Tuesday, 20 December 2016

Our family history is just amazing!

Yes, our family history is just amazing. Having started on tracing my family's history and that of my husband about 8 year ago. Because I was confined to bed and very bored with severe vertigo, But I could sit upright and found that if I  only moved my head or eyes very slowly. I could use my laptop computer to access the few family history websites and do other searches. Not one to sit idle, I soon got hooked.

Now years later I have discovered (and continue to discover) that my relatives and my husbands would have known each other in the Victorian era of Birmingham. What is amazing is that my branch came from Germany/Poland, Ireland, Scotland, Stafford, Shropshire and Kenilworth. His came from Coventry, Shropshire, Ireland, Wales and Birmingham. But they appeared to be living in the late 1890s in the same area and even on the same street.



We have between us: Shoe makers, blacksmiths, Peaky Blinders, bellow makers, tailors, charwomen, sawyers, laborers, brick layers, factory workers, gunsmiths, jewelers, and many more.

We were working class - just like most today. You have to have some sort of work to survive. There is really no upper class anymore, as they have to have some sort of work nowadays to make a living. Even the Royal Family works....

Those that live of the state - well that has always happened to those that are old, ill or infirm-ed. The Parish Relief was available. So was the workhouses. Nowadays we have benefits and charities that help those that find themselves out of work and unable to hold down employment.

RAF badge that belonged to my father.


I do not think that times have changed really... We are just the same as our ancestors. Trying to get bye. But it does make your life richer and more interesting to know a bit about your own history. This should be taught in schools instead of the stuff that we were subjected to...   

Print from Henry Martin Pope (Victorian artist) who married a Hands - one of my ancestors.
   

So for this Christmas we are both getting our DNA checked out - instead of presents that we normally give each other - so watch this space....

Have a Happy Christmas and New Year. Will blog again soon :)      

Friday, 1 July 2016

Frederick Charles Horrocks died at the Somme in 1916 aged 18 years

Frederick Charles Horrocks 1898 - 1916.

On this day that is commemorating the 100 years that have passed on that dreadful first world war that claimed so many young men of many countries. I can not help remembering the young man that died at the Somme on the 1st of July that was part of my family.

Frederick Horrocks - my nan's brother in law by her first husband. Charles 4 years older was also away and serving in the army at the time of his brother's death. He was also not only my step grandfather, but a blood relative as my nan married her first cousin.

My nan never talked about her first husband's family. Not to us, her grandchildren or to her own children by Charles. I think it was a thing at that time that people did. Death was very common and to cope they just did not dwell on what had happened and moved on as best they could.

So I have traced my great uncle/third cousin's life as far as I can find. When my nan was alive - I never knew he even existed.

Frederick Charles Horrocks born in 1898 in central Birmingham, England and lived at 29 Lennox street, Hockley. I have found 4 siblings before him and another 5 after him - but by 1911 he was one of 10 born with only 8 living - so more to find and add to our family tree soon.

At 14 he was an errand boy for the silver trade at the Jewellery Quarter in Birmingham. At 16 he joined the army. It was 1914 and he was soon in the Royal Warwickshire Regiment. He was not alone. His father Edward, and brothers William, Arthur and Charles also joined up.

At 18 he had died at the Somme on the 1st July 1916. The others returned home safe, but Charles, my nan's husband was ill and didn't live long after.

This is what was said in the National Roll of the Great war about him..

Private in the 8th Royal warwickshire Regiment. Volunteered in August 1914, he was drafted to France the following November and was in action at many important battles and engagements until 1916. When during an advancement on the Somme he was unfortunately killed.
He was entitled to the 1914 - 1915 Star and the General Service and Victory medals.

His body was never found, so presumed dead. His mother Emily received 5 shillings and 6 pence. His father Edward got 8 shillings and 10 pence. I have no idea where his medals went to. If they were ever claimed!

He is commemorated at Serre Road Cemetry No 2, Beaumont - Hamel, Department De La Somme, Picardie in France.

One day I would like to visit. I have no photographs or any indication that he lived in any of my grandparent's paper work that they left. So it has been just searching the archives to find him...   

So a hundred years on - Frederick Charles Horrocks - you were so bloody brave and you are remembered....  


Thursday, 14 January 2016

Another year passing

I can not believe that the last time I wrote a blog post for this blog was back early last years! Where does the time go. It is passing far too quick. My new years resolution is to write more. I have so much information stored from across many memorials and churches.

I have never been a complete finisher!!

So here is a photograh and a promise to be better this years 2016.