Blog
Archive for February, 2011
Look out for Discover My Past Scotland magazine March issue
The March issue of Discover My Past Scotland magazine goes online on Monday 28 February.
This 40-page A4 issue is packed with special features and how-to guides to connect you with your Scottish Heritage, including:
- MacBraynes – lifeblood of the islands
- Sources in Kirk Sessions – new avenues for your research
- Tay Bridge disaster – human stories behind the tragedy
- Votes for women – Scottish suffragettes in action
- Rabbie’s Kin – are you related to Robert Burns?
- Spotlight on Forfar
- Expert Q&A
- Family history newsround, library and events

Find out more about Discover My Past Scotland
January newsletter competition winner
We’ve picked the winner of our January newsletter competition in which we asked you this question:
’31 January marks the anniversary of the death of English novelist and playwright John Galsworthy. We found the record of Galsworthy’s marriage to Ada Nemesis Pearson Cooper in 1905 – can you tell us in which London registration district they married?’
Congratulations go to Mike Simpson from Glasgow who correctly answered ‘St George Hanover Square, London’.
Mike searched our fully name indexed marriage records to find the correct answer. He wins a fantastic Panasonic 12.1 megapixel digital camera.
Many thanks to all of you who entered – look out for the next competition question in our newsletter this Friday.
Ask the Expert – elusive great grandfather
Our resident expert Stephen Rigden, pictured below, answers your queries.
From Marilyn Ellis from Aberdeenshire:
‘For the last 40 years, I and my aunt before me have been trying to trace details of the life of my great grandfather. The elusive William Basterfield was supposedly born in Stourbridge Workhouse around 1858, the illegitimate son of Elizabeth ? Basterfield and a shoemaker by the name of Adrian Mountfield.
I cannot trace my Basterfield line because I cannot find my great great grandmother. All I know for certain is that her last name was Basterfield. I have researched every William Basterfield born from about 1855 onwards but I’ve had no luck finding his birth record.
The records for Stourbridge Workhouse for this period are missing. There are no entries on the 1861 census and a possible entry on the 1871 census showing him living alone in Halesowen and his profession as ‘shoemaker’.
My first real evidence of William is a marriage certificate dated 1880, which gives details of his marriage to my great grandmother Elizabeth Faulkner.
The strange thing is that his name is stated as William Mountfield, profession shoemaker, son of Aid Mountfield. By the following year, however, he is shown on the 1881 census as William Basterfield. He appears again on the 1891 census but that’s the last census entry for him.
My grandfather Joseph Arthur Basterfield was born in 1895, the seventh child of the marriage. By 1900, however, my great grandmother was living with a Stephen Price by whom she had two further children. The story in the family was that she had thrown William out of the house because of his hard drinking and he had gone to live in Worcester.
There is no record of him, however, after his name appears on my grandfather’s birth certificate in 1895. I have searched every available record but I can’t find anything! I am not sure when my great grandmother’s relationship started with Stephen Price but she never married him. His name does appear, however, on my great aunt and uncle’s birth certificates.
The unusual thing is that although I cannot trace my maternal great great grandmother or her son William, I have been able to trace the life of Adrian Mountfield. It seems that Adrian lived life to the full, drinking and womanising, never marrying and he finally died in Sedgley Workhouse in 1885. I have even traced the Mountfield line back to the 18th century.
My father is now 91 and it would be great if I could tell him what happened to his grandfather, a man whose name was never mentioned in the family.’
Stephen says:
‘I do not think this problem can be easily solved, but I would like to give a few thoughts and suggestions, just in case you have not already considered them, and just in case they might assist other family historians confronting similar problems in their own research.
Firstly, you do not identify in your email the source of the information that William’s mother was Elizabeth, so I am assuming this has come down to you as family legend. Assuming for now that the mother did bear this name and proceeding upon the basis that her child was born illegitimately, we need to consider the three possible scenarios:
- The mother was a spinster
- The mother was a married woman, perhaps but not necessarily separated from her husband
- The mother was a widow
These scenarios give very different potential profiles for Elizabeth. She may have been, say, a 15 year old girl living at home with her parents, or she may have been a mature 45 year old with a number of children by her late husband and now having a final child out of wedlock, or she could have been somewhere on the spectrum of age and experience between these two points.
Note that age and experience do not necessarily tie up simplistically. It is quite possible to play with these ages and come up with Elizabeth either as a young widow of 21 or as a spinster in her 40s at the time of birth of her child.
Now let us assume that the son William was indeed born in 1858. If so, our imaginary scenarios give a possible year of birth for Elizabeth ranging from 1813 (if aged 45 years at his birth) to 1843 (if aged 15 years at his birth). We would wish to extend this by a year or two on either side, not least because the year of birth of William is unproven.
I looked up the death of the putative father Adrian Mountfield and see that he was aged 55 at his death in March 1885, suggesting that he was born circa 1829/30. If so, he would have been aged 28 or 29 years when William was born in 1858.
A typical male/female relationship of that time would be where the parties were of similar age or the man being up to maybe eight years older. Of course we are dealing with degrees of probability only, but this would place Elizabeth’s birth most likely within the period 1828 to 1838, which would make her aged 20 to 30 at the birth of William.

