Went to a local fair on the Wirral to see what I could find out about the branch of my family that are local and unlock the dead end I'm in. I think I need to join my local family history society. I bought a great chart that I can put 10 generations of grandparents on and their siblings and children. Will need 4 of these for the 4 great grandparents I'm following on my Mum's side
My Family Tree
Sunday, 26 April 2015
Saturday, 25 April 2015
Things I now know
I know my Grandfather and his brothers made a film about the family mill in Yorkshire and they came from a strong line of non conformist Liberal voting temperance men. I know one of the Parkers married into the Salt family mill at Saltaire and what an amazing building that is. I know about Benjamin Munday's travels around the World in the late 1880s and his connection to the Boy Scouts of America. There's a film to be made from his story or a book to be written.
Church yards
Looked around 3 churchyards so far in search of more clues when I've got stuck looking for Gore's. Fairly successful finds in Huyton, Bidston and Churchtown. Howarth also helpful in the search for Parkers. Now I need to sort through all the photos and try to match them to the family tree. Using Family Tree Maker as my search engine and to back up an offline version.
Sunday, 5 April 2015
Abraham Parker 1841-1898
Abraham Parker was my 2nd Great Grandfather
He was a mill owner in Pudsey, Yorkshire.
He was born on 17th Oct 1841 to Job Parker and Susy Shackleton in Howarth Yorkshire. They were a strict non conformist family and as an adult he played a big role in the temperance movement and the Liberal Party.
The Yorkshire Film Archive has a short film about his mill. Click on this link to find out more.
http://www.yfaonline.com/film/parkers-mill-bingley
In Oct 1862 he married Mary Jane Murgatroyd and they had 7 children.
He died on the 9th April 1898 aged 56 leaving £796 cash to his 2 sons which is about £100k now
His obituary said:
& Members of the Firm
Photography and Direction by A. Norman Riley esq. and Frank H. Laycock esq.
The film begins with extensive shots of fabrics which are displayed, draped on a lit stage, and with headless mannequins adorned with long, flowing dresses. The film also focuses on the many different kinds of fabric designs.
Title – Our story commences in the year eighteen hundred and ninety.
Modern days.
Arrival of employees
The recreation room.
First day instruction.
Sports Day.
A man shifts through some samples of different designs and selects one which is shown in close up. He compares others to colour watches, and a few designs are shown.
Materials – ‘Par Fabrics’
Gowns. – Messrs, Brown Muff Ltd.
Friday, 27 March 2015
Matthew Gore 1879 - 1966 Liverpool
Matthew Gore is my Great Grandfather
He was born in Liverpool in 1879 to Thomas Gore and Alice Youds.
His early life was pretty traumatic; his father died when he was 4 years old and then his mother when he was 11 and he had no brothers and sisters which is unusual for that generation in my family. Papers show that his Aunty Mary Pye (Gore) and Uncle John Pye had previously been made his Guardians and he moved in with them and lived with them until he got married in 1907, firstly in a cottage in Orrell and then Jackson Street in Toxteth
He married Sarah Anne Walton at St Athanasius Church Kirkdale, Liverpool in 1907 and they had 3 children, the eldest of which was my Grandmother Alice (Mary) Gore.
Matthew worked all his life on the docks in Liverpool, firstly as a fruit porter and he retired as a Customs Clerk working for the Mersey Docks and Harbour Board. In 1911 when he was 32, he was living in Pentland Avenue in Liverpool and his Aunty Mary, now a widow was living with them. A favour returned.
He died aged 86 years in 1966
Saturday, 17 January 2015
Lady Godiva 990-1067
Lady Godiva is my 32nd Great Grandmother.
She was born in Coventry on 5th September 990 to the Sheriff of Lincoln and Edith Malet.
She's most famous for riding on a horse naked through the streets of Coventry as a protest against the taxes imposed by her Anglo Saxon husband the Earl of Mercia, on the people of Coventry. He said if she rode naked, he'd drop the taxes, so she did just that. Good on you Godiva.
She was wealthy and was a church benefactor, donating large sums to a number of monasteries including the one at Chester. She's so old she lived through the Norman Conquests of 1066 and she was mentioned in the Domesday Survey although she had died before it was published.
There are a number of paintings and sculptures of her and Godiva Chocolate is named in her honour. She's also mentioned in a few songs and there's a film!
She died an old lady in approx. 1067 and is buried either in Evesham or Coventry, no-one's quite sure.
There is a Society of Descendants of Lady Godiva, based in the USA
Sunday, 4 January 2015
Charlemagne, Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire 2nd April 742 - 28 Jan 814
Charlemagne is my grandest relative and the one you'll have heard of; it will be agricultural labourers and dockers from here on. He is my German Great Grandfather twice through 2 different branches of my family tree:
He is my 41st Great Grandfather through his marriage to Regina Reginopycrha Concubine a German. She was his concubinage (not married)
He is my 36th Great Grandfather through his 2nd marriage to Hildegarde Swabia von Vinzgau Empress Franks, a German.
He was King of the Franks who united most of Western Europe during the Middle Ages and laid the foundations for modern France and Germany. He took the Frankish throne from 768, became King of Italy from 774, and from 800 was the first recognized Roman emperor in Western Europe since the collapse of the Western Roman Empire three centuries earlier. The expanded Frankish state he founded is called the Carolingian Empire.
He had a concubine, 4 wives and 12 children so I'm sure he will pop up again via another route
His parents were Pepin the Short (King of the Franks) and Bertrada of Laon
He spoke a dialect of Old High German but also spoke Latin and Greek
An estimate of his height from a X-ray and CT Scan of his tibia performed in 2010 is 1.84 m (72 in). This puts him in the 99th percentile of tall people of his period, given that average male height of his time was 1.69 m (67 in).
He was Emperor for 13 years, died from pleurisy and is buried in Aachen Cathedral, Germany
One last thing.....Charlemagne was a lover of books. He had clerics translate Christian creeds and prayers into their respective vernaculars. Book production was completed slowly by hand, and took place mainly in large monastic libraries. Books were so in demand during Charlemagne’s time that monastic libraries lent out some books, but only if that borrower put up valuable collateral. At Charlemagne’s court, a court library was founded. Charlemagne was a bibliophile and founded a court library during the ninth century. Some claims that add to Charlemagne's credit as a lover of books include during meals having books read out loud to him, and loving the books by St. Augustine.