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GSQ Blog→Published 2019 → March

Monthly Archives: March 2019

So What’s in a name? Name variants and do they really matter?

GSQ Blog Posted on March 25, 2019 by Annalies NutleyNovember 8, 2024

As a genealogist by trade, I can’t tell you how many times I’ve had clients tell me something similar to this:  “He/she isn’t from our line because the surname is spelled Byrnes instead of Burns” or “Oh no, ours is Elliot with one ‘t’ – not two”, or “Our line is MacIntosh with an ‘a’ not “McIntosh”. And to be fair, they all truly believed it – they were quite unaware of the ever-annoying variants of surnames when tracing back … Continue reading

8 Replies

Dame Nellie Melba and the Boer War: Duke Bell

GSQ Blog Posted on March 18, 2019 by Sue BellNovember 8, 2024

What do Dame Nellie Melba and the Boer War have in common? I would have thought very little until I started researching the story of one of my relatives, Marmaduke Alexander Thomas (Duke) Bell. The name Marmaduke seems very quaint and unusual but as it was passed down for a few generations in my father’s family, it has become quite helpful in doing family research. I commenced researching Duke Bell because I knew he had gone to the Boer War … Continue reading

1 Reply

My Webster ancestors: Part two

GSQ Blog Posted on March 11, 2019 by Bobbie EdesNovember 3, 2024

This story is a continuation of my blog of 28 January 2019 The Websters in ‘Oz – Sibling James Webster Travelling to New South Wales from their home in Fife was David & Euphemia Webster’s eldest son James, born in 1829. Shortly after he married Elisabeth Redpath in January 1853, the couple emigrated to Sydney onboard the ‘Empire’ arriving on 27 July 1853.[1] [2] Elisabeth had been given a tiny bible prior to her marriage, which was embossed ‘ER’ on … Continue reading

Posted in family history, Websters of Dunino | Tagged Dunino Websters, Under the Lino | 8 Replies

If only I had known

GSQ Blog Posted on March 4, 2019 by Lee EnglishNovember 8, 2024

Gold Coast – January 2019 Recently my two older cousins and I were reminiscing about our paternal grandfather and the Sundays we spent at our grandparent’s house during the 1950s. We laughed about running through the house, remembering how we had to jump over the sills that lead onto the side veranda, making sudden noises and laughing and yelling as we went. These were activities that we cousins had been given strict instructions not to do.  None of the adults … Continue reading

6 Replies

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