Re: Joseph BENTLEY 1814-1874
Julie
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All the marriages you mention to Ann ELLIS (1835), Mary WESTERMAN (1843) Esther BROWN (1853),? Joseph made a mark. and occupations stubber and clothier for Joseph and father Jonathan for the last two.
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The other Joseph signed his name on his 1853 marriage, occupation shoemaker, father Joseph.
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Have you obtained Ann's 1841 death certificate to check Joseph's occupation?
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Lin
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Re: Joseph BENTLEY 1814-1874
Julie
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There is a baptism of Joseph son of Jonathan and Mary BENTLEY in Woodkirk in 1814. Abode, Morley, father's occupation clothier.
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The tree on Ancestry that I looked at had Joseph son of Joseph and Martha marrying Ann ELLIS in 1835 (as you have) and Hannah ILLINGWORTH in 1853 (father Joseph)
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What I have done in the past is to compare each person, create a time line , check signatures on marriages, occupations etc to make sure I haven't mixed two people up.
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Lin
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Re: Joseph BENTLEY 1814-1874
Thanks for your thoughtful reply, John. I suppose I’m rather naive when it comes to what these documents contain, taking them at face value.
Regards, Julie
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On Aug 25, 2024, at 9:58?PM, John Hanson <john.hanson@...> wrote:
Julie Just because Joseph says that his father was Jonathan doesn’t mean to say that it was.? At that time, you didn’t need to provide any proof He would simply have been asked – who was your father – he might have just answered “Jonathan” and the clerk assumed Bentley Also, there is a possibility that if he was illegitimate and his mother married just after he was born to a Jonathan Bentley then he was possibly brought up thinking that his father the Jonathan. Whilst he died have been buried in the Wesleyan cemetery, he is not likely to have been a Wesleyan in 1853 when he married, or he would not have married by Banns There never was a legal requirement for non-conformist registers to be deposited so many may still be with the church – but which church at the time. Also, they could have been kept by the person performing which ever service and taking with him to the next church! CAN I suspect is going to point you more in the right direction? The problem then might be trying to find the paper trail to match the DNA ? Regards John Hanson FSG? Researching the Halstead/Holstead/Alstead names Researcher, the Halsted Trust -? Research website -? And my own study of FOSKER ? ? I'm trying to determine who the parents of Joseph BENTLEY (1814-1874) are. He was buried at Morley Wesleyan 13 Mar 1874. ? He married Ann ELLIS 1 Feb 1835 in Batley and had two children. She died in 1841. He married Mary WESTERMAN (1820-1851) in 1843, had two children and Esther BROWN (1825-1905) in 1853 and had six more children. In the 1851 census he is married to Mary with their daughter and son and his two children from his marriage with Ann. Lidian (Lydia Ann BENTLEY) is my ancestor. ? I've always thought that Joseph's parents were Jonathan BENTLEY (1787-1859) who married Mary RHODES 14 Feb 1806 in Batley. Certainly his marriages to both Mary WESTERMAN and Esther BROWN indicate Jonathan being his father.? ? What makes me wonder if this is wrong is not having dna matches with others further back when there should be a match. I must have made an error somewhere. ? There are many other families with parents Joseph BENTLEY and Martha FIELD but I'm the only one with Jonathan and Mary. I would appreciate some other eyes looking at this and telling me what they think. ? Julie Kane
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I've been able to prove my MOVERLEY line back to a marriage in the parish of Bramham in 1676. John MOVERLEY appears to have come in from elsewhere as there are no earlier references to the surname in the parish registers and he is not named in either the 1672 or 1674 Hearth Tax lists. The only other MOVERLEYs in evidence at this time were resident in the parish of Kellington about 15 miles to the south but I've yet to find anything that might link him to them. He remains an enigma.
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Re: James SYKES (b circa 1833)
Lin The 1861 census was possibly the worst kept of all the census returns and certainly in the 1950s if you went to the Public Records Office to look at the census you would have been given the original book to look at. ? So, there are many books with missing pages at the beginning and end due to handling and many missing in the middle where they were pulled out. ? I have many families where I can’t find them in 1861 ? Interestingly I checked your Hiram in the GROs own indexes an it has his mothers maiden name as Simpson not Atkinson – I assume he is the one born in Dewsbury RD ? Regards John Hanson FSG Researching the Halstead/Holstead/Alstead names Researcher, the Halsted Trust - Research website - And my own study of FOSKER ?
