Bicknell & Coyle-Williams Family History
Notes
Matches 401 to 450 of 478
| # | Notes | Linked to |
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| 401 | Soldier. Promoted to the rank of temporary Second Lieutenant in the King's Own Scottish Borderers 9th Batallion on August 6 1915 (Supplied by courtesy of Naval & Military Press) | COYLE, Clement William T (I0737)
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| 402 | Sometimes spelt MERRETT | MERRITT, Jane (I0016)
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| 403 | Sometimes spelt MERRETT | FLETCHER, Hannah Ann (I0217)
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| 404 | Sometimes spelt MERRETT | MERRITT, Hannah (I0248)
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| 405 | Sometimes spelt MERRETT | MERRITT, Mary Ann (I0249)
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| 406 | Sometimes spelt MERRETT | MERRITT, Elizabeth (I0250)
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| 407 | Sometimes spelt MERRETT | MERRITT, Charles (I0251)
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| 408 | Sometimes spelt MERRETT or MERROTT | MERRITT, Charles (I0229)
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| 409 | St John at Hackney ref P79/JN1 Item 072 | Family: WITHERS, Charles / UNDERWOOD, Mary Ann Susannah (F0069)
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| 410 | Stan lived at 63 Saxon Road, Southall, Middlesex at the time of marriage | Family: COYLE-WILLIAMS, Stanley William / BICKNELL, Violet Doris (F0053)
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| 411 | Stan was a Gunner, Royal Artillery (1513895) at the time of marriage | Family: COYLE-WILLIAMS, Stanley William / BICKNELL, Violet Doris (F0053)
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| 412 | Stanley was born 15 months before Elizabeth married Clement Coyle and the father's name does not appear on the birth certificate. Clement's regiment (17th Lancers) was in India at the time. The father is thus unknown. In the subsequent census Stanley had the surname "Coyle" | BLANCHARD, Stanley (I0779)
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| 413 | Still alive in 1896 at 3 Matthew Street, Manchester, but no longer living there in 1901 | MARTIN, Isabella (I0919)
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| 414 | Surname also recorded as Hauchin and Houchen | HOUCHEN, Isabella (I0441)
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| 415 | Surname confirmed by her niece, Jessie Weekes, being with her at the same address in 1911 | WEEKES, Alice (I0174)
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| 416 | Surname noted on her son's baptism record | RINGE, Elizabeth (I0896)
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| 417 | TF2137 Private Ernest Hancock, "B" Company 1st/8th Battalion, Duke of Cambridge's Own Middlesex Regiment. | HANCOCK, Ernest (I0501)
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| 418 | Thames Waterman (as noted in 1851 census- Master: George Sallaway from Vauxhall (Surrey); bound 12 Oct 1848 Date free:14 Sep 1848 Source: Binding Records 1692-1949, Thames watermen and lightermen Data provider: Rob Cottrell, Trueflare LimitedTranscriptions © Rob Cottrell, Trueflare Limited (via findmypast.co.uk) | SALLAWAY, George (I0218)
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| 419 | The 1851 census places her in lodgings, without her husband, described as a "fireman's wife" | BOURNE, Elizabeth (I0197)
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| 420 | The 1861 census address was the Robbins and Miller office at Nine Elms, Battersea. This lighterage firm ran a fleet of barges and were handling coal. They were licensed watermen. They were present in the 1840-1860s on a wharf next to the railway goods yard. | SALLAWAY, George (I0218)
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| 421 | The 1939 Register gives her name as "Gwendoline E Dewsnap (Soester)" It was amended in 1947 to show her new name on re-marriage in 1946 | BICKNELL, Gwendoline Edith (I0099)
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| 422 | The 1939 Register has his DOB as 5th February 1894 | RUDOLF, George Franz (I0381)
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| 423 | The birth certificate cannot be found in the public archives. Both Poplar, Middlesex and Leytonstone, Essex are mentioned as birthplaces on public records. Poplar is the one noted on the 1891 census three years after Frederick was born, and on the 1921 census where he is noted as being 34 years and 1 month old (ie approx May 1887). | WILLIAMS, Frederick James Coyle (I0052)
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| 424 | The birth year marked on her grave is 1761, but I can find no record of that, nor of 1850 which other family trees have cited, in either the Isle of Wight or Portsmouth. | PRESTON, Jane (I0701)
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| 425 | The census record does not identify individual streets in Mundford | SHINN, William (I0007)
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| 426 | The census record does not identify individual streets in Mundford | SHINN, William (I0007)
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| 427 | The census record does not identify individual streets in Mundford | PALMER, Mary (I0008)
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| 428 | The census record does not identify individual streets in Mundford | PALMER, Mary (I0008)
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| 429 | The census record does not identify individual streets in Mundford | PALMER, Mary (I0008)
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| 430 | The date of death is, oddly, noted on Martha's baptism record, the daughter of William and Mary Shinn. There is also a census record for 1851 in Mildenhall of a Martha Shinn, domestic servant born 1835 in Eriswell | SHINN, Martha (I0292)
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| 431 | The date of death is, oddly, noted on Martha's baptism record, the daughter of William and Mary Shinn: 25th August 1843. However the National Burial Index For England & Wales has the 1843 burial as that of an infant There is also a census record for 1851 in Mildenhall of a Martha Shinn, domestic servant born 1835 in Eriswell | SHINN, Martha (I0292)
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| 432 | The Drive Mansions were built in 1897. the Drive Club was a tennis establishment located at the Mansions (drivemansions.co.uk) | DEAN, Lewis Alfred (I0020)
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| 433 | The Drive Mansions were built in 1897. the Drive Club was a tennis establishment located at the Mansions (drivemansions.co.uk) | BICKNELL, Thomas (I0047)
