Notes
Matches 56,901 to 56,950 of 57,977
# | Notes | Linked to |
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56901 | The Index of Church (Isle of Axholme FHS) says she was burried 05.01.1761 | Maw, Mary (I2876)
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56902 | The index reads surname to Donington. | Family: Dunington, James Gill / Joll, Martha (F2210)
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56903 | The index shows name of district as Edmonton but the Volume and Page number correspond to the District Islington. | Sharwood, Samuel (I4458)
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56904 | The Isle of Axholme transcripts show William and Harriet as parents of Charles Bap. 28 Oct 1849, however another entry shows William and Sophia as parents of Mary 14 Apr 1848. The 1851 census for Haxey shows William, Sophia, Mary(3) and Charles (1) so I think the Harriett entry in the Isle of Axholme transcripts must be an error. Roy Stringer | Holgate, Charles (I40166)
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56905 | The late Thelma B. Maw, the second donor who left her fortune to Angels' Haven, was born in February 19, 1916 and graduated from University of California at Berkeley. She came to Korea in 1949 and worked as a physical therapist at Severance Hospital, Seoul. She attended Eunpyung Methodist Church and helped foundation and operation of Angels' Haven. She retired in 1982 and returned back to Corona, California. As Executive Director Cho visited her in 1994, she gave him a lot of pictures and slidefilms of Angels' Haven. They are our valuable assets in the aspect of historical records. As she passed away in November 15, 2005, Thelma Maw bequeathed some of her property to Angels' Haven. http://www.angelshaven.or.kr/eng/press/news_.asp?Page=1&IDX=1&FndKind=&FndCont= | Maw, Thelma Bridges (I30764)
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56906 | The Life Journey of Art Anderson: http://www.stfrancisrutherfordton.org/lifejourneys/artanderson.html | Anderson, Arthur Conway (I7546)
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56907 | The marriage ceremony weas winessed by George Whisker & Mary Drum. The Roman Catholic Priest was Maurice O' Regan and John Clapham was Registrar. | Harrison, Margaret (I39207)
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56908 | The marriage ceremony weas winessed by George Whisker & Mary Drum. The Roman Catholic Priest was Maurice O' Regan and John Clapham was Registrar. | Briggs, William Thomas (I39213)
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56909 | The marriage shown in the parish register for Crofton on this date shows William Oxley marrying Hannah Barras. No marriage was found for Richard Oxley and Hannah. Are they the same person? | Family: Oxley, Richard / Hannah (F103)
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56910 | The marriage was by Declaration in the presence of Robert Robertson, miner, and Ann Robertson, of 32 Links, Buckhaven. It was an Irregular marriage, by warrant of the Sheriff Substitute of the Lothians and Peebles dated 18 December 1902, registered 18 December 1902 at Edinburgh. Ann Robertson was the elder sister of the groom, Robert Robertson her husband, and also the next-door neighbours of the groom, whilst the bride lived andother two door away at No.34. | Family: Dunsire, Andrew / Dewar, Jane (F1165)
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56911 | The prospect of a Spanish dowry from a marriage between Charles, Prince of Wales and the Spanish Infanta, Maria was a potential source of income for James I, who sought ways to rule without depending on the Commons for subsidies.[1] The policy of the "Spanish Match", as it was called, was supported by the Howards and other Catholic-leaning ministers and diplomats— together known as the Spanish Party— but deeply distrusted in Protestant England, a sentiment voiced vociferously in the Commons when James called his first parliament for seven years in 1621 to raise funds for a military expedition in support of Frederick V, Elector Palatine . By the 1620s, events on the continent had stirred up anti-Catholic feeling to a new pitch. A conflict had broken out between the Catholic Holy Roman Empire and the Protestant Bohemians, who had deposed the emperor as their king and elected James's son-in-law, Frederick V, Elector Palatine, in his place, triggering the Thirty Years' War .[2] James reluctantly summoned parliament as the only means to raise the funds necessary to assist his daughter Elizabeth and Frederick, who had been ousted from Prague by Emperor Ferdinand II in 1620. The Commons on the one hand granted subsidies inadequate to finance serious military operations in aid of Frederick,[3] and on the other called for a war directly against Spain.[4] In November 1621, led by Sir Edward Coke , the Commons framed a petition asking not only for a war with Spain but for Prince Charles to marry a Protestant, and for enforcement of the anti-Catholic laws.