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From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Lin Duke Sent: Wednesday, August 28, 2024 9:03 PM To: [email protected] Subject: [yorksgen] James SYKES (b circa 1833)? James SYKES (b circa 1833) married Hannah ATKINSON (b 1837), in Castleford in 1857. I cannot find them on1861 census. I would imagine that were some between 1857 and 1862. 1911 census says she had 11 children - (I've found seven of them). 6 living. They had two children I am sure of in Hopton - George Thomas in 1862 (not on GRO but have his baptism) and Hiram b 1864. Both were baptised on the same day in 1864.? James is now William James. Between 1869 and 1872 he appears to be known as Joseph STEAD. Joseph is on 1871 census, 36, coal miner, place of birth not known, Hannah, 28, born Monk Bretton*, George T STEAD, 9, Hiram STEAD and Ernest STEAD. Mary Ellen STEAD daughter of Joseph and Hannah (ATKINSON) was born Court 13 Shambles St in 1872. When she married in 1895 her surname is SYKES, father James SYKES (deceased). Witnesses were Hiram and Annie SYKES James SYKES died 6 June 1875 at Court 13 Shambles St, Barnsley. Hannah was the informant. *Hannah was baptised in Wragby, Yorkshire in 1837, daughter of George and Anne . On 1871-1911 censuses she gives her birth place as Monk Bretton. Yorkshire]. Hannah SYKES married George ROLLINGS in 1877. In 1917 Hannah was murdered by her daughter Annie STEAD. Any help in locating them in 1861 would be gratefully received.
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Some of Yorkshire's Court Records and Archives Go Online
From Eastman's Online Genealogy Newsletter,
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Barnsley's borough archives have been made available on family history website Ancestry...
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It is the first time the material has been accessible digitally and means researchers no longer have to visit the archives in person.
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It is hoped the records will provide "a rich source of information" and "a fascinating glimpse" into the lives and struggles of ordinary people.
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The Barnsley Archives and Local Studies [] service supplied 100,000 entries from baptism, marriage and burial registers to Ancestry, as well as transcriptions of more than a million cases heard in Barnsley Magistrates' Court between 1841 and 1923.
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The two databases were collated and can now be viewed by Ancestry users worldwide.
?
The parish registers include more than 100 different churches and chapels that existed across the Barnsley area.
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The colourful court records detail the petty criminals charged over matters such as theft, poaching and drunkenness.
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The archives were previously only available to browse at Barnsley Town Hall.
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James SYKES (b circa 1833)
James SYKES (b circa 1833) married Hannah ATKINSON (b 1837), in Castleford in 1857. I cannot find them on1861 census.
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I would imagine that were some between 1857 and 1862. 1911 census says she had 11 children - (I've found seven of them). 6 living.
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They had two children I am sure of in Hopton - George Thomas in 1862 (not on GRO but have his baptism) and Hiram b 1864. Both were baptised on the same day in 1864.? James is now William James.
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Between 1869 and 1872 he appears to be known as Joseph STEAD. Joseph is on 1871 census, 36, coal miner, place of birth not known, Hannah, 28, born Monk Bretton*, George T STEAD, 9, Hiram STEAD and Ernest STEAD.
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Mary Ellen STEAD daughter of Joseph and Hannah (ATKINSON) was born Court 13 Shambles St in 1872. When she married in 1895 her surname is SYKES, father James SYKES (deceased). Witnesses were Hiram and Annie SYKES
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James SYKES died 6 June 1875 at Court 13 Shambles St, Barnsley. Hannah was the informant.
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*Hannah was baptised in Wragby, Yorkshire in 1837, daughter of George and Anne . On 1871-1911 censuses she gives her birth place as Monk Bretton. Yorkshire].
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Hannah SYKES married George ROLLINGS in 1877.
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In 1917 Hannah was murdered by her daughter Annie STEAD.
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Any help in locating them in 1861 would be gratefully received.
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Lin
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?
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Re: Thomas FLETCHER born 1756 Yorkshire
John
?I came across another baptism record years ago that was just as informative but I hadn't realised it was in a Dade register. I am finding that most registers of this time give very bare information. What a pity there weren't more Dade registers! At the moment I would be glad to find bare facts for Thomas b 1756
Margaret
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On Tue, Aug 27, 2024 at 5:53?PM John Hanson via <john.hanson= [email protected]> wrote:
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Margaret
You will not find a baptism register entry like that for Thomas born in 1756 – likely to have father but not the mother
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That register in 1782 is in format known as “Dade registers” common in the North Yorkshire/Durham area between 1780 and 1812.
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Regards
John Hanson FSG
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I am reading this book (see below)
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I thought I would mention Evelyn (Eve) APPLEYARD
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She was the second wife of Joe HOBBS who owned several distilleries, the Great Glen Cattle Ranch and Inverlochy Castle Hotel.
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She was born in Bawtry, near Doncaster, in 1900.? So I thought she might be of interest to someone here.
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She was the elder of two daughters of George Henry (Harry) SNOW, a coachman and his wife Flora.? They moved to London before the 1911 Census, with Harry still working as a coachman and living in Kensington.? She travelled back and forth between England, Scotland and Canada.
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There is more in the book and probably online.
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Not Your Average Joe
A Biography of Joseph William Hobbs (1891–1963), Whisky Entrepreneur
Released: 28th August, 2024Format: Paperback, eBook
ISBN: 9781805144250
eISBN: 9781836286417
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Matching Person details
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Spouse
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Mabel Della Bush
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Father
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Joseph William Hobbs
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Mother
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Elizabeth Jane Morgan
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Children
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Mabel Patricia
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Birth
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29 Jan 1891 Kingsclere, Hampshire, England
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Death
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19 Aug 1963 Inverlochy, Inverness-shire, Scotland
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Residence
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1935 Aldford, Cheshire, England
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?
