# |
Notes |
Linked to |
2101 |
Mar Q 6a 539 1870 Bridgnorth | RUSHTON, Francis (I000471)
|
2102 |
Mar Q 6d 666 | COTTON, Sarah Ann (I000107)
|
2103 |
Mar Q 6D 922 Birmingham | BROWN, Theresa Elizabeth (I000515)
|
2104 |
Mar Q Barton on Irwell 8c 697 | HUGHES, Frank Mills (I000491)
|
2105 |
Mar Q Gosport 6b 277 | SAIT, Alice Maud Mary (I000076)
|
2106 |
Mar Q Killadysert, Co. Clare | Family: Michael Philip KENNEDY / Una (Oona) BIANCONI (F395)
|
2107 |
Mar Q Salford 8d 106 | HUGHES, Ada (I000492)
|
2108 |
Mar Q Vol 18 Page 543 Upton upon Severn | Family: Frederick SHERWOOD / Mary Ann WILSON (F000234)
|
2109 |
Mar Q Vol 20 Page 889 Reg No. 389 Portsmouth | WILLIAMS, Winifred Eva (I000742)
|
2110 |
Mar Q Volume 6B Page 628 1954 | Family: Kenneth James SAIT / Pamela GILL (F773)
|
2111 |
Mar Q Warminster Vol. V111 Page ___ | WILLIAMS, Charles George (I000747)
|
2112 |
Mar Quarter 1931 8e 1252 Barrow F | MARSDEN, Mary Jane (I000700)
|
2113 |
March 1984 Greenwich
Vol No. 12
Page No. 1025
Reg. No. 384 | OTT, Ethel Maud (I1344)
|
2114 |
March Q 1853 8c 4** Barton | IRLAM, James (I001096)
|
2115 |
March Quarter Barton on Irwell 8c 404 | TAYLOR, Thomas Bowers (I000594)
|
2116 |
Maria Kenny married Thomas Lingard an officer in the Kings Borderers (also known as the 25th regiment) in 1823 in Ennis church (Connaught Journal, 1823). She had a large family (15 according to Cecil S. Kenny who does not list all 15 children). The boys from the family were brought up Protestant and the girls Catholic. I know little of her. In 1838 the birth of a daughter was announced to Thomas Lingard at Cooga(Ruan). In 1844 he was listed as a Cess payer at Coogey (modern day Cooga, Ruan) (Limerick Chronicle, 1844). In the same year the Limerick Chronicle announced the birth of a son to him at Cooga (Limerick Chronicle, 1844). | KENNY, Maria (I2247)
|
2117 |
Mariage Licence.
Dublin, Ireland, Probate Record and Marriage Licence Index, 1270-1858 for Patrick Hayes. Page 217. | Family: Patrick Philpott HAYES / Henrietta BURTON (F000207)
|
2118 |
Mariner, at the time of his decease belonging to His Majesty's Navy and the "Superb" Man of War.
Late of Fovant. | MORRELL, George (I1546)
|
2119 |
Marriage Date: 27 Mar 1867
Marriage Place: Kingstown, Rathdown, Dublin, Ireland
Father: Ned P. Hayes
Spouse: Eleanor O'Connell Bianconi
FHL Film Number: 101505
Reference ID: P1071-44
Records on Page:
Name
Patrick Hayes
Eleanor Fitzsimon
Ellen O'Connell Fitzsimon
Eleanor Bianconi
Ellen O'Connell Bianconi | Family: Patrick HAYES / Eilie (Eileen) FITZSIMON (F39)
|
2120 |
Marriage dissolved 24th April 1933 | Family: James Hamish HAMILTON / Jean A FORBES-ROBERTSON (F000137)
|
2121 |
Marriage quarter 1
Marriage year 1974
Spouse's last name FOWLES
District LEICESTER CENTRAL
Volume 3A
Page 1110 | Family: Stephen James BARTLETT / Rosemary FOWLES (F000219)
|
2122 |
Marriage: 28 Aug 1939 St Andrew, Eccles, Lancashire, England
Albert Hughes - 24 Salesman bachelor of 9 Catherine Street, Winton
Julia Jeffries - 22 spinster of 535 Barton Lane, Eccles
Groom's Father: James Mills Hughes, deceased
Bride's Father: Tom Jeffries, Licensee
Witness: Wilfred Cawley; Doris Cunliffe
Married by Banns by: Vernon Lester Curate
Register: Marriages 1933 - 1948, Page 118, Entry 235
Source: Original Register held by MCL | Family: Albert HUGHES / Julia JEFFRIES (F686)
|
2123 |
Married 1897 to Harold Henry Craven or Edwin Lister Maw Jun Q 2b 998 Portsea Island | SNOOK, Adele Virginie (I000891)
|
2124 |
Married 1913 to Jehu Fielding
or - 1915 to Frederick Sharman | HUNT, Elizabeth Alice (I1833)
|
2125 |
Married by the Most Rev. Dr. Murray, Archbishop of Dublin | Family: Charles BIANCONI / Elizabeth HAYES (F000206)
|
2126 |
Married Nellie ? | BILLSON, Horace (I000061)
|
2127 |
Married Richard Lester b c.1864 West Chinnock, Somerset - more research required. | MOULAND, Ellen (I1380)
|
2128 |
Married Sept Q 1907 Barton On Irwell 8c 1339
to either George Bridge or ? | HUGHES, Edna (I000488)
|
2129 |
Married Wolverhampton District - 1852 - 4th quarter - vol 6b - page 886 | Family: William RUSHTON / Hannah GRAINGER (F000129)
|
2130 |
Mary Ann Bianconi in her book:- Bianconi, King of the Irish Roads, records his name as Patrick Philpot Hayes. | HAYES, Patrick Philpott (I000580)
|
2131 |
MARY GREENWOOD nee Rushton
Mary was born on 5th July 1913 to John & Alice Rushton in Oliver St Coventry. She was the eldest child, having three younger brothers – John, Harry and James (Jim). Her parents had come down from Barrow-in-Furness, and her father found work as a skilled machinist. He was also a talented singer, often performing on the stage in his spare time both as a solo singer, and as part of a quartet called “Les Amis”. As the eldest daughter, it fell to her to keep an eye on her three rather unruly brothers, but she also had another role to fulfil – teaching them to dance.
