500500PAF?mm>pMN >ALEX BARCLAY23 EDGEFIELDASTLEY VILLAGECHORLEYPR7 1XHUK0796 203 7450alexbarclay@hotmail.co.uk6-         pp7pXp|ppppq-qKqlqqImmigrIIMIMMIqqqr7r`rrrrrs5s[sCremICRCREMs sss0tgttttBsMitzIBMBASM1uHuwuuuAnnulMANANULv5vWv|vvvvw>wiwwwwAChrIACCHRAxx8xZxxxxx y5yTyvyyAdoptIADADOP1uyy zSzzzz{O{|{{{AnnulIANANUL| *|J|m|||||%}N}n}}}BaptismIBABAPM}}'~X~~~~"VBrMitzIBMBARM7  1Prހ%BlessIBLBLESM aJx݂6gCensusICSCENSM9 Ƀ.CensusMCSCENSe 5vWv|vvvvw>wiwwwwChrICCHR~ ݄.Osą 0ConfirmICFCONFZxՆ5[AConfirmILCCONL $Gm‹ 4`ҌCirICI5W|Í 2QsEngageIENENGAՎ>gЏ CiDivIDVDIV8ېDivMDVDIV0Lqđ?jDivFilIDFDIVF0>eDivFilMDFDIVF!Af˔5UzEmigrIEMEMIG$[Ɩ1kЗ1stComIFCFCOMAbEngageMENENGAטBnÙGmšExcomIEX5_ :jHospitalIHO0Ps+TtGradIGRGRAD"LyП'W~ՠIllnessIIL*>e1^ӢMisnIMN&O{MisnMMN %ǣ*`ɤ2kΥMarBanIMNMARB!=oܦMarBanMMNMARB"# 6ȩ3eҨ3hMarConIMCMARC:!ѩ<MarConMMCMARCv$!ê*bë0_ƬMarLicIMLMARLv;#/cMarLicMMLMARLԭ&'+d߮Nɯ9uMarSetIMSMARSԭ%'eMarSetMMSMARS(%ݱ"IgӲ6MiscrgIMG)']}ƳMiscrgMMG( :jӴ0cƵ)MilSvcIMS_-+sܶ%HnڷNameINM),1*>e=jProbIPRPROBH.+dֺ%KtûNatINTNATU>*PiƼ߼<UqMoveIMV/0,ɽJ{ξ-UOrdIORORDI߿.FrKqOccuIOCOCCU. 0VIlOrdnIORORDN24+>b1RvRetIRERETI31.]-VReliIRGRELI2"FaResIRSRESIB561Z{5\SepISPB4@gSepMSP4<fAhWillIWLWILL= 'CbBirthIBIBIRT+>>Vq?WrDeathIDEDEAT (Om<BurIBUBURIpHuImmigration7ppp%1 immigrated%3.|pXpp%1 immigrated%3 %4.7p%1 immigrated%3 to %5.y7p%1 immigrated%3 %4 to %5.p-qp%2 immigrated%3.qpp%2 immigrated%3 %4.p%2 immigrated%3 to %5.qp%2 immigrated%3 %4 to %5.Kqqp%7 immigrated%3.qlq-q%7 immigrated%3 %4.Kq%7 immigrated%3 to %5.`rKq%7 immigrated%3 %4 to %5.r-qCremationqsq%1 was cremated%3.7rrq%1 was cremated%3 %4.q%1 was cremated%3 in %5.5vq%1 was cremated%3 %4 in %5.rgtq%2 was cremated%3.rr`r%2 was cremated%3 %4.r%2 was cremated%3 in %5.vr%2 was cremated%3 %4 in %5.ssq%7 was cremated%3.[s5sr%7 was cremated%3 %4.s%7 was cremated%3 in %5.iws%7 was cremated%3 %4 in %5.1urBas Mitzvahszq%2 celebrated her bas Mitzvah%3.0tss%2 celebrated her bas Mitzvah%3 %4.s%2 celebrated her bas Mitzvah%3 in %5.Վs%2 celebrated her bas Mitzvah%3 %4 in %5.tO{`r%7 celebrated her bas Mitzvah%3.ttgt%7 celebrated her bas Mitzvah%3 %4.t%7 celebrated her bas Mitzvah%3 in %5.gt%7 celebrated her bas Mitzvah%3 %4 in %5.v|sAnnulmentwupThey had the marriage annulled%3.uuHuThey had the marriage annulled%3 %4.wuThey had the marriage annulled%3 in %5.ZwuThey had the marriage annulled%3 %4 in %5.x1uAdult ChristeningWva7r%1 was christened%3.v|v5v%1 was christened%3 %4.Wv%1 was christened%3 in %5.xWv%1 was christened%3 %4 in %5.vr%2 was christened%3.>wwv%2 was christened%3 %4.v%2 was christened%3 in %5.xv%2 was christened%3 %4 in %5.w݂[s%7 was christened%3.wwiw%7 was christened%3 %4.w%7 was christened%3 in %5.5yw%7 was christened%3 %4 in %5.vAdoption8x*|v%1 was adopted%3.xZxx%1 was adopted%3 %4.8x%1 was adopted%3 in %5.8x%1 was adopted%3 %4 in %5.x|>w%2 was adopted%3. yxx%2 was adopted%3 %4.x%2 was adopted%3 in %5.x%2 was adopted%3 %4 in %5.TyN}w%7 was adopted%3.yvy5y%7 was adopted%3 %4.Ty%7 was adopted%3 in %5.kTy%7 was adopted%3 %4 in %5.yɽ|p%1 had the marriage annulled%3.Sz zy%1 had the marriage annulled%3 %4.y%1 had the marriage annulled%3 in %5.}y%1 had the marriage annulled%3 %4 in %5.z{s%2 had the marriage annulled%3.{zz%2 had the marriage annulled%3 %4.z%2 had the marriage annulled%3 in %5.z%2 had the marriage annulled%3 %4 in %5.|{-gt%7 had the marriage annulled%3.{{O{%7 had the marriage annulled%3 %4.|{%7 had the marriage annulled%3 in %5.~|{%7 had the marriage annulled%3 %4 in %5.}1uBaptismJ|x%1 was baptized%3.|m|*|%1 was baptized%3 %4.J|%1 was baptized%3 in %5.J|%1 was baptized%3 %4 in %5.|1x%2 was baptized%3.%}||%2 was baptized%3 %4.|%2 was baptized%3 in %5.|%2 was baptized%3 %4 in %5.n}5y%7 was baptized%3.}}N}%7 was baptized%3 %4.n}%7 was baptized%3 in %5.n}%7 was baptized%3 %4 in %5.|Bar Mitzvah'~Sz%1 celebrated his bar Mitzvah%3.~X~}%1 celebrated his bar Mitzvah%3 %4.'~%1 celebrated his bar Mitzvah%3 in %5.6'~%1 celebrated his bar Mitzvah%3 %4 in %5.~2{%7 celebrated his bar Mitzvah%3.V"~%7 celebrated his bar Mitzvah%3 %4.~%7 celebrated his bar Mitzvah%3 in %5.~%7 celebrated his bar Mitzvah%3 %4 in %5.MsBlessing*|%1 was blessed%3. %1 was blessed%3 %4.%1 was blessed%3 in %5.%1 was blessed%3 %4 in %5.P'|%2 was blessed%3.r1%2 was blessed%3 %4.P%2 was blessed%3 in %5.P%2 was blessed%3 %4 in %5.ހN}%7 was blessed%3.%%7 was blessed%3 %4.ހ%7 was blessed%3 in %5.ހ%7 was blessed%3 %4 in %5.eCensus5v%1 was counted in a census%3.a%1 was counted in a census%3 %4.%1 was counted in a census%3 in %5.%1 was counted in a census%3 %4 in %5.Jv%2 was counted in a census%3.x%2 was counted in a census%3 %4.J%2 was counted in a census%3 in %5..J%2 was counted in a census%3 %4 in %5.iw%7 was counted in a census%3.g6݂%7 was counted in a census%3 %4.%7 was counted in a census%3 in %5.ą%7 was counted in a census%3 %4 in %5.ɃHuThey were counted in a census%3..They were counted in a census%3 %4.ɃThey were counted in a census%3 in %5.ɃThey were counted in a census%3 %4 in %5.~MChristening eConfirmation%1 was confirmed%3.݄%1 was confirmed%3 %4.%1 was confirmed%3 in %5.x%1 was confirmed%3 %4 in %5.O%2 was confirmed%3.s.%2 was confirmed%3 %4.O%2 was confirmed%3 in %5.O%2 was confirmed%3 %4 in %5.g%7 was confirmed%3.0 ą%7 was confirmed%3 %4.%7 was confirmed%3 in %5.%7 was confirmed%3 %4 in %5.>uLDS ConfirmationՆ%1 was confirmed a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints%3.5x%1 was confirmed a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints%3 %4.Ն%1 was confirmed a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints%3 in %5.$Ն%1 was confirmed a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints%3 %4 in %5.[%2 was confirmed a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints%3.%2 was confirmed a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints%3 %4.[%2 was confirmed a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints%3 in %5.‹[%2 was confirmed a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints%3 %4 in %5.0%7 was confirmed a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints%3.A%7 was confirmed a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints%3 %4.%7 was confirmed a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints%3 in %5.`%7 was confirmed a member of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints%3 %4 in %5.~CircumcisionG%1 was circumcised%3.m$%1 was circumcised%3 %4.G%1 was circumcised%3 in %5.G%1 was circumcised%3 %4 in %5.%2 was circumcised%3.4 ‹%2 was circumcised%3 %4.%2 was circumcised%3 in %5.%2 was circumcised%3 %4 in %5.%7 was circumcised%3.Ҍ`%7 was circumcised%3 %4.%7 was circumcised%3 in %5.%7 was circumcised%3 %4 in %5.qEngagement50}%1 got engaged%3.|W%1 got engaged%3 %4.5%1 got engaged%3 in %5.L5%1 got engaged%3 %4 in %5.͝{%2 got engaged%3. %2 got engaged%3 %4.Í%2 got engaged%3 in %5.Í%2 got engaged%3 %4 in %5.QT~%7 got engaged%3.s2%7 got engaged%3 %4.Q%7 got engaged%3 in %5.Q%7 got engaged%3 %4 in %5.+0Divorce0t%1 was divorced%3.>Վ%1 was divorced%3 %4.%1 was divorced%3 in %5.%1 was divorced%3 %4 in %5.t%2 was divorced%3.Џg%2 was divorced%3 %4.%2 was divorced%3 in %5.%2 was divorced%3 %4 in %5. Gx%7 was divorced%3.iC%7 was divorced%3 %4. %7 was divorced%3 in %5. %7 was divorced%3 %4 in %5.They were divorced%3.ېThey were divorced%3 %4.They were divorced%3 in %5.They were divorced%3 %4 in %5.Divorce Filingq|%1 filed for divorce%3.đL%1 filed for divorce%3 %4.q%1 filed for divorce%3 in %5.q%1 filed for divorce%3 %4 in %5. %2 filed for divorce%3.j?%2 filed for divorce%3 %4.%2 filed for divorce%3 in %5.%2 filed for divorce%3 %4 in %5.%7 filed for divorce%3.%7 filed for divorce%3 %4.%7 filed for divorce%3 in %5.%7 filed for divorce%3 %4 in %5.eAZThey filed for divorce%3.>They filed for divorce%3 %4.eThey filed for divorce%3 in %5.eThey filed for divorce%3 %4 in %5.0Emigration!đ%1 emigrated%3.fA%1 emigrated%3 %4.!%1 emigrated%3 from %5.>!%1 emigrated%3 %4 from %5.j%2 emigrated%3.˔%2 emigrated%3 %4.%2 emigrated%3 from %5.%2 emigrated%3 %4 from %5.5%7 emigrated%3.zU%7 emigrated%3 %4.5%7 emigrated%3 from %5.?5%7 emigrated%3 %4 from %5.טFirst Communionx%1 received First Holy Communion%3.[$%1 received First Holy Communion%3 %4.%1 received First Holy Communion%3 in %5.ǣ%1 received First Holy Communion%3 %4 in %5.Ɩ y%2 received First Holy Communion%3.1%2 received First Holy Communion%3 %4.Ɩ%2 received First Holy Communion%3 in %5.Ɩ%2 received First Holy Communion%3 %4 in %5.Wy%7 received First Holy Communion%3.Зk%7 received First Holy Communion%3 %4.%7 received First Holy Communion%3 in %5.k%7 received First Holy Communion%3 %4 in %5.b>They got engaged%3.AThey got engaged%3 %4.bThey got engaged%3 in %5.bThey got engaged%3 %4 in %5.ExcommunicatedՎ%1 was excommunicated%3.nB%1 was excommunicated%3 %4.%1 was excommunicated%3 in %5.%1 was excommunicated%3 %4 in %5.Ùg%2 was excommunicated%3.%2 was excommunicated%3 %4.Ù%2 was excommunicated%3 in %5.Ù%2 was excommunicated%3 %4 in %5.mj%7 was excommunicated%3.šG%7 was excommunicated%3 %4.m%7 was excommunicated%3 in %5.Km%7 was excommunicated%3 %4 in %5.Hospitalization5%1 was hospitalized%3 %6._%1 was hospitalized%3 %6 %4.5%1 was hospitalized%3 %6 in %5.5%1 was hospitalized%3 %6 %4 in %5.Ҩ%2 was hospitalized%3 %6.: %2 was hospitalized%3 %6 %4.%2 was hospitalized%3 %6 in %5.%2 was hospitalized%3 %6 %4 in %5.G%7 was hospitalized%3 %6.j%7 was hospitalized%3 %6 %4.%7 was hospitalized%3 %6 in %5.%7 was hospitalized%3 %6 %4 in %5.GraduationP>%1 graduated%3 %6.s0%1 graduated%3 %6 %4.P%1 graduated%3 %6 in %5.P%1 graduated%3 %6 %4 in %5.%2 graduated%3 %6.+%2 graduated%3 %6 %4.%2 graduated%3 %6 in %5.%2 graduated%3 %6 %4 in %5.t2%7 graduated%3 %6.T%7 graduated%3 %6 %4.t%7 graduated%3 %6 in %5.t%7 graduated%3 %6 %4 in %5.ZIllness"%1 suffered illness%3 %6.yL%1 suffered illness%3 %6 %4."%1 suffered illness%3 %6 in %5."%1 suffered illness%3 %6 %4 in %5.П%2 suffered illness%3 %6.'%2 suffered illness%3 %6 %4.П%2 suffered illness%3 %6 in %5.П%2 suffered illness%3 %6 %4 in %5.~k%7 suffered illness%3 %6.ՠW%7 suffered illness%3 %6 %4.~%7 suffered illness%3 %6 in %5.^~%7 suffered illness%3 %6 %4 in %5.Mission> y%1 served a mission%3.e%1 served a mission%3 %4.>%1 served a mission%3 in %5.>%1 served a mission%3 %4 in %5.Ӵ'%2 served a mission%3.1%2 served a mission%3 %4.%2 served a mission%3 in %5.%2 served a mission%3 %4 in %5.ՠ%7 served a mission%3.Ӣ^%7 served a mission%3 %4.%7 served a mission%3 in %5.%7 served a mission%3 %4 in %5.&.They served a mission%3.{OThey served a mission%3 %4.&They served a mission%3 in %5.=&They served a mission%3 %4 in %5.ԭMarriage Notice[%1 published notice of marriage%3.`*ǣ%1 published notice of marriage%3 %4.%1 published notice of marriage%3 in %5.%1 published notice of marriage%3 %4 in %5.ɤ1%2 published notice of marriage%3.2%2 published notice of marriage%3 %4.ɤ%2 published notice of marriage%3 in %5.bɤ%2 published notice of marriage%3 %4 in %5.%7 published notice of marriage%3.Υk%7 published notice of marriage%3 %4.%7 published notice of marriage%3 in %5.0%7 published notice of marriage%3 %4 in %5.o{They published notice of marriage%3.ܦ=They published notice of marriage%3 %4.oThey published notice of marriage%3 in %5.oThey published notice of marriage%3 %4 in %5.cvMarriage Contracte~%1 agreed on marriage contract%3.̧6%1 agreed on marriage contract%3 %4.e%1 agreed on marriage contract%3 in %5.e%1 agreed on marriage contract%3 %4 in %5.3߮%2 agreed on marriage contract%3.e%2 agreed on marriage contract%3 %4.3%2 agreed on marriage contract%3 in %5.s3%2 agreed on marriage contract%3 %4 in %5.ɯ%7 agreed on marriage contract%3.h3Ҩ%7 agreed on marriage contract%3 %4.%7 agreed on marriage contract%3 in %5.%7 agreed on marriage contract%3 %4 in %5.ѩThey agreed on marriage contract%3.<They agreed on marriage contract%3 %4.ѩThey agreed on marriage contract%3 in %5._ѩThey agreed on marriage contract%3 %4 in %5.'Marriage Licenseê`%1 obtained a marriage license%3.*%1 obtained a marriage license%3 %4.ê%1 obtained a marriage license%3 in %5.ê%1 obtained a marriage license%3 %4 in %5.2%2 obtained a marriage license%3.ëb%2 obtained a marriage license%3 %4.%2 obtained a marriage license%3 in %5.I%2 obtained a marriage license%3 %4 in %5._%7 obtained a marriage license%3.Ƭ0%7 obtained a marriage license%3 %4._%7 obtained a marriage license%3 in %5.Ӳ_%7 obtained a marriage license%3 %4 in %5./ܦThey obtained a marriage license%3.cThey obtained a marriage license%3 %4./They obtained a marriage license%3 in %5.]/They obtained a marriage license%3 %4 in %5.Marriage Settlement+6%1 agreed on marriage property rights%3.d%1 agreed on marriage property rights%3 %4.+%1 agreed on marriage property rights%3 in %5.+%1 agreed on marriage property rights%3 %4 in %5.%2 agreed on marriage property rights%3.N߮%2 agreed on marriage property rights%3 %4.%2 agreed on marriage property rights%3 in %5.%2 agreed on marriage property rights%3 %4 in %5.Ҩ%7 agreed on marriage property rights%3.u9ɯ%7 agreed on marriage property rights%3 %4.%7 agreed on marriage property rights%3 in %5.%7 agreed on marriage property rights%3 %4 in %5.They agreed on marriage property rights%3.e'They agreed on marriage property rights%3 %4.They agreed on marriage property rights%3 in %5.They agreed on marriage property rights%3 %4 in %5.ԭMiscarriageݱP*%1 miscarried%3."%1 miscarried%3 %4.ݱ%1 miscarried%3 in %5.