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LANCASHIRE FAMILY HISTORY AND HERALDRY SOCIETY
Rossendale Branch Newsletter October 2004
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Programme: 2004 |
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Wednesday 6th October
Slides of old Rossendale. Harry O’Neil |
Wednesday 3rd November
Short talks by members.
Another chance for those of you unable to bring your
heirloom in April.. |
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Wednesday 1st December
Christmas Celebrations |
January 2005
To be announced |
Coming Events
Saturday 9th
October 2004 Rawtenstall Library - Family History Workshop
Drop-in between
10am & 3pm. Help and advice in tracing your family tree - free.
Refreshments.
Saturday 16th
October 2004 Advice and Research into tracing Irish Ancestry here
and in Ireland
Venue The Resource
Centre, 2 The Straits, Oswaldtwistle, Lancs. BB5 3LU 1 pm to 4.30 pm
Full details are
given in the Irish Ancestry Group's Branch News and programme
section of the recent August issue of the Society's Journal.
Enquiries/bookings
to Margaret Purcell, 128 Red Bank Rd., Bispham, Blackpool, Lancs.,
FY2 9DZ. Tel 01253 353909 E-mail Margaret Purcell -
mpurcell@redbankmp.fsnet.co.uk
Thursday 21st
October; Tuesday 2nd November; Thursday 18th November 2004
Lancashire Record
Office. 2.00pm - 3.30pm
Family History
Online: An introduction to Web Resources. These sessions are free,
please call the Record Office and book 01772 533039.
Rossendale Census
Indexes
1851 Census.
Continuing this series from last month
This census is
available in booklet form. It covers surnames and folio numbers
only.
HO 107/2247 Vol.
24. - Whitworth. This is an area you might easily overlook. It
covers that part of Bacup which falls within the Ancient Parish and
Registration area of Rochdale. It also covers the area to the east
of Cowpe and south of Newchurch. So if you can’t find your
Stacksteads/Bacup ancestors, try here.
HO 107/2248 Vol. 30
- Newchurch. This very large Township lies to the north of the road
from Rawtenstall to Bacup. It includes Deadwen Clough (with the
Hamlet of Cloughfold and Newchurch Village; Wolfenden and Tunstead
Booths with the hamlets of Waterfoot, Booth Fold and Tunstead; That
part of Bacup and Stacksteads which came within Haslingden
Registration area.
HO 107/2249 Vol. 31
- Rossendale and Edenfield.
"Rossendale"
includes the Townships of Higher Booths (Crawshaw Booth and Goodshaw
Booth); Lower Booths includes Oakenhead Wood, and Rawtenstall
"Edenfield" is actually Tottington Higher End. A part of the ancient
parish of Bury which is in Haslingden Registration area. It covers
the hamlets of Stubbins, Chatterton and Irwell Vale together with
the village of Edenfield.
HO 107/2250 Vol. 32
- Haslingden and Accrington. This volume covers Haslingden,
including Grane, Henheads, Stonefold and Rising Bridge and also the
areas known as Old Accrington and New Accrington.
Haslingden World
War II - Book of Remembrance
Haslingden
historian William (Bill) Taylor has almost completed his new book,
which lists 99 Haslingden men known to have been killed during World
War II. There are no names on Haslingden’s impressive war memorial
in Greenfield Park.
Mr Turner has
collated his list from official sources, from local newspapers and
from individual church and chapel war memorials. He has collected
details about these men, their families and where they died etc.
However he is left
with four men who remain just names. These are:
Richard Ashworth -
St. James’ Church
James Clarke - St.
James’ Church
Albert Davies - St.
Peter’s (Laneside) Church
Laurence W.
Entwistle - Ebenezer Baptist Chapel.
If you have any
idea who these men were, then please
write to Mr. Turner
at 53 Bamford Crescent, Accrington BB5 2PQ or you can email me and I
will pass on the details.
Rossendale
Ancestry
Tattersall/
Greenwood/ Ashworth
Erie Matthews has
just joined the society . Writing from Canada she tells me that her
husband’s maternal grandfather was John Henry Tattersall. He was
born at Union Street, Bacup, 22 August 1854. His parents were John
Tattersall and Sarah Greenwood.