She was very close to her father, and when he fell ill with kidney disease, she would spend hours sitting at his bedside massaging his back to try and relieve the pain he was suffering. She was devastated when he died in 1933 aged only 49.
Mary was a talented sketch artist, and when she was young used to draw film stars of the day from photographs. She also made some pen & ink drawings of old buildings in Coventry, some of which still hang on the wall in the house.
Mary started work at the Coventry Co-operative Society, and then moved to the Council House as a comptometer operator – the forerunner to the computer! When she was new at the job, she came across some letters that read “FO”. When she asked what they meant, she was told “Fined out”. “That’s what I am trying to do!” she said, unaware of the different spelling of “FINED”.
As was usual during the 1930’s Mary used to go to a lot of dances, and a friend of hers introduced her to a nice lad who had recently moved from Wolverhampton to digs in Coventry to work in the Electricity Showrooms. His name was Richard Greenwood, known to all as Dick. They became very close, but unfortunately the spectre of war was approaching, and Dick was drafted into the Royal Navy. They had to endure many periods apart, but managed to get married at St Mark’s Church in Coventry on May 11th 1940. Dick soon had to go back to the Navy, and undertook some hazardous tours of duty on Russian convoys. Whenever he came back to this country he would somehow get word to Mary, and she would travel to be with him – sometimes only for a weekend or so. One Christmas she learnt at short notice that he was coming in to port in Scotland, and took the train up there to meet him, arriving on Christmas Eve. They dined splendidly the next day on a tin of beef stew which she had taken up with her as rationing was the order of the day. Years later, the Coventry Evening Telegraph ran a competition inviting people to describe the best Christmas dinner they had ever had. Mary and Dick won first prize.
Mary stayed in her house in Allesley Old Rd throughout the war, sheltering from Hitler’s might behind the settee in the lounge – even during the Blitz which devastated Coventry in 1940. She was not a person to be trifled with, as some Army personnel found out. They had set up an anti-aircraft battery close to her house, and the noise of the gun was deafening. She went out and remonstrated with them, frightening them to death as they did not realise anyone was still living in the area. They moved the gun further down the road.
Dick returned from the War, and they soon had a baby girl, Jill, born in 1946. However tragedy struck, as Jill was taken ill with leukaemia and died in 1949. A son Ian was born in 1950, then Hugh came along in 1952.
Mary had worked in the Electricity showrooms as a demonstrator for a time before the children came along, and when the boys moved into secondary school, went back part-time to the showrooms in Bedworth, then as a clerk in the main office at Sandy Lane Coventry. When Ian started work at the Electricity Board in 1967, they became an “electric family!”
Since she was in her teens, Mary had always been interested in “Keep Fit”, and for about fifty years ran several classes a week. She was still teaching into her eighties, when she teamed up with a friend who played the keyboard, and they went to care homes to entertain the residents, and to show them how to do simple exercises to keep moving. It did not really occur to her that she was probably older than a lot of the residents she was teaching.
Mary enjoyed travel, and went to Spain and Majorca many times with Dick. Later she went with Ian and Susan to Malta and Cyprus, and in her eighties, went with them for a whistle-stop tour of four US cities in eight days.
As Mary got older her eyesight deteriorated, and Hugh ended up as her carer as he lived with her, although it was never entirely clear who looked after whom as she always had Hugh’s dinner cooked for him when he came home from work!
Her deteriorating eyesight meant that she was unable to continue with one of her great loves, reading. However, with the help of the RNIB’s Talking Book service, she was still able to lose herself in a good book.
She also a fan of Country & Western music, which she and Hugh would listen to on Saga radio on a Tuesday night.
During her last illness, she said that “I have never felt so ill in all my life” and this was probably because, as a fit woman, she had rarely been ill throughout her life.