ݱ%1 miscarried%3 %4 in %5.gƼ%2 miscarried%3.I%2 miscarried%3 %4.g%2 miscarried%3 in %5.]g%2 miscarried%3 %4 in %5.<Ƭ%7 miscarried%3.6Ӳ%7 miscarried%3 %4.%7 miscarried%3 in %5.%7 miscarried%3 %4 in %5.}They miscarried%3.Ƴ]They miscarried%3 %4.}They miscarried%3 in %5.}They miscarried%3 %4 in %5.Military Service:%1 served in the military%3 %6.j %1 served in the military%3 %6 %4.:%1 served in the military%3 %6 in %5.:%1 served in the military%3 %6 %4 in %5.f%2 served in the military%3 %6.c0Ӵ%2 served in the military%3 %6 %4.%2 served in the military%3 %6 in %5.%2 served in the military%3 %6 %4 in %5.Ƶ^%7 served in the military%3 %6.)%7 served in the military%3 %6 %4.Ƶ%7 served in the military%3 %6 in %5.Ƶ%7 served in the military%3 %6 %4 in %5.>)<Namingd%1 was named%3 %6.ܶs%1 was named%3 %6 %4.%1 was named%3 %6 in %5.%1 was named%3 %6 %4 in %5.%h%2 was named%3 %6.nH%2 was named%3 %6 %4.%%2 was named%3 %6 in %5.%%2 was named%3 %6 %4 in %5.j%7 was named%3 %6.ڷ%7 was named%3 %6 %4.%7 was named%3 %6 in %5.%7 was named%3 %6 %4 in %5.H_Probatee0%1 had a will probated%3.>%1 had a will probated%3 %4.e%1 had a will probated%3 in %5.e%1 had a will probated%3 %4 in %5.%2 had a will probated%3.j=%2 had a will probated%3 %4.%2 had a will probated%3 in %5.%2 had a will probated%3 %4 in %5.T%7 had a will probated%3.%7 had a will probated%3 %4.%7 had a will probated%3 in %5.%7 had a will probated%3 %4 in %5.)Naturalization s%1 was naturalized%3.ֺd%1 was naturalized%3 %4.%1 was naturalized%3 in %5.%1 was naturalized%3 %4 in %5.%%2 was naturalized%3.tK%2 was naturalized%3 %4.%%2 was naturalized%3 in %5.%%2 was naturalized%3 %4 in %5.ûI%7 was naturalized%3.%7 was naturalized%3 %4.û%7 was naturalized%3 in %5.û%7 was naturalized%3 %4 in %5./_Movei%1 moved%3.P%1 moved%3 %4.i%1 moved%3 to %5.i%1 moved%3 %4 to %5.߼I%2 moved%3.Ƽ%2 moved%3 %4.߼%2 moved%3 to %5.߼%2 moved%3 %4 to %5.UӲ%7 moved%3.q<%7 moved%3 %4.U%7 moved%3 to %5.U%7 moved%3 %4 to %5.߿HOrdinancey%1 had the ordinance%3 %6.Jɽ%1 had the ordinance%3 %6 %4.%1 had the ordinance%3 %6 in %5.%1 had the ordinance%3 %6 %4 in %5.z%2 had the ordinance%3 %6.ξ{%2 had the ordinance%3 %6 %4.%2 had the ordinance%3 %6 in %5.%2 had the ordinance%3 %6 %4 in %5.UO{%7 had the ordinance%3 %6.-%7 had the ordinance%3 %6 %4.U%7 had the ordinance%3 %6 in %5.U%7 had the ordinance%3 %6 %4 in %5.Occupationn%1 was employed%3 as %6.rF%1 was employed%3 as %6 %4.%1 was employed%3 as %6 in %5.%1 was employed%3 as %6 %4 in %5.%2 was employed%3 as %6.%2 was employed%3 as %6 %4.%2 was employed%3 as %6 in %5.%2 was employed%3 as %6 %4 in %5.qš%7 was employed%3 as %6.K%7 was employed%3 as %6 %4.q%7 was employed%3 as %6 in %5.q%7 was employed%3 as %6 %4 in %5.Ordination0Zd%1 was ordained%3 %6.V %1 was ordained%3 %6 %4.0%1 was ordained%3 %6 in %5.0%1 was ordained%3 %6 %4 in %5.%2 was ordained%3 %6.%2 was ordained%3 %6 %4.%2 was ordained%3 %6 in %5.%2 was ordained%3 %6 %4 in %5.l%7 was ordained%3 %6.I%7 was ordained%3 %6 %4.l%7 was ordained%3 %6 in %5.l%7 was ordained%3 %6 %4 in %5.B)Retirement%1 retired%3 %6.b>%1 retired%3 %6 %4.%1 retired%3 %6 in %5.%1 retired%3 %6 %4 in %5.1%2 retired%3 %6.%2 retired%3 %6 %4.%2 retired%3 %6 in %5.F%2 retired%3 %6 %4 in %5.1Ӣ%7 retired%3 %6.vR%7 retired%3 %6 %4.1%7 retired%3 %6 in %5.1%7 retired%3 %6 %4 in %5.Religiony"%1 joined religion%3 %6..%1 joined religion%3 %6 %4.%1 joined religion%3 %6 in %5.%1 joined religion%3 %6 %4 in %5.%2 joined religion%3 %6.]%2 joined religion%3 %6 %4.%2 joined religion%3 %6 in %5.%2 joined religion%3 %6 %4 in %5.-6%7 joined religion%3 %6.V%7 joined religion%3 %6 %4.-%7 joined religion%3 %6 in %5.-%7 joined religion%3 %6 %4 in %5.Residenceb%1 resided%3."%1 resided%3 %4.%1 resided%3 in %5.O%1 resided%3 %4 in %5.a%2 resided%3.F%2 resided%3 %4.a%2 resided%3 in %5.?a%2 resided%3 %4 in %5.v%7 resided%3.%7 resided%3 %4.%7 resided%3 in %5./%7 resided%3 %4 in %5.Separation{ %1 was separated%3.Z%1 was separated%3 %4.{%1 was separated%3 in %5.{%1 was separated%3 %4 in %5.%2 was separated%3.\5%2 was separated%3 %4.%2 was separated%3 in %5.%2 was separated%3 %4 in %5.uI%7 was separated%3.%7 was separated%3 %4.%7 was separated%3 in %5.%7 was separated%3 %4 in %5.@They were separated%3.gThey were separated%3 %4.@They were separated%3 in %5.@They were separated%3 %4 in %5.Will %1 signed a will%3.<%1 signed a will%3 %4.%1 signed a will%3 in %5.%1 signed a will%3 %4 in %5.Ӵ%2 signed a will%3.f%2 signed a will%3 %4.%2 signed a will%3 in %5.%2 signed a will%3 %4 in %5.%7 signed a will%3.hA%7 signed a will%3 %4.%7 signed a will%3 in %5.%7 signed a will%3 %4 in %5.Birth%1 was born%3.%1 was born%3 %4.%1 was born%3 in %5.%1 was born%3 %4 in %5.CO1%2 was born%3.b'%2 was born%3 %4.C%2 was born%3 in %5.C%2 was born%3 %4 in %5.%7 was born%3.%7 was born%3 %4.%7 was born%3 in %5.%7 was born%3 %4 in %5.SDeathVf%1 died%3.q>%1 died%3 %4.V%1 died%3 in %5.V%1 died%3 %4 in %5.%2 died%3.%2 died%3 %4.%2 died%3 in %5.%2 died%3 %4 in %5.Wz%7 died%3.r?%7 died%3 %4.W%7 died%3 in %5.W%7 died%3 %4 in %5.jMBurial%1 was buried%3.(%1 was buried%3 %4.%1 was buried%3 in %5.%1 was buried%3 %4 in %5.m'%2 was buried%3.O%2 was buried%3 %4.m%2 was buried%3 in %5.m%2 was buried%3 %4 in %5.%7 was buried%3.<%7 was buried%3 %4.%7 was buried%3 in %5.%7 was buried%3 %4 in %5.3Marriage%1 married%3 %9.y%1 married%3 %9 %4.%1 married%3 %9 in %5.%1 married%3 %9 %4 in %5.!]%2 married%3 %9.fB%2 married%3 %9 %4.!%2 married%3 %9 in %5.!%2 married%3 %9 %4 in %5.They were married%3.They were married%3 %4.They were married%3 in %5.KThey were married%3 %4 in %5.vMarriage for Time Only{They were married for time only%3.KThey were married for time only%3 %4.{They were married for time only%3 in the %5 temple.{They were married for time only%3 %4 in the %5 temple.cLDS Initiatory"%1 received initiatory ordinances%3.O%1 received initiatory ordinances%3 %4.%1 received initiatory ordinances%3 in the %5 temple.%1 received initiatory ordinances%3 %4 in the %5 temple.q%2 received initiatory ordinances%3.?%2 received initiatory ordinances%3 %4.q%2 received initiatory ordinances%3 in the %5 temple.q%2 received initiatory ordinances%3 %4 in the %5 temple.a%7 received initiatory ordinances%3./%7 received initiatory ordinances%3 %4.a%7 received initiatory ordinances%3 in the %5 temple.a%7 received initiatory ordinances%3 %4 in the %5 temple.9Batch NumberBatch numbern+Custom ID6C:\My Documents\Photos\Kel&4.jpgjC:\My Documents\Photos\Jean&Girls&Kids.jpgC:\My Documents\Photos\Alex'sDad1.jpgVC:\My Documents\Photos\Alex'sDad2.jpgjC:\My Documents\Photos\Tom&JessWedding.jpgSDad & Mum on their Wedding DaynDad & Mum with Alec McReady, who I was named after. I think I vaugely remember them.6C:\My Documents\Photos\Mum&Harold.JPG>Mum and Harold Rutherford^C:\My Documents\Photos\David Barclay.JPGVC:\My Documents\Photos\DavidB2.JPGC:\My Documents\Photos\DavidB&MaryG1.jpg(C:\My Documents\Photos\DavidB&MaryG2.jpgC:\My Documents\Photos\DavidB&MaryG3.jpgVC:\My Documents\Photos\AndGem1.jpg^C:\My Documents\Photos\AndGem2.jpgC:\My Documents\Photos\Gemma1.jpg#C:\My Documents\Photos\JoesFirstFish.jpgC:\My Documents\Photos\Jo&TomFishing1.jpgI:\FAMILY HISTORY\Fathers blessing for Tom.WAVTom Blessing Jan 2006ZI:\FAMILY HISTORY\ANDREW BLESSING 13JAN06.WAVvANDREWS BLESSING 13 JAN 06טFAMILY HISTORY PHOTOS\Andrew's Aaronic Priesthood Certificate - Deacon.jpgAaronic Priesthood CertificateC:\My Documents\Photos\PGBarclay.JPGc<"y!BfMarrMMAMARR'$K{MarrMMA3:O?q/aInitIINWAC799999BtNbMBN_BATCHS8SSSSSCsIDMIDREFNF@q |&bm%M<FBq |&b-%F_^-dHDq |&b$466%Va4%VMa-dHFq |&b$l%al%FeFJq |&b$$%;F eFLq |&bai$ZM+ FNq |&bs$Z.=%xMK eFPq |&b$A%MuFRq |&b$Z$F FTq |&b$;%F -dHVq |&b$X%M -dHXq |&ba$ $M+ FZq |&ba$$ZF_ --dH \q |&b$ZФ$;MF^q |&b$Z$FF`q |&b@$Z$MFbq |&b.$ZMFdq |&bM$Z^$F.-dHfq |&bWh$/$ZMO-dHhq |&b]$ZJ$F:-dHjq |&ba*>$U"kZ~M?-dHlq |&byH$zH$ >$ZF Fnq |&baEY$MDFpq |&ba^$FwAFrq |&bSa7$a$ӎ$MFtq |&b-$6+$FB-dHvq |&ba8$^$MFxq |&baZ$q%FSFzq |&baZ$UMF|q |&bag`$FF~q |&baT$MFq |&baZ$F%Fq |&ba$MXFq |&ba$FFq |&bv-$FFq |&b0$FFq |&b4$M <_   + K 9u n+_  342>1O5! D/w 0ONS()"#%%J X$&!,-#'[!+#0*%e_.NtZ^'Y&#\$VR$T(AK)@]7<?6;4:82D=7cV W762"8Z4BC1FE/.@bGD@ICHAACED<LM"Z*0cJJSd).PQOTOs)ObX-kmNeU.adTN9:R+ i*@%r],f\*`(C_zUiR|L9UEhgTz]eje4kjbmhulSsqkopSW~ zymrml'wpYvl)5xk{s7rpuoovU}c|n~:VsW3Xt t.d, C|%\:q2Q1,0i 3PIPPPPQQQQQQ&RXRIRRR3SjSSS TCTTTT'UbUUUV9VrVVVWOWWWW&X^XXXY:YoYYYZSZZZZ/[e[.[[[.\_\\\\&]\'Z]]/]%+r]^><^"c^^^3^=^ !_ J_Nr__. _c__@"`#I`"f`:`}`Z`a&(aNasa~aaaDaa b-Fblbb bb c /c [c c c cBcdBdedd!dd e/5eTeveeeefL$f1Ef_Fff{lf$ff0"feg(/gLg&{gQgbKg\gQMh!hhBhy~bh4$hhhh0i;6u@i75gi86i7iPOdi=?i><5'j;Rj:jBA;jJ:jcSkE]>#kC>HkBnkkAkGI kHF lKGIlFql?l[HllW,mB?B`BaDcDdBgDjBjCjDoBoDtBtDuBvBwBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBCBDBBBBB \I ^I _I `IHkFAq |&bV%DNHCq |&bJ%NHq |&bNHIq |&ba%YHGq |&b$ZNH9q |&bNHTSIq |&b$)NHoMq |&b%$ZNHq |&b$NHq |&b#$NH q |&bNH Oq |&bZ%,GNH Kq |&b'$ZNH Qq |&b܅$ZNH Sq |&ba$NHlq |&bNHq |&b$NHq |&b^$ZNHV{WJPۼ$ZNH%Uq |&bb$cNH5Wq |&baK$NH.Yq |&baF$NH.XS7cL*GDJQI$ZNH/3[q |&ba$NH01=]q |&b!$ZNH _q |&ba8$NHaq |&ba$UNH!"cq |&b-$NH'XIeq |&ba]$NH(r |&bNHNP mhXḀUNHZ2r7G ѪCg$ZNH5(q |&b׍$ZNH8q |&b8$NH:q |&b#$NHeO~TfNedENHQRBjzg7Ndf4NHgLCq |&bNHotckq |&b:$INHacE*gq |&bޙ$RHNHGq |&b;%KNHaMq |&b$NH|}Siq |&ban$RNHfq |&b$NHhh [)HB)nNHi r(N:ض;>NHkl[mq |&bag`$NHmn]oq |&b$AJNH~\qq |&baf$NHb7sq |&b$NHv/q |&b$NH0wq |&b$NH q |&bC$NHq |&b$UNH$q |&bF$NH}Buq |&bbf$NHqwq |&bg$NH!q |&b~$NH"q |&b$NH%=q |&bE$NH&q |&bNH#q |&b$NH'q |&b $NH(q |&b$NH)q |&bV$NH*q |&b_$NH{yq |&bk0$NH|{q |&b=$QNH-q |&bA$[NHq |&b_$NH,q |&b$NH12q |&bNH}q |&ba]$NH+q |&b(T$NH.q |&bJ$NHq |&b$QNHq |&bap#Nb bTbnbbbb b b b, b b  b b b b b&b:bbb3b>bbb#b$b%b&b'b!(b )b"!*b#"+b$#,bF$-b%2b'&3b('4b)(5b*)6b+*7bZ+8bg,9b.-:b/.;b0/<b10=bm1>b 2?b43@b4Ab65Bb76Cb87Db98Eb9Fb;:Gb<;Hb<Ib=Jb?>Kb@?Lb=@Mb%BAOb%ABPb&CCRb'eDSb(EETbFUb)HGVb)GHWbJIYbKJZbLK[bML\bNM]bON^bPO_bQP`bRQabIRbb+SScbUTdbVUebWVfbXWgbYXhbZYibZjb/[[mb1\\nb0^]ob0_^pb0`_qb0a`rb0]asb2rbtb'dcub'Ddvb'fewb'gfxb'hgyb'ihzb'ci{bjbkbllb2mbonbob8~pb9qb2srb2tsb2utb2vub2wvb2xwb2yxb2zyb2bzbC{bD|b8p}b8~b8b8b8b8b8b8b8b8}bHbIbCbCbCbCbCbCbCbC{bIbIbIbIbLbMbLbLbLbLbLbLbNbMbMbMbNbNbNbNbNbNbNbQbPbPbPbPbPbPbSbQbQbTb*Alexander Keith /Barclay/ 1eKelly Lee /Turner/Thomas Hamilton /Barclay/_ 823aEnid Jessica /Sawyers/ 3iMary /Grimshaw/ 98yWilliam /Barclay/mDavid /Barclay/Philip Grimshaw /Barclay/ Helen Stewart /Barclay/ Mary Ann Hamilton /Barclay/ Alberto Braccini /Barclay/F William /Barclay/m 994?aK Helen /Stewart/+ 965nDavid /Barclay/_ 93iMary Ann /Barclay/]William /Barclay/mThomas /Barclay/jMargaret /Barclay/];David /Barclay/ 121dsMary (Ann?) /Clark/O 144 William /Barclay/ 960?a Janet /Grant/JessieG 961/1023a0Alexander /Stewart/  962acMary /Hepburn/D 964 William /Clark/w 1033aHelen /Coupar/ 959/1019uPhillip /Grimshaw/] 918l?Mary Ann /Hamilton/ 914 sJohn /Hamilton/S 911 Mary /Mc Cormack/m 913 James /Grimshaw/j 915s Eliza /Fraser/ 917aD!John /Sawyers/%! 945 v" Sarah /Flint/X" 946h#Mary /Sawyers/# 587 $Sarah Charlotte /Sawyers/$ 586h%George /Sawyers/j% 569gQ&Joseph /Sawyers/j0& 568p'John /Sawyers/e' 137 (Edward /Sawyers/j( 72a)Alexander /Kennedy/*Henry /Sawyers/* 68rC+Maria /Sawyers/#+ 70ix,William /Sawyers/mV, 69l-Sarah /Sawyers/- 136h.Janet /Richie/. 1027 /Mrs Mary /Clark/j/ 1032aH0David /Coupar/)0 1036 }1Isobell /Black/]1 1024l2Isabella /Barclay/]3Robert /Barclay/j4Marjory /Barclay/m5William /Barclay/m6Margaret Lennox /Barclay/7John /Barclay/8James /Barclay/9Ellen /Barclay/|9 995n:Margaret /Barclay/]: 997a;Maria /Barclay/|; 999aE<Isabella /Barclay/]"< 1028ly=Jean /Barclay/Z= 1029/>David /Barclay/> 998/534a?Mary /Barclay/? 1001/@Dougal /Clark/@ 1034lMAThomas /Clark/.A 1035sBIsabell /Clark/C David /Clark/DBarbara /Clark/E Susan /Clark/FWilliam /Clark/GDougal /Clark/HThomas /Clark/I Allan /Clark/|JMargaret /Coupar/mZJ 1018rKDavid /Coupar/K 1020 LSusanne /Coupar/jL 1021nM John /Coupar/M 1022/NGordon /Kennedy/hOHelen Mary /Harber/PPatricia Lindsay /Harber/QBertram /Harber/jRMyrtle /Sawyers/jSLouisa /Little/S 82i;TAlfred William /Sawyers/T 94rnUJoseph /Sawyer/NU 71eVFiona Jane /Barclay/WLisa Elizabeth Ann /Barclay/@XMrs Francis /Sawyers/hX 948F-YMaria /Sawyers/ Y 77i_ZJohn /Sawyers/@Z 80n[Francis /Sawyers/mr[ 79n\Sophia /Sawyers/j\ 77h]William /Sawyers/m] 78l0^Henry /Sawyers/^ 76rg_Elizabeth /Sawyers/C_ 73z`Emma /Sawyers/z` 75aaAlfred /Sawyers/a 74rbSarah /Sawyers/b 67a1c Ann /Edwards/c 952/gdGertrude /Sawyer/mEd 99teBertha /Sawyers/jze 100hfVictoria Elsie /Sawyers/f 825/7, 880s gAlfred William Lee /Sawyers/g 101e[hCharles Eric /Sawyers/4h 5aiRobert George /Sawyers/mi 26, 804ejDorothy Louise /Sawyers/j 83o kThomas /Little/k 1013sBlMrs Thomas /Little/l 1015hxmCharles /Little/jWm 1016en Mary /Tanner/n 1012/oGeorge /Little/|o 20, 799Lp Ann /Little/p 2nEq Mark /Little/'q 924 xrAaron /Little/Yr 925ns Noah /Little/s 306 tEliza /Hollister/t 19, 800ouWilliam James /Little/u 25, 805JWvRobert /Little/|7v 104, 808iw Ann /Little/pw 105, 807lxTregarthen /Little/x 910ayCharles Herbert /Little/y 152lAzHarriet Mary /Little/hz 151iz{Olive Cecil /Little/U{ 966 1017i|Morgan /Edwards/j| 949/950E}Mrs Morgan /Edwards/} 951M%~Thomas /Tanner/~ 1009s^Mrs Thomas /Tanner/: 1011hGemma Lee /Barclay/Joseph Hamilton /Barclay/Helen Stewart /Barclay/ Susan /Barclay/| 1000 DEliza Jane /Grimshaw/h 967a{Isabell /Grimshaw/]X 143eJames /Hollister/m 55, 78HHarriet /Gibbs/ 50rAnn /Hollister/ 40 QThomas /Hollister/]. 