in about 1900, the house passed to his elder daughter Georgiana (d. 1907), the wife of Sir Charles Shakerley, bt.. At her death it passed to her second son, who changed his name to Shackerley-Ackers in 1908, but later reverted to Shakerley. He sold the house for use as a school in 1931, and inherited the family baronetcy on the death of his elder brother in 1943.
Landed families of Britain and Ireland: (12) Ackers of ...
landedfamilies.blogspot.co.uk/2013/03/12-ackers-of-great-moreton...
Ackers family of Great Moreton Hall (Cheshire) Ackers, Holland ... High Sheriff of Lancashire, 1800. He was unmarried but had a mistress, Ann Coops, ...
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AnnCardiff
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31 Oct 2014 16:13 |
The Acker family of Little Moreton, Congleton
An old Anglo-Saxon surname, referring to a plot of arable land, deriving from the old English pre-7th Century word "aecer", meaning a ploughed field or cultivated land, which became "acker" (or 'acre') in Middle English. There are a number of spelling variations, including Acres, Ackers, Acors, Akers, Akess and Akker. The first recorded spelling of the family name is that of William del Acr',1214, in the "Curia Regis Rolls of Sussex", during the reign of King John. A Coat of Arms granted to the Ackers family is a silver shield with three gold acorns, husked green, on a black bend, the Crest being a dove rising proper, in the beak an acorn of the arms, and the Motto: "La Liberté" (Liberty).
One George Ackers (born 1788) owned Little Moreton Hall near Congleton, Cheshire and his son, George Holland Ackers, was High Sheriff for the County of Cheshire in 1852. The Ackers of Moreton Hall were landed gentry who also built Christ Church, in Wheelock near Sandbach. There is also an Ackers Crossing in the same area. James Ackers ( 1752 - 1824 ), described as the 'father of the silk trade' in Manchester, built Lark Hill Mansion on the site of what is now Salford Museum and Art Gallery. In 1792 he was Borough Reeve to the City of Manchester, later Deputy Lieutenant for Lancashire and in 1800 was appointed High Sheriff of Lancashire. The Ackers also had a branch in Merseyside, where Ackers Hall was located and lands were held in the surrounding districts and townships of Roby, Huyton, Whiston, Prescot and Rainhill.
Old Historic Families of Lancashire - geni family tree
www.geni.com/projects/Old-Historic-Families-of-Lancashire/15657
The Acker family of ... later Deputy Lieutenant for Lancashire and in 1800 was appointed ... The start of the old Lancashire family of Standish came into
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AnnCardiff
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31 Oct 2014 16:11 |
Book List, Wigan Family & Local History Society
www.wiganworld.co.uk/familyhistory/booklist.php
ACKERS, Norma: The Civil War in ... Family Hist: ADVICE: Wigan Heritage Leaflets, ... Family Hist: FRANCE, R Sharpe: Lancashire Acts of Parliament 1415-1800: Local Hist.
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AnnCardiff
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31 Oct 2014 16:09 |
Early Victorian Abram - Leigh Lancashire
www.leighlife.com/?page=wiki&id=leighlife:earlyabram
The staff of the Wigan Record Office have given assistance in providing ... The Ackers family first came into the Bickershaw estate ... Directory of Lancashire,
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AnnCardiff
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31 Oct 2014 16:05 |
Old Historic Families (1)
Families of the Northwest of England, Greater Manchester, Cheshire & Lancashire
Many of the old families of Greater Manchester, Lancashire and Cheshire can trace their ancestries back to the Norman Conquest of 1066. Their names effectively echo the long history of the region and are imprinted in districts and townships whose streets and placenames record their passing.
Alphabetical Order:
The Acker family of Little Moreton, Congleton
An old Anglo-Saxon surname, referring to a plot of arable land, deriving from the old English pre-7th Century word "aecer", meaning a ploughed field or cultivated land, which became "acker" (or 'acre') in Middle English. There are a number of spelling variations, including Acres, Ackers, Acors, Akers, Akess and Akker. The first recorded spelling of the family name is that of William del Acr',1214, in the "Curia Regis Rolls of Sussex", during the reign of King John. A Coat of Arms granted to the Ackers family is a silver shield with three gold acorns, husked green, on a black bend, the Crest being a dove rising proper, in the beak an acorn of the arms, and the Motto: "La Liberté" (Liberty). One George Ackers (born 1788) owned Little Moreton Hall near Congleton, Cheshire and his son, George Holland Ackers, was High Sheriff for the County of Cheshire in 1852. The Ackers of Moreton Hall were landed gentry who also built Christ Church, in Wheelock near Sandbach. There is also an Ackers Crossing in the same area. James Ackers ( 1752 - 1824 ), described as the 'father of the silk trade' in Manchester, built Lark Hill Mansion on the site of what is now Salford Museum and Art Gallery. In 1792 he was Borough Reeve to the City of Manchester, later Deputy Lieutenant for Lancashire and in 1800 was appointed High Sheriff of Lancashire. The Ackers also had a branch in Merseyside, where Ackers Hall was located and lands were held in the surrounding districts and townships of Roby, Huyton, Whiston, Prescot and Rainhill.