Her death at the age of 94 is really the end of an era, as she outlived her three younger brothers, and we look back affectionately on a long life filled with love and humour.
| RUSHTON, Mary (I000088)
|
2132 |
Mary M Nunn in 1891 Census | NUNN, May (I000297)
|
2133 |
Mary Snook, Grand Daughter living with them. In 1871 Ethel was living there as well.
Peel Cottage was next door to Haslar Cemetery Lodge. | Family: George SNOOK / Marie Adele ? (F000277)
|
2134 |
Maternity nursing home for British women in Calcutta | MILLS, Celia Rosemary (I000012)
|
2135 |
Matthew Mills is an error. James Mills was Emma's father. | Family: Jabez HUGHES / Emma MILLS (F000177)
|
2136 |
Maxine Elliott was born in Maine and made her stage debut in 1889. In 1895 she joined the New York City company of Augustin Daly and appeared in two Shakespeare plays: The Two Gentlemen of Verona and A Midsummer Night's Dream. In London with Daly in 1895 she again played in Two Gentlemen and she took the part of Hermia in A Midsummer Night's Dream.
She left Daly's company in 1896 and toured Australia for a few years. She played Portia in The Merchant of Venice in 1901 and then in 1908 opened her own theatre--The Maxine Elliott Theatre--in New York City where she both managed and acted in a number of leading parts.
She also appeared in two films, one in 1917 and the other in 1919. | DERMOT, Jessie C (I000366)
|
2137 |
May 1984 Vol 30 Page 32 Reg No. 584 | WILLIAMS, William George (I000756)
|
2138 |
May 1991 23 2072 591 Salisbury | MILLS, Roland Marvin (I1572)
|
2139 |
May Gertrude Elliott first appeared on stage in 1894 when she was twenty. In 1899 she joined Nat Goodwin's English company , where she met and a year later married the noted Shakespearean actor Johnston Forbes-Robertson. From that time on she toured with her husband as his leading lady in many of Shakespeare's plays. She last appeared with Forbes-Robertson at the Drury Lane Theatre, London, in his farewell performance in 1913. She, however, did not retire and went on to tour in New Zealand, Australia, and South Africa. Her last notable performance was as Gertrude in Leslie Howard's 1936 production of Hamlet at the Imperial Theatre in New York City. | DERMOT, May Gertrude (I000303)
|
2140 |
May not be connected with this family | BILLSON, William (I1845)
|
2141 |
MCANNULTY, JAMES
Gender: Male
Birth 1864 - PORT CYGNET,Tasmania [AO]
Marriage/Relationship: 1893 - VICTORIA ( WINDOVER, MARY ) [AO]
Death: 1916 - VICTORIA [AO]
FAMILY INFORMATION
Parents:
91975 CONNELLY ELLEN
386041 MACKINOLTY BENJAMIN
http://portal.archives.tas.gov.au/menu.aspx?detail=1&type=P&id=378567
| MACKINOLTY, James Mickleburgh (I437)
|
2142 |
McKIMM, Beryl Jean Death notice 11 JUN 2005. Death 92 Published in The Sydney Morning Herald 14 JUN 2005 | DICKENSON, Beryl Jean (I70)
|
2143 |
McKIMM, Ellen Bridget. Death notice 13 MAR 1983. Death late of Kirribilli. Published in the Sydney Morning Herald 14 MAR 1983. | HIGGINS, Ellen Bridget (I64)
|
2144 |
McKIMM, Jack Edwin Death notice 11 MAY 1957 Death 60 at Bathurst, late of Bondi. Published in The Sydney Morning Herald 13 MAY 1957. | MCKIMM, Jack Edwin (I54)
|
2145 |
McKIMM, Robert Bloomfield. Death notice 20 JUL 1975 Death late of Newport. Published in The Sydney Morning Herald 22 JUL 1975 | MCKIMM, Robert Bloomfield (I000503)
|
2146 |
McKIMM, Ronald Jack. Death notice 18 APR 1985 Death late of Banora Point. Published in the Sydney Morning Herald 24 APR 1985
Also in the Ryerson Index. | MCKIMM, Ronald Jack (I65)
|
2147 |
McNalty | MACKINOLTY, Catherine (I614)
|
2148 |
McNalty | MACKINOLTY, Ellen Jane (I615)
|
2149 |
Medal listing of Barr, Herbert Charles
Discharge number: R123894
Date (Birth) 29 July 1904
Catalogue reference BT 395/1
Dept Records of the Board of Trade and of successor and related bodies
Series Registry of Shipping and Seamen: Database of World War II Medals issued to Merchant Seamen
Piece Database of World War II medals issued to merchant seamen
Image contains 1 medal listing of many for this collection
| BARR, Herbert Charles (I1718)
|
2150 |
Memorial Inscription:-
In loving memory of John Mills who departed this life
8th July 1814 aged 77 years.
Taken from a large upright stone.
Transcribed by Dorset OPC - MI Ref:- 134 | MILLS, John (I001138)
|