49mRichard /Hollister/d 38hWilliam /Hollister/ 57lEleanor /Hollister/ 59a+James /Hollister/m  24, 802odJohn /Hollister/jC 23, 803lCharles /Hollister/| 21, 798/Robert /Hollister/] 58eWilliam /Hollister/ 62lIEleanor /Greenaway/% 61aRichard /Hollister/\ 44hElizabeth /Hollister/ 51zCaroline /Hollister/ 54o'Mariah /Hollister/ 37i^William /Hollister/: 43lJoseph /Hollister/]q 39eEllen /Hollister/m 53eMary Ann /Hollister/ 56y6Henry /Hollister/ 22,107,801itHannah /Hollister/Q 41nCharles /Hollister/ 923lElizabeth /Shewry/] 868aElizabeth /Hollister/N 968aQJohn /Hollister/j0 61, 277lMary /Hollister/ji 969 Hannah /Hollister/] 970aPAnn /Hollister/Calcutta, India4SingaporeVLinlithgow, Scotland4Lower Eaton Bishop, Hereford, EnglandUxbridge, Middlesex, England6kBristol, EnglandZ;4Eaton Bishop, Hereford, England|Wilsons Land, Upper Pleasance, Dundee, Scotland Glasgow, ScotlandxDundee, ScotlandZCollingwood, Ontario, CanadaxDundee, Angus, ScotlandUVPerth, ScotlandU/;Harrow, Middlesex, England|;Forfarshire, Scotland~Leuchars, Fife, Scotland Scotland)rc1840/Howff, Dundee, ScotlandjRMyre, Kilmany, Fife~Kilmany, Fife, ScotlandxCo Londonderry, Ireland~Hawkhill, Dundee, Scotland^Brighty, Murroes, Scotland6At Sea, aboard "The Seven Sisters"Leigh, Surrey, EnglandDorking, Surrey, EnglandVLondonderry, IrelandTealing, Angus, ScotlandN+USeggie, Leuchars, Fife, Scotland Seggie, Fife, ScotlandFkc1848Yrc1855M^18 Dec 1856, Age 55??CTealing, Scotland(ASwindon, Wilts, EnglandKensington, London, EnglandSouthall, Middlesex, England[Newport, Monmouthshire, Englandr21 Oct 1856 age 29+^Blaina, WalesBombay, IndiaAt SeaHendon, Middlesex, EnglandWooton Bassett, Wiltshire, EnglandSwindon, Wiltshire, EnglandLyneham, Wiltshire, England RNorwood, Middlesex, EnglandWooton Basset, Wiltshire, EnglandHighworth, Wiltshire, Englandage 7QkByculla, Bombay, India10 May 1883, age 4 months 10 dayswWalesUQ.M.C., Nottingham, England25 Mar 1885, Age 2LNottinghill, London, England*F ZEastrop, Wiltshire, England Shepton Mallet, ,England)Broad Blunsden, Wiltshire, EnglandTAshburton, New Zealand+|Wanborough, Wiltshire, EnglandV,(Stanton FitzWarren, , England(South Marston, Wiltshire, EnglandaWestrop, Wiltshire, EnglandAll Saints Anglican Cemetary, Collingwood, Ontario, CanadaKilled in Action, Royal Canadian Airforce, GermanyAshby de-la-Zouch, England@Dublin, Ireland, EnglandsBillinge, Lancashire, England"St Vigeans, Arbroath, ScotlandTArbroath, Angus, ScotlandQBrotty Ferry, Dundee, ScotlandcI/Lidiard Tregoes, Wiltshire, England jMeaford, Ontario, CanadaSunderland, Durham, England3Hamilton, Ontario, Canadad GermanyMontreal, Canada$VSt Therese, Quebeq, Canada%Burnt Fort Eyre, CanadaKincardin, Ontario, Canada,St Louis, Missouri, USALima, PeruP +Washington Dc, USABChapel Hill, Orange Co, n.Carolina, USADenver, Colorado, USASKirkwood, St Louis, USAChicago, Ill, USAF Kirkwood, St Louis, Missouri, USA Patrick,Glasgow,Scotland1936 age 7Bude, Cornwall, England|Gateshead, Co Durham, England Morpeth, Northumberland, EnglandjLumley, Chester-le-Street, Co Durham, EnglandTweedmouth, Berwickshire, Scotland+Bensham, Gateshead, Co Durham, EnglandRyton, Co Durham, England+Wickham, Co Durham, EnglandCTynemouth, Co Durham, EnglandVStannington Northumberland, EnglandKnightswood, Glasgow, Scotland TAlexandria, Dunbartonshire, ScotlandLennoxtown, ScotlandbPollockshaws, Scotland sBellshill, Lanarkshire, Scotland Busby, ScotlandCathcart, ScotlandProvan, Glasgow, Scotland)c1825Wicklow, IrelandRc1785 Ireland?unknowna-c1880Alexandria, Scotlandc1890Dumbarton, Scotland+tc1862> ac1869Lenoxtown, ScotlandIrelandCThornliebank, Scotland[c1822bPollokshaws, Scotlandc1827^Duntocher, Dunbartonshire, Scotlandnc1800= e[c1790,c1839x[c1817Gartcosh, Lanarkshire, Scotlandr2 June 19??Budhill, Glasgow, ScotlandIreland ? ?c1831Q,c1833wc1766 nc1799c1803T -c1889Allerton, Liverpool, England Meigle, Scotland-c1893Kilsyth, Scotland3c1894ac1857tc1868 d?c1836Qc1837z Rc1775^Lintrathen, Forfarshire, Scotland  Forfar, Scotland)>c1865?Aigburgh, Liverpool, England4Aberdeen, Scotland<Aberdeen, Aberdeen, ScotlandLintrathen, Angus, Scotland BCaldhame, Forfar, Scotlandxc1805ATannadice, Forfarshire, Scotland SKirriemuir, Forfarshire, ScotlandO,Strathdon, Aberdeenshire, ScotlandStrathdon, Aberdeen, Scotland wc1767Cortachy & Clova, ScotlandRc1730 c1743c1689c1693 LPaisley, Scotland tc1872c1895rc1847lc1849Yc1850 lc1854g Bridgeton, Glasgow, Scotland+c1861Kilmarnock, ScotlandFc1845Clyde Estuary, Scotlandc186344 April 1942, Forfar*Eassie, Angus, ScotlandInverarity, Angus, Scotland3c19101948, Stracathroc1824Claughton, Lancashire, England\ Orton, Westmoreland, Englandu Kirkmichael, Perthshire, Scotland F Kirkmichael, Perth, ScotlandKirriemuir, Angus, Scotlandec1797c1765zc1769wc1781Kellet, Lancashire, Englandnc17883aWesthouse, Yorkshire or Scotland ? t Balmuckety, Kirriemuir, ScotlandMarytown, Kirriemuir, Scotland c1871 Morningside, Edinburgh, Scotland< Edinburgh, Scotland Edinburgh?c1887Bonhill, Dunbartonshire, Scotland ,c1830 Cathcart, Renfrewshire, Scotland%Busby, Mearns, Scotland Mearns, Scotland Mearns, Renfrewshire, ScotlandEastwood, Renfrewshire, Scotland Belfast, Ireland Cathcart Parish, Scotlandc18512 u Kingoldrum, Angus, Scotland c1829LPersie, Perthshire, Scotland Kirkmichael, Banff, Scotland Old Machar, Aberdeen, Scotland Montrose, ScotlandQc1835Newtyle, Angus, Scotland Auchterhouse Parish, Angus, ScotlandFowlis Easter, Angus, ScotlandAirlie, Angus, Scotland|Glasgow (High Church), ScotlandDennistoun, Glasgow, ScotlandhGalashiels (Borders), Scotland+Selsdon, Croydon, Surrey, EnglandUnknown$St Martins in the Fields, London, EnglandLeuchars, Fifeshire, ScotlandMire, Kilmany, Fife, ScotlandHillhead, Glasgow,ScotlandWinepeg, CanadaIThe Personal History of Alexander Keith Barclay Overview of Ordinances Born 21st Nov 1948 Baptised 11th Feb 1972 Confirmed 11th Feb 1972 Membership Number 008-0001-8493 Ordained Deacon 5 April 1972 Ordained Teacher 31 May 1972 OrIdained Priest 8th Nov 1972 Ordained Elder 25 Feb 1973 Patriarchial Blessing 13th May 1973 Endowed 1st Sept 1973 Set apart for Mission to Scotland 16th Jan 1974 Released from Mission 21st Jan 1976 Ordained Seventy 2nd June 1976 Ordained IHigh Priest 17th April 1983 Married Kelly Lee Turner for time and all eternity in the London Temple on 26th Sept 1987 888 I was born on 21 November 1948 in Calcutta India of British parents, Thomas Hamilton Barclay and Enid Jessica SaIwyers. My father worked for the British India Steam Navigation Company as a Superintending Engineer at the docks. Before coming to England when I was about 8 years old, we lived in Calcutta and also Bombay. In Calcutta, our address was 9 New IRoad, Alipoor. As with all europeans, we had native servants, a driver, a cook, an Ayah or nanny. I think part of our Bombay address was Malabar Hill, where we lived in a block of flats. I remember in Bombay the children from the flats usedI to get rides on an elephant belonging to a local Indian Maharajah or minor prince. My Ayah or childminder was a lady called Kamila, who was a devout catholic who seemed to have endless patience and boundless goodness of heart. I think I was sIent to try her. I have often wished I could have her Temple work done for her. I remember playing a game of stepping where my Dad had stepped as I followed him down the stairs at the flat. I also got into trouble for playing with the telepho Ine and putting muck into the petrol tank of the car. I remember going to the docks with my Dad and looking at the big ships and cranes and the huge propellers. We had a yellow canary. I went to Sunnyside primary school. It was hot and dry Iand I used to go to frequently to the european swimming club. It had a circular floating raft in the middle with a canvass top. We used to run around the edge and make it spin faster and faster until we all fell off into the water. I could sw Iim OK with my face mask but not without. The sun was so hot I had to wet the flagstones at the side of the pool before getting out. They did great hot dogs at the pool but the crows used to swoop down and steal them out of your hand if you we Ire not careful. One night my parents woke me up and asked me if I wanted to come on holiday with them. I dont know why they bothered to ask me because of course I said yes. We went up to the Kashmir in the Himalayas. It was cooler and very Ibeautiful, with lakes and daily donkey rides for me. The first day I was frightened and thought the donkey man was trying to take me away and kidnap me and I kept trying to turn the donkey back. After that day I went everywhere on the donkey I. On that holiday my Dad taught me to ride a bicycle. I also got shouted at for taking off the handbrake on the car while I was alone in it on a steep slope. A servant ran out and stopped the car. I used to stop and talk to an indian man stan Iding on his head every day. I suppose he was trying to meditate. When he met me in the market one day I didnt recognize him because he was the right way up. Another holiday we had was with "Uncle" Marco and the Glover family. We went to a Ilake to shoot crocodiles. It was illegal and a policeman stopped our car and asked if we had a gun. Uncle Marco said no but it was by the side of the drivers seat. It was a rifle and he set it up on a tripod. I couldnt see the croc in the wateIr until he shot it and it started jumping and snapping about. He then ran into the water with a knife. I thought it was because the croc was still alive and that it was going to eat him. It was dead really, and the knife was to protect himselIf against any others that came along. He dragged it out by the tail and all the ladies got croc skin handbags out of it. Uncle Marco was a magician and once gave me a chocolate biscuit. After nearly breaking my jaw on it I was outraged to finId that it was made of rubber. I remember going on the train from Bombay to Calcutta. I must have been about 6 years old. We lived at 9 New Road, Alipoor. We had some budgies in a cage with a glass side and watched the eggs hatch. We had a dIashound called Coonie ??!! and I used to spend a lot of time playing with Meccano. A budding engineer even then?? I also had some lessons in woodwork in the evenings. I made a rather crude plywood jewellery box with a hinged lid for my motheIr, which was received with something less than the total amazement and appreciation I had anticipated. I had put a lot of time into it and I thought it was terrific. Actually it was pretty shabby but not bad for a first project. When I was I8 I remember waking up on the night of my birthday and feeling something saying to me " Now you are for it. You are over 8 and you are no longer immune and protected." I understood with my spirit but not with my mind. A little later I had to Igo back to England and Mum and Dad said they would follow soon. I flew back and stayed at Greenacres in Hereford with "Uncle" Tony and "Auntie" Rita, who were very good to me. This was one of the happiest times of my life as a child. They haId a dog called Paddy and Tony used to take me fishing and to his engineering factory. Dad had to retire early because he had caught a tropical disease that affected his feet first of all. When I first saw him after he came back he said " I beIt you never thought you would see your Dad with a walking stick." In spite of that he took me on a few long walks. I didnt like walking then and he wore me out. I then went off to Lindisfarne College in Ruabon North Wales. It was a boardingI school and I was there from age 9 to 18. I was frightened and hated it at first as there was a lot of serious bullying and the bigger boys used to terrorise the smaller boys. Until I was about 15 I was very upset and sick at heart at the end Iof holidays when it was time to go back to school. A lot happened while I was at school. Towards the end I got into electronics, (pre-transisitors!) learned to play the electric guitar and made my own amplifier. I also got into motor mechanicsI and motorbikes, which taught me how to use hand tools with some proficiency. I got about 6 'O' levels and 2 'A' levels in science subjects and english. My Dad died shortly before my A levels. I also nearly got expelled on a few occasions,I not because I was oustandingly wicked, but because I was always the one that seemed to get caught. Once it was for making bombs with weedkiller and sugar. Another time it was for stripping lead off the roof to try to sell it. I narrowly escaIped being expelled with a friend of mine who used to take the masters cars and go joyriding at 2.00am all round North Wales. I was due to go with him the night he was caught but I think I overslept. As a result I was the only boy to leave theI school at that time who was never made a Prefect. In school holidays I used to go home to Mum and Dad, first at 122 Sion Lane Isleworth and then at the house my dad built with his retirement money at Lower Eaton Bishop Hereford. When my Da Id died from motor nurosis I was at school and I cried my heart out. It made me realise that I had been wasting my time playing about at school having fun and wasting my Dad's hard earned money. I couldnt cry any more when I got home and altho!Iugh Mum was very upset and emotional for some time afterwards I was unable to give her much sympathy and comfort. As a result of pulling myself together at the last minute I scraped through my 'A' levels with 2 bare passes. I left school a " Ismoker and having had no social contact with girls, I thought they came from another planet. There were only 2 University courses in the country that would take someone with 2 grade E's. One was a course in Textiles and the other was a course #!Iin Fuel Engineering at Leeds, which I took. University was quite an experience. Without the Gospel in my life I had no standards to live up to and there was strong peer pressure to sleep around. However, I found it very difficult to develo$"Ip any relationships with girls and so I ended up having lots of fun with friends, music, motorcycles, beer and latterly smoking pot on infrequent occasions. My guitar heros were Jimmy Hendrix and the Rolling Stones. After leaving University%#I I lived in Egham Surrey for a few years and worked for a company making oil and gas burners as a Development Engineer. I started out in a nice rented flat but soon got bored with it and rented a house with a friend from University. Unfortunat&$Iely, we also shared it with a couple that were into drugs and who knew some of the local suppliers. It wasnt long before I tried LSD and at first I thought it was really great. It seemed like the week was in black and white until I took some L'%ISD at the weekend, which was then in colour. The drugs suddenly made me aware that the power of the devil was very real and for many months I was extremely frightened. I thought at first that it was just an illusion, a so called "Bad Trip".