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| 434 | The Drive Mansions were built in 1897. the Drive Club was a tennis establishment located at the Mansions (drivemansions.co.uk) | BICKNELL, Bertie Louis William (I0060)
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| 435 | The family had moved to Newcastle upon Tyne by 1873 as his son William (aged thirteen) was convicted of theft there in that year. | COYLE, William Augustus (I0252)
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| 436 | The family was living at Donor Farm (?), Carisbrooke, Isle of Wight, when John was christened | ATTRILL, John William (I0196)
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| 437 | The family was living at Donor Farm, Carisbrooke, Isle of Wight when John was christened | Source (S0021)
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| 438 | The informant on Albert Coyle-Williams's death certificate is Esther Williams, widow of deceased | COOKE, Esther C (I0865)
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| 439 | The marriage between Ann Markham and Lawrence Underwood is putative, but the circumstantial evidence is strong. Apart from geography, and time, Lawrence is noted as coming from Framlingham which is where his son was born. | Family: UNDERWOOD, Laurence / MARKHAM, Ann (F0213)
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| 440 | The Rookery, Roehampton Lane, is now part of Queen Mary's Hospital The Anglesea Arms pub was rebuilt in 1939 on the site of an earlier ale house. It was then set back from the road and given a mock-Tudor front. It closed in 2006 and is now in use as a pharmacy. | DEAN, Lewis Alfred (I0020)
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| 441 | There is a record of a Thomas Norman marrying a Catherine Ingram in London on 16/02/1790 | Family: NORMAN, Thomas / ?, Catherine (F0092)
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| 442 | There is no record of his birth, the census records stating he was born in Mildenhall or the adjacent village of Eriswell. Another William Shinn was born in 1812 in Hockwold cum Wilton to the north near Mundford (parents William Shinn and Francis Clarke) although this is likely to be the William Shinn who died in that village in 1847. His wife was marked as widowed in the 1851 census. | SHINN, William (I0007)
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| 443 | There is no record of the couple having married | Family: BRACE, James / BATEMAN, Mary (F0243)
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| 444 | There was an Eleanor Deane b.1756 livingin Islington in 1841 | AXTELL, Eleanor (I0332)
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| 445 | These cottages appear to have been in the vicinity of Bleak Hall Farm, near the current New Park Road area of Brixton | SALLAWAY, Martha (I0013)
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| 446 | This information is subject to a Creative Commons License: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/ | Source (S0119)
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| 447 | This is believed to be the relevant death event, although his age at death (65) gives him a birth year of 1806. However there are inconsistencies in recording his age on the census records in which he appears. | SHINN, William (I0007)
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| 448 | This would appear to be the Gore Street to the east of Brunswick and Coburg Dock (between Stanhope and Warwick Streets) | COYLE, Owen (I0723)
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| 449 | TIMES PAST Quakers in Brandeston The site of Quaker House, Friday Street, now the home of the Fielder family was first mentioned in 1547, the fifteenth year of the reign of Elizabeth I. One acre of land was then granted to two brothers, Thomas and William Reynolds, by John Revett of Brandeston Hall. Its boundaries were described as ‘abutting on the Highway from Monewden to Cretingham on the South’ and ‘North on the river, running from Brandeston Bridge towards the Five Bridges’. The Reynolds family continued to live there until about 1721 by which time their descendants had joined the Quakers. Quakerism spread to this part of Suffolk in 1655 when ‘a great concourse of people of divers sorts’ met together in Charsfield orchard where they were addressed by a young Quaker school master. Quakers believed in a freedom of religion which was not allowed at that time. They had no set order of service but would wait in silence until someone was inspired to speak. They had pacifist beliefs, did not wish to attend the parish church, neither did they want to pay tithes to the Vicar. However the Conventicle Acts of 1664 and 1670 made it illegal for religious meetings of more than four people, in addition to members of a family, to be held. This continued until the Toleration Act of 1689. In 1673 Quaker burials began to take place locally. The garden of ‘The Chestnuts’, Monewden was used at first. Quaker records show that in 1704 an additional four acres of land was purchased at Quaker house, Brandeston. Internments took place there until 1790. Altogether some fifty eight people from Brandeston and the nearby district were buried. Some of these were also recorded in the then current Burial Register of All Saints’ Church:- ‘May 26th 1765 Goodchild Gobbett, a Quaker.’ In 1850 Quaker records stated ‘There have been no internments for the last sixty years (1790). It is now planted with a few fruit trees. The other part of the property is divided into four enclosures and a drift way; it is let to Henry Smith at a rent of £12..0..0 per annum.’ The Smith family had taken over the tenancy about 1828 and their descendents stayed at Quaker House until 1898. W.M.W from BRANDESTON AND KETTLEBURGH PARISH NEWS AUGUST 2011 http://archive.brandeston.net/aug11mag_1_-PDF.pdf | GOBBITT, Goodchild (I0657)
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| 450 | Two Settlement Examinations exist for Joseph Downham at Stanton St Quintin, referencing Brimpton Berks, Basingstoke Hants, Corston, Tower Hamlets Militia, Sherborne Dorset. (WRO/1621/24). "In the event of the parish authorities discovering that a person was likely to become a financial burden and become chargeable to the parish such as illegitimacy cases, those taken ill, suspected illegal immigrants or vagrants, the parish authorities undertook a Settlement Examination. The examination took place under the auspices of the Overseer of the Poor and a Justice of the Peace and was carried out to determine whether the person had a legitimate right to residency in the parish. The results of an examination are found in Examination Papers." (The Gen Guide) | DOWNHAM, Joseph (I0120)
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