?
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Martin Briscoe
martin@...
Fort William
Ancestry DNA, FTDNA (B68554), GEDMatch (A374507), MyHeritage MH-4MN878
?
?
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Re: Thomas FLETCHER born 1756 Yorkshire
Margaret You will not find a baptism register entry like that for Thomas born in 1756 – likely to have father but not the mother ? That register in 1782 is in format known as “Dade registers” common in the North Yorkshire/Durham area between 1780 and 1812. ? Regards John Hanson FSG Researching the Halstead/Holstead/Alstead names Researcher, the Halsted Trust - Research website - And my own study of FOSKER ? ?
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From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Margaret Shearing Sent: Monday, August 26, 2024 2:24 PM To: [email protected] Subject: [yorksgen] Thomas FLETCHER born 1756 Yorkshire? Hi I would welcome your thoughts in finding Thomas FLETCHER’s baptism in 1756. Below is what I know: When I found the baptism for my 4x Gt Grandfather Thomas FLETCHER bap 1782 at Sherburn in Elmet, Yorks. it contained such a lot of ancestral information below: ‘Thomas 2nd son of Thomas of Bishop-dikeside Labourer son of William of Barlow farmer by Mary his wife, daughter of ….. (presumably unknown to the registrar) Mary daughter of John Dent of Little Fenton farmer by Ann his wife daughter of Joseph Jaqueman of Bramham - Gardener Born Sunday 27th January 1782? Baptised Monday 11th 贵别产谤耻补谤测’ ? I found his parent’s marriage: Thomas FLETCHER of Birchin (Birkin?) & Mary DENT of Sherburn (in Elmet) married 30 Jan 1778 by Licence with consent of parents. ? Knowing that Thomas’ father was William I searched for a baptism for Thomas. I could not find an obvious baptism for Thomas about 1756. There was one baptism for Thomas whose father was William, 21 Feb 1722 Sherburn in Elmet. Rather early I think. Thomas would have been an older man when he married Mary DENT who needed her parent’s consent to marry. It is possible that Mary was Thomas’ 2nd wife. Of course, he could have required looking after later in life and Mary may have been his ‘housekeeper’ but Mary gave birth to Thomas Jnr in 1782. ? I found several baptisms around 1753-1761 with father William. One included mother Mary at Lythe. 17 Feb 1760. The others were in Birstall, Ecclesfield, Luddenden, Barnsley. Yesterday, Ancestry came up with 1758 Rothwell , father Robert. Today it is suggesting William FLETCHER & Mary THRESH are his parents and they married 21 Nov 1742 Wm bap either 1718 Brayton OR 12 Oct 1718 Sherburn in Elmet, Yorks. ? I found Thomas Snr on the 1841 census living with a son Matthew and his grandchildren. So I then found a baptism for Matthew. Another breakthrough as it gave the same details of his ancestry matching his brother Thomas Jnr bap 1782. Then I found another 9 bap for Thomas & Mary DENT. So I had found the correct Thomas in 1841 which meant I found a death record for him. Thanks to digital GRO records I had both Thomas & Mary’s death records within minutes! From his death & burial records I am certain that Thomas was definitely born in 1756. I would welcome thoughts in finding his baptism in 1756. ? Thinking about possible parents of Thomas Snr: William FLETCHER & Mary THRESH married 21 Nov 1742. Their burials are at Brayton.? Wm was a farmer of Barlow, as also mentioned in Thomas Jnr ’s bap. ??and Mary was wife of Wm of BARLOW, farmer & dau of Wm THRESH. BUT still I cannot find a bap for Thomas 1756. I did find 2 bap at Wessell with Wm as father 1752 & 1748. ? Since the burials match the info to bap of grandson Thomas Jnr 1782 I think I have found the correct Wm & Mary BUT no evidence of their children OR more importantly Thomas. ? Margaret?
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Thomas FLETCHER born 1756 Yorkshire
Hi
I would welcome your thoughts in finding Thomas FLETCHER’s baptism in 1756. Below is what I know:
When I found the baptism for my 4x Gt Grandfather Thomas FLETCHER bap 1782 at Sherburn in Elmet, Yorks. it contained such a lot of ancestral information below:
‘Thomas 2nd son of Thomas of Bishop-dikeside Labourer son of William of Barlow farmer by Mary his wife, daughter of ….. (presumably unknown to the registrar)
Mary daughter of John Dent of Little Fenton farmer by Ann his wife daughter of Joseph Jaqueman of Bramham - Gardener
Born Sunday 27th January 1782? Baptised Monday 11th 贵别产谤耻补谤测’
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I found his parent’s marriage: Thomas FLETCHER of Birchin (Birkin?) & Mary DENT of Sherburn (in Elmet) married 30 Jan 1778 by Licence with consent of parents.