(&I But I found out that it wasnt and in the process I had some pretty terrifying experiences. I started acting a bit strangely at work because for a time it seemed to me that many people around me were merely the puppets and the mouthpieces of t)'Ihe devil himself. Not surprisingly, I ended up in a psychiatric Hospital. The only good the hospital did me was to force a break with my druggy friends because we were kicked out of our rented house. The whole episode caused me to start to pr*(Iay, because for much of the time I was frightened out of my wits. To cut a long story short I was discharged from the Hospital and ended up in a rented room in Egham. My prayers were answered because the Sister Missionaries had just moved o+)Iut and they came back to collect their mail. They asked me to read the Book of Mormon and they started teaching me. When I read Joseph Smith's description of the attack of Satan on him and read some of the Book of Mormon, I knew it was true an,*Id I was baptised into the Staines Branch of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. I felt the Spirit after I was baptised, when I stood on the steps outside Hyde Park chapel. I felt I had no confidence in my ability to keep the comm-+Iandments of God and the standards of the church, and I told him that I could only try my best and that he would have to help me. He has not let me down or failed me even though I have failed him on many occasions. Over the next year or so I.,I read the Standard Works and gained an understanding of the doctrines of salvation. Because of the mess I had made of my life so far, I felt that the least I could do would be to serve a Mission. On a genealogical research trip to Scotland, I /-Iremember walking down the street and saying to Heavenly Father "I dont mind if you send me here for my mission" So I wasnt at all surprised when I received my call to serve in Scotland from Jan 1974 to Jan 1976. To do it I sold up all I had, 0.Imy car, my electric guitar, my hi-fi system and gave up my job. It dosnt seem much now, but at the time it took quite a bit of faith. I would like to pay special tribute to the members of the Staines ward who befriended me and helped me mak1/Ie the transition from one lifestyle to another, the Turners, the Hawkins's, the Hamiltons and many other good people. I doubt I would have survived my first year or two in the church without their support and friendship. It has been important 20Ifor me to make friends in the church, and I have the joy of knowing that they will remain my friends eternally. I did keep a Mission journal or diary. However, looking back on it I am not very impressed with it at all as I seemed to be more31I concerned with mundane day to day events and the difficulties I was having with my companions than I was to record the spiritual experiences. I suppose it was because I was fairly new in the church and was not the worlds most spiritual missi42Ionary. Nevertheless, I did have many spiritual experiences that I will always remember. There were many times after my mission in the years 1976 to 1987 when I desperately unhappy about the fact that I was still single. If it was not for my mi53Ission and the things I experienced and learned by study and prayer I do not think I would still be active in the church today. Before I turn to some of the spiritual experiences Ive had up to now (1989) in my church life, I must say that be64Ifore I joined the Church the good and worthwhile experiences were relatively few and far between. I am surprised to find that in the 1st 25 years of my life there has been so little that that I could record as being truly good and wholesome. 75I I now find it rather difficult to summarise my experiences after so many years as a church member, (not having kept a record at the time) of so many, many experiences that have been spiritual, good, uplifting, and wholesome over the years 1986I72 to date (1990). There have been times when I have been closer to the Lord than at others, but through it all I have prayed every day with few exceptions. I had been out of work for 6 months after my mission and I stayed with a non-memb97Ier called Eddie. I got his address off a notice board after praying about which card to pick. He was a christian who had a very low opinion of the Church because of the misinformation he had accepted about it. He had a friend called Paul who w:8Ias very offensive and aggressive about the church. They cornered me one evening and really had a go at me. They raised some questions that at the time I couldnt answer about the church and the Book of Mormon. This upset me but I got the answer;9Is immediately afterwards when I prayed about the questions they had asked. About that time I hurt my back lifting chairs at church and for several days I attended job interviews even though I was in great pain and could hardly walk. Little<:I steps of about 6" only. Eventually I made it to mutual one night and was given a blessing by Bro Neil Turner. I was in pain and could hardly move when I sat down but I got up out of the chair completely free of pain and I was free to move no=;Irmally. I walked home in the snow as if on air, thanking the lord that I was counted worthy to receive such an amazing blessing. Eddie was surprised that I had recovered so quickly. I dont think I told him why, perhaps I should have. I really><I knew the Lord was with me even though my faith was under strong attack by Eddie and Paul. I eventually got a job and came to Croydon Ward. There, I was once an institute teacher praying about who to have as class president. I selected a r?=Iather inactive brother I didnt know very well and I had a really good feeling when I prayed about him. When I told the Bishop who I wanted, he went off the deep end because this brother had a reputation as a trouble maker. Anyway, he agreed to@>I interview him and told me afterwards that he was wrong, and that the time was right for this brother to be active again. He later served a mission and went on to be a Bishop. I was not at all happy in the job I first had in Croydon. After A?Ifasting and praying until I had reached desperation point, I was answered, while I was praying with a peaceful assurance that I need not worry about it, and that everything would be alright. Within a few weeks of this experience I had changedB@I my job to that of a consulting engineer with Strange Strange and Gardner, at a very considerably increased salary with a company car. For many years I was in the singles program in Croydon Ward. Although I at times I found it painful and uCAIpsetting to be single for so long, I had many valuable experiences and made many good friends all over the country among the singles. I know the Lord has a great love and regard for the singles in the church. I believe I was unmarried for so lDBIong because a had not met the right person. I shudder to think what would have happened if I had married some of the girls I was keen on in those years, special though they were. On one occasion I was guided to the house of an investigatorECI the missionaries asked me to visit, even though I didnt have the full address. Another time, I was driving much too fast in fog when I received an impression to stop. I ignored the first impression but when the second came I braked just in tiFDIme to avoid a car that came out of a side road. On another occasion, I helped a brother give a blessing to the baby of an inactive family who was ill. We did not know the family. In the blessing the brother blessed the baby that all its orGEIgans would work correctly. I thought it was a bit strange at the time. I learned years later that the baby was deaf until the day of that blessing. About the same time, the single adults used to help an old lady with her garden. Once, aftHFIer not having seen her for many months if not a few years, I was driving past the Church when the thought came to me that I should go to see her. I tried to dismiss it but I couldnt. So I got to her house I heard her shouting for help. She haIGId been stuck in the bath for many hours and was blue with cold. I got her out and put her into bed and called her family. I know that it was the voice of the Spirit that sent me to her. When God answers prayers, it is usually by human hands thJHIat he does so. Oh that you and I may be sufficiently in tune to be an instrument in his hands. I have had many many other similar experiences which I have not recorded. I hope one day to include in this the special experiences of my missioKIIn. I have told you about these incidents to show you that I know that the power of the Holy Priesthood after the order of the Son of God is real, for I have experienced it. This power comes by ordination and by worthiness and according to theLJI will of God. I have an abiding testimony by the Holy Ghost that Jesus Christ is the Son of God. From the time I first heard the gospel preached and testified of by authorised messengers I have never doubted that The Church of Jesus ChristMKI of Latter-day Saints is the inspired organisation Jesus Christ has personally set up on the earth. I know that the leaders of the church are humble and inspired men of God and I have felt the power of the God associated with them on many occaNLIsions. I feel that the words of the apostles and general authorities in particular are filled with power. This power is also manifest to me in the words and actions of even the "least" officers in the church when they are acting sincerely and OMIhumbly in their calling. I have had the privilege of sitting in private counsels with several Bishops and Stake Presidents and I count these men as the greatest I have ever met, humble choice and outstanding servants of God and of all men. PNIThey serve their fellow men humbly but with great power, as did the saviour. I am not ashamed to say that I feel love for these men. I remember the words of the saviour to them (and to me and to you) "Wherefore, ye are the world's servants forQOI my sake." In contrast, I think there can be few if any politicians and men in worldly office that do not have their own personal interests, satisfaction and advancement at the centre of their motivation. I have also felt the power and SpirRPIit of God in my own personal life and I wish to tell you I have found this to be dependant on two things. Firstly on my worthiness and secondly on how much effort I am putting in to serving humbly and sincerely and with faith. I think the besSQIt way of serving with faith or having faith associated with the service you give is to be diligent and to take sufficient time to pray effectively. The thing that I want above all else is for my children and the members of my family and KelTRIly's family to find out and know for themselves, with certainty, that the things that I have discovered are true. This is my dearest and most heartfelt wish. I know that Jesus Christ is the Son of God, that the Book of Mormon is true, and thaUSIt the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints has been established by and is directed today by Jesus Christ himself in person. In order to find out for yourself you need to do four things, the first of which is to listen to the discussiVTIons given by the missionaries. Some people are reluctant to do this because they think the missionaries will somehow deceive them or browbeat them into accepting the teachings of the church. Nothing could be further from the truth. The MissionWUIaries only present information, answer questions and explain the steps you need to follow to find out and know for yourself. The other three steps are 1) read and think about the Book of Mormon, 2) attend church, and 3) pray and ask God if XVIwhat you have learned is true. God answers