[5] James flatly told them not to interfere in matters of royal prerogative or they would risk punishment;[6] to which provocation they reacted by issuing a statement protesting their rights, including freedom of speech.[7] Urged on by Buckingham and the Spanish ambassador Gondomar , James ripped the protest out of the record book and dissolved Parliament.[8] Denied the military option, James ignored public opinion and returned to the Spanish match as his only hope of restoring the possessions of Elizabeth and Frederick. When negotiations began to drag, Prince Charles, now 23, and Buckingham, decided to seize the initiative and travel to Spain incognito,[9] to win the Infanta directly. Arriving in Madrid on 17 February 1623 to the astonishment of King Philip IV , the impetuous delegation proved a desperate mistake. Charles and Buckingham had no idea that Maria was strongly averse to marrying a non-Catholic and that the Spanish, who had been protracting the marriage negotiations to keep British troops out of the war, would never agree to such a match unless Charles converted to Catholicism and pledged to repeal the anti-Catholic laws.[10] Though a secret treaty was signed, the prince and duke returned to England in October without the Infanta, much to the delight of the British people.[11] Embittered by their treatment in Spain, Charles and Buckingham now turned James's Spanish policy upon its head and called for a French match and a war against the Habsburg empire.[12] To raise the necessary finance, they prevailed upon James to call another Parliament, which met in February 1624. For once, the outpouring of anti-Catholic sentiment in the Commons was echoed in court, where control of policy had shifted from James to Charles and Buckingham,[13] who pressured the king to declare war and engineered the impeachment and imprisonment of the Lord Treasurer , Lionel Cranfield , earl of Middlesex , when he opposed the idea on grounds of cost.[14] The outcome of the Parliament of 1624 was ambiguous: James still refused to declare war, but Charles believed the Commons had committed themselves to financing a war against Spain, a stance which was to contribute to his problems with Parliament in his own reign.[15] | Mawe, Leonard (I9829)
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56912 | The Quay Congregational Meeting House | Family: Maw, Samuel Alexander / Alexander, Rachel (F2120)
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56913 | The rank of Knight Commander (KBE) or Dame Commander (DBE), Order of the British Empire, commonly appears on the Diplomatic Service and Overseas list. It can be given to Britons based abroad or in an honorary capacity to foreign nationals. | Abell, Sir Westcott Stile KBE (I32204)
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56914 | The sister of her sisters husband Jane Elizabeth Maw is staying with her. | Sampson, Sarah Hannah (I2754)
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56915 | The sisters Isabel Maria and Edith Matilda Mawe married the brothers George and John Gill. Proposed Change: Mawe, Edith Matilda (I9460) Tree: The Maw Family Link: Description: Another child of Edith's is Harry McDonald Gill who was born 23rd November 1873. Registered January 1874 sub district Byker County Newcastle upon Tyne. Edith's husband was called John Rymer Gill teresa Hull teresa.hull @ sky.com | Gill, John Rymer (I9463)
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56916 | The sisters Isabel Maria and Edith Matilda Mawe married the brothers George and John Gill. | Mawe, Isabel Maria (I9458)
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56917 | The sisters Isabel Maria and Edith Matilda Mawe married the brothers George and John Gill. | Mawe, Edith Matilda (I9460)
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56918 | The sisters Isabel Maria and Edith Matilda Mawe married the brothers George and John Gill. | Gill, George (I9465)
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56919 | The Sons of Maw, The name MAW has been associated with a whole range of British made chemist's sundries, dressings, surgical appliances and instruments, for nearly 200 years. Whilst it is more than likely that it is the older generation of pharmacists who best remember Maw, as their strictly "Chemists Only" products and their range of dressings and bandages were stocked by practically every community pharmacy.0 Unfortunately importation problems and increased competition have seen them disappear from Pharmacy shelves in Australia. Today Maw products are now invisible in the UK as well, and the Maw name on all packaging has been re-branded as Tommee Tippee. This is another corporate name used by the Mayborn group of companies, for the US market, where Maw had won many awards for their innovative baby products which combined infant safety with function and style. Apart from their huge pharmaceutical manufacturing and distribution business, the Maw family was also associated with the manufacture of decorative tiles for walls and floors. A