Posts archive for: November, 2007
  • Going south of the Thames

    Inspired by the prospect of my visit to London getting nearer, I turned my attention to my father's mother's family once again. Back in 2005 I had traced her mother's side of the family (Chambers) back to Barking fisherfolk but found myself hampered by the fact that the menfolk were always absent and unrecorded when census were taken.

    Gran's mother was Hannah Garnell Chambers - I've found that many of my female forebears were exceedingly helpful in giving their maiden surnames to their children as second names. Hannah's parents were Hannah Garnell and William Chambers. From his daughter's marriage certificate I knew that William Chambers was a fisherman and his own marriage certificate told me that his father was William Hughes Chambers, but only that he claimed to be of age in 1875.

    Searching FreeBMD, the only possible Chambers in the index of births for Essex, was named George instead of William. However, since I knew that William had named his son William George, I decided to risk it and in June 2005 sent off for the birth certificate. Sadly, however, it turned out to be the wrong one. (If anyone is interested in a certificate for George Chambers born 10 March 1842 in North Benfleet, just get in touch)

    Nothing daunted I sent off for the certificate of the closest William Chambers I could find, and hit paydirt: This William Chambers, born in Camberwell in 1844, was son of Hugh Chambers and Rebecca Barnett. Since I could find no trace of him in any census, though, the story stopped there until this weekend, when I visited the Ancestry.co.uk website where I searched the 1861 census, which I suspect was not yet available in 2005. Aha, the search flags up a William Chambers, age 18, born Camberwell, resident in Barking. Umm, don't really have the money to fork out for another year's sub though... Nevertheless, I went to have a look to see how much the asking price is these days and found that you can now subscribe for a month at a time, which suits me fine, since I usually do my family history in short intensive bursts. Copied in the Mastercard details and went to have a closer look at William. He turned out to be living in Heath Street, Barking, in the household of James Morgan, Smack Owner and Fish Salesman. In the same household were 19 other apprentice fisherboys aged between 13 and 18, many of them also originally from London.

    I searched for him in the 1851 census, but with no results so turned my attention to his parents. A search in the 1841 census for Rebecca Chambers resident in Camberwell produced two results, at the same address. Further investigation revealed that they were the wife and daughter of Hugh Chambers, Labourer - surely this was William's family. Using the IGI I found the dates of birth of Hugh and Rebecca's children and then tried to find them in 1851. No sign of Hugh and Rebecca, so I searched the BMD deaths in Camberwell and found a Hugh Chambers died in 1848 and a Rebecca Chambers a year later, so it looks like poor William became an orphan when he was five.

    And there the story ends at the time being. At some point I must see if there are any Poor Records for Camberwell that can tell me what happened to William when his parents died and how he came to be an apprentice in Barking.

  • Murphy's Law strikes again!

    For the last two years or so I have been looking for a chance to get down to London and plunder the archives there, as well as visit a few places that crop up in my Dad's family tree. In mid-October we decided that I could get away for the second week of December and I booked train tickets and accommodation for the 11th to the 15th December.

    Top of the to-do list is to try to locate my Grandfather's grave in Tower Hamlets Cemetery. My Dad remembers there being a gravestone, suggesting that it was a private grave and the guidance at the Friends of Tower Hamlets Cemetery webpage suggested I would be highly likely to find records and a map at London Metropolitan Archive . Then Murphy's Law struck as I discovered that the LMA is closed for building work until 21st January. Fortunately their enquiry service is still operating, so I decided to invest £35 in it. Let's hope that it bears fruit - before the 10th of December!

    The second blow struck yesterday, when I went to the National Archives website to add to my list of catalogue reference codes of interesting documents and discovered that it, too, will be closed in the first half of December. I was intensely disappointed but, with hindsight, there is nothing vital that I need from there at the moment, only a lot of documents that might be of interest and that it would have been useful to have a look at without ordering copies 'blind'.

    One of the ways I will make up for it is by visiting the London Probate Department and looking to see if any of my less poverty-stricken ancestors left wills. Another place that looks like it will be worth a visit is the Local Studies Centre at Valence House Museum in Dagenham, where it seems I should be able to find out a bit more about Barking fishermen, as well as look through school records to see if any of my Wills, Garnells or Chambers appear. It might be interesting to read through the local papers from around 1900, the time when my ancestors there seem to have had a depressingly high rate of infant mortality.

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