?
Knowing that Thomas’ father was William I searched for a baptism for Thomas. I could not find an obvious baptism for Thomas about 1756. There was one baptism for Thomas whose father was William, 21 Feb 1722 Sherburn in Elmet. Rather early I think. Thomas would have been an older man when he married Mary DENT who needed her parent’s consent to marry. It is possible that Mary was Thomas’ 2nd wife. Of course, he could have required looking after later in life and Mary may have been his ‘housekeeper’ but Mary gave birth to Thomas Jnr in 1782.
?
I found several baptisms around 1753-1761 with father William. One included mother Mary at Lythe. 17 Feb 1760. The others were in Birstall, Ecclesfield, Luddenden, Barnsley. Yesterday, Ancestry came up with 1758 Rothwell , father Robert. Today it is suggesting William FLETCHER & Mary THRESH are his parents and they married 21 Nov 1742
Wm bap either 1718 Brayton OR 12 Oct 1718 Sherburn in Elmet, Yorks.
?
I found Thomas Snr on the 1841 census living with a son Matthew and his grandchildren. So I then found a baptism for Matthew. Another breakthrough as it gave the same details of his ancestry matching his brother Thomas Jnr bap 1782. Then I found another 9 bap for Thomas & Mary DENT. So I had found the correct Thomas in 1841 which meant I found a death record for him. Thanks to digital GRO records I had both Thomas & Mary’s death records within minutes! From his death & burial records I am certain that Thomas was definitely born in 1756.
I would welcome thoughts in finding his baptism in 1756.
?
Thinking about possible parents of Thomas Snr: William FLETCHER & Mary THRESH married 21 Nov 1742. Their burials are at Brayton.? Wm was a farmer of Barlow, as also mentioned in Thomas Jnr ’s bap. ??and Mary was wife of Wm of BARLOW, farmer & dau of Wm THRESH. BUT still I cannot find a bap for Thomas 1756. I did find 2 bap at Wessell with Wm as father 1752 & 1748.
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Since the burials match the info to bap of grandson Thomas Jnr 1782 I think I have found the correct Wm & Mary BUT no evidence of their children OR more importantly Thomas.
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Margaret?
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Re: Joseph BENTLEY 1814-1874
Julie Just because Joseph says that his father was Jonathan doesn’t mean to say that it was. At that time, you didn’t need to provide any proof He would simply have been asked – who was your father – he might have just answered “Jonathan” and the clerk assumed Bentley Also, there is a possibility that if he was illegitimate and his mother married just after he was born to a Jonathan Bentley then he was possibly brought up thinking that his father the Jonathan. Whilst he died have been buried in the Wesleyan cemetery, he is not likely to have been a Wesleyan in 1853 when he married, or he would not have married by Banns There never was a legal requirement for non-conformist registers to be deposited so many may still be with the church – but which church at the time. Also, they could have been kept by the person performing which ever service and taking with him to the next church! CAN I suspect is going to point you more in the right direction The problem then might be trying to find the paper trail to match the DNA ? Regards John Hanson FSG Researching the Halstead/Holstead/Alstead names Researcher, the Halsted Trust - Research website - And my own study of FOSKER ?
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From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On Behalf Of Julie Kane via groups.io Sent: Sunday, August 25, 2024 6:18 PM To: [email protected] Subject: [yorksgen] Joseph BENTLEY 1814-1874? I'm trying to determine who the parents of Joseph BENTLEY (1814-1874) are. He was buried at Morley Wesleyan 13 Mar 1874. ? He married Ann ELLIS 1 Feb 1835 in Batley and had two children. She died in 1841. He married Mary WESTERMAN (1820-1851) in 1843, had two children and Esther BROWN (1825-1905) in 1853 and had six more children. In the 1851 census he is married to Mary with their daughter and son and his two children from his marriage with Ann. Lidian (Lydia Ann BENTLEY) is my ancestor. ? I've always thought that Joseph's parents were Jonathan BENTLEY (1787-1859) who married Mary RHODES 14 Feb 1806 in Batley. Certainly his marriages to both Mary WESTERMAN and Esther BROWN indicate Jonathan being his father.? ? What makes me wonder if this is wrong is not having dna matches with others further back when there should be a match. I must have made an error somewhere. ? There are many other families with parents Joseph BENTLEY and Martha FIELD but I'm the only one with Jonathan and Mary. I would appreciate some other eyes looking at this and telling me what they think. ? Julie Kane
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Thank you Lin thought that might be the case
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On 25 Aug 2024, at 1:28?PM, Maureen Farrer via groups.io <maureenfarrer71@...> wrote:
?Chris I agree with you it is probably as mistake by the transcriber. I tried to get the digital copy but said unavailable so will try again in a day as that happened a few days go for another death certificate and then when I retried a few days later I could get it, if not will get the pdf for ?8. Our exchange rate is so bad. Do you think that her children wouldn’t be registered in the deaths or maybe went their own way. Was interesting to read about the Friends Burial ground. Shame there is no headstones left. Came across a short YouTube on it.
