Naomi Symes Books Naomi Symes Books - Women's History and Social History Books. www.naomisymes.com Secure Bookselling Service. Established 1994. Out-of-print, antiquarian and in-print books in the field of women's history and social history. Our On-line Search and Order Service lets you search all titles and order using our fully-automated ordering system with shopping basket facilities. This service is secure (SSL) for credit/debit card transactions and we guarantee rapid delivery of your order, to all destinations worldwide. | |
Essential Reading
Sunday, 10 December 2023
Stocking Fillers for the Suffragettes in Your Family
Thursday, 9 November 2023
Were Your Ancestors Normal?
https://amzn.to/3u97W9V
Just reviewed this stupendous compendium for Who Do You Think You Are Magazine!
Review added here May 21st 2024.
Normal Women
by
Phillipa Gregory
Review by Ruth A Symes
Written in the colourful and thought-provoking style
of Gregory’s historical fiction, this stupendous compendium of the last 900
years of women’s history in England has much to offer the family historian. Injustice
against women goes back at least as far as the Norman Conquest, purports
Gregory, but for most family historians, it will be her discussion of women in the
nineteenth and twentieth centuries which informs and resonates.
Rest assured - just
about whatever the ordinary women in your family experienced over the last few
hundred years will be covered here. Work, slavery, marriage, childbirth,
criminality, male violence and protest are all tackled through a wealth of entertaining
examples supported by reference to changes in legislature. Gregory’ is
particularly interested in ‘the huge spectrum of sexual identity that was
[known in the past] but which we have tried to forget.’ She puts this down to
the start of Civil Registration (1837) which insisted upon recording one of
only two options for the sex of a child.
If you have a specific question about the women in
your family, you are likely to find information, and similar examples, here to help
you. How unusual was it that my ancestor was pregnant at the altar? 20 to 40 percent of brides ‘in English country
parishes’ were apparently in this condition in the period 1800-1848. How
rare was it for a woman to remain single in the early twentieth century ? There
were 1,158,000 single women recorded on the 1921 census. Gregory fleshes out such half-known statistics
with hundreds of vibrant stories that intersect powerfully with the stories of
the ‘normal’ women in all of our family trees.
Naomi Symes Books Naomi Symes Books - Women's History and Social History Books. www.naomisymes.com Secure Bookselling Service. Established 1994. Out-of-print, antiquarian and in-print books in the field of women's history and social history. Our On-line Search and Order Service lets you search all titles and order using our fully-automated ordering system with shopping basket facilities. This service is secure (SSL) for credit/debit card transactions and we guarantee rapid delivery of your order, to all destinations worldwide. |
Thursday, 31 August 2023
My 10 Point Guide to Starting Researching Your UK Family History - The Absolute Basics
Maria Dahlberg - Four Generations 1960s. Via Wikimedia Commons
Identify a relative to research
Talk to elderly relatives. Ask
open-ended questions. Identify your subject. Focus on an event about which you
have some details, or some date parameters e.g. a birth, marriage or death.
Join a Genealogical Website
Buy a
membership to one of the online organisations below. They have different
packages for different purposes. They also have different specialisms.
Look for Civil Registration Records
of Births/Marriages and Deaths (BMD RECORDS) from 1837 onwards on one of the above sites.
Find the BASIC record of these events for the ancestor in whom you are interested.
GET THE SPECIAL REFERENCE NUMBER FOR YOUR BIRTH, MARRIAGE OR DEATH FROM THE ONLINE SITE
Go to the
General Register Office (GRO) website at www.gro.gov.uk For a fee, certificates can either
be sent to you through the post or as an email attachment. These certificates will have much
FULLER INFORMATION about your family event, eg who registered the death, the church where the marriage took place, the occupations of the fathers of the bride and groom.
Want to Go Further Back? Look for Parish Records (Of Baptisms,
Marriages and Burials)
Many, but not all, can
be found on the online sites; more are being added daily. It’s more difficult
to find Non-conformist and Catholic records, but again, more are being added
all the time.
Information will back up that on the Civil Registration
Documents from 1837.
Information potentially goes much further back to 1538.
Look at the online Census Records (1841 – 1921, every 10 years)
Find your
family in the 10 yearly censuses from 1841 onwards online at the family history sites. Each of these
censuses gives slightly different information. Compare information about your family on one census with information about the same family ten years later/earlier. Did any children die between the two dates? How did the household change shape over the course of the decade? Would more or less money be coming into the household in the later period? Would there be more or less room for the family?
Take a look at the households next to your family on the census. What kind of jobs did these people do? Did they have roughly the same income as your family? Were the families roughly the same shape as your family, or was your family unusual in some way?
1841 :
Generalised information including rounding down of ages to nearest 5 years
1851:
1861:
1871:
1881:
1891:
1901:
1911 :
SO-CALLED ‘FERTILITY’ CENSUS. Asks how many children were born into the family and how many survived. Asks for Nationality, infirmity and more information about number of rooms in the house in addition to questions asked in earlier censuses.