Do not get carried away with trying to pin down anything more exact, as this will not be possible. I am trying only to outline the various possibilities and permutations, as it is important to consider them all as theoretical possibilities and then to decide what lines of enquiry are appropriate to examine each of these. In practical terms, this means looking for the mother in, for example, the 1861 census not just as a spinster, but also as a married woman with husband and children, or as a widow with children.
Actuality may also be disguised in the records available to us. For example, were Elizabeth a 15 year old girl living at home when she had her baby in 1858, in the 1861 census her by then three year old child might be shown as if he were the son not of Elizabeth but of Elizabeth’s parents (his own maternal grandparents). This is a quite common occurrence: when their ages do not make it too improbable, i.e., the grandmother under aged 50 at the time, the grandparents bring up their unmarried daughter’s illegitimate child as one of their own.
Such a child can conceivably pass through life believing he is his grandparents’ child and, therefore, perpetuating this misapprehension on his subsequent marriage certificate and other official documents.
I appreciate that everything I have written complicates rather than simplifies, but that is the multiplicity of human experience and most researchers will need to grapple will these issues at one point or another – as I am sure you have done already when pondering the way forward on your research.
If this is a problem that you really need and want to crack, you will need to identify every possible candidate for the mother Elizabeth, using census returns, civil and parish registers, and then descend their line to positively eliminate them or leave them in contention. Ultimately, the careful and painstaking process of elimination may be the only way forward.
My other advice would be to include the usual variants in everything you do. Think of the various spellings and misspellings of Basterfield, such as Bastefield or even Baskerfield. Be generous in your expectations of the accuracy of recorded ages in the censuses and on certificates.
It is common to track a single individual through four, five or more consecutive census returns and find that his or her age goes up or down by irregular amounts between censuses – in the 10 years between the 1851 and 1861 census a person may be shown as aging an impossible 12 years, only to then age by a mere 7 years in the decade to the next census.
When William was a shoemaker’s assistant in the Chatwin household at the time of the 1871 census, his recorded age of 16 years (which gives a year of birth circa 1854/55) may not have been accurate.
Finally, remember that the Stourbridge Union was an administrative district as well as shorthand for the poorhouse or workhouse. I know you believe that the child may have been born in the Workhouse and this may well have been the fact of the matter, but I mention the other meaning of union just in case.’
If you’d like to send your question to our experts, please register or opt to receive newsletters in My Account. Unfortunately our experts only have time to answer a few queries each month. If yours wasn’t answered this time, you could be lucky next month!
Ask the Expert – Essex Regiment
Our military expert Paul Nixon, pictured below, answers your queries.
From Christina Harris in Essex:
‘My grandfather Albert Frederick Spicer, regiment no. 21519 was killed in France on 18 February 1917 when he was serving in the 13th Battalion of the Essex Regiment. I have been unable to find any records of him serving in the Essex regiment.
He originally enlisted at Stratford (now Greater London) Essex on 26 August 1914 in the Middlesex Regiment, service no. 2091, but after 38 days was discharged with Neurasthenia with persistent headaches, not likely to be an efficient soldier. I found nine pages of records for his time served in the Middlesex Regiment online but none for his service and death in the Essex Regiment.
I have been to The National Archives at Kew but they had no records of him serving in the Essex Regiment. I have three medals awarded to him, one of which is the military medal for bravery in the field. All are engraved with his Essex regiment number 21519. I checked the war diaries at Kew for 18 February 1917 but only the officers were named. According to the diaries they were situated at a place named Courcelette, near the village of Albert.
I also found him on the War Graves commission website. He has no known grave but was listed on the Thiepvel Memorial in France. I sent for his death certificate but it just states his army number 21519, Lance Corporal, Albert Spicer, aged 35 years, born in England, date of death 18 February 1917, place of death British Expeditionary Force, cause of death killed in action.
Where can I find further information of his time and eventual death in the Essex Regiment?’
Paul says:
Try the Great War Forum – there are Essex Regiment experts there.
You could also try local newspapers. The 13th Battalion had West Ham connections. Was he from West Ham area? Find out where he was living at the time and then go through newspapers for that area. He may also get a mention during the time he won his military medal, or certainly when it was announced. The London Gazette should have details of the date on which his military medal was gazetted but it can be a devil’s own job to search on the gazettes on-line site.’