Agains thanks for your invaluable information
Maureen
On 25 Aug 2024, at 5:10?AM, Chris Pitt Lewis via groups.io <chris@...> wrote:
Maureen
I am lucky enough to have many years of the Annual Monitor on my bookshelves so I can check the original printed copy. It says Widow of John Farrar. If FMP's transcript says Thomas, it must be a mistake by the transcriber.
If you want to double check, there should be an original "burial note" in the Brighouse MM records in Leeds University Library which would be the source of the Annual Monitor entry. Easier to obtain, however, would be a digital copy of her civil death registration (more detail than the index entry I quoted), which you should be able to order for 3 pounds starting at the index search page here (you may need to register on the site first):
Chris Pitt Lewis
On 24/08/2024 02:37, Maureen Farrer wrote:
Hi Chris,
I found the record for Hannah’s death in the Quaker Monitor Annual, but when you look on FMP script of the record it says widow of Thomas Farrar, but in the Monitor it says John Farrar ?
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I'm trying to determine who the parents of Joseph BENTLEY (1814-1874) are. He was buried at Morley Wesleyan 13 Mar 1874.
?
He married Ann ELLIS 1 Feb 1835 in Batley and had two children. She died in 1841. He married Mary WESTERMAN (1820-1851) in 1843, had two children and Esther BROWN (1825-1905) in 1853 and had six more children. In the 1851 census he is married to Mary with their daughter and son and his two children from his marriage with Ann. Lidian (Lydia Ann BENTLEY) is my ancestor.
?
I've always thought that Joseph's parents were Jonathan BENTLEY (1787-1859) who married Mary RHODES 14 Feb 1806 in Batley. Certainly his marriages to both Mary WESTERMAN and Esther BROWN indicate Jonathan being his father.?
?
What makes me wonder if this is wrong is not having dna matches with others further back when there should be a match. I must have made an error somewhere.
?
There are many other families with parents Joseph BENTLEY and Martha FIELD but I'm the only one with Jonathan and Mary. I would appreciate some other eyes looking at this and telling me what they think.
?
Julie Kane
|
?
Chris I agree with you it is probably as mistake by the transcriber.
I tried to get the digital copy but said unavailable so will try again in a day as that happened a few days go for another death certificate and then when I retried a few days later I could get it, if not will get the pdf for ?8. Our exchange rate is so bad.
Do you think that her children wouldn’t be registered in the deaths or maybe went their own way.
Was interesting to read about the Friends Burial ground. Shame there is no headstones left. Came across a short YouTube on it.
?
Agains thanks for your invaluable information?
?
Maureen
?
?
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On 25 Aug 2024, at 5:10?AM, Chris Pitt Lewis via groups.io <chris@...> wrote:
Maureen
I am lucky enough to have many years of the Annual Monitor on my bookshelves so I can check the original printed copy. It says Widow of John Farrar. If FMP's transcript says Thomas, it must be a mistake by the transcriber.
If you want to double check, there should be an original "burial note" in the Brighouse MM records in Leeds University Library which would be the source of the Annual Monitor entry. Easier to obtain, however, would be a digital copy of her civil death registration (more detail than the index entry I quoted), which you should be able to order for 3 pounds starting at the index search page here (you may need to register on the site first):
Chris Pitt Lewis
On 24/08/2024 02:37, Maureen Farrer wrote:
Hi Chris,
?
I found the record for Hannah’s death in the Quaker Monitor Annual, but when you look on FMP script of the record it says widow of Thomas Farrar, but in the Monitor it
says John Farrar ?
?
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The transcript on FMP is wrong. The image clearly says John.
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I have put in a correction to FMP.
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Lin
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Maureen
I am lucky enough to have many years of the Annual Monitor on my
bookshelves so I can check the original printed copy. It says
Widow of John Farrar. If FMP's transcript says Thomas, it must be
a mistake by the transcriber.
If you want to double check, there should be an original "burial
note" in the Brighouse MM records in Leeds University Library
which would be the source of the Annual Monitor entry. Easier to
obtain, however, would be a digital copy of her civil death
registration (more detail than the index entry I quoted), which
you should be able to order for 3 pounds starting at the index
search page here (you may need to register on the site first):
Chris Pitt Lewis
On 24/08/2024 02:37, Maureen Farrer
wrote:
toggle quoted message
Show quoted text
Hi Chris,
I found the record for Hannah’s death in the Quaker Monitor
Annual, but when you look on FMP script of the record it says
widow of Thomas Farrar, but in the Monitor it
says John Farrar ?
Maureen
On 23 Aug 2024, at 8:34?PM, Chris Pitt Lewis via
groups.io <chris@...> wrote:
There is a death on 12 August 1854 which might be
hers:
GRO index: Hannah Farrar, 82, September Quarter
1854, Bradford and North Bierley RD 9b 60.
