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1939 Register

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ProfilePosted byOptionsPost Date

SylviaInCanada

SylviaInCanada Report 4 Nov 2015 21:14

RR .


thanks for that.

When I was aware of what he did for a living, he was foreman in a brass foundry.

I suspect he was involved in building either planes or bombs :-)

Rambling

Rambling Report 4 Nov 2015 20:51

Sylvia you might be able to find out if he was any of these reserved occupations ( how accurate it is I don't know) by putting the surname , area and occupation ( from the list, in turn) in the required fields... I used it to double check that my grandfather was a bookbinder, I knew he would either come under that or printer.

Dock Workers
Miners
Farmers
Scientists
Merchant Seamen
Railway Workers
Utility Workers - Water, Gas, Electricity
Teachers and university lecturers
Doctors (Unless in the Territorial Army)
Police officers
Certain Civil Servants
Students (Only for the duration of their studies. Undergraduates were deferred, but not fully exempted. They could be conscripted at the end of their studies, unless they had a criminal record or ill health)
Priests, monks, nuns and anyone in Holy orders
Journalists (Though they may have been sent to the front, even running the risk of being shot or held by the enemies as spies. Some worked as intelligence officers during WW2.)
Some artists involved in propaganda work
Other media workers (especially those involved in technical roles, such as lighting engineers, electricians, cameramen, photographers, sound engineers, etc.)
Anyone running a small business, including government and local council contractors and their employees.
Local authority employees
Bank employees and employees of insurance companies
company directors
Veterinary surgeons

MR_MAGOO

MR_MAGOO Report 4 Nov 2015 20:32

Well done Susie :-D

SylviaInCanada

SylviaInCanada Report 4 Nov 2015 20:07

that's good news Susan!

By using the free search, I've confirmed that parents and grandparents were living were I knew them to be after the war, and thus also confirmed that Dad had not yet moved down to London where he lived for a few months in the early months of the war.

I might have to give in and buy credits to see what he says his job is .......... he was in Restricted Occupation, and I've never known what that was.



Re children ............... someone on another site has spotted that you will not be able to find children evacuated from their homes as the records will be closed, unless the site does have the date of death.

Rambling

Rambling Report 4 Nov 2015 19:32

That's good news Susan :-)

Susan10146857

Susan10146857 Report 4 Nov 2015 18:31



I couldn't help myself and forked out for one household and YAY!!!!! A brick wall has tumbled down with a resounding crash. There he was, my Great Grandfather the elusive one. His birthdate has been a boon and now I have traced him and my Grandmother. They could have been any of the millions of Williams out there but this one unlocking of a door is the proof I needed to enable me to go back much further.....Took me over 30 years to get the right one, so you could say I am well chuffed! :-D

Dame*Shelly*(

Dame*Shelly*("\(*o*)/") Report 4 Nov 2015 14:23

see just my luck i new i would have to pay and open the record
and gess what she is closed why i dont no when her son born 1919 and died 1988
is open and my nan died 1978

i think probably because they can not comfurm her birth
i have a deth cert for her so maybe ill send them a copy and maybe thay will open it for me

Dame*Shelly*(

Dame*Shelly*("\(*o*)/") Report 4 Nov 2015 13:50

well im temped to pay for one record that i think is of my nan and granpops
to see if it has her date of birth as there dont seem to be any bith records of her
and she was born 1892 all though her death cert give her birth of 13th feb
and marrige cert she is down as full age

+++DetEcTive+++

+++DetEcTive+++ Report 4 Nov 2015 13:16

Well, I'm finding the free search quite useful. Its not always possible to work out when or where a spouse was born if they married after 1911.

Using the 1939 register, there's a reasonable chance of picking up their year of birth which 'might' lead to other references.

Andysmum

Andysmum Report 4 Nov 2015 12:46

I have tried using names, addresses, DOB/no DOB and have not found anyone much.

I have found the family of a school friend!! and one great aunt, but no parents, grandparents or other relatives, nor anyone for OH. :-( :-( :-(

Certainly nothing worth paying a fortune for. :-(

Kay????

Kay???? Report 4 Nov 2015 11:33

On September 1st, 1939 Germany invaded Poland, putting the wheels in motion for Britain to declare war on the 3rd. On September 5th, the National Registration Act received royal assent and Registrar General Sir Sylvanus Vivian announced that National Registration Day would be September 29th.

Andrew

Andrew Report 4 Nov 2015 10:33

I won't be paying for info I mostly have.

Andy

maggiewinchester

maggiewinchester Report 4 Nov 2015 09:14

It was a good time to disappear and change identity :-(

lilybids

lilybids Report 4 Nov 2015 09:10

Great Uncle who i was looking for disappeared during the war never to be seen again

maggiewinchester

maggiewinchester Report 4 Nov 2015 09:05

That is very disappointing Lilybids.
Then there's the fact that many people moved during the war.

I know my gran, mum and her siblings were evacuated, first to someone's house in Bournemouth, then to the New Forest, when their house in Southampton was bombed. I also knew the Southampton house was repaired and rented out to someone else! (demolished after the war)
Grandad, however worked in the Docks, so had to stay in Southampton, and lived with his mother in law!!

lilybids

lilybids Report 4 Nov 2015 08:31

I paid £6-95 for something I already knew,age ,name where living which I got from electrol roll,won't be doing it again very disappionted :-(

maggiewinchester

maggiewinchester Report 2 Nov 2015 23:34

Granny eventually married in 1942 - just so my dad could have a 'father's name' on his birth certificate, so he could join the Services.
According to the adoption certificate, gran was living in Cornwall, her husband was in Devon. He didn't sign the certificate - Gran did it on his behalf!!!

When the person by whose surname she was known (before the marriage to the other man - handily his best mate) was killed in WWII - granny went to claim her widows pension - but was refused.
This man was a friend of her father, was 30 years older than her, was married with 5 children - who she must have known about - what was she thinking!!!

I have been in contact with this mans family, and have suggested a DNA test - just out of interest - but they (unsurprisingly) weren't interested!!

Also, dad was known by a variety of names as a child. Gran would send him to a public school, then, when the final demand came for the fees, he was removed, and sent to another public school under another name!

°o.OOº°‘¨Claire in Wales¨‘°ºOO.o°

°o.OOº°‘¨Claire in Wales¨‘°ºOO.o° Report 2 Nov 2015 22:58

It's not a mistake, the registers were updated right up to the 1990s, so when she married her name was amended.

I would say your granny was known by her bracketed name but later reverted to her maiden name.

maggiewinchester

maggiewinchester Report 2 Nov 2015 22:37

Gosh, Claire, that's very presumptuous.
Makes you wonder how the mistake was made :-S

°o.OOº°‘¨Claire in Wales¨‘°ºOO.o°

°o.OOº°‘¨Claire in Wales¨‘°ºOO.o° Report 2 Nov 2015 22:14

Maggie my dad's auntie is listed under her married name with maiden name in brackets. She was only 10 in 1939