prayers by the power of the Holy Ghost. The answers are accompanied by a good and warm feeling,the likes of which you will not have felt before. To know for yourself you need to follow all the 4 stYWIeps. The book of Mormon contains this promise. "And when ye shall receive these things, I would exhort you that ye would ask God, the Eternal Father, in the name of Christ, if these things are not true; and if ye shall ask with a sincere ZXIheart, with real intent, having faith in Christ, he will manifest the truth of it unto you, by the power of the Holy Ghost." (BofM:Moroni 10:4) Concerning this record the Prophet Joseph Smith said: "I told the brethren that the Book of M[YIormon was the most correct of any book on earth, and the keystone of our religion, and a man would get nearer to God by abiding by its precepts, than by any other book." This is a bold claim, but if you will read the book and pray about it, yo\ZIu will discover for yourself that it is true. "For where a testament is, there must also of necessity be the death of the testator. For a testament is of force after men are dead: otherwise it is of no strength at all while the testator l][Iiveth." (NewT:Hebrews 9:16-17) I hope that many of my family and friends will read this before I die, -as well as after!! Looking at this now (JULY 1999) I see that have deviated from a history to a testimony. I will try to bring this up\I to date now whenever I have a few moments._IMy dad married & divorced Elizabeth Smith McClelland before 1946 and had a daughter ??? Born in "The Old Hole in the Wall Pub" in Linlithgow.Lived at 132 ? West Graham Street in Glasgow as a boy. Worked as a marine engineer and went out t`^Io India & met my Mum. Was present at the Great Bombay Explosion during WW2. Suprintending Engineer, British India Steam Navigation Company at Mazigon docks (Bombay / Calcutta) Said to have an excellent command of written english. Contracted mo_Itor neuron disease before it was properly understood and died from it aprox 10 years later.jPdPdPdPd6nPd//PdVPdPd Pd Pd (Pd Pd ^Pd Pd&#PdPdPd&ZSdSduPdfPdbIInterview with Enid Jessica Barclay in December 1981, taped by her son Alexander Keith Barclay. We are recording this in December 198l. The idea of this is just so that people that come after can get some idea of the experiences in your licaIfe and who all these different people are in the photographs and things. I find it very confusing wondering who all these people are. When were you born Mum? 23rd June 1908 Yes In England not in India. Some of the family were born in IndidbIa. Where were you when the war started in 1914 were you in England? No in India. I moved out when I was 10 months old. Till I was 10. Yes we were all there and Alfie my eldest brother he was at sea and he got torpedoed. I remember him ecIcoming home covered in jelly fish bites his body was swollen terribly. So who was your Dad working for? My father was erecting engineer for the great India Peninsula Railway and that ran from Bombay to Calcutta It had to climb the WesterfdIn Gotts before it got to the plains of India So was that your parents first time out in India when you went out ? No my mother went out when she was eleven and of course she stayed there till she was married. My mother was 14 when shegeI met my father and he was 14 years older than my mother, so he was 28 and she was 14. That was a big difference. Actually he fell in love with her then so I believe. He had to wait till she was old enough to get married. Yes, she used to chfIome home from school and she would get him to help her with her maths. Then he asked my grandfather for her hand as they did in those days when she was 16. Marriages were very young in those days. He would have been about 30 then? Oh yes heigI was over 30, and she was married just before she was 17. And how did he get out to India then.? This was where the strange part comes in. My father was going to China, he was on his way to China to do so government job. I dont know whichjhI it was and on the way he got half-way to India to Bombay and there were three men he found looking at huge plans in the smoking room. This was on the ship. After two or three days one of the men who had noticed him looking over their shouldekiIrs asked him if he was interested in the plan and he said "Yes" and they asked him if he was an engineer and he said Yes , and after talking to him for a while they suggested that he should come off at Bombay and join them because they were goljIing to build the hydraulic dock gates for the Victoria Docks in Bombay. So this was a big thing for him to do because his passage was paid by the Government to China. Anyway they said that they would make up any loss of money to anybody you semkIe. So he got off and thats how he came to India. So it was quite by chance. It was by chance and as I have often told the family, none of you lot should be here.! So thats how it came about, and it was a very happy marriage. So you wernlIe born in Bombay? No, my parents used to come home every three or four years and half their eight children were born in England and half in India, and I was one that was born in England. I was the last of eight, and she lost her first two omIbabies when they were just a week or so old. Was it a tricky birth. I spent 10 years in Bombay and then during that time of course the First World War. And you went to school there in Bombay. Yes I went to a Railway School and Im afraid the pnIeducation was just a smattering really because it was just a little school of about 30 or so, so I didnt really have much education until I came home to England when I was 10 or 11. What kind of things do you remember about your mother and faqoIther in that early period in India? Well not much really but my mother she loved sporting guns and she was a very good shot, she loved shooting and my father being on the railway he used to have a carriage that could be shunted onto an engirpIne or even a goods train they would go up towards the Gotts to areas where they could shoot pig and venison and she used to go along with him. They would camp for two or three days and she shot many a boar sometimes. Do you remember any osqIf your brothers and sisters getting into mischief? No they were so much older than me , in fact I didn't know my eldest brother very much because he was at sea most of the time. So when did you come back to England then? When I was 11. We wertrIe one of the first to be able to get to England after the war because my mother had a medical certificate to say that her nerves were in a bad condition so we came home very soon after the war in fact we were home in October and the war finishusIed in August. And where did you live then? In Southall with my grandmother. In Beechcroft Avenue and the house next door was ours but of course we couldn't get into it My grandmother was No. 6 and we were No. 8. Which grandmother? My mothevtIr's father and mother. Their name was Little. So you can remember your grandparents then?. Oh yes although as I say I didnt meet them till just a few years before they both died. They came out to India when I was very small. I don't remember wuIthem then. Did they talk to you much . Oh yes My grandmother was a lovely person but she was rather a staid person. She could never let herself go. My name now is Jessica. Nobody called me Jessica its always Jessie . My grandmother alwayxvIs called me Jessica. This was grandma Little and she could make Jessica sound so that I always knew when I was in trouble because she would say Jessica, Ca at the end, and I knew I had been up to something. So what kind of things did you gywIet into trouble for? Oh I cant remember anything in particular. Grandpa Little-what kind of a person was he? Oh a lovely man, he was fun and my grandmother was a lovely person but she was staid and proper - we had to be proper. He used zxIto give her a bit of a difficult time did he. A difficult time, he was never nasty to her and not terribly drunk but he was always so funny with his drink and we adored him. All the children adored him and as I say, he was at his funniest w{yIhen he was tight. He was never a nasty man Once she actually got a sack and sewed him up in it while he was drunk and he had the devil of a job trying to get out of it. He wondered where he was he thought he'd been buried?~He really thought|zI he'd been buried alive and he was thrashing about in this thing and a servant came into the bedroom. That was in India was it? Yes and then my mother used to go into him and he'd put his fingers up to his face and say just bring me one little}{I one and I'll be able to make it. What just one little drink, yes just one little drink and of course my mother was between the two stools. She daren't do what he wanted because her mother was out there telling her, you dare! She couldn't do m~|Iuch about it One night when he was like that he managed to get to bed but he decided he wanted a to drop a penny and he was having a whale of a time dropping a penny till my grandmother realised what was happening. In those days, there was a }Ihatbox in the corner of the room and he kicked it you see he thought this was the chamber pot. He was having a whale of a time on top of grandmas hat. He wasn't popular then. He told you some stories of what life was like when he was young~I did he? I expect he did but I don't remember clearly. Ok so you came back to England when you were about 11 and you were at Becchcroft Avenue and you went to school, yes a government school. Where was that . In Southall. Was it boys or girlIs only. It was a mixed school. And thats where you met Rita was it. I met Rita and Tony was at the same school but I didnt know Tony till he was in his teens. Did he live near you? Yes two roads away. And Rita '5 been your friend throughoutI life really. Yes and Tony , but Rita of course was then going deaf because she had diptheria and she was going deaf and she used to depend on me before lip-reading came in to mouth for what she couldn't get . And she was in the choir but ocIcasionally she would go off. Was she on the same course as you then, she was a few months younger than me and in the choir. I would hear her voice going off and so would the choir master. He would look at me with a pained expression and I Iwould nod and then turn my head towards Rita and I would sing loudly and she'd turn round to me with a bright look on her face. Oh, she would say and she would soon get onto the right note. So how long did you live in Beechcroft Avenue? II went back to India when I was 18. What was life like? I didn't have a very happy life with other children I was odd man out because the school I went to was a government school but the children were such that they didn't know much of life in Ias far that because I had come from India they gave me a hell of a life. They said I couldnt have come from India because I'd be black. This was the sort of education they'd had and it was no use me telling them that my parents had gone to InIdia. No if I was in India I should be black and the nasty thing about it was they then went on to say, you've just come home after the war and you're a German and Germans are fair and white skinned. They used to knock hell out of me physicallIy, they used to get me in the cloakrooms and they really used to hit me. And I hated that school. Yes children can be very nasty. It was that that started me being very cautious of people and being a little bit aloof. So from 11 to 18 thIen you were living in Southall and were all your brothers and sisters with you then? No. My two other brothers were in India still. My eldest brother Alfie was at sea and then he got married and took a flat elsewhere in Southall and he had a dIaughter, Myrtle. So there was Alfie then and Elsie. No Elsie was in India . What about your brothers, They were in India but we didn't see anything of them , that was Bertie and Eric. One was in cotton mills and the other was on the RailIway, but we didn't see much of them. No they were quite a bit older than you . Oh yes, 13 and 14 years older. Your grandparents died fairly soon after. Yes they died two or three years afterwards. That was the Littles. Now what about theI other grandparents Did you ever meet them. No I never met them. So you went out to India when you were 18 again. And where was that? Bombay again, but it was shipping. My sister was married to an engineer who came ashore. White was his nameI. Life in India was very different then? Not really because that was the life I knew. It was the life in England that I didnt know and I hated. So what was life in India like then? It would be very different from what it is now. Oh yes, but iIt wasnt much different than when I left at the age of 11 although there had been a war. You had lots of servants then? Oh yes. You took that for granted, but people today would find that very strange. Oh yes, I was used to it and of course Iwhen I came to England I missed it all. I had to learn to do things for myself. It didn't mean anything to me going back. I just lived with my sister and brother-in-law So you were 18 when you went back to India and how long did you stayI there then? Well I stayed there till I was married, Which was when. I was 20 Before I could marry, of course