Old Historic Families of Manchester, Cheshire and Lancashire 1
www.manchester2002-uk.com/history/old-families2.html
... family names in Greater Manchester ... A Coat of Arms granted to the Ackers family is a ... later Deputy Lieutenant for Lancashire and in 1800 was ...
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AnnCardiff
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31 Oct 2014 16:04 |
Ackers in Wigan in the 1700s/1800s
Three of the sons Thomas, Hamlet and Ralph out of the 8 children born in Newton and Wigan in the 1730/40s appear to have stayed in Wigan. A number of the Ackers living in Wigan in the 1800s seem to have come from that source. There doesn't appear to be any other Ackers families actually living in Wigan in the 1730s/40s but there is a family in West Houghton that includes a number of children born in the same era and with the same christian names as our family. The father of the West Houghton family is also called Hamlet which suggests the families may be linked but this is unknown.
The youngest 3 siblings out of the 8 are listed as born in Ince, Wigan so it can be assumed that is where the family lived in the 1740/50s. Later on, Ralph is recorded as a Husbandsman ( tenant farmer ) living in Wallgate, Wigan in the 1780s and as there arent any other Ralph's around must be the right one. There are 2 Thomas Ackers around in the right era, one a farmer/weaver in Hindley ( married to Frances ) and one who marries Betty Ashurst in Wigan in 1764 and appears to be the correct Thomas due to the children's names agreeing with the will of William Ackers. This Thomas appears to move to Winstanley, Wigan and his offspring are baptised at Billinge church and are farmers on the Winstanley estate. There was an Ackers farm there in living memory. There is a Hamlet Ackers, a weaver, living in Hindley in 1780s, the assumption is he is our Hamlet but there is one born in 1750 in West Houghton also ?
In the 1851 census there are 2 Ackers families on farms in the Winstanley area, and a number of familes in Hindley and Wigan itself.
Ackers in Wigan in the 1700s/1800s - Peter Ackers 1800
members.tripod.com/jonathan_ackers/wigan1800s.html
Ackers in Wigan in the 1700s/1800s. ... The father of the West Houghton family is also called Hamlet which suggests the families may be linked but this is unknown.
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AnnCardiff
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31 Oct 2014 15:57 |
Name: Ernest Ackers Event Type: Marriage Registration Registration Quarter: Oct-Nov-Dec Registration Year: 1927 Registration District: Wigan County: Lancashire Event Place: Wigan, Lancashire, England Spouse Name (available after 1911): Coulshed Volume: 8C Page: 78 Line Number: 98 Ernest Ackers probably married one of the following people Name: Mary Coulshed
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AnnCardiff
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31 Oct 2014 15:56 |
Name: Ernest Ackers Event Type: Death Registration Registration Quarter: Oct-Nov-Dec Registration Year: 1978 Registration District: Knowsley County: Lancashire Event Place: Knowsley, Lancashire, England Birth Date (available after June quarter 1969): 23 Jul 1903 Volume: 36 Page: 0146 Line Number: 84
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PricklyHolly
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31 Oct 2014 09:41 |
There is this birth for a Mary Coulshed......
England & Wales, FreeBMD Birth Index, 1837-1915 about Mary Coulshed Name:Mary Coulshed Registration Year:1904 Registration Quarter:Apr-May-Jun Registration district:Wigan Inferred County:Lancashire Volume:8c Page:135
I'm not seeing an appropriate death so maybe she remarried too?
??
1911 England Census about Mary Coulshed Name:Mary Coulshed Age in 1911:6 Estimated Birth Year:abt 1905 Relation to Head:Daughter Gender:Female Birth Place:Orrell, Lancashire, England Civil Parish:Orrell County/Island:Lancashire Country:England Street address:46 Chapel Lamberhead Green Orrell Near Wigan Registration district:Wigan Registration District Number:458 Sub-registration district:Pemberton
Household Members:
Thomas Coulshed 31 (Coal Miner (Hewer)) Billinge, Lancashire Margaret Coulshed 30 (Married 7 years.....2 children born and living) Mary Coulshed 6 Arthur Coulshed 8/12 Elizabeth Lowe 49 (Sister In Law) Married 5 years.....No children
The marriage cert would confirm.
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