jo did you know

A place to chat with friends, old and new

Re: jo did you know

Postby Kaz » 08 Apr 2015, 09:51

That's lovely Saundra - I find all this stuff fascinating. I used to love listening to my Aunty Ethel's stories when I was a little girl. She went into service in a big house in Essex in 1905 ( :shock: ) as a 12 year old, to be a kitchen maid/tweenie (between maid) and was already in her late 70s when I was little. I did love her, she was a gentle soul, used to the Essex countryside - she came to stay with us once at our house near Heathrow but found the planes terrifying......She stayed in service until she was about 50, just after the war, when she married the gamekeeper, my Uncle Fred, and they retired together. A bit like Mr Carson and Mrs Hughes are planning in Downton Abbey, or going back a bit Mr Hudson and Mrs Bridge in Upstairs, Downstairs :D 8-)
User avatar
Kaz
 
Posts: 43354
Joined: 25 Nov 2012, 21:02
Location: Gloucester

Re: jo did you know

Postby Diflower » 08 Apr 2015, 10:37

I'm so pleased for you Saundra :)
I've always known quite a lot about my family, even though both grandfathers died long before I was born.
Mum's family was a large one, and I grew up knowing all the various aunts/uncles/cousins names, relationships to each other, etc.
Dad's side was smaller, but was more of a closed shop. His father died very tragically when he was only 7 and he didn't really talk about him at all till I was well into my 30s.
There's a box in the attic at s/mother's house with all sorts of his father's things; I've made sure his brother knows it's there and will be making sure he and his sons get it ;)
User avatar
Diflower
 
Posts: 16148
Joined: 25 Nov 2012, 22:10

Re: jo did you know

Postby Kaz » 08 Apr 2015, 14:51

8-) That's good Di 8-)
User avatar
Kaz
 
Posts: 43354
Joined: 25 Nov 2012, 21:02
Location: Gloucester

Re: jo did you know

Postby JoM » 09 Apr 2015, 00:17

So pleased you managed to find them Saundra, the certificates will be lovely to have :D

My Mom's cousin had done a family tree for my Nan's family so she has a copy of that. I found it so interesting as when we go into Birmingham on Sundays we always park on the road on Holloway Head, just along from a street called Ernest St. I now know that my Nan was living in Ernest St when she met my Grandad, she was in service there. It's hard to believe that there would be houses there in the past which would require servants - now it's made up of a hotel, industrial units and a ;) ;) massage parlour (and there's a strip club just around the corner). Nan would be like "Ooooh! Well I never!" if she saw how seedy the area is today :lol: My Grandad, her first husband, was the grandson of the blacksmith whose photo I posted on here. On the 1901 census he lived with his grandparents and his mother but by the 1911 one she'd married and moved away but he, by then 14, was still with his grandparents. There's no information whatsoever on who his father was. My Mom lost her Dad when she was a little girl and Nan remarried later. The man I knew as Grandad, and who my Mom called Dad, used to scare me. He had a really strong black country accent and was rarely clean shaven, I remember it hurt when he gave me a kiss. I came to realise, as I've grown up, what a generous and kind man he was though. He took on my Nan's four children as well as raising three of his own (he was a widower) and he and Nan had one child together (my favourite aunty) and when I look at my Mom and Dad's wedding photos he looks so proud to be standing there with his family, and I know that my Mom remembers him with pride.

Dad didn't know much about his family, particularly his Dad's family. He did know thought that his great uncle on his Dad's side was the winning jockey in the Grand National in 1907. I put him in touch with his cousin, on my Nan's side, after seeing his name on the local history page on Facebook and he not only gave Dad a copy of his Mom's family tree but knocked on the door a few weeks later with a family tree for his Dad's family which he'd worked on after chatting to Dad.
Image
User avatar
JoM
 
Posts: 17717
Joined: 25 Nov 2012, 23:06

Re: jo did you know

Postby Kaz » 09 Apr 2015, 06:54

Jo, that's lovely!! :D

My dad's grandparents, who bought him up, had very strong Durham accents, my Nan called me Hinny and I loved that :D Our Gal sounds a bit like them, although her accent is less strong and gentler :D
User avatar
Kaz
 
Posts: 43354
Joined: 25 Nov 2012, 21:02
Location: Gloucester

Previous

Return to Cafe

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 394 guests