I was under 21, 50 because my mother was in England I couldnt marry without her consent so my husband to be had to write to my motheIr and propose to me through my mother and get her permission. She had to write back in such a letter that could be handed on to the powers that be that allow you to get married and that was how I was able to marry under the age of 21. You firsIt husband Harold was quite a lot older than you, Yes he was 27 years older than me. There was a big difference, but he was more of a family friend. He was a very nice man but I couldn't say I fell in love with him or anything like that. He dIecided that he wanted to marry me and he got my mothers and my sisters consent and we were married. And you lived in India or did you come back straight away? No his leave was due in a few months after we were married and we came home two mIonths after we were married. So where were Norman and Edward born then? They were both born in India. I didn't know that. Well during that time before the next world war we were coming home to England every 2.1/2 to 3 years. That went on tiIll the second world war and Edward was a week from being 16 when we wanted to come home on leave. How old were they when Harold died then? Oh Edward was 9 to 10 and Norman was 6. So we stayed out there because the war was going to start anId we wanted to get away because of their education. I wanted them to have home education and as I say we couldn't leave because Edward was military age. They were calling up youngsters age 16. And Harold was working. He was Works Manager of thIe B.I.S.N. Company's workshops in Bombay. They were a shipping company workshops and he was works manager. Do you have any special memories of Harold, any experiences you had together? Not really it was a very happy marriage and we were moIre friends than anything else with that age difference , but he was a very nice man. You met my father shortly before Harold died didn't you. Yes, actually he was the reason for your father coming ashore, because he took such a liking to him.I He talked to me about him many times before I met him and I was always hearing about this wonderful Tommy Barclay and he was bursting to get him ashore because he knew he was going to be the right man for what he had in mind for the company tIo do in future. They became great friends didn't they? Yes they were friends before and it was through Harold getting him ashore that the Company changed their policy that the man that could come ashore would finish up in the London office asI Chief Superintendent Engineer of the Company and this was what Harold had in mind and strangely enough it came through and happened to your father. So he was the means of making your father what he was here. So was Harold ill for a long tIime or did he die very suddenly? No he wasn't ill very long but his illness took the form that he couldn't breath very well and that was what took him off. He knew that. So how did you meet my father? When he came ashore. Harold brought him Iashore. So you were living in Bombay all could get in through the huge wooden gates. The seepoys were standing there and would only open up to people who lived in the dockyard. I dont suppose any of it has changed very much? Oh its changed a lIot. There are still an awful lot of poor people there? Oh that has always been and always will be because of the tremendous population of the underprivileged Has the government changed very much since then or not? Oh yes. Nehrus did the couIntry an awful lot of good. It was a British Colony of course. Oh yes . It was British India then. So when did they get their independence? I;m never very sure of this -1946 about. So you would have been there then? Oh yes we were in CalcutIta. It was a very dicey at the time. Particularly Calcutta was more of a vicious sort of place as far as Europeans. Was there any trouble? They day that Gandhi was shot you could almost hear the silence and no Europeans went out. Gandhi was Ishot? Oh yes, this was all brewing and this was why Europeans had to be careful of what they did and said. We were all advised to stay indoors till the news got round that it wasn't a European that shot him. And then we all breathed. You coIuld almost hear Calcutta breath again. Where did you go for holidays when you were in India? We always went up in the hills and Edward and Norman went to school there. It was cooler up in the mountains? Oh yes it was very much higher than tIhe Bombay side and of course with a view of Everest. How often did you go up there then? Just once a year? Only once a year because you got a month's holiday and that was by train and then a very slow train and then the rest by car, but you Icouldn't get that high by train. You married my father when? I was born in 1948. Yes we were married in 1946. So it was fairly soon after Harold died then? Yes. Youve been right through the war then in India. Harold worked in the docIkyard in the war thats right isnit it? No Harold died a few months before war. Harold died in the May at the beginning of the war This is why we couldn't get home We had to wait So Harold died in 1939 and you married my Dad in 1946. HarolId died in May and the war started in September. And you didn't marry my dad till after the war then in 1946. So what were you doing during the war years then ? Right at the beginning your father that was to be asked me to go and see somebIody in the Company's office . The war had started by this time and it was creeping towards the Middle East and I could see what was on the cards that it would be our side of the Middle East and Japan was going to be involved. It was then thaIt somebody sent for me. I didnt know what it was about and it turned out to be that because war was coming so near shipping would be very much involved and it would have to be naturally very secret. So the Ministry of War Transport wanted to Iopen a trading department dealing with shipping. I was scared stiff at this because I had never done a job in my life and coding I didn know a thing about it. But somehow somebody thought that I was going to be the ideal person and into this II went. Of course you had to be British born and they thought I was the ideal person because I had been in India all my life, and I knew India and a lot about shipping. So with fear and trembling I did accept so I joined the Ministry of War TIransport. Then they asked me to recruit women that I thought would be able to keep their mouths shut because we all had to sign the Official Secrets Act and I had choose women that didnt chatter So I started with myself and then I got two moreI and another one and then I finished up with about 18 cyphers as they were called So it was a big department? Yes and it was a department you couldnt get into because there was a seepoy at the door and you could't get in. And then within thIat room there was another secret room that I could get into. This was the direct line to London and there was a machine in there that brought the tapes through from London and we decoded them. When a cypher girl picked up the first four or fiIve special letters she had to bring it me so that I had to drop everything and do this one myself. Then I took it personnaly to the head of Ministry of War Transport so if it leaked out it would be through me. I was very happy to help but you Icouldnt do cyphering for more than four hours. It was very tiring. I did have a little breakdown because there was a lot on my mind. Tommy being in the position he was there were things I could have told him for his own benefit. Like savingI him going out at 2 and 3 oclock in the morning. I knew that there was no need to go down to the jetty but I couldn't say anything. I knew the ships' arrival or departure times in advance and that was a very important thing to keep secret becaIuse by then of course the Japs were in action and we had spotted a Jap submarine 100 miles from Bombay. Many of our ships were sunk in fact the BI lost a third of their ships. This isnt a happy thing for me to talk about. So there I was therIe the whole time of the war. Was My dad was working in the dockyard the whole time? Not in the dockyard no. He wasnt well. By then he was in the office. He was in the Bombay office then. He was Assistant Superintendent. Then a very intereIsting and sad thing happened, the great Bombay explosion. That was the ship called the Fort Stikine. (Note Norman Rutherford has a copy of a rare book called "The Great Bombay Explosion). She arrived in Bombay loaded to the gunwales as they sIay with ammunition and on top of the ammunition was gold bullion. This terrific amount of gold bullion and this ship blew up in the dock, in the wet docks. The wet docks were crammed with ships with only a few yards between them and I was in tIhe Mm. of War Transport about 6 miles away. There was this tremendous explosion, great big glass windows behind me blew in and many of my cypher girls were cut with glass. All these huge blinds fell down. The first thing I did was to phone yIour father in the BI office and somebody had just told me, they shouldnt have told me, that he was on his way to the explosion. So I know enough about explosion and ships to know that with ships so close there was going to be carnage and he wIas on his way. Later of course I found out that just before he got there was another explosion and he jumped out of his car and took shelter under a stone archway and when he thought things were quiet enough he thought he would get into the caIr again the driver was sitting in the car absolutely shattered, his nerves, and of course Tommy had a topee on (hard hat) the best thing he could have on with things flying around, because the anchor from one ship flew over his head and landedI 2 miles away in the hospital garden. All this stuff was flying around and it was setting other ships on fire. It was really terrible. He was hanging on to his topee under this archway and when he decided to go he happened to look up to see ifI there was anything more flying around and his eye caught the writing on this archway and on the archway it said "If God is with us who can be against us." So he still carried on and went on to this ship, not on to it, but a bit was all right Iand he could see all the damage that had been done, and between the ships the next day there were bodies just floating about 300 bodies. and for months afterwards passing down that road to the docks the smell was something terrible. A littlIe light story connected with this was there was an old parsee about 2 miles away sitting up in his top floor flat and there was a bang on the roof and he looked down and something had come through the roof and it was a gold bar, a bullion barI. They havent recovered all the bullion yet. What happened when the war ended - there was a big celebration was there? Oh yes, great news but the first thing in my mind was to get the boys home. Did you have newspapers out there? Oh yes, and tIhere was radio. So the year after the war ended you married dad, Yes and as I say it was imperative that I got Edward out before he was 16 because they were still calling young men up. He would have had to register and stay in India. So thIe Company put their best foot forward and got me a passage on the (?????). She was an iron-decked ship and there were 6 of us in a 2-berth cabin. And by that time I was to go out and marry your father. You went back to Bombay and married dad Iin Bombay. Yes I was to go out and just as I'd booked my passage to go out a telegram came by a motor cyclist and this was to say that Id been given the MBE. Thats the one youve got in the cabinet there is it? For the war work for the cypheIrs. Did you collect that personally? No because we had waited so long to get married and I had booked my passage and he didnt know I'd got the MBE of course but he'd arranged it and it had to be a special dispensation because no woman could goI out to India and not be responsible to somebody and she could only stay there 24 or 48 hours and she had to move again out of the country. So your father had arranged the wedding and the ship and this thing came in between the MBE, and I hadI to make up my mind whether I should have the honour of receiving this from the King himself or go to India. So I made up my mind I would go to India. So it was sent to me before I left by post. I would have loved to have gone but the other Ithing was more important. There is a special chapel in St. Paul's for holders of the MBE? Yes its in the crypt quite near to Wellington's gun carriage I think. Its a lovely little chapel. Everyone else has to pay to go in but you get in fIor free dont you? I get in for free. A funny little story attached to that when Holly and her friend were over from America they didnt know and I didnt know either and when we approached the gate I was going to get my money ready to pay. I saIw a notice on the board saying that any Members of the British Empire go through free and their guests with them so I went forward. The girls saw I hadnt paid anything so they grabbed hold of me, poor old granny whod made a mistake, and they sIaid "oh you've got to pay granny". I said "No I dont have to pay because I'm a Member of the British Empire". They thought it was