Family History Writing Challenge – Day 7

I recently wrote on my ancestor of the week post about my Grandmother. During the Second World War my Grandmother had three evacuees living with her, whilst at the same time working at the Laundry at Guildford. At the laundry her job was to iron all the sheets from the military hospital and the soldier uniforms.
About a year or so ago Guildford Museum had an exhibition focusing on evacuees and whilst I did have a few photos of one of the evacuees in particular, I submitted the following photo to that exhibition. I was delighted to see earlier that the exhibition had made it to the web and the photograph has been included.

My understanding was the three evacuees all came from London, one was Joyce Moore who remained in contact and friends with our family until she passed away about 10 years ago. I certainly viewed her as a relative. There were also two others, both nameless and one of them is thought to have married an American or Canadian serviceman and returned back to either the States or Canada with him. On the back of the photo is the name of Edie Greenaway. My Grandmother is in the middle. So this is either a photo of my Grandmother with two of the evacuees or two people from the laundry.
I do wonder what happened to the evacuee who made a new life across the pond, and is she still alive today? The address of the house where the evacuees lived was 17 Walnut Tree Close Guildford. If that address rings bells with anyone please get in touch. Whilst my Grandmother is no longer here, we would love to hear more about the events of this time.
Word count 289
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Ancestor of the week – Lilian Edith Butcher nee Matthews

This week I am featuring my late Grandmother, whose family I have focused on thus far in the Family History Writing Challenge.

Born Lilian Edith Matthews in Guildford Surrey on 18th December 1912, the daughter of John Matthews and Mary Elizabeth nee Elstone. My Grandmother was one of 11 children born between 1901 and 1921.
Despite having a really close relationship with my Grandmother so much of her life is unclear, and it was when I started becoming interested in family history that my Grandmother developed the early stages of dementia. I can only describe that as tragic to watch, but nonetheless, I loved her dearly and up until she died we maintained that special relationship and she always knew who I was, although was hazy on other things.
In her earlier life she looked after her brothers, which I described in an earlier post as part of the writing challenge. After she left the family home she went to live with her sister Elsie and brother in law William Downes.
My Grandmother’s brothers use to drink, a swift pint after work at the coal yard at a pub called The Plough in Guildford. It was the same pub that my Grandfather’s family used. Through this my Grandmother met my Grandfather, and my Grandmother’s brother Ernest met and married my Grandfather’s sister Margery. It does take a moment or two to get your head around the criss crosses of the family marriages, and I all I can say is that criss crosses of my family history continued after this event and research shows that they had happened before too!
Anyway, at some point between leaving St Nicholas School at Guildford in 1924 and getting married in 1939 my Grandmother had worked at Woolworths in Guildford, always known in our family as Fred’s, which sadly demised through the recent recession and Flippance’s the Green Grocers in Guildford.
During the war she worked at the Laundry at Guildford dealing with the clothes, uniforms and bedlinen from the hospitals & solders and had three evacuees, which are the subject of the Family History Writing challenge day 7.
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Book Blogger Hop – Post of this week

Book Blogger Hop
From the Crazy-For-Books web page “the Book Blogger Hop is a place just for book bloggers and readers to connect and share our love of the written word! This weekly BOOK PARTY is an awesome opportunity for book bloggers to connect with other book lovers, make new friends, support each other, and generally just share our love of books! It will also give blog readers a chance to find other book blogs to read! So, grab the logo, post about the Hop on your blog, and start HOPPING through the list of blogs that are posted in the Linky list below!!


The Hop lasts Friday-Monday every week, so if you don’t have time to Hop today, come back later and join the fun! This is a weekly event! And stop back throughout the weekend to see all the new blogs that are added!


There are a few rules!
1. Enter your blog address at the linky list on the Crazy-For-Books website
2. Post about the hop on your blog & answer the question on the Crazy-For-Books website
3. Visit other blogs in the linky list

This weeks question is:

“Tell us about one of your posts from this week and give us a link so we can read it (review or otherwise)!”

This week has been fairly busy at work and I have come down with another cold, the 4th since November. I have written two book reviews

I have also spotted a Book Meme, in which feature what is in your mail box There has been a campaign here in the UK to save libraries. Well, with a new job in town I have taken to walking to and from work, on the way passing the library. Monday is one of two late nights, so I nipped in, the first time in more than 18 months. I reactivated my card and left with 4 books, out of a possible 12!

I have also been undertaking a series of genealogy posts, as part of the Family History Writing Challenge in which the challenge is to write every day. I have kept up and do write every day, although I have not posted them all to blogger, as I need to review for spellings etc, posts for days 7 – 12 should happen over the weekend.
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In My Mailbox – Week 1

“In my Mailbox” is a weekly meme I spotted on The Story Siren Blog. Read all about the fine details to take part. Here are the books that have arrived within the last week.

