Skip to main content

Saturday 19th November 2016 - Number 1064

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

==================================================================

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. 


-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


 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 19th November


BIRTHS baptisms etc

1802 - Birth: Mary Ann LAWES-28638, Allington WIL UK


1834 - Baptism: Mary Ann LAWS-29202, Bishopwearmouth DUR UK

1857 - Birth: Ed J LAWS-20500, 

1868 - Birth: Nathan LAWS-20593, 


1871 - Birth: Herbert Austin  LAWS (Confectioner)-5630, Darlington DUR UK


1888 - Birth: Edwin George LAWS-3644, Parkstone DOR UK


1888 - Birth: William James LAWS-3643, Parkstone DOR UK

1892 - Birth: Martha Bessie LAWS (Laundry Maid) -15546, Acton MDX UK


1897 - Birth: Robert Lethbridge Murray LAWES-31959, Mayfair MDX UK


1911 - Birth: Wilford Derby LAWS (Jnr)-10022, Colonia Diaz, Galeana, Chihuahua MEXICO

1917 - Birth: Frederick Lawrence LAWS-37004, 

1918 - Birth: Joseph Victor LAWS-38472, 

MARRIAGES

1717 - Marriage: John LAWS-6908 and Susan PITTOCKE-6909, St.Mary Bredin, 
          Canterbury KEN UK

1860 - Marriage: Joseph SHIELDS-27719 and Jane LAWS-27718, South Church DUR UK

1904 - Marriage: James Rogers DeWitt LAWS -(Dentist) 36549 and Mabel Agatha KEIRLE                (Spinster) -36551, Barnstaple DEV UK

1905 - Marriage: Harry Cyril LAWS (Tea Planter) -17334 and Olive Elvira OSTREHAN-17335,           Tara, Doom Dooma ASSAM INDIA


1932 - Marriage: Thomas George LAWS (Wireless component despatcher) -33069 and 
          Grace Lavinia HETHERINGTON-31117, Croydon SRY UK

DEATHS
1889 - Death: Elizabeth LAWS (Spinster) -7498, Clerkenwell MDX UK


1911 - Death: Jennie Alfreda LAWS-13835, Diaz, Galeana, Chihuahua MEXICO

1945 - Burial: James LAWS-28135, Stockton-On-Tees DUR UK

1978 - Death: Ernest William LAWS (Fireman NFS) -15899, Ipswich SFK UK

                                       St Nicholas Street, Ipswich Suffolk UK

1985 - Death: Frederick Arthur LAWS-26739, Bury St. Edmunds SFK UK

                                              Arch at Bury St Edmunds Suffolk UK

1989 - Death: Jacqueline Coral LAWS-21213,



1997 - Burial: Andrew LAWS (CE2 US Navy) 16641, Chattanooga, Hamilton TN United States


1998 - Death: Waverly LAWS-40310, NC United States

MISC & OTHER INFOMATION

OTHER BIRTHS Etc
1798 - Baptism: Mary BIRD-(illegitimate)21882, Penrith CUL UK


1802 - Baptism: Sarah BIRD-21883, Penrith CUL UK

1841 - Birth: Polly SHOBERT-13770, 

1873 - Birth: Emma Frances Loretta WATERS-20720, Waynesboro PA United States


1888 - Birth: William Louis Conrad NAVIER-43383, Kingston Upon Hull ERY UK


                                 Kingston Upon Hull, East Riding of Yorkshire UK

1912 - Birth: Ethel Rose HAWES-32668, Hoxne SFK UK

1916 - Birth: Ronald Joseph M HOLLAND-36344, Colchester ESS UK

OTHER  MARRIAGES

OTHER DEATHS & Burials

1890 - Burial: Harriett OXBOROUGH-3539, Southwold SFK UK


                                                      Southwold Suffolk UK


1929 - Burial: Nellie Therasa GAGE-2784, Pine Grove Cemetery, Manchester, 
          Hillsborough NH United States


1932 - Death: James HETHERINGTON (Farm Manager) -31119, 

1957 - Death: John Samuel WESTFALLEN (Cartage Contractors Carman) -20110, 
           Bromley MDX UK

1984 - Death: Marguerite Jane TYLER-14572, Palmdale NSW AUSTRALIA


1992 - Death: Louis Edmund GRIMANI-22377, Bromley MDX UK
           My second cousin once removed

++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++============================

A suburban childhood of the Twenties 

Seen from the Nineteen Nineties

By John Robert Laws 1921-2008
Part 11


EDUCATION
In those days one paid fees for attendance at grammar schools though these could be waived if a family income was a bit tight. At fifteen guineas a term, or was it a year, it seems chicken feed now but for many the amount was a big lump to find. School uniform was obligatory of course and included caps for boys and hats for girls – to hide their pretty curls.

Minchenden was, like the elementary school, one of the schools which were co-educational probably about half and half, and one soon found out that boys and girls were pretty equal at academic subjects and that some of the girls tended to work harder, There was a theory that boys worked harder in separate schools without the girls to distract them, but I doubt the truth of it, indeed it seems possible that the boys in the boys only schools had to put more time and effort into finding and meeting girls instead of working.