If you’d like to send your question to our experts, please register or opt to receive newsletters in My Account. Unfortunately our experts only have time to answer a few queries each month. If yours wasn’t answered this time, you could be lucky next month!
Search more than 40,000 new Yorkshire parish records
You can now search for your Yorkshire ancestors in 40,029 new baptism, marriage and burial records on findmypast.co.uk
The Wakefield & District Family History Society provided findmypast.co.uk with these records, in association with the Federation of Family History Societies.
The table below provides the details about these new records:
|
Type of
records |
Number of
records |
Date
range |
Counties covered
|
Parishes
covered |
Places covered
|
|
Baptisms
|
34,071
|
1813-1910
|
Yorkshire West Riding
|
Warmfield St Peters
Ossett Holy Trinity Sandal St Helens Alverthorpe St Pauls Royston St Johns Wrenthorpe Chapel Wakefield All Saints St John & St Michaels |
Warmfield
Ossett Sandal Alverthorpe Royston Wrenthorpe Wakefield |
|
Marriages
|
1,398
|
1754-1921
|
Yorkshire West Riding
|
Horbury St Peters
Ossett Holy Trinity Wakefield All Saints |
Horbury
Ossett Wakefield |
|
Burials
|
4,560
|
1782-1842
|
Yorkshire West Riding
|
Wakefield All Saints
Flockton St James |
Flockton
Wakefield |
These new records will be of real benefit to anyone with Yorkshire roots. Search for your Yorkshire ancestors now

Bracknell Family History Fair competition winners
Thanks to everyone who came to visit the findmypast.co.uk stand at the Bracknell Family History Fair last month, and especially to those of you who entered our competition. We can now reveal the names of our lucky winners (drum roll, please!)…
Winner of a 12 month Full subscription: Brenda Aldridge
Winners of 6 month Full subscriptions: Janet Jones and Bruce Kendall.
Congratulations to all of you and we hope you enjoy your subscriptions!
More than 54,000 new Lincolnshire parish marriage records published
We have just published 54,722 new Lincolnshire parish marriage records on findmypast.co.uk
These records span the period 1700 to 1837 and cover a total of 139 parishes. View the full list of parishes here (PDF).
The Lincolnshire Family History Society provided findmypast.co.uk with these records, in association with the Federation of Family History Societies.
Search our parish marriage records now to find your Lincolnshire ancestors’ marriages.

Free family history guide and CD-Rom in The Telegraph this weekend
Don’t miss The Telegraph this Saturday, February 19, and Sunday, February 20, for your free Trace Your Family History guide and CD-Rom, in association with Who Do You Think Your Are? Magazine.
This step-by-step guide and CD-Rom will give you the skills you need to discover your family background in only 14 days.
To find out more visit the Telegraph’s website

Search the Bank of England Wills Extracts Index now
You can now search 60,523 Bank of England Wills Extracts on findmypast.co.uk
These records from the Society of Genealogists cover the period 1717-1845. They contain extracts of wills of those who died with monies in public funds, as well as abstracts of orders made for stockholders who went bankrupt or were declared ‘lunatic’.
One of the best features of these records is that they cover a wide social demographic, from servants to gentry, making it possible to find ancestors from a broad range of backgrounds. The records cover every part of the British Isles and the Colonies and there are also several hundred Dutch fundholders in the index.
Read more detailed information about these records here
This record launch completes our exciting project to publish over 9 million Society of Genealogists records on findmypast.co.uk. Read about the other SoG records we recently published and find out more about the Society of Genealogists
Search for your ancestors in the Bank of England Wills Extracts Index now

Cupid strikes in our marriage records
As Valentine’s day approaches, we’ve made a fitting discovery in our marriage records.
We found the record of Valentine Pincemaille marrying Harry Hart in Windsor in 1914. This pairing would have given ‘Valentine Hart’ one of the most romantic names imaginable.
Here you can see their marriage record:

We found this loved-up couple in our fully name indexed marriage records. Have you found any romantic names in your family tree?
