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anyone want to swap an ag lab?

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ProfilePosted byOptionsPost Date

Chrispynoodle

Chrispynoodle Report 13 Apr 2006 14:29

Heather I will report back to you...it would have been nice meeting you (love a good sense of humour). Hope things improve. Chris

Elizabeth

Elizabeth Report 13 Apr 2006 14:26

I thought that as well. I think most of it went paying fines for adultery charges, and the rest when they had to make a quick exit from England. Thanks anyway. Going to bed now. It's the middle of the night here.

Heather

Heather Report 13 Apr 2006 14:23

I should think the 'dividends' people said they were living on income from 'dividends' - you know stocks and shares so they must have had a fair bit of dosh. I would check out for Wills in their name. Chris - I wanted to go but with things as they are here at moment .........

Chrispynoodle

Chrispynoodle Report 13 Apr 2006 14:22

Dividend sounds impressive what ever it is but not worth swapping with my Member of Parliament (preen preen)!!!! Chris

Chrispynoodle

Chrispynoodle Report 13 Apr 2006 13:58

I felt sorry that my ggrandfather who had been a chemist (coming down from Aberdeen to the Balls Pond Road!!) ended up with an entry on the census of 'does nothing'. Better maybe than a 'puller down of houses' which also rears its ugly head in another branch of the family......the said puller down etc had been a brewer in a previous incarnation.....much more like it! Heather, have booked the watermen walk ...looks like a good day...will report back. Chris

Elizabeth

Elizabeth Report 13 Apr 2006 13:39

I've got two 'dividends'. Don't know what they are but they have three domestic servs, so it must have paid well.

Phoenix

Phoenix Report 13 Apr 2006 13:36

I claim a shepherd on the Norfolk coast at the time of the Armada, though this is from his son's will. There is also a haberdasher who dies in 1565 and is mysteriously left off the family tree - presumably because he wasn't posh enough for his descendants. The wretched man is apprenticed before records start, so I can't find out as much as I'd like to. Jess is very welcome to share him as he was a nasty piece of goods, forever taking other people to court. He got his comeuppance in the end and was found guilty in the Guildhall of stealing a chest of money. On his deathbed (presumably prompted by his son and daughter in law) he declared his innocence. His name? .... Crymes!

Merry

Merry Report 13 Apr 2006 13:26

Oh and hubby has some fairground people (as you mentioned fairs!!! LOL) Merry

Heather

Heather Report 13 Apr 2006 13:24

B******* hell, its just not fair. Well, (down-hearted), I was just going to add my jeweller bloke lived in Belgravia but I suppose that hardly merits any points now ............... (goes to comfort eat and cuddle Ralphie for consolation)

Merry

Merry Report 13 Apr 2006 13:23

Heather, well, my spy married in, so he's not truly my relative!! He was the husband of my 2nd cousin, three times removed (Heather, she was the younger baby in that photo I sent you of the lady with the 40-years-older-than-her-husband!!)...... His name was Frederick William Winterbotham and he was in MI6....he wrote an autobiography called The Ultraspy...... Well, you did ask!!! LOL Merry

Heather

Heather Report 13 Apr 2006 13:18

What surprised me - was among my horny handed lightermen,mariners, ships carpenters and such like in Bermondsey - there is one male member of the family who is a 'hairdresser'. I cant imagine what the rest of the familys menfolk thought about him! (I keep imagining him looking like John Hurt in the Quentin Crisp story!) Oh, oh, oh, Merry I just remembered, a have one of the (infamous) Horsteads who, when his poor cousins also down from Norfolk were labouring as coal whippers in Stepney - married himself off to a wealthy Jewess AND (eat your heart out Merry) owned a 'fancy jewellers' Burlington Arcade - woo hoo, class at last!

fraserbooks

fraserbooks Report 13 Apr 2006 12:59

My oldest occupations all 17th century are Scrivener, cordwainer, yeoman and stone mason. I found the stone mason on an old directory living next to a peruquier (wig maker).

Heather

Heather Report 13 Apr 2006 12:58

Macbev, I would say that is a very possible sign of erm, ecentricity. Not wanting to sound an unbeliever Merry, but your rellie actually has 'Spy' on his census employment details, does he???

Merry

Merry Report 13 Apr 2006 12:13

Jess, they better had, as hubby will only were Loakes for ''proper shoes'' (in trainers most of the time though!)............ Just told him Glen's message....he went crackers.....then told him yours and he is smiling again! Merry

Jess Bow Bag

Jess Bow Bag Report 13 Apr 2006 12:10

Glen - i believe Loakes still exisits, Churches deffo does. Quality doesnt need quantity maybe? Are you local to the area? ------------------ I always thought straw platting a rather mundane occupation , want to discover a fog Knotter somewhere , one day!

Heather

Heather Report 13 Apr 2006 11:07

Michelle, you forgot 'LOCK KEEPER'. I seem to remember he lived next to Camden Lock.

Michelle

Michelle Report 13 Apr 2006 09:55

You can have my 'KEEPER' it's causing all sorts of hastle to find out what it means could be 'anything' Keeper take your pick so far Park, Game,Horse,Tavern,House,Boarding House,Zoo,Railway, etc sleepless nights or what. would be easier if his name wasn't Edward Jones lol.

Janet

Janet Report 13 Apr 2006 09:50

My earliest occupation is a 1699 'Hemp Dresser' Even though the thoughts of this occupation may be a little thought provoking, I will hang on to him for the time being. I may have found a 1633 'Woolwynder' but only half proven as yet. Has anyone found any older occupations out there? Janet

Glen In Tinsel Knickers

Glen In Tinsel Knickers Report 13 Apr 2006 09:45

Jess World famous yes but now very thin on the ground. Take Doc Martens and Loakes,both now with us no more. The Griggs family (Doc Martens and Toe Tectors) now gone and the only reminder is the office and footy ground,unless you know the old sites they used through not only Northampton but the villages around and about,Rushden ,Finedon and Thrapston amongst them. Along with most of British Manufacturing now only a memory,but a great deal of the shoes made nowadays have roots in Italy or are made of Italian components,hence the big grey shed on the A14,next to the Ikea warehouse. Glen

Macbev

Macbev Report 13 Apr 2006 03:16

Hi Heather, My s-i-l comes of a long line of hatters. The family founder rejoiced in the name of Thomas Grain Twight Bays. Lots of his descendants have exotic names too -is that a sign of madness? Some of them branched out -one was a traveller in paper and type,another was a china buyer after serving his time as an ironmonger's assistant, one daughter SAID she was a sailor's wife (but he never seemed to be home on census night) while her sister became a governess and their nephew,young Percy Leopold became a page boy Beverley