well known example of this craft are the floor and wall tiles in St.Paul's Anglican Cathedral in Melbourne. Our story starts in 1807 when a Lincolnshire farmer, George Maw decided to start a new life in London with his wife Ann and their (then) three children. George established a wholesale druggist business in London with his wife's cousin named Hornby. In 1814 he parted from Mr Hornby and set up a pharmaceutical manufacturing business by purchasing a surgical plaster factory. Other sundries were soon added including surgeons' instruments. When their eldest son, John Hornby Maw turned 15, his father placed him with a chemist at Croydon for two years and afterwards entered him at St Bartholomew's Hospital, London in order to get first hand knowledge which might benefit the family business. In 1826 J H Maw was taken into partnership with his father. As well as being an instrument maker, George Maw is attributed with being the inventor of baby feeding teats, which revolutionised the infant care industry by adapting a baby's natural feeding process to create the world's first feeding teat.. (2) The Maw Company also manufactured feeding bottles of many different patent designs. One of the most successful of their early products was the Maws Fountain feeding bottle, which had a teat attached to a rubber tube which was connected to the bottle by a non return valve to prevent the milk draining back into the bottle. (3) The family business prospered and in the early 1830s provided a secure financial basis for John Hornby Maw to begin to indulge in the collection of paintings. In 1835 he retired from the business for health reasons but its considerable commercial success continued throughout the nineteenth century under his brother Solomon and nephew Charles. In 1849 the family moved to Devon for a few months and it was here that an interest in decorative tile making was aroused. It struck him that it would not be difficult to imitate ancient encaustic tiles by using inlaid clays in the medieval fashion. Designs were traced in local churches and the prototypes were fired by a local potter. J H Maw saw 'the germ of the business for his boys for which he had been searching and in 1850 a disused tile works was purchased at Worcester, and for two years floor tiles were made there. In 1852 the family, their workforce and equipment moved (by special train!) to Benthall in the Ironbridge Gorge, Shropshire, to be closer to sources of coal and suitable clay. The family firm grew rapidly over the next decade, the demand for decorative floor tiles being fuelled by the building and restoration of churches and grand civic buildings. Wall tiling and glazed architectural faience was added to the product range and designs were commissioned from leading architects. A considerable quantity of tiles were exported to the countries of the British Empire and to the United States. By the 1880s Maws manufacturing site at Benthall had become too restricted and land was purchased at Jackfield, a mile downstream on the River Severn where a new Benthall Works was erected and opened on 1 May 1883. John Hornby Maw's achievements fall into three distinct phases. His entrepreneurial flair was first demonstrated during his early years in London in the family manufacturing chemists business. The last 33 years of his life in Shropshire, saw his business flair linked to successful artistic manufacture - the epitome of a Victorian art industry. He saw decorative tile making develop from a few crude, handmade prototypes in 1849 to the opening of the largest decorative tile works in the world in 1883. Meanwhile, the mainstream branch of the family kept expanding the medical side of the Maw business, which survived the disruptions and devastation of two world wars. It was not until 1970 that the last Maw descendent retired and the old firm was absorbed into one of the multi national companies that dominate the market today. NOTE The following article by Susan Watts., provides a complete picture of the progress of the MAW business from 1807 until the present day, and should be useful to the collector who needs a reliable reference for determining the age of an artefact. REFERENCES (1) Pharmaceutical Journal, R.P.S.G.B., September 28 1957 p 270 (2) Maw's Company profile. (3) W.A.Jackson, Pharmacy History Australia, 4, Jan.1998. p11. | Maw, George (I4464)
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56920 | The steamer Lady Ann was registered with the Board of Trade for trade to France, Spain, Portugal and the Azores, as well as having a general Foreign registration. The Lady Ann was owned by the Earl of Durham. The following details are from Lloyds Register of Shipping Iron Sc Sr Constructed 1882 Austin & Son Sunderland Armateurs - H T Morton & Co 225.3 long 33.0 wide 1016 Tons | Strutt, William Robert (I6888)
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56921 | The transcription says 1740 but could it be 1746? | Maw, Matthew (I20248)