1921:
1931: THESE CENSUS RECORDS WERE DESTROYED IN A FIRE
1941: NO
CENSUS TAKEN DUE TO WORLD WAR TWO
1951 : NOT TO BE RELEASED UNTIL 2051
Look at the 1939 Register
Search 1939 Register on the online family history sites for details of your family in this nationwide survey taken just before World War II.
Look at these other kinds of record available at the family history sites. Search by name (and dates if you have them) NB: information in these areas is patchy and varies from site to site.
· Education e.g. school attendance records
· Jobs
· Passenger Lists
· Military
· Wills
· Newspapers ( via www.findmypast membership only)
7Look for other useful documents that may tell you something about your ancestors’ life. You may find these amongst family papers, with relatives, or sometimes in Local or County Record Offices. Search for the location of these via the National Archives Discovery Site : www.discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk
These include: Diaries Letters Passports Commonplace Books Poor Law records Documents relating to Properties Vaccination Records Minutes of Church Meetings Naturalisation Records Ships’ Logs Muster Records....
The list of possibilities is endless……
The site will tell you the name of the County Record Office or other archive in which these
sources can be viewed. You need to contact the relevant record office and book
an appointment to view.
Research other aspects of your
ancestor’s life more generally using keywords online:
· Places/ Maps
· Occupations
· Religion
· Photographs
· House History
· One-Name Studies
Useful Magazines and Books
· Who Do You Think You Are ? magazine (Who Do You Think You Are Magazine - Who Do You Think You Are Magazine)
· Discover Your Ancestors (Online Periodical) Discover Your Ancestors | Bringing Past Lives to Life
1 Search for relevant book titles at www.amazon.co.uk.
My family history books are:
Ruth A Symes, Unearthing Family Tree Mysteries, Pen and Sword.
2016. [Reprint of an earlier title]
Ruth A Symes, It Runs in the Family: Understanding More About Your
Ancestors, The History Press, 2013
Ruth A Symes, Family First: Tracing Relationships in the Past, Pen
and Sword, 2015
Ruth A Symes, Tracing Ancestors Through Letters and Personal Writings,
Pen and Sword, 2016
Facebook: Search My Ancestry; Family History Flotsam; Family History Gifts
Keywords: British, Britain, UK, England, English, history, family history research, genealogy, genealogical, family tree, who do you think you are?, nineteenth century, twentieth century, relatives, ancestors, ancestry, ancestral, births, marriages, deaths, censuses, certificates, parish records, dummies guide to family history, simple guide to family history, beginners' guide to family history, basic guide to family history
Naomi Symes Books Naomi Symes Books - Women's History and Social History Books. www.naomisymes.com Secure Bookselling Service. Established 1994. Out-of-print, antiquarian and in-print books in the field of women's history and social history. Our On-line Search and Order Service lets you search all titles and order using our fully-automated ordering system with shopping basket facilities. This service is secure (SSL) for credit/debit card transactions and we guarantee rapid delivery of your order, to all destinations worldwide. |
Saturday, 26 August 2023
Finding an Ancestor in the Boot Trade
They Pulled Themselves Up By Their Bootstraps
Charles Terrell: The Bootmaker’s Apprentice
Freeman, Hardy and Willis: A Brief History
My ancestors Charles Terrell and Jack Symes became shop
managers for one of Britain’s most famous and successful shoe retailers. Freeman
Hardy and Willis began in Leicester in 1875 and was incorporated in 1876
(when future bootmaker Charles Terrell would have been just eleven years
old). The founder of the company, Edward Wood, a boot and shoe manufacturer,
named his new enterprise after three of the company’s employees: architect,
Arthur Hardy, factory manager, William
Freeman, and traveller, Charles Willis. The first branch of the retail shoe
business was opened in Wandsworth, London in 1877.
In the early years of the twentieth century, the company
acquired the boot and shoe retailers, Rabbits and Sons Ltd (1903); and The
Kettering Boot and Shoe Company Ltd (1913).
By the time Jack Symes,
started work (just before the First World War), the chain was already well
established. In 1921 (when Jack was demobbed from the Tank Corps and back in
the boot trade), the company had 428 shops.
In 1925,
Freeman, Hardy and Willis acquired the shoe capital of the Leicester
firm Leavesley and North Ltd and by 1927, Jack Symes was manager of a branch of the shop in County Road,
Walton, Liverpool. In 1929, Freeman,
Hardy and Willis was acquired by Sears of Northampton (operating under the brand name of Trueform).
The shops continued to operate under the Freeman, Hardy and Willis
name.
The joint shoe business, (consisting by then of over 900
shops) was acquired in 1955 by the entrepreneur Charles Clore. He added many
other businesses to his conglomerate including more shoe retailers (two of
which were Manfield and Dolcis). The footwear side of the business became
known as the British Shoe Corporation and, with 1,500 shops, soon had over
one quarter of the British footwear market.
Archival papers
relating to Freeman, Hardy and Willis (in its various incarnations) are
described at http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/a2a/records.aspx?cat=056-de2357&cid=2#2 and available to view in the
Leicestershire, Leicester and Rutland Record Office
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