Despite the age discrepancy, this must be the same
person as the following entry in the Annual Monitor
(see below) 1855, page 47:
"Hannah Farrar, Bradford, [age] 86, [date of death]
8mo 12 1854, Widow of John Farrar".
To summarise the availability of Quaker (Society of
Friends) records in England and Wales:
Almost all Quaker registers of births, marriages
and burials up to 1837 (which are mostly very well
kept and informative, though there are gaps in some
meetings) were surrendered to the Registrar General
in 1841, and a few more in 1857, like other
non-conformist registers. The originals are now in
the National Archives, but digital images are
available and can be searched on Ancestry,
FindMyPast and TheGenealogist websites.
Before they surrendered them, Quakers made a
"Digest", essentially a detailed tabular summary, of
the entries. Before the originals were put on line
earlier this century, these digests were the usual
way of accessing the registers, but they are now
largely superceded.? What you found listed in West
Yorkshire Archives is, I think, a copy of the Digest
relating to the area of Pontefract Monthly Meeting,
or possibly the whole of Yorkshire. It is very
unlikely to tell you anything that you will not find
on one of the 3 websites mentioned.
After the introduction of civil registration in
1837, Quakers continued to keep birth marriage and
burial records. For marriages, they continued, as
before 1837, to be able to legally celebrate
marriages in their meetings, but their registers
were now part of civil registration system - the
Meeting's registrar made quarterly returns to the
local Superintendent registrar, so the marriages
will be in the GRO indexes. They regarded the civil
system as fulfilling their requirement to register
births and deaths. However, they continued to keep
birth and burial "notes" for the purpose of keeping
their membership records up to date, but ceased to
do this in the mid 20th century, except for the
purpose of recording burials in their burial
grounds.? These post 1837 records are held with
monthly meeting records, usually in a relevant
county record office, though those for most of
Yorkshire (including Bradford) are in the Brotherton
Library at the University of Leeds. Very few of
these records are online. There is also a national
digest of post 1837 births marriages and burials
held at Friends House Library in London - this is
not online.
For Quaker deaths 1813 to 1920 there is a wonderful
publication called the "Annual Monitor", recording
deaths of Friends in the previous year. It is pretty
much comprehensive from about 1840 onwards, but only
records those who were in formal membership of the
Society of Friends when they died. You can search it
online on FindMyPast in a collection called "Quaker
Deaths 1810-1918".
The marriage of John and Hannah took place in
Ilkley Parish Church. If Hannah was a Quaker at the
time, she will have been "disowned", that is,
deprived of her formal membership of the Society of
Friends, as aresult. There would be a record of this
in the Minutes of the Monthly Meeting to which she
belonged, which would have been Knaresborough MM, in
the months after the marriage. These minutes are
also in the Brotherton Library in the University of
Leeds. Being dosowned did not prevent her continuing
to attend Quaker meetings for worship, if she wanted
to. This is what probably happened, as the births of
the children were registered by Brighouse MM (which
included Bradford). The birth note for the eldest
(Ann) indeed says "Parents not in Membership" - I
have not checked the others. You could also check
whether the burial note of John states that he? was
not a member. It is possible that Hannah was
subsequently readmitted to membership if it is her
death that is recorded in the Annual Membership. The
record of this will be in the Minutes of Brighouse
MM but the quickest way to find out when would be to
look at the List of Members of Brighouse MM for
1839-54. Also in Leeds University library - the
(possibly out of date) reference I have for the list
is CH M 2.
Hope this helps
Chris Pitt Lewis
On 23/08/2024 05:30,
Maureen Farrer wrote:
Yes unfortunately no death for her. Have written off
to Leeds University Library to see what they could
do.
On 23 Aug 2024, at 5:04?AM, Lin Duke via
groups.io <dml5481@...>
wrote:
Hannah's birth in 1771:
?
John and Hannah's marriage - All Saints,
Ilkley 1798 (v faint image)
?
Transcript of Marriage Licence
?
Bishop's Transcript image of marriage
entry
?
Lin
?
On Wed, Aug 21, 2024 at 08:19 PM, Maureen
Farrer wrote:
Hi listers,
?
I live in Australia and would like to
search the??registers for
births (1641-1837), marriages
(1650-1836), and deaths (1656-1837).
for
the Brighouse
Quakers, but as they are held in West
Yorkshire archives, makes it
impossible for me to search.
I am interested in
finding a Hannah HOLMES born in 1771
to Joseph and Magdalene. ?She married
John FARRER in 1798 in Ilkley but
not sure where it
took place. I have all their children
and her husband death being registered
in Bradford Quakers.
|
Dear Chris,
Thank you for your very informative email. How wonderful for you to be able to find all that information which is easy if you live in UK. ?Unlike us poor Aussies who have to rely on things that are online and unfortunately I havent found a lot online to do with the Quakers. ?I have found that all the children were listed in Brighouse and John’s death was but says he wasnt a member.
Will certainly read your info slowly and sure I will find things that I havent found before.