We were in general, fortunate with the school staff, a mix of types and personalities like any group, but as competent as any and better than a lot. They too must have been influenced by the pleasant working conditions and relaxed but disciplined mood of the unit. It was small by present day standards, some four hundred pupils, quite enough to my mind even if it can be done more cheaply with twice as many. G.B.S’s comments about doing and teaching are very true so often, but we had both, Art and Music teachers about whom the reverse was true. - They could do but not teach. It must have been frustrating in the extreme for them. The rest of the staff must have had their frustrations too with the need to produce exam results from pupils with their normal share of laziness and only interested in only a few subjects. However produce results they did, by dint of much note scribbling and even the unorthodox use of a French text of the New Testament for religious instruction.

Not all the education was in the classroom, there were occasional outside visits, two very contrasting ones spring to mind. The first to the Roman remains of Verulanium at St.Albans and the other to the Ford Car factory a Dagenham. I think I was more impressed with the factory where it seemed to me that they made everything except the tyres, perhaps there was not a lot of sub-contracting then. The molten metal being poured into sand moulds for the cylinder blocks was a wonderful bit of knowhow even if its roots went back as far as Verulanium.

Although education was fairly broad it became exam orientated as the time went by. The General Schools Certificate with Matriculation exemption was the objective for most of us and there was plenty of homework to be done in the evenings and holidays. I fear we skimped on a lot of it. Only a few went to University in those days but the Matric served as an exemption from the preliminary exams of a number of professional bodies as well as being needed before doing the Inter for University entrance.
There were other activities outside school hours and one of my interests was the Astronomical Society. Under the guidance apparently of the woodwork master a good observatory with a revolving dome was built by the boys and was equipped with an excellent five inch refracting telescope which had at one time belonged to King George V. How it came to us I have no idea, there must have been some sort of tie up between one of the science masters and the powers that be who arranged it well in advance as the observatory was built to fit it. 

Apart from the idle curiosity of looking at the moon and planets, a good deal of useful work was keeping records of sunspots movements and timings of occultation of stars by the moon. We visited the Greenwich Observatory which was still one of the great observatories of the world although beginning to be out-classed by the hundred inch reflector at Mount Wilson in the United States. The big two hundred reflectors and the radio telescopes were not even on the drawing board.


There was at that time, already speculation about the possibility of space travel and my friend Stan Law and I gave a lecture to our group about it, all carefully mugged up from a book of course. I doubt whether at that time we believed a word of it. We were kindred spirits with common interests in mathematics and woodwork. The maths did not get that far as the ‘mathematics’ – more advanced, which a few of us did as an extra subject for Matric, was only on the fringes. The woodwork turned out more useful and the final exams we spent all our time in the woodwork room making equipment for the physics lab.

Continued tomorrow
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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


===============================================


FOLLOW US on Twitter
LIKE us on Facebook


=====================================================

The content provided on this site is not guaranteed to be error free - It is always advised that you consult original records.

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/
===============================================================

We support INVICTUS and Help for Heroes

"This organization recognizes the United Nations' International Decade for People of African Descent 2015-2024. We reach out to all regardless of race, color, creed, orientation or national origin with support for researching family and documenting cultural inheritance.”



Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Wednesday 17th February 2021 - Number 7340

   LAWS  F AMILY  REGISTER          Henry Lawes 1595-1662 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 our fathers trod,  which led them through so many lands,  to find our present sod. Lord help me find an ancient book  or dusty manuscript,  that's safely hidden now away,  In some forgotten crypt. Lord, let it bridge the gap,  that haunts my soul when I can't find,  that missing link between some name,  that ends the same as min e. =================================   ========================= =================================   If you are a LAWS or a LAWES searching for your family,  You may be interested in our new  Facebook   Group "LAWS FAMILY HISTORY WORLDWIDE"   E-Mail us at:- lawsfhs@gmail.com +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ FROM OUR DATABASE TODAY FAMILY EVENTS 1722 - Marriage: J

LFR 22 Aug Number 615

North Berwick, East Lothian, Scotland Welcome to the Laws Family Register.   A Child of  the Twenties A suburban childhood of the Twenties  seen from the Ninteen Nineties by my late father John Robert Laws 1921-2008 Part 16 Holidays 1, Holidays at that time meant the seaside, and the seaside meant the East Coast, Sunshine, East winds sand, and an icy grey sea. June was the preferred month, until school became important enough to interfere. My mother packed vast quantities of clothing in a big cabin trunk, which must have gone on ahead; it certainly didn’t come in the car with us. It took a good three hours to cover seventy odd miles to the coast.  Bypass was an almost unknown word and certainly wasn’t applicable to even the Essex county town of Colchester, the first time of two, that we went that way. One was built in the next couple of years but now some sixty odd years later has been virtually absorbed into

From the LAWS FAMILY REGISTER Database Today 10 July

From the LAWS FAMILY REGISTER Database Today 10 July For full details of these people and up to 40,000 others are recorded in the Register. Apply for a subscription today - Just send an email to :- registrar@lawsfamilyregister.org.uk and we will send you an application form by return. Membership is just £10 a year collected via PayPal. We are registered with The Guild of One-Name Studies (www.one-name.org) (The UK county & US state codes used here are Chapman Codes, Surnames are in  bold type,  extra information is in  italic type ) Comments and enquiries are always welcome ------------------------------------------------------ Born Today 10 July LAWES 1962 Jacqueline Ann Lawes at West Bridgeford NTT UK 1984 Graham Kenneth Lawes at Harlow ESS UK LAWS 1796 Isabella Laws at Gateshead DUR UK 1819 Thomas Laws (Builder) at Floredon NFK UK 1831 Charlotte Laws at Sullivan NH USA 1838 Andrew Timothy Laws at Wilkes Co NC USA 1858 Louise Laws 1911 Marjoie