Kesley Godfrey Ebert

Looking for Scottish Ancestors

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SarahND
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Re: Kesley Godfrey Ebert

Post by SarahND » Sun Oct 31, 2010 8:55 pm

speleobat2 wrote: Earlier today, when I was searching for Alexander, a public member story kept popping up for something on the Hill Farm Mine disaster, but I couldn't get it to download and now I can't find it again!
Hi Carol,
Were you searching for Kesley with Soundex? I found the story about the disaster, but no mention of a Kesley, only a Keighley :?

Regards,
Sarah

speleobat2
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Re: Kesley Godfrey Ebert

Post by speleobat2 » Sun Oct 31, 2010 9:21 pm

Annette,

The only record that I found under Schools, Directories etc. on Ancestry so far is a table of hours children worked outside of school from 1896 to 1902. The Margaret Kesley listed was age 13 so too old to be the one we are looking for.

Sarah,

No Soundex. I just was putting basic information into the advanced search. I Googled the Hill Farm Mine disaster and it took place around 1891 somewhere in Ayrshire. Will have another look around.

Edit: The mining disaster took place in Pennsylvania in June of 1890.

Carol :D
Last edited by speleobat2 on Sun Oct 31, 2010 9:38 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Looking for: Clerihew, Longmuir/Longmore, Chalmers, Milne, Barclay in Newhills,
Munro, Cadenhead, Raitt, Ririe/Reary

speleobat2
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Re: Kesley Godfrey Ebert

Post by speleobat2 » Sun Oct 31, 2010 9:34 pm

Sarah,

When all else fails, follow logic. This time I clicked on Public Member Stories and searched Alex Kesley and the mine disaster story came right up!

No Kesley in it, just the Keighley which Ancestry search must think resembles Kesley closely enough. :roll: Have that problem all the time with Clerihew!

Have looked outside Scotland too. I think a couple of Alexander's brothers ended up in the USA, but no sign of Alexander anywhere. Just ran into one of these missing death certificates myself recently. The only other thought I have is that maybe it is misindexed somehow?

Carol :D
Looking for: Clerihew, Longmuir/Longmore, Chalmers, Milne, Barclay in Newhills,
Munro, Cadenhead, Raitt, Ririe/Reary

Herrie
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Re: Kesley Godfrey Ebert

Post by Herrie » Mon Nov 01, 2010 11:04 am

Hello all,
what a response !! thank you all, Alexander was a coalminer, and his family were born in Dalziel, I have most of the family history for the Kesley's ,and the death certificates for both Hugh and John in Canada,and also a wife and two daughters in the USA, however, I noticed Annette's reply that Mrs Alexander Kesley lived at 31 St Leonards St Perth,the address on Helens marriage to Harry is 13 St Leonards St, (they had six children born in England)
I have no record for the death of Helen/ Helena Kesley,but would be happy to find the elusive Alexander.
Thank You
Herrie

SuMacd
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Re: Kesley Godfrey Ebert

Post by SuMacd » Mon Nov 01, 2010 12:33 pm

Hi
Looked on Ancestry.
Perhaps this is family at 4 Millar St; Motherwell in 1901 Census.
Head shown as I. Kelsey - could maybe be an A.
Wife shown as Ellen - possibly Helena
Family Jas, Eliz, Wm, Jno, Hugh & maggie aged 5
Above names are typed as shown on Ancestry.
Hope this helps
Susan

**Looks like relatives but not correct age group by looks of things
Seeking Anderson, Ross, Beatttie, Caddell, Grindlay, Bannerman, Dundas, Robertson, Campbell,Rae, Watson,Elliot, Madigan, O'Connell, Connell, Imlah, Stevenson, Smith,McCann, Cairns, Macdonald, Patience amongst others

Herrie
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Re: Kesley Godfrey Ebert

Post by Herrie » Mon Nov 01, 2010 1:27 pm

Thank's for input Susan,
the 1901 family are a later generation , and should read James Kesley (head) Helen his wife.
Alexanders parents were James and Sarah.
Thank's
Herrie

speleobat2
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Location: USA--Alabama

Re: Kesley Godfrey Ebert

Post by speleobat2 » Mon Nov 01, 2010 1:31 pm

Hi all,

My first try on this hasn't gone through so...

Free BMD has a death for Helena Kesley, age 64, June 1932, Wycomb, England.