Regards Maureen
toggle quoted message
Show quoted text
On 23 Aug 2024, at 8:34?PM, Chris Pitt Lewis via groups.io <chris@...> wrote:
There is a death on 12 August 1854 which might be hers: GRO index: Hannah Farrar, 82, September Quarter 1854, Bradford
and North Bierley RD 9b 60.
Despite the age discrepancy, this must be the same person as the
following entry in the Annual Monitor (see below) 1855, page 47:
"Hannah Farrar, Bradford, [age] 86, [date of death] 8mo 12 1854,
Widow of John Farrar". To summarise the availability of Quaker (Society of Friends)
records in England and Wales: Almost all Quaker registers of births, marriages and burials up
to 1837 (which are mostly very well kept and informative, though
there are gaps in some meetings) were surrendered to the Registrar
General in 1841, and a few more in 1857, like other non-conformist
registers. The originals are now in the National Archives, but
digital images are available and can be searched on Ancestry,
FindMyPast and TheGenealogist websites.
Before they surrendered them, Quakers made a "Digest",
essentially a detailed tabular summary, of the entries. Before the
originals were put on line earlier this century, these digests
were the usual way of accessing the registers, but they are now
largely superceded.? What you found listed in West Yorkshire
Archives is, I think, a copy of the Digest relating to the area of
Pontefract Monthly Meeting, or possibly the whole of Yorkshire. It
is very unlikely to tell you anything that you will not find on
one of the 3 websites mentioned. After the introduction of civil registration in 1837, Quakers
continued to keep birth marriage and burial records. For
marriages, they continued, as before 1837, to be able to legally
celebrate marriages in their meetings, but their registers were
now part of civil registration system - the Meeting's registrar
made quarterly returns to the local Superintendent registrar, so
the marriages will be in the GRO indexes. They regarded the civil
system as fulfilling their requirement to register births and
deaths. However, they continued to keep birth and burial "notes"
for the purpose of keeping their membership records up to date,
but ceased to do this in the mid 20th century, except for the
purpose of recording burials in their burial grounds.? These post
1837 records are held with monthly meeting records, usually in a
relevant county record office, though those for most of Yorkshire
(including Bradford) are in the Brotherton Library at the
University of Leeds. Very few of these records are online. There
is also a national digest of post 1837 births marriages and
burials held at Friends House Library in London - this is not
online. For Quaker deaths 1813 to 1920 there is a wonderful publication
called the "Annual Monitor", recording deaths of Friends in the
previous year. It is pretty much comprehensive from about 1840
onwards, but only records those who were in formal membership of
the Society of Friends when they died. You can search it online on
FindMyPast in a collection called "Quaker Deaths 1810-1918". The marriage of John and Hannah took place in Ilkley Parish
Church. If Hannah was a Quaker at the time, she will have been
"disowned", that is, deprived of her formal membership of the
Society of Friends, as aresult. There would be a record of this in
the Minutes of the Monthly Meeting to which she belonged, which
would have been Knaresborough MM, in the months after the
marriage. These minutes are also in the Brotherton Library in the
University of Leeds. Being dosowned did not prevent her continuing
to attend Quaker meetings for worship, if she wanted to. This is
what probably happened, as the births of the children were
registered by Brighouse MM (which included Bradford). The birth
note for the eldest (Ann) indeed says "Parents not in Membership"
- I have not checked the others. You could also check whether the
burial note of John states that he? was not a member. It is
possible that Hannah was subsequently readmitted to membership if
it is her death that is recorded in the Annual Membership. The
record of this will be in the Minutes of Brighouse MM but the
quickest way to find out when would be to look at the List of
Members of Brighouse MM for 1839-54. Also in Leeds University
library - the (possibly out of date) reference I have for the list
is CH M 2.
Hope this helps
Chris Pitt Lewis
On 23/08/2024 05:30, Maureen Farrer
wrote:
Yes unfortunately no death for her. Have written off to Leeds
University Library to see what they could do.
On 23 Aug 2024, at 5:04?AM, Lin Duke via groups.io
<dml5481@...> wrote:
Hannah's birth in 1771:
?
John and Hannah's marriage - All Saints, Ilkley 1798 (v
faint image)
?
Transcript of Marriage Licence
?
Bishop's Transcript image of marriage entry
?
Lin
?
On Wed, Aug 21, 2024 at 08:19 PM, Maureen Farrer wrote:
Hi listers,
?
I live in Australia and would like to search the??registers
for births (1641-1837), marriages (1650-1836), and
deaths (1656-1837). for
the
Brighouse Quakers, but as they are held in West
Yorkshire archives, makes it impossible for me to
search.
I
am interested in finding a Hannah HOLMES born in
1771 to Joseph and Magdalene. ?She married John
FARRER in 1798 in Ilkley but
not
sure where it took place. I have all their children
and her husband death being registered in Bradford
Quakers.
|
Hi Chris,
I found the record for Hannah’s death in the Quaker Monitor Annual, but when you look on FMP script of the record it says widow of Thomas Farrar, but in the Monitor it says John Farrar ?
