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Monday 28th November 2016 - Number 1068

Welcome 
to  the
Laws Family Blog

We reach out to all, regardless 

of Race, Colour, Creed, Orientation or National Origin, with support for researching family and documenting cultural inhertance

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DearAncestor,-
Your tombstone stands amongst the rest, neglected and alone
The names and dates are chiselled out on polished marble stone
It reaches out to all who care, it is too late to mourn
You did not know that I exist, you died and I was born
Yet each of us are cells of you, in flesh, in blood, in bone.
Our blood contracts and beats a pulse entirely not our own

Dear Ancestor, 
The place you filled one hundred years ago
Spreads out amongst the ones you left who would have loved you so,
I wonder if you lived and loved, I wonder if you knew
That someday I would find this spot, and come to visit you. 


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 LAWS FAMILY REGISTER

We are happy to work on your 

LAWS FAMILY TREE

(maybe we already have)

All LAWS Enquires are still welcome

Mail us at 

registrar@lawsfamilyregister.org.uk

   EXTRACTS FROM OUR DATABASE

PLEASE NOTE
We have excluded records of living people to protect their Privacy -we are not showing births after 1920 or marriages after 1940 these are only available on request

If you are interested in anyone listed here, email us with the name, date and reference number, and we will happily do a look up, you might even get a whole tree! 

We will be happy to publish within this blog Your stories of your LAWS research and also members of the LAWS and LAWES family you are searching for like your greart grandfathers uncle Charlie or aunt Maud.

We will be happy to help with you with your LAWS/LAWES research, and in certain instances we may be willing to undertake private research on your behalf.

This blog will also appear on our Facebook page, please come visit us, 

Family Events from our database, for today 28th November


BIRTHS baptisms etc

1756 - Burial: James LAWS-6592, Felthorpe NFK UK



1816 - Birth: Thomas LAWS (Ag Lab)-32344, Chatteris CAM UK




1841 - Baptism: Charles LAWS (Roadman) -957, Bungay SFK UK



1883 - Birth: Mabel Jane LAWS-3196, Kialla VIC AUSTRALIA


1898 - Birth: Cyril Henry LAWS-35782, 


1909 - Birth: Violet Hilda LAWES-24506, Norwich NFK UK



1910 - Birth: Arthur LAWS-36119, 


1915 - Birth: Vera Ethel LAWS-3142, KENT UK

1916 - Birth: Douglas Frank LAWS-36522, Croydon SRY UK


1916 - Birth: Ellen Lily LAWS-35157, Edmonton MDX UK


1919 - Birth: Arthur LAWS (Chauffeur & Mechanic)-42653, 


1920 - Birth: Alan LAWS (Apprentice Dental Mechanic) -42508, 

MARRIAGES

1844 - Marriage: Thomas DURFEE-5299 and Adah C LAWS-5298, Killingley Windham 
          CT United States

1869 - Marriage: Charles GRIMANI (Scenic Artist)-14269 and Henrietta LAWS-14253, 
          Regent Square MDX UK
         My Great Gand Aunt and her husband

1874 - Marriage: John MORGAN (Coal Miner) -25559 and Jane LAWS-12342, 
          Tynemouth NBL UK




1878 - Marriage: George LAWS-6145 and Rosa FOY-6146, Issaquena MS USA

1908 - Marriage: Joseph THOMPSON-24560 and Elsie Louisa LAWES-24559, 
          Petersham NSW AUSTRALIA

DEATHS

1875 - Death: William LAWS(Master Mariner) 7305, South Kilvington, Thirsk NRY UK

1917 - Death: Gladys LAWS-20586, 

1918 - Death: Matthew LAWS (Mustard Miller)-22343, Fletton HUN UK


1923 - Death: Thomas Clifford LAWES-2347, Memorial Hospital, Cirencester GLS UK

1926 - Death: Alma J LAWS-33302, 

1944 - Death: Thomas Campbell LAWS (Fireman and Trimmer Merchant Marine) -22340, 
          SS "Stronsa Firth"

1970 - Death: Anderson LAWS-19751, Jefferson Co KY United States

1984 - Death: James H LAWES-36651, 

2002 - Death: Graham James LAWS (Australian Army)-12558, Wahroonga NSW AUSTRALIA



2009 - Death: Roy Bunnett LAWS-16336, Sheffield WRY UK

MISC

1921 - Residence: Henry William LAWS (Consultant Mining Engineer)-18360, 
          Shanghai CHINA

1937 - Residence: Alfred James Charles LAWES (Post Office) -34949, Post Office,
          Shorncliffe KEN UK


