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Showing posts from October, 2010

Bagillt, Flintshire, Wales

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Bagillt, Flintshire, Wales (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bagillt) The parish of Bagillt was gazetted on 23 May 1844, having been created from the townships of Bagillt Fawr, Bagillt Fechan, Coleshill Fawr and Coleshill Fechan, which were formerly in the parish of Holywell. It is located in the Northern part of Wales. (Genuki, http://www.genuki.org.uk/big/wal/FLN/Bagillt/index.html)   The 1841 British Census finds Margaret(2) Roberts, aged four years living with her parents and siblings in Bagillt, Flintshire, Wales. In 1831, J. Poole penned: "Bagillt is a bustling place, and will continue so, as long as her smelting and coal works go on in their present prosperous state. Well conducted boats go from this place to Chester every day; with a favorable wind, these little barks make the 17 or 18 miles in little more than two hours."   (J. Poole, Gleanings of the histories of Holywell, Flint, St. Asaph and Rhuddlan, 1831 as qtd.  in http://www.genuki.org.uk/

Update

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I have been working on Robert Owen Roberts'(7) life history.  It is almost done.  He was Hugh(1) & Margaret's(2) oldest child.  (Insert question here:  according to all of the family group records passed down from generation to generation, the oldest child would have been Edward Roberts, however, if his birth date is accurate, then Margaret would have been 13 years old when he was born!  Possible, but not probable.  In addition I have never found a single primary source of information documenting Edward.  So, If you have any documentation, please, PLEASE let me know.)   Robert Owen(7) was Hugh(1) & Margaret's(2) only child that was deaf.  Which makes one wonder if he was born deaf, or became deaf after he was born.  According to what information I have, there were no other children and only one grandchild that suffered from deafness. How were the deaf treated in the Victorian Era in England?  How did Robert(7) support his wife and family...Why didn't he move

October Newsletter

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Did you get your copy of the newsletter in the mail? The newsletter went out this week.  Hope you enjoy your copy.

Western States Marriages-website

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BYU-Idaho has been compiling an index of marriages.  According to the website: Most of the pre-1900 marriages are included in the index for Arizona, Idaho and Nevada. Many counties for those same states have been extracted into the 1930’s and some, much later. A significant number of marriages from selected counties in California, western Colorado, Montana, Oregon, Utah, eastern Washington, and Wyoming are also included. Very early marriages (1700’s) in New Mexico are currently being added.  The website also states: At this time, the index is not comprehensive for the time period and/or localities described. However, the goal for this index is to have marriages from all 12 western states at the fingertips of family researchers.  After searching this site I was able to locate about 17 marriages with accompanying information.  The site is very easy to search and it was extremely quick.  The site includes name variations in its searches, and it is user friendly.  Best of a

NuMb3rS. . . &. . .StAtS

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Here are a few statistics and numbers: 720--original documents and sources 762--people in the Roberts database 272--families in the Roberts database 307--places in the Roberts database 1,093--citations in the Roberts database 447--times, this blog has been viewed 70--posts on Roberts Roots & Branches blog 38--family members receive the  newsletter  19--editions of the newsletters have been published to date, including Oct 2010

Ideas

At the Blog: We Tree you can Jump Start Your Genealogy with 52 ideas for 52 weeks of research, writing, and general family history work. Go see what's there... http://wetree.blogspot.com/2009/01/jump-start-your-genealogy-blog-52-ideas.html

Free Online Classes

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There are free online genealogy classes at familysearch.org .  In the middle of the page click on the "free online classes" tab located under the title Family History Library . There are over 80 online classes ranging from 20 minutes to an hour.  Some of the titles of these online classes include: England Beginning Research Series Germany Research Ireland Beginning Research Series Reading Handwritten Record Series Research Principles and Tools Timelines. . .Lifelines Tips and Tactics from 50 Years of Research Visit this website and learn.

FamilySearch Beta Preview

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The following is a copied article dated:            September 28, 2010 Posted by:    Dick Eastman from:              Eastman's Online genealogy Newsletter FamilySearch is sponsored by The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (the Mormons) and the web site at http://www.familysearch.org has become one of the more popular sites on the Internet. Now the public is able to access the latest version of the site even though it hasn't been formally launched. The newest version, beta.familysearch.org, is up and running for the public, even though it carries the "beta" name, usually reserved for a test site on the Internet. "Every 30 days, we are doing a pretty significant update," said Paul Nauta, manager of public affairs for Family Search. "We're getting ready for our official launch the first of next year." In an article in the Standard-Examiner web site, Nauta is quoted as saying that almost weekly major announcements are made on

October's Newsletter

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In the October 2010 newsletter, find out why this address, 128 Parish, is pertinent in our family's history. (Not getting the newsletter, email your name and address to the contact information below)