crackers and when we got home I had to show them the MBE. What were Norman and Edward like when they were veryI little.? Well their characters were as different as chalk and cheese. How old were they when they went to boarding school. Very very young. I expect they got up to a lot of mischief. Oh they were always into mischief, because they were difIferent characters. Norman was the softie of course and Edward could get anything round him. They used to fight a lot when they were little? I suppose they did. But Edward was the cute one and could get round Norman. Thats why I call Norman sIoftie- he couldnt see that Edward was moving him in the way he wanted him to go. They went off to boarding school and then you came back to India and then you got married. Do you remember anything particular about your wedding? Nothing except I that it was a Register Office which I was very sad about. Actually Tommy before we were married used to talk to the Church of England, Bishop in Bombay Cathedral because he so wanted us to have a Church wedding, for my sake, but it never cameI off so it had to be a Register Office, which he was very sorry about and I was. Where did you go for your honeymoon? We went up to Rangoon(???) and Poonah, the Gotts, the mountains - they're not high enough to be called mountains, but its Ithe ridge that runs right down the coast. There are some photos in the album Which we ur come to a bit later. I was born a couple of years later then? That was in Calcutta. So you'd moved then from Bombay at some time? He went to Calcutta whilIe I stayed at home before I came out and then he was in Calcutta. What was I like when I was little then? Well you werent terribly bad, you couldnt be just' on your own. I remember one day in Calcutta, no Bombay, there was a block of flats neaIr the seafront and at the back one of the local Indian Princes had his estate or something and you used to go for elephant rides. That was when we lived in Malabar flats. The next door neighbour was the Rajah of Jaipur and they used to have biIg parties for the children and they always had these elephants for the children to ride on. We also of course had the notorious Towers of Silence, that's right next door to the Rajah's house and all the big nobs used to live in this place wIhere we did, the wealthy part of India, but this was stuck in the middle of it all and the Tower of Silence is the Parsees burial ground where the Parsees are buried. They dont burn them, they just lay their bodies out. Its called a Tower of ISilence, its a huge hollow in the ground and its covered with an iron grid. They break all the bones in the body first and then its laid out on this grid. Nullabar hill is when you look in the sky you see huge vultures flying around and thesIe vultures eat the flesh and thats how the Parsee buries their dead. They dont bury and they dont burn. And continuing with a little story, my mother was getting into a rickshaw (a garry the Indians call it- it means eating the air, meaning tIhat you go out for a drive in the fresh air) The Europeans used to do this, to go "out eating the air" along the sea front. My mother and father were sitting at the back of the garry and chatting away when all of a sudden she heard a bit of a Iplop and she looked down on to her lap and here was a human finger and she promptly passed out! You used to have some trouble with burglars in India didnt you? Oh we were always having trouble with burglars. When Norman was coming - I wIas 7 months pregnant and wakened up one night hearing something and my face was turned towards the bathroom and the bathroom door had frosted glass halfway up and the bathroom follows through to a roundabout iron grille staircase leading down Ito the bottom floors. When I looked at this glass I could see a face and I though to myself, "We've got a burglar". So instead of waking Harold I crept out of bed and knew that the door was locked on my side with a little snick and I thought, Inow the door opened towards his face, so I worked it out and thought now if I hang onto something and get myself steady I could put my foot on the door and give a shove right into his face, and so this is what I did, I quietly moved the snick,I steadied myself, put my foot flat on the door and wallop. There was an unholy yell from this man which wakened up Harold and he shouted What the so and so's wrong, put on all the lights of course, and by this time the fellow had gone. He wentI round and round this iron staircase, but before he was even halfway down I managed to get the big metal tin pot as we called it, we used to throw it over our shoulders for water, and I chucked this thing and this thing went rattling down and Imade the Dickens of a noise, all the servants down below were wakened up, but he got away. I think he was one of the servants from some nearby house and I'm quite sure my lot would know who it was, but they never saw a thing. Was it NormanI or Edward who used to climb up the drainpipes outside the house. This was Norman again, well you couldnt tell Norman he couldn't do anything because he'd do it. Whether he could or not he'd show you he could do it. Friends of ours on the Ifourth floor had said they'd had a burglar and so we were arguing about this, how he could get in and somebody said, well he must have got through the window from outside. How can you do that there are four floors? We were on the ground floor Iand while the argument went on and on Norman went and climbed the pipe. Oh yes, he said of course you can do it and he was l2, no less than l2. And if Norman said he could do something he had to show that he could do it. We didn't think anythiIng more about it and on the third floor we had friends and she was a lovely old lady, a Jewish family, and they adored Norman Edward too but Norman in particular, and all of a sudden there was a terrific shouting and carrying on on this top Ifloor and then silence and then somebody came to my door and he was outside the window. The old lady was in a terrible state. She had heard something and Norman had climbed up because he said it could be done and here he was up the spout as yIou might say and he was up to the third floor showing he could go to the fourth floor. Of course he got a darned good shaking from me when he got home. But this was Norman, if he said a thing could be done then he had to do it. One thing I Iremember I don't know if you remember it. I think you had a jar of sweets or something and you went out one day and you knew that I liked these sweets. I was eating too many of them so you decided to put the jar away somewhere and you put it oIn top of the cabinet in the bathroom and you went out and I thought to myself well, I'll get these sweets so I climbed up on the bath. I couldn't quite reach them so I started climbing up the outside of the cabinet and the screws came out holdIing the cabinet to the wall. The whole cabinet came off the wall on top of me, all the glass smashed and there was a tremendous crash and the cabinet was wrecked. Yes I remember that now. There are lots of things you forget You left IndIia when I was what, 8? And then I came back to live with Tony and Rita in England? Not to live with them only while we were leaving, packing up. You found out that dad wasnt very well so you had to come back to England? Yes he had toI retire before his time and you had your schooling to go on so rather than hang around we put you to Lindisfarne College. Your dad had to retire when he wasnt very well, had to take early retirement and we lived in Syon Lane for a bit. We boIught Tony's house. That was actually Tony's house in Syon Lane was it? I didn't know that. Yes it was built round about l932, l22 Syon Lane. Actually we were very fortunate to have the house. We bought the house some years before then. ITony was spreading himself out in business trying to make a bigger business and he needed a little ready money and he suggested would we like to buy his house. That was the way Tommy was able to help them and it fitted in so beautifully that TIommy had to leave himself. It was fate that gave him a home to come to right away. While we were there Tommy went to Chief Superintendent of the Company in London and I used to drive him in and come back and go and pick him up in the afternoIon. The office was in Aldgate. Of course his disease was getting worse and worse so that he couldnt walk in the end and he had to rely on me for everything, and he had to retire, because he was falling about all over the place, his legs had gIiven up. Then we stayed in Syon Lane and at that time this bungalow in Hereford was being built. We found this spot and Tony said that he would like to shift to be near us so we divided the land and built two bungalows on it. Looking at thIe photograph albums now, I'm going to start with the one with the South American dragon design on the front. My wedding photographs. That's Harold there is it? Yes, Norman and Edwards father and thats my sister and my brother in law, Ihes on the left, he gave me away and then my sisters in black, yes that was the fashion, government fashion in India, black was smart. Who are these people at the back? That was Harold's best man and our best friend. You were l8? NIo I was 2O. The little girl in front of Harold is my niece Zoe, Zoe Ellis now Zoe Smith and the girl who was my bridesmaid was a friend my mother knew. Now a picture of you and my dad, Yes taken on the wedding day, looking very coy. This Igroup picture , this is you and dad and who's that? That's the best man and my bridesmaid. Who was the best man? Alex MacReadie, he was a Scotsman. Is that who I was named after then? Yes. After that Alex himself got married anId he married his cousin. She died fairly soon afterwards. Yes I remember her. Kathy. There are some more wedding shots here. Tony and Maureen. I remember these. Tony, Maureen, Rita, my friend from Southall, Yes and Grandpa, we were reallyI snowed up, lucky to get through, and Maureen in her wedding dress there. Shes got Grandpas longjohns on under her wedding dress, and then she had pleurisy during her honeymoon. Oh it was a terrible day. I dont remember where they went. ThIere are you and dad and Henry and Eve. Yes a night out we had. Thats taken at the Taj Restaurant is it? No not restaurant it was a hotel, every traveller in the world knows the Taj. You only have to say the Taj thats all Gorgeous placeI, 5OO bedrooms all done in the grand style. Its a lovely photograph. Another one of the Taj. Alec Macready again, Yes and another friend, taken on a new hair style there. One of you and dad, thats just before he retired isnt it. Yes. Mary ArdIiti again, Yes I think this was after the wedding on our third anniversary. Alec Macready and his wife. This is a picture of me and a dog. You were great friends, Ritas dog Lady and you were leaving her to go back to India and you were sIaying goodbye and he knew something was on too because the pair of you, you can see are absolutely miserable. Dad was standing about 3' from you taking that and you were so miserable that you hadnt a clue that it was taken. There's one of RitIa and Marjorie. Thats me playing billiards with I wouldn't have recognised you. Its a bad photograph. That is at the back of Syon Lane, yes Rita's house. One of Maureen there. Charles and Naomi Glover, my best friends in India. He died. IThat's your father's mother. In Glasgow. Yes she looks quite a character there. I don't really remember her. Oh no, you were only a baby in a carry cot. She was a good person. That's Norman is it? Yes right up in the Himalayas where all Ithe travellers go. This is one in bombay is it? You were on the top terrace floor, we had a terrace garden. Good looking chap weren't you. Very fair hair there. This is a girl friend. She was from downstairs, the Darcy family. SheI was their niece or something and the pair of you were absolutely twins, see her looking at you there, she thinks you are the bees knees. Yes, it just says Alex and girl friend. Bombay there's Naomi and Charles, and Dave Wilson, thats when yoIu took me to see her. He was the Bombay Harbour Master. That is outside BI Engineer Department. Tommy and the staff, there he is. Just the office and a painting, she was very good at painting. That was done by an artist that I didn't know wIas taking me in the Taj Mahal and they just came up to me and gave it to me. Didn't know he was taking it. My grandparents, your Grandmother ???? aged l6 and her sister? That's just after they got to India they started the family in IndiIa so that is an important one. Is your grandmother on the left here, that's her. It says here your Grandmother ???? aged l6 that's her they left when she was ll So whos this sitting in the front? My grandfather. So there was a big age Idifference between them? Theyre older there, shes not far off being married only a couple of years and she was spoken for, as they used to call it. Your mother and father again? Oh yes I dont recognise my mother but I recognise my fatIher. On their first wedding anniversary, yes. Very dark round the eyes and dark hair. She nearly had consumption, put it that way, thats why she lost her first two babies, they weren't strong enough you see. One of your father