Genealogy or perhaps more Family History. Not just straight forward (or backward) family lines, but brothers and sisters, the neighbourhoods that they lived in and some information about what was happening at the time.
Sunday, May 16, 2021
Come straight home
Friday, April 30, 2021
Rambling
Rambling is one of those words which have a number of meanings. When we were young it mostly meant a weekend activity with a group of friends going for a walk in the countryside. A group of us from the local branch of the Labour Party League of Youth in Lewisham used to go out to Farnborough, Kent to the end of the number 47 bus route and follow one of the walks listed in a small book sold by the Evening news.
Most of the walks started off by going through the churchyard but then diverged to different walks, some circular returning to Farnborough, others finished elsewhere like Down or Halstead, mostly at a pub. These were never particularly active outings like keen ramblers seem to do these days with there alpine walking sticks and backpacks. Ours were more a country stroll with frequent stops just to loll about in the grass and talk. We used to do a lot of talking in those days, rather more than groups of similarly aged young people in the twenty-first century.
At the end of the day it was usually wend our way home by the next available bus, and if we had been in the pub there was usually some singing including the Red Flag and the the Internationale, much to the consternation of homegoing church goers. Getting a bus could be hit and miss on a Sunday evening so the alternative was a walk to the nearest country railway station and the train to one of stations near home depending on which line we were on. The train journey was frequently free as country stations in those days were rarely manned on a Sunday so there was no one to buy a ticket from and at the other end there was no ticket collector either. It didn't seem illegal when there was no one to collect the fares.
That kind of rambling is for the relatively young and fit. As you get older there is a greater inclination to do the other kind were your mind rambles around in a haphazard way, trying to remember a name that escapes or a memory which is no longer as clear as it used to be. C'est la vie.
What A Life!
I started researching our family history perhaps 40 years ago and started writing them up some 20 years ago. My first books I printed myself on a laser printer and just sent copies to those family members that I thought might be interested. Later I started having my books printed on Amazon, originally Createspace and now KDP.
I started blogging about 15 years ago about genealogy and family history, odd stories about my research and so on and then started to include small anecdotes from my childhood before the war and as a evacuee from London.
I've written and published some ten books mostly family histories of our ancestors and two detective novels. Some of my family have read what I have written and suggested that I should write my own story.
I am not a great fan of autobiographies so I am reluctant to consider that my own life story is worth a book. Does the world really need another diary of a nobody? I suppose I have had a fairly interesting life, married and raised a family and done a variety of jobs. the archetypal Jack of all trades I suppose. Our travels as a family have taken us to the other side of the world and back, but we do not need another travel book.
I have promised to write my story, if only for the information of my family who have claimed that they know little of my life before they were born. I have started but it is a bit off and on, so many things get in the way. However it has come to me, on my birthday that whilst I am trotting towards the end of my life, my memory is actually galloping away. So many things that I used to remember quite clearly are not just fuzzy but non-existent. So many names and places that I can no longer recall, struggle as I might. So I will have to knuckle down and get it written soon.
Take heed all writers out there. If your story is worth recording then do it now.
Tempus fugit and all that as well as Memento Mori
Saturday, March 27, 2021
WW1 Prisoners of War made to work
Wednesday, March 24, 2021
Tell it to the Marines
at the age of 19 in 1881. Served for twelve years in Gibraltar, Malta and Egypt, including the Sudan during the Mahdi rebellions but was not involved in the disastrous Siege of Khartoum as far as I can gather. But he did receive the Egyptian Medal and the Khedive Star so he must have been around somewhere.
Friday, March 5, 2021
The qwerty keyboard and me.
I have had an association with the qwerty keyboard for something like 72 years and sadly it appears to be coming to an end. I am still a reasonably competent touch typist but an unexplained damage to my left wrist some four months ago has meant that I have not been able to use my left hand for typing and I think I am l;osing the ability to do so.
Many two finger typists would consider that not to be a problem. But if you learned touchtyping all those years ago then that is the only way you can type. The constant repetion of familiar keys when learning to touch type means that the fingers automatically go to the correct key to press without having to think about it. I think this is called muscle memory consolidation. Your right hand then does not necessarily know where the keys normally pressed by the left are located.
I tried to use speech recognition software but the skill involved in thinking and talking at the same time is completely diferent to thinking and typing at the same time. I used to be fairly competent in having my fingers on the keyboard keeping up with my mental flow when I was writing, say for instance something like a blog. But to dictate to the computer and watch the words coming up on the screen inhibits the thought flow. At least does for me.
Wednesday, February 24, 2021
Its Census year again.
The next UK census will be held in March 2021 continueing a process which has taken place almost every ten years in a constantly changing format since 1841.
Every census year the amount of information being collected has increased and this yar will be no exception. As usual there will be many who disagree with this process of compelling citizens to disclolse what many regard as being private information.
Only being released after a period of a cedntury, the censuses are a continuos source of discovery for genealogists and family historians, like myself, providing information about birthplaces, accomodation, size of families etc.
Alphons Eder was a musician and had joined the ship in 1857 as a civilian bandsman, the other bandsmen on board were all members of the Royal Marine Light Infantry. On the voyage home in 1861 from Vancouver Island the rear admiral, Sir Robert Baynes was accompanied by his wife and 6 year old daughter with two female servants. They were the only females on board so one assumes that there would have been little need for the small band to play dance music.
When Ganges finally arrived back in home waters in April 1861 she had logged up 60,100 nautical miles since leaving in 1857. Our Great Grandfather married in London the following year and as far as we know never travelled again.