Maureen
toggle quoted message
Show quoted text
On 23 Aug 2024, at 8:34?PM, Chris Pitt Lewis via groups.io <chris@...> wrote:
There is a death on 12 August 1854 which might be hers: GRO index: Hannah Farrar, 82, September Quarter 1854, Bradford
and North Bierley RD 9b 60.
Despite the age discrepancy, this must be the same person as the
following entry in the Annual Monitor (see below) 1855, page 47:
"Hannah Farrar, Bradford, [age] 86, [date of death] 8mo 12 1854,
Widow of John Farrar". To summarise the availability of Quaker (Society of Friends)
records in England and Wales: Almost all Quaker registers of births, marriages and burials up
to 1837 (which are mostly very well kept and informative, though
there are gaps in some meetings) were surrendered to the Registrar
General in 1841, and a few more in 1857, like other non-conformist
registers. The originals are now in the National Archives, but
digital images are available and can be searched on Ancestry,
FindMyPast and TheGenealogist websites.
Before they surrendered them, Quakers made a "Digest",
essentially a detailed tabular summary, of the entries. Before the
originals were put on line earlier this century, these digests
were the usual way of accessing the registers, but they are now
largely superceded.? What you found listed in West Yorkshire
Archives is, I think, a copy of the Digest relating to the area of
Pontefract Monthly Meeting, or possibly the whole of Yorkshire. It
is very unlikely to tell you anything that you will not find on
one of the 3 websites mentioned. After the introduction of civil registration in 1837, Quakers
continued to keep birth marriage and burial records. For
marriages, they continued, as before 1837, to be able to legally
celebrate marriages in their meetings, but their registers were
now part of civil registration system - the Meeting's registrar
made quarterly returns to the local Superintendent registrar, so
the marriages will be in the GRO indexes. They regarded the civil
system as fulfilling their requirement to register births and
deaths. However, they continued to keep birth and burial "notes"
for the purpose of keeping their membership records up to date,
but ceased to do this in the mid 20th century, except for the
purpose of recording burials in their burial grounds.? These post
1837 records are held with monthly meeting records, usually in a
relevant county record office, though those for most of Yorkshire
(including Bradford) are in the Brotherton Library at the
University of Leeds. Very few of these records are online. There
is also a national digest of post 1837 births marriages and
burials held at Friends House Library in London - this is not
online. For Quaker deaths 1813 to 1920 there is a wonderful publication
called the "Annual Monitor", recording deaths of Friends in the
previous year. It is pretty much comprehensive from about 1840
onwards, but only records those who were in formal membership of
the Society of Friends when they died. You can search it online on
FindMyPast in a collection called "Quaker Deaths 1810-1918". The marriage of John and Hannah took place in Ilkley Parish
Church. If Hannah was a Quaker at the time, she will have been
"disowned", that is, deprived of her formal membership of the
Society of Friends, as aresult. There would be a record of this in
the Minutes of the Monthly Meeting to which she belonged, which
would have been Knaresborough MM, in the months after the
marriage. These minutes are also in the Brotherton Library in the
University of Leeds. Being dosowned did not prevent her continuing
to attend Quaker meetings for worship, if she wanted to. This is
what probably happened, as the births of the children were
registered by Brighouse MM (which included Bradford). The birth
note for the eldest (Ann) indeed says "Parents not in Membership"
- I have not checked the others. You could also check whether the
burial note of John states that he? was not a member. It is
possible that Hannah was subsequently readmitted to membership if
it is her death that is recorded in the Annual Membership. The
record of this will be in the Minutes of Brighouse MM but the
quickest way to find out when would be to look at the List of
Members of Brighouse MM for 1839-54. Also in Leeds University
library - the (possibly out of date) reference I have for the list
is CH M 2.
Hope this helps
Chris Pitt Lewis
On 23/08/2024 05:30, Maureen Farrer
wrote:
Yes unfortunately no death for her. Have written off to Leeds
University Library to see what they could do.
On 23 Aug 2024, at 5:04?AM, Lin Duke via groups.io
<dml5481@...> wrote:
Hannah's birth in 1771:
?
John and Hannah's marriage - All Saints, Ilkley 1798 (v
faint image)
?
Transcript of Marriage Licence
?
Bishop's Transcript image of marriage entry
?
Lin
?
On Wed, Aug 21, 2024 at 08:19 PM, Maureen Farrer wrote:
Hi listers,
?
I live in Australia and would like to search the??registers
for births (1641-1837), marriages (1650-1836), and
deaths (1656-1837). for
the
Brighouse Quakers, but as they are held in West
Yorkshire archives, makes it impossible for me to
search.
I
am interested in finding a Hannah HOLMES born in
1771 to Joseph and Magdalene. ?She married John
FARRER in 1798 in Ilkley but
not
sure where it took place. I have all their children
and her husband death being registered in Bradford
Quakers.
|