1944 - Residence: Annie Stott RIVERS-40873, South Shields DUR UK

OTHER BIRTHS
1914 - Birth: Ruby Georgina COBBETT-265, Hamilton ONT CANADA

1920 - Birth: Emanuel SHOOLHEIFER-41432, Hackney MDX UK

OTHER  MARRIAGES

OTHER DEATHS & Burials


1920 - Death: Eliza  WARD- (Dressmaker)13607, Bungay SFK UK


1926 - Death: Emma GOWLER (Servant) -10724, Chatteris CAM UK

1983 - Death: John DICKINSON-37215, Canberra ACT AUSTRALIA


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A suburban childhood of the Twenties 

Seen from the Nineteen Nineties

By John Robert Laws 1921-2008

Part 21
We spent all the family holidays on that little bit of east coast and going further afield did not arise until I could go off on my bike alone or with a friend. I had already been to scout camps, all on a shoestring. About the same time school journeys were started, only in the holidays of course not in term time like today.  The camps were for boys only. I doubt whether our devoted school staff thought they could cope with the tribulations of a mixed camp. The journeys to foreign parts  however were co-ed without any problems.

I recall one school camp at St.Audries Bay, near Watchet in of course wonderful summer weather. Our site was in a field between the coast road and low cliffs above the beach. 

We must have gone to Somerset by coach, an uneventful journey of which I remember nothing except that our kit was moved by horse and cart from the road down a narrow track to the field beside the farm where a line of bell tents had already been erected for us.

We had the luxury of palliases which we filled with straw from the tumbledown buildings near the farmhouse and the cooking was done by the school caretaker with a small amount of help from us on a rota basis. A few cows were kept by the farmer and we were able to see the milk he supplied to us hand milked into the pail.


Behind and above our camp on the other side of the road, rose the warm late summer colours of the Quantock hills, an almost impenetrable terrain of bracken and bilberries guaranteed to stain ones fingers and lips and scratch ones knees to ribbons. We had time to wander on our own and there were organised trips when we visited Dunster and walked to the top of Dunkery Beacon. 


The timeless stone cottages and ancient butter market of Dunster were already an attraction to visitors but as boys we were too keen on looking forward to really appreciate the glimpse back into the past that such places are able to give us later in life. Exmoor’s wide vistas and stony ground thatched with heather and berries were pure joy, the purples and crimsons of the foliage stretching out through the sunshine to a distant hazy horizon and the world at ones feet.

In our free time we wandered into the little town of Watchet  lying somnolent in the sunshine, seemingly untouched by tourism. There was a corner shop selling sweets and buns, and Cydrax to refuel the inner man for a walk into the hills.  Watchet was minding its own business  around its tiny harbour where cargoes seemed to be black coal in and white china clay out. There must have been a few holidaymakers about however because one day we went by paddle steamer along the coast to Lynmouth where  we disembarked in small boats  and had a day to explore and wade up the river to Watersmeet. This was decades before the catastrophic flood  destroyed the town which had previously stood secure for centuries. 

Nearly everyone who holidayed around Somerset visited Lynmouth but the numbers were small and it was not crowded.

Back at St Audries Bay the beach is stony with grey rocks and flat stones ideal for skimming the waves. The most interesting find was that it abounded in fossils of spiral creatures up to a foot across, ammonites I believe, which had been preserved when their nice grey slimy mud was pressed into rock a few million years back.

Another boys only school trip took us youth hostelling to the hostel at Millersdale in Derbyshire. There were about fifteen in the group with two of three school stall including ‘Sammy’ Stewart one of the most popular masters. He taught geography and seemed to be a member of nearly all the journeys. We walked the hills and dales and went by train to Edale where the station name board said ‘HOPE for Castleton’ though we never saw Castleton as we walked away from Hope over the hills.


A visit to the Blue John Mine where blue fluorspar is mined showed us something new in this glowing rock and in an underground trip by boat through a low tunnel which led us to a cave where there is a hefty waterfall from above which went down below us into the depths of that the guide told us was a bottomless pit. At least it never filled up with water.


  



Continued tomorrow
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Lord, help me dig into the past
and sift the sands of time
That I might find the roots that made
This family tree of mine

Lord, help me trace the ancient roads,
On which my father's trod
And led them through so many lands
To find our present sod.

Lord, help me find an ancient book
Or dusty manuscript,
Thats's safely hidden now away
In some forgotten crypt

Lord, let it bridge the gap that haunts
My soul, when I can't find
The missing link between some name
That ends the same as mine


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Member of The Guild of One-Name Studies



THE GUILD OF ONE-NAME STUDIES
www.one-name.org

registrar@lawsfamilyregister.org.uk

With grateful thanks to Simon Knott for permission to reproduce his photographs on this site see :-http://www.norfolkchurches.co.uk/
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