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56922 | The will of Margaret Johnson Haselden was made 20 Jan 1640/1, proved 27 Apr 1641. She directed she be buried at Goldington. She named her deceased husband Robert, sons -in-law : William and John; daughters-in-law : Elizabeth, Alice and Mary; god-daughter Margaret, daughter of Nicholas Mawe - deceased, Robert son of Nicholas Mawe, along with sister- in-law Alice St. John and several cousins.Source: The Bulkeley Genealogy, pg 49 - Donald Lines Jacobus | Johnson, Margaret (I12947)
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56923 | Their nephew Herbert W Maw [6642] is staying with them during the 1901 Census. | Needham, Thomas (I6640)
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56924 | Their nephew Herbert W Maw [6642] is staying with them during the 1901 Census. | Mary (I6641)
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56925 | Their only child was deceased before 1911 First name(s) William Last name Maw Age 25 Birth year 1871 Residence 50 Scarboro Road Marriage year 1896 Marriage date 04 Apr 1896 Marriage place Great Driffield Spouse's first name(s) Annie Elizabeth Spouse's last name Simpson Spouse's age 23 Spouse's residence 50 Scarboro Road Father's first name(s) Charles Father's last name Maw Spouse's father's first name(s) John Spouse's father's last name Simpson County Yorkshire (East Riding) Country England Archive East Riding Archives & Local Studies Service Archive reference E-PE10-21 Page 37 Record set Yorkshire Marriages Category Birth, Marriage, Death & Parish Records Subcategory Parish Marriages Collections from England, Great Britain Transcription © Findmypast | Family: Maw, William / Simpson, Annie Elizabeth (F10041)
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56926 | There are 2 deaths for Henry Crompton in between 1851 and 1861 in Bury. It seems from later Censi that both father and son Henry Crompton died in that period, so we can not say who died at what date. Deaths Sep 1853: Crompton Henry Bury Volume 8c Page 221 Deaths Sep 1856: Crompton Henry Bury Volume * Page 2*1 Spouse: Betsey Battersby Spouse: Betsey Battersby | Crompton, Henry (I7112)
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56927 | There are 2 deaths for Henry Crompton in between 1851 and 1861 in Bury. It seems from later Censi that both father and son Henry Crompton died in that period, so we can not say who died at what date. Deaths Sep 1853: Crompton Henry Bury Volume 8c Page 221 Deaths Sep 1856: Crompton Henry Bury Volume * Page 2*1 | Crompton, Henry George (I7114)
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56928 | There are no census entries for Andrew b.1820, Alexander b.1824 or James Wilkie b.1829. It is presumed that they died in infancy. | Dunsire, Andrew (I4182)
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56929 | There are no census entries for Andrew b.1820, Alexander b.1824 or James Wilkie b.1829. It is presumed that they died in infancy. | Dunsire, Alexander (I4184)
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56930 | There are no census entries for Andrew b.1820, Alexander b.1824 or James Wilkie b.1829. It is presumed that they died in infancy. | Dunsire, James Wilkie (I4186)
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56931 | There are only two possible Georges that we have managed to find so far. One has parents called Thomas and Ann and was baptised in Haxey on 4.1.1739. The other was baptised in Epworth on 30.3.1737 and his parents were Solomon and Mary (but presumably a different Solomon and Mary who had a son who died in 1758 in Owston). But this is speculation and guesswork at this stage. | Maw, Thomas (I707)
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56932 | There is a baptism for William Theaker, son of Samuel and Anne? Theaker on 18/10/1835 | Theaker, William (I2468)
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56933 | There is a birth for Mary Ellen Owen in Sep Qtr 1887 in District Scarborough (volume 9d page 369) | Maw, Mary E. (I6228)
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56934 | There is a burial of Frances Maw on 6 November 1811 in ST Pater Wisbech. This could be either the mother Frances Maw or daughter Frances Maw. See individual I64947 https://www.family-maw.co.uk/getperson.php?personID=I64947&tree=Maw First name(s) Frances Last name Maw Birth year - Death year 1811 Age - Burial year 1811 Burial date 06 Nov 1811 Parish Wisbech, St Peter County Cambridgeshire Record set Cambridgeshire Burials Category Birth, Marriage & Death (Parish Registers) Subcategory Parish Burials Collections from England, United Kingdom Cambridgeshire Family History Society Transcriptions © Cambridgeshire Family History Society | Frances (I20742)