  • Outlander by Aaron Fletcher (eBay)
  • An Incomplete Revenge, A Maisie Dobbs Mystery (library book)
  • Messager of Truth, A Maisie Dobbs Mystery (library book)
  • Trade Winds by Christina Courtnay (library books)
  • The Distant Hours by Kate Morton (library books)
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    A Place of Secrets by Rachel Hore

    Item image

    This book had a complex storyline and it takes great skill to weave the threads of the book separately then coming together to bring the story to conclusion.

    The central character is Jude, who works at a London auctioneers house and by chance answers a ringing telephone in her office. The caller wants a valuation on a fascinating collection of early astronomical books and equipment which have been passed down through his family. On establishing that the seller is living in Jude’s home town , where her Grandmother, sister and niece still live Jude agrees to go and visit the seller for an assessment. Once she has arrived in Norfolk she sees the collection is a fine example of 18th Century history and immediately sets about assessing the collection, and Jude stumbles across a set of journals of the astronomer Anthony Wickham and his daughter Ester. She asks the mother of the seller if there is any more details on the family, only to be told that Wickham did not have any children. Jude is immediately curious.
    Meanwhile, she sees her sister and niece and is suddenly aware that her niece is having dreams. Dreams that she too experienced as a child. Was this a coincidence? The seller of the collection then confirms that he is definitely going to sell the collection and Jude is then thrust into the world of the Wickhams. There is an Folly in the grounds and Jude is intrigued. In the forest surrounding the property she meets Euan, who by chance lives in the cottage her Grandmother lived in and we start to see the gentle threads of the complex story forming. Ester’s journal is in some parts a summary of her early life, found as a young child by Wickham she is adopted as his heir, but later on we see that, after Wickham’s death his wishes are not carried out. Over the course of a little more than 450 pages Rachel Hore weaves a complex story in which the lives of the Wickhams and Jude’s family are connected, added to that are connections to other characters who do not appear until later in the book.
    This book has been painstakingly written, and although a work fiction there has been research undertaken using the methods available as if the storyline were real. Certainly my best read of the year so far and I am looking forward to more from this author.
    Crossed posted to Book Reviews
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    Family History Writing Challenge – Day 6

    I said on Day 3 of this challenge that my Great Grandfather had a sister called Mary Anne.

    Mary Anne was born in 1872 in Long Lawford, Warwickshire. I knew from the Census returns that she existed and set about, once I knew the family were in Guildford, of locating her on the census. I did find Mary Anne a border in a house, again in Merrow as a domestic. I had planned to do some extra research on the descendants of Mary Anne, but shelved that at the time temporarily as I was then still seeking the birth place of my Great Great Grandmother that linked into this family and was preoccupied with that.
    At that time the Merrow parish records were housed in a super archive in Guildford called the Muniment Room which was attached to the Museum. I arrived on a Wednesday afternoon and set about reading various parish records and the school records. I spotted a baptism for a child, Harry Matthews, son of Mary Anne in 1898. I looked for a marriage later than the birth, just in case it was recorded later, and found nothing. I then came across a marriage for Harry in 1925 still in the same parish and the birth of a son, Clive Colin to Harry in 1934. So, where did that leave me? I had a son who married and had his own son. I then looked through the death records for the parish and was sad to find the death of Mary Anne in 1898, the same year as the year that Harry was born. Did Mary Anne ever see her son? Who was the father? If Mary Anne died while Harry was still a baby who looked after him? So many questions, and even as I type this I feel the urge to try once again and unravel the series of events to the demise of Mary Anne and her descendants.
    Then in 2009 when in the Stoughton Cemetery at Guildford I spotted the following grave stone.

    DSCF0328

    The gravestone for the son of Harry. I really did feel overcome with sadness for a man that I had never met, yet we shared some of the same genetics and family. Clive had passed away at the same age I am now and there is nothing like that for a mortality check. I wondered what kind of life he and his father had lead, and more importantly who had brought Harry up. I knew that Mary Anne’s brother, My Great Grandfather had not and I could see from research into their sister Edith that she hadn’t either. Like most of us, with every bit of genealogy research comes another set of questions, and perhaps there are some things, like the parentage of Harry, we shall never know?
    Word count 469
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    The Sunday Salon – A week of books

    A few weeks ago I spotted a post at the Adventures of an Intrepid Reader that mentioned a book, indeed a series of books about Australia and thought that they sounded great series. I set about looking on the usual sites Amazon UK and eBay UK and I think I eventually found the first in the series, Outback, on eBay. I waited about a week, having had the email from the seller to say the book had been posted before contacting the seller to advise the book had not arrived. We both assumed it was lost in the post and a refund arrived into my Paypal account. Then on Friday I arrived home to find the book had arrived. It had been travelling around Royal Mail for three weeks. Horray! and the payment returned to the seller. So I am looking forward to starting that Australian series. There does seem to be very little about the author, Aaron Fletcher online, and I am not even sure about the order of the books in the series, and I am afraid I am slightly obsessive about reading books in order.