Carol :D
Looking for: Clerihew, Longmuir/Longmore, Chalmers, Milne, Barclay in Newhills,
Munro, Cadenhead, Raitt, Ririe/Reary

Herrie
Posts: 14
Joined: Tue Sep 29, 2009 12:52 pm

Re: Kesley Godfrey Ebert

Post by Herrie » Tue Nov 02, 2010 8:26 am

Thank's carol,
although Helena's birth was 1879 and death on FBMD was 1932 age 64, it may be a transcription error,the interesting fact is that, her daughter's children were all born not far from Wycombe ,in Hackney and Romford.
Thank You
Herrie

scottishlass1228
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Re: Kesley Godfrey Ebert

Post by scottishlass1228 » Sun Jan 09, 2011 3:11 pm

Hi There


Helena Godfrey was my Great Grandmother Sarah Godfrey's sister. It's a good possibility that she was living in Perth,Scotland , as Sarah's Husband David Speedie Rutherford was born there. Helena's mother was Dora Croker born Dublin in 1833. She married Edward Godfrey in Dublin 17 Feb 1860. I have found 2 of Helena's other siblings born in County Kildare Ireland ( there was an English Army Camp here called The Curragh), Thomas born 4th May 1866 and Elizabeth born February 12, 1868. As far as I know Thomas died in America.

My great Grandmother immigrated to Melbourne, Australia in 1924 and was living in Perth before she went. Sarah had separated from my great Grandfather by this time and 2 of her daughters were already in Melbourne. My grandfather and another sibling also went with her, but my Grandfather came back to Scotland in 1926 and never saw his Mother or his siblings again.

Hope this helps regards Lesley
Last edited by scottishlass1228 on Sun Jan 09, 2011 7:50 pm, edited 1 time in total.

scottishlass1228
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Re: Kesley Godfrey Ebert

Post by scottishlass1228 » Sun Jan 09, 2011 7:05 pm

Motherwell, a town in Dalziel and Hamilton parishes, Lanarkshire, on the Caledonian railway, at the junction of the two lines from the N and S sides of Glasgow, and at the intersection of the cross line from Holytown to Hamilton and Lesmahagow, ½ mile from the left bank of South Calder Water, 1 ¼ from the right bank of the Clyde, 2 ½ miles NE of Hamilton, 2 ¼ SSE of Holytown, 12 ½ SE by E of Glasgow, 15 ¼ NW of Carstairs Junction, and 43 W by S of Edinburgh. It took its name from a famous well, dedicated in pre-Reformation times to the Virgin Mary; and it occupies flat ground, 300 feet above sea-level, amid richly cultivated and well-wooded environs. Consisting largely of the dwellings of miners and operatives employed in neighbouring collieries and ironworks, it serves, in connection with the railway junctions, as a great and bustling centre of traffic; and it ranks as a police burgh, governed by a senior magistrate, 2 junior magistrates, a clerk, a treasurer, and 6 commissioners. Motherwell has a post office, with money order, savings' bank, insurance, and railway telegraph departments, branches of the Bank of Scotland and the Clydesdale Bank, offices or agencies of 18 insurance companies, 5 hotels, the combination poorhouse for Dalziel, Bothwell, Cambusnethan, and Shotts parishes, and a Saturday paper, the Motherwell Times. The streets are lighted with gas; and in 1877 a splendid water supply was brought in from two burns on the estate of Lee at a cost of over £14, 000. In Merry Street is the new parish church of Dalziel, erected in 1874 at a cost of £5700; whilst the former parish church (1789) belongs now to the quoad sacra parish of South Dalziel, constituted in 1 880. One of the two U.P. churches was built in 1881 at a cost of £3750, and from its site - the highest in the town uprears a conspicuous steeple. There are also a Free church, a Primitive Methodist chapel, an Evangelical Union chapel, and the Roman Catholic church of Our Lady of Good Aid (1873). No Scottish Town - not even Hawick - has grown so rapidly as Motherwell, such growth being due to the vast extension of its mineral industries. These, at the census of 1881, employed 2470 of the 3671 persons here of the ' industrial class, - 1024 being engaged in coal-mining, 20 in ironstone-mining, 1069 in the iron manufacture, 58 in the steel manufacture, etc. The malleable iron-works of the Glasgow Iron Company are the largest in Scotland, with 50 puddling furnaces and 8 rolling mills; and Mr D. Colville's steel-works, where operations were commenced on 20 Oct. 1880, now employs over 1000 men. Pop. (1841) 726, (1861) 2925, (1871) 6943, (1881) 12, 904, of whom 7041 were males, and 2209 were in Hamilton parish. Houses (1881) 2346 inhabited, 146 vacant, 50 building.—Ord. Sur., sh. 23, 1865.