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56935 | There is a burial of Frances Maw on 6 November 1811 in ST Pater Wisbech. This could be either the mother Frances Maw or daughter Frances Maw. See individual I64947 https://www.family-maw.co.uk/getperson.php?personID=I64947&tree=Maw First name(s) Frances Last name Maw Birth year - Death year 1811 Age - Burial year 1811 Burial date 06 Nov 1811 Parish Wisbech, St Peter County Cambridgeshire Record set Cambridgeshire Burials Category Birth, Marriage & Death (Parish Registers) Subcategory Parish Burials Collections from England, United Kingdom Cambridgeshire Family History Society Transcriptions © Cambridgeshire Family History Society | Maw, Frances (I20746)
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56936 | There is a death for Francis Maw in Dec Qtr 1849 (GRO District Howden Volume 23 Page 41 but that would be the quarter after his widow Ann Maw (née Brown) remarried to William Thompson. | Maw, Francis (I8168)
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56937 | There is a death registered for a Sarah Ranshaw in 1840 at Gainsborough district. | Ward, Sarah (I13258)
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56938 | There is a grandson in the 1891 and 1901 Census but it is not clear who is the father: 1891 Census: Arthur M Maw, Grandson, Single, aged 1, born in Pickering, Yorkshire, England 1901 Census: Arthur M Maw, Grandson, Single, aged 11, born in Pickering, Yorkshire, England Alt Christening: 16 May 1836 Scarborough, Yorkshire, England | Maw, William Boynton (I6079)
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56939 | There is a J. or Joseph Grasby, bookseller, Bawtry, advertising in The Hull Packet and Humber Mercury in the period 1818 - 1828. Also a Robert Grasby of Etton, in 1805. And a Joseph Grasby, agent, T.P. Smithson, insurance, 47 High St., Hull in 1841 Baptism 1788 Hull, Yorkshire Marriage 1809 Holy Trinity, Hull Residence 1841 Holy Trinity, Yorkshire | Grassby, Richard (I42906)
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56940 | There is a marriage of Georgina Pocklington to George Coulson in 1879. Children Charlotte Elizabeth and Sabrina Pocklington are always staying with family ... never with parents. Is Albert Edward Coulson (1911 Census) thus a half brother of Charlotte? | Pocklington, Charlotte Elizabeth (I6558)
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56941 | There is a Mary Ann How at same address .. widow and school mistress but born in Minorca???? | Mary Ann (I27321)
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56942 | There is a niece, Ida A Blackshaw b c1892 Doncaster staying with the family in 1901 John Burgess | Blackshaw, Emily (I13165)
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56943 | There is some mention of a marriaige in 1518 but that would mean that other records that give Maud or Mauld Maw as the mother of Richard, Thomas and William are wrong ... | Family: Maw, John Senior / Maud (F2819)
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56944 | There was a baptism of a Sarah Ward to a George and Sarah Ward, at Bolsover in 1809. Not yet proven whether this is the same Sarah Ward who marries Robert Ranshaw (spelled Renshaw on the marriage entry at Bolsover in 1821) There was also a baptism of Sarah Ward in Bolsover in 1799 to George and Elizabeth Ward, and this seems to be the most likely to be the one who married Robert Ranshaw in 1821. | Family: Ranshaw, Robert / Ward, Sarah (F5852)
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56945 | There was a Mary Maw staying with them in 1841. She was mentionned to be 70 years old and thus born 1766-1771. She is probably too old to be the mother of the youngest child James who was born 1816-1821. We have put her as a sister for the moment [9402]. There was also a granddaughter Ann Maw born in 1841 but no eveidence of her father or mother ... | Mawe, Mary (I9402)
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56946 | There was a Mary Maw staying with them in 1841. She was mentionned to be 70 years old and thus born 1766-1771. She is probably too old to be the mother of the youngest child James who was born 1816-1821. We have put her as a sister for the moment [9402]. There was also a granddaughter Ann Maw born in 1841 but no eveidence of her father or mother ... | Maw, Thomas (I21321)
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56947 | There was a mother-in-law living with them in the 1901 Census: Mary Ann Maw, Mother-in-law, widow, 74, Living on Own Means, born Henley on Thames, Oxfordshire, England | Maw, John Huntley (I5143)
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56948 | There was a niece Susan Maw born abt 1880 in Walton, Yorkshire staying with them during the 1891 Census. | Maw, Robert (I6723)
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56949 | There was also a niece staying with them during the 1861 Census: abt 1842 Susan Hall, Niece, Servant, aged 19, born abt 1842 in Hampton, Middlesex, England | Maw, George (I8030)
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56950 | There was an Annie M Maw visiting them. This is Hannah Maria Maw born 1882 in Belton - I6994. Strangely this Annie M Maw seems not directly related to Alice's second husband Thomas Maw. | Gurnell, Alice (I13541)
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