John Tattersall was
living in Union Square prior to his marriage to Sarah. He was living
with his mother Mary, aged 51. She was given as born Blackburn. Her
son John was given as aged 21, a factory worker. I was amused to see
that the enumerator had written "born in this house." The rest of
the family were indicated by this "helpful" enumerator only by their
initials A (Abraham) 16; I (Isaac) 14; J(Jacob) 10. There was also a
son-in-law Harrison Haworth (who turned out to be Hargreaves
Haworth) 26, his wife Susanna 26 and their daughter Eliza aged 6.
The family were
listed in 1841 at Bacup HO509/12. The names were given in full.
There was an additional child Ashworth aged 18. John, senior was 50,
his wife Mary aged 42, John junior was 12.
The 1861 census
gives John Tattersall, aged 31, a cotton weaver, his wife Sarah aged
29, a charwoman, his brothers Isaac, 23 ad Jacob 20, also cotton
weavers. John and Sarah had only one child listed John Henry aged 6.
They were all born Bacup except for Sarah who was born in Yorkshire.
It appears from the
baptisms that John’s parents were Wesleyan Methodists. John
Tattersall married Mary Ashworth 29th December 1823 at Newchurch.
John Henry joined
the Royal Highlanders in May 1873. He served in Great Britain for a
short period and then East Indies until 1881 and then back to Great
Britain [serving in England, Ireland and Scotland] retiring in 1894.
He married Emily
Jane Hicks, d/o of Joseph Hicks, [sailor] and Lavinia Budd Dec. 25,
1881 at St. Simon's Church, Southsea in the Parish of Portsea,
County of Southampton. He died 12 Oct. 1918 Eastney, Kingston & East
Southsea, Portsmouth Emily Jane died 28 Apr. 1926 at the same
location.
They had nine
children, born in seven different locations.
Mrs Matthews says
she would like more information about John Henry’s mother Sarah
Greenwood. Her father was given on her marriage certificate as
Simeon Greenwood. She would also like to know when and where Sarah
and John died. Of course any new information would be welcome.
email:
e.mathews@golden.net
Seville Family
Crawshawbooth and Goodshaw
I met Mr Seville at
the NW Family History Fair in Manchester. He told me that he had
traced the Seville family back to the 18th century in Higher Booths
and Rossendale. He is willing to share this information with anyone
who has an interest in the name. He can be contacted by email at
m.jseville@tiscali.co.uk
Hopwood Family -
Rawtenstall
I met another man
at the NW Family History Fair who was purchasing our 1871 census
index on microfiche. I offered to give him some information on the
areas covered by the fiche. He wrote down his email address but
evemail.net keep returning my mail. He will have to contact me if he
you wants this information
or Dorothy Haworth
email fiche@lfhhs.co.uk
Haslingden
Roots:
Autumn and Winter
Opening Hours
Monday night - St.
James’s Church. 7.00pm - 8.45pm
11th October 2004;
1st November 2004
7th February 2005;
7th March 2005;
From 4th April -
every Monday except Bank Holidays.
Lancashire BMD
update for September
4710 Civil
Marriages for Hyndburn and Rossendale have been added covering the
years 1908-1925. Please note that these include marriages which took
place in non-conformist churches and Catholic churches which were
not licensed for marriages.
Ebenezer
I was indexing the
marriages for Ebenezer Baptist Church in Haslingden, when I started
to ponder on the name Ebenezer. Why is the name given to so many
Baptist Churches? Has the name ever recovered from the disservice
done to it by Charles Dickens with his Ebenezer Scrooge?
Michael Hiluta
heard me pondering and a few days ago at the Society dinner in
Whalley, he gave me the following explanation:
Ebenezer - from 1
Samuel chapter 7 verse 12.
Then Samuel took a
stone, and set it between Mizpah and Shen and called the name of it
Ebenezer, saying ‘thus far has the LORD helped us."
I thought this
needed greater clarification, so I looked in my own Bible. Israel
was at war with the Philistines. Samuel had repeated called on God
for help and the Philistines had been repulsed, having been chased
out of Mizpah, they did not invade again. Ebenezer literally means
stone of help.
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