    I have recently completed a book that I read for both the Victorian & Historical book challenge. The book is called the Autobiographical Recollections of John Bowring. A fascinating book and I need to sit and reflect further before writing the review.
    I have made some progress with the book cataloguing and will post about that another time, needless to say it is going to take a while to complete that task. I have also written a post in support of Save our Libraries Day
    I also finished reading the festive book in the knitting series by Maggie Sefton. Fleece Navidad. It was actually read out of order, and I may have to re read the next book before buying the latest in the series. See, I said I was obsessive! My current read is A Secret Place by Rachel Hore and I am also in the middle of a super hardback book called The Girl on the wall: One Life’s Rich Tapestry by Jean Baggott. I saw this book advertised and reviewed in one of the UK genealogy magazines a year or so ago and added it to my Amazon wish list then made the purchase just after Christmas. It is a super book, one that simply has to be held and stroked occasionally! A website to accompany the book is available and well worth viewing.
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    Save our Libraries Day – 5th February 2011

    Save our Libraries Day was yesterday, so I am posting a little late. When the Coalition walked into Parliament I heard David Cameron’s speech in which he mentioned “Big Society” I am not too sure just where closing libraries, reducing spending in the benefit system so that it affects those who genuinely need it and reducing the services offered by the NHS and the Care Services fits the plan of Big Society and I am deeply saddened by this.

    From what I can see Devon libraries are not looking at closures, but perhaps some reduction to opening hours and whilst that is not perfect, it is better than the alternative, although the Records Offices in Devon are to be affected with reduced opening hours. I grew up in Surrey and see that Surrey libraries, along with others in the Country are to be affected by the plans.
    I can’t recall when I received my library ticket. I do recall going to Guildford library with my mother and being allowed to choose a few books perhaps 4 or so. In the 1970s the tickets were made of a strongish cardboard and the ticket from the book slotting into the cardboard ticket. Later on the tickets were replaced with a credit card size ticket with a bar code and were scanned. I remember sitting in the children’s section and when I felt ready, moving across to young adult and finally adult books where the historical fiction held my attention. Upstairs was the reference section and the non fiction books and on the top floor was the local history section where I spent lots of time looking and reading books that helped me undertake various bits of research for my family history. In the last decade or so the local history section merged with the Surrey Records Offices from both the Muniment Room Guildford and Kingston into the newly built office at Woking. Guildford library, I am guessing will not be affected too much, it is a main library in a University town, although it should really have City status. It will be the small libraries and mobile facilities that will be affected and thus they should be protected as best as we can.
    Disclaimer. The post above is written based upon my personal opinion. It is not written as a political post
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    Book Blogger Hop – What are you reading and why?

    Book Blogger Hop
    From the Crazy-For-Books web page “the Book Blogger Hop is a place just for book bloggers and readers to connect and share our love of the written word! This weekly BOOK PARTY is an awesome opportunity for book bloggers to connect with other book lovers, make new friends, support each other, and generally just share our love of books! It will also give blog readers a chance to find other book blogs to read! So, grab the logo, post about the Hop on your blog, and start HOPPING through the list of blogs that are posted in the Linky list below!!


    The Hop lasts Friday-Monday every week, so if you don’t have time to Hop today, come back later and join the fun! This is a weekly event! And stop back throughout the weekend to see all the new blogs that are added!


    There are a few rules!
    1. Enter your blog address at the linky list on the Crazy-For-Books website
    2. Post about the hop on your blog & answer the question on the Crazy-For-Books website
    3. Visit other blogs in the linky list

    This weeks question is:

    “What are you reading now and why are you reading it?”
    I am currently in the middle of two reads.
    1. A Place of Secrets by Rachel Hore – paperback
    2. The Girl on the Wall : One Life’s Rich Tapestry by Jean Baggott – Hardback

    I spotted A place of secrets when in Smiths, having just had a blood test,and was feel sorry for myself and in need of a reward, although my TBR pile did not really need to grow any more!
    The Girl on the Wall was reviewed in one of the Family History magazines last year and I was intrigued. It was a wonderful way of combining two of my obsessions – reading and genealogy.
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    Fleece Navidad by Maggie Sefton

    I usually hate reading books out of order, but I bought books 5 and 7 of the series together and missed this one as Amazon UK were out of stock. I then couldn’t wait to read book 7! It has been a tough Winter here and I was keen to have some relaxing escapism reading, and I wasn’t disappointed.
    Kelly and Steve are now living together in the cottage that was originally the home of her Aunt and Uncle. As usual, the storyline weaves itself around the local knitting and yarn store and there are two new residents in town. The two residents are known to each other, yet they can not get along.
    Claudia is a widow and has not had much luck with husbands, as she has been widowed three times. She meets a local professor who severs his relationship with a local librarian. Potentially deemed as a gold digger, Claudia just has high spirits who lives life to the full. Her step daughter, the other newcomer in town has followed Claudia here from another state and seems very keen to cast doubt onto the genuineness of Claudia. Then the tranquility of the town is shattered as the Claudia’s relationship with the professor breaks down, the police want to talk to Claudia about a stolen credit card and car and then the librarian is murdered. Kelly interrupts her festive shopping to do some sleuthing and somehow everything is not as it seems…..
    Cross posted to Book Reviews
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