there, NewpoIrt it says. He had silver hair from the age of about 25. That was his seaman brother I don't know what his name was. Couple of real rascals. Now this is the man that changed my life. Really changed it should have changed. He was an actor and Ithe company used to come out to India and my mother was a great theatre goer and I used to go with her of course and this man stopped me in the theatre one night. Oh I was about 9 or lO, asked me where my parents were and I said out in the garIden having drinks, so he came along with me. To cut a long story short, he wanted me to join the company as a child actress and he picked me out. He is or was Charlie Chaplin's stepbrother. These are all pictures of him. Pictures of him doing Idifferent parts and then while they were doing this he asked my parents if they would give me to the company. They wanted to take me they said I had great potential and I wanted to be an actress strangely enough. I was always doing acting at sIchool, but of course my mother was all for it and my father said no, and that was it. Just as well, good job too. This is your letter from Downing Street, for the MBE. And then theres one here from This is the big brown onIe that says photographs on the front. The tower of silence is in here. Where the Parsees put them on a grid and then the vultures pick the bones. That semi circle is the flats where we used to live and thats the they call it the QIueen's necklace. At night it's all lights and just like a necklace. Very pretty. This is Greenacres, Tony's house, yes where we used to stay for part of our leave. This is one of us building a snowman. Thats one of you with Grandpa and youI were always playing tricks on him. You nearly broke his leg one day. He used to get up into the caravan for an afternoon nap and you had to get onto a box that he had placed to get up into the caravan . One day you thought you'd play a tricIk and took the box away, hoping he'd step down. You got a clip on the ear for that. Theres one of Norman and Barbara there One in a bus conductor's outfit there. Yes you loved that. See how fat you were in the face you've never been fat eveIr since then. I look quite different there. Thats Tony, Kay , quite a lot of me there. These are back in Bombay now. Thats Naomi my best friend in India and that's her children. The flats again, Shot alligator it says on this pa Ige. First time you'd seen anything killed and unfortunately they have a nerve they can move after they're killed and you thought it was alive and it made you almost sick. I thought it was going to bite somebody. But you didn't like it being Ikilled, you didn' t like things being killed. Oh this is up in the mountains again where we went for a holdiay, I remember dad teaching me to ride a bicycle up there. You got your first bike when you got back to Bombay. I used to go off  Ion the horse every day. You got your first mouth organ too there. It was pretty painful! Thats Bombay, thats Juhu our seaside place, we used to go out there practically every weekend. Charles , he died. I remember this old lady Yes thats the f  Ilats. Theres a photograph of Normans photograph there. Bird tiles up on the wall, I remember that. Its a lovely floor we were on the top floor. More parties, mainly wedding anniversaries. These are all of India, My birthday party, this wa  Is a great success the toy crocodile that came in for the children. Heres one of the elephant. Thats the Maharajas grounds. Thats The only one I have of your father at that age. RMS that's the name of one of the islands round Bom Ibay where there are ruins there of way back, a thousand years or something. Theres the Garry family. Marco there , he was the magician and the hunter. He used to give away crocodile skins. Thats the family they used to come to your birthday pa Irties. Theres and that's the Dukes nose, that rock . The train coming up from Bombay goes to this point in the hills and you can't go any further, he's reversing, it reverses back and at that point there is this Duke's nose. The DuIke of Wellington had one of his battles just along there, in India. That 's the lake there that he's supposed to have chucked his guns into so that the enemy wouldn't get them. Colour photographs now, some children's parties. That's stillI in Bombay. There's you with your Harry Lauder stick. One of Pamela there my Ayah Heres some of Calcutta now. I remember the dog Yes the dog, and he was the man your father took over from when he had to retire. Yes I remember. He used to Ikeep budgerigars, yes you were charmed with those. Dad used to keep them. Theyre just picnics there. Some of the swimming pool. Yes that was the swimming club built with the European business people. This is when we were leaving and all theI servants out in the front there. Thats the boy, you went ahead of us you see, and his father worked for an airline and we took him home. These are views of the himalayas, Darjeeling, lovely place. You could walk right round Darjeeling iIt was the top of the mountains. This is one of the farewell do's that they gave us. I remember Mr.May I met his son on that cruise I went on when I was about l3 or l4. Some more shots of Dad's goodbye in India. Thats taken outside. TheI directors at the front. These are coming home on the different ships. A ship being launched here. Ah that was a launching we went to, what was the ship's name, Alanga, Yes were up in the glass box and here we are smashing the bottle. IWho launched the ship? The chap who took over from dad. A few months more I would have been lauching a ship. Back to Greenacres again. Naomi went to visit them. Me and my fish I caught my one and only fish I think. Didnt have much Iluck apart from that. l959 Thats when he couldnt walk, he was in the back garden, he used to crawl along. Some with Elsie , and I think that's Stephen with the baby there.. Theres a picture of me and Hotel. yes I Iremember that old car we had that from l958 to about well Norman took it on, we had that about 25 years. Norman handed it to Barbara was using it, yes then I had it after that. Then they got themselves a new car and the old car used toI start off in the winter and leave Norman behind with the new car. It didnt have a mileage you see. Like this one now, its old but it hasnt got the mileage. This is at Swansea, Mumbles. Here's some of the house being built . This Ione in particular is quite good of Tommy sitting there, seeing as he designed it. l96l. Oh he used to watch them like a hawk, so much so that he stopped Tony's house being built in time, you know. He was sitting out there and as watchingI it and he said Bring Tony's house plans along, and I handed them to him and he said, call the boss over, whatever his name was. He says what are you doing up there man, why are you putting that fireplace. He said oh so and so , Mr. BarclIay, he says you're not right you know, look at the plan. He was putting the fireplace on the opposite side to where he should have been putting it, already started on it, so if Tommy hadn't been watching, Tony would have had a cock eyed lounIge there. There are some early pictures of the house, yes they're quite good. Norman...and Barbara there and baby, Carrie. That was the year he died l964. Thats you there on your motor bike, Horrible, my long hair at University,I Well you had to go through the phase. No good telling you when you're young in another few years you'll be saying "Oh look at that long hair and all this sort of thing, you had to go through the phase. That was when you broke your leg, Ion your bike and then you went off to get your degree you had to sit down when everybody else was standing up, you couldnt take the degree. Thats right I had my leg in plaster when I went for the degree . Yes and it was giving you gyp al Il the way, remember in the car you were saying. Sitting with your leg up on the back. These are my cruise, I had a cruise. SS Paria you were on a training holiday Where St. Paul preached that particular sermon. Yes I'd forgotten. Thats !Ithe lot for this album, there are some letters at the back, Seaford College. I'm just going along to this third brown album now. Early pictures of Kashmir Thats before you and dad were married isnt it. Yes. Flowers here , pressed flowe" Irs , yes from the Maharahjah's gardens. Now were in Cornwall. Thats Edward, most of these are fairly well labelled I think, you've been through these books labelling the photos. I think we can skip on fairly fast through these and if #!Ithere's anything that you particularly want , as I said they're all fairly well labelled. Dates are on them. Theres Maureen, she was expecting. Sunderland. Juhu beach we used to go swimming there. l936, these are some old ones, Norma$"In, cowboy and Indian outfit. No outfits they're naked. These are the ones I like, the swimming parties with the old swimming costumes on. The hats as well. Look at the four men there with their swimming costumes and the topees. You had t%#Io you see otherwise you'd get sunstroke. The boys, they're all running too. These are l942. I think I know what that it, its David Barclay dad's brother isnt it. Yes in Canada, yes and his brother. Yes this is Bombay Zoo. Weve &$Iseen most of these people before . We used to go up there and we spent one month up there with them and then brought them back to Bombay for their holidays. These are some very early ones. on a boat there. Theres one of me '%Ias a girl guide at l4. Which is you the one lower down? Yes po face. I wouldn't have recognised you. You can see Norman in it though. Theres Elsie and Glen, he was in School. Some old baby pictures of me now. When we were on our l(&Ieaves. Thats you in a carrycot . My mother with her great grandchildren. Four generations. Elsie, Zoe and Valerie. Four generations. So thats your mum, yes that's her daughter and that's her daughter. They might like a copy. Theyll )'Ihave it in any case. Valerie might like a copy. Edward in Peru.Look at John here again, thats is it. Is that you naked there is it. Teresa . The ship Daressa. Thats when you had about 2O,OOO pounds in your hand. In thos*(Ie days of diamonds They were diamonds and you were playing with them. A cheeky Arab had given you them in a bag and they were rolling around the deck. We nearly had a fit, you were thrilled with him too because he had his falcon on board and+)I used to fly his falcon. Yes they go for falcons in a big way. He took a fancy to you, he showed you these and let you play with them. The red album one is one of Edward and his family, and this little black album one is Normans, Its a ,*Igeneral one of the boys, Norman and Edward. Yes at school. School shots, and weddings. John and Mary Rutherford, Is that Norman 's grandparents? Yes. And that's Harold when he was young. Greenacres again, Tower of London. Just +Ithe two boys This is ready for them. That's a nice one of your and Barbara. And a nice one of Albert there.IHad a half brother, Jonny Penny?? batman to cnl stewart in black watch friend of Sir Harry Lauder played for dundee united football team?/IJimmy Barclay Dunn of Inverness wrote I had another look at your file this morning which prompted me to have a look at the census and death certificate of your great great grandfather (David Barclay, 1841-1883) on the 'Scotlandspeople websi0.Ite' and discovered something that I was completely unaware of. The Death Certificate of David's brother (William c1828-1904) has his father simply as a labourer, and I had assumed he was a FARM labourer in the fermtoun of Seggie. However, Da1/Ivid's death certificate records his father (William) as a Distillery Labourer - he must have worked in the Seggie Whisky Distillery which was founded by the Hague family (Hague's Whisky) in 1810 at Guard Bridge, just south of the village of Le20Iuchars in Fife. It employed about 100 workers, but closed in 1852 and was then converted into a paper mill which is still in existence (Gaurdbridge Paper Company). I'm not sure of the chronology, but some members of the family seemed to have31I moved to Dundee by 1841- David is recorded in the census, aged 22 and employed as a taylor (as he was on his death certificate) living with a Clark family in Hawkhill, Dundee - interestingly, there is also a William Barclay, aged 72 or 70 liv42Iing with him (the enumerator's handwriting is difficult to read), and this is probably his father. However, there is no sign of the rest of the family (old William's wife, Janet or Jessie Grant, was still alive). Young William (my great grea53It grandfather, and David's young brother ) was married in Dundee in 1846 but is not shown on the 1841 census return with his brother and father. It's all a wee bit confusing at the moment!!! It's possible that you may not have paid much at64Itention to this detail as you were presumably researching the family history for a different purpose (to complete records for the Church of Latter Day Saints), and you have probably now forgotten most of the detail as it was so long ago when y75Iou completed your PAF. My interest is in the social history and I'm in the process of writing up a history of the family. I've written a fair amount (14 pages on the Barclays to date). It's being revised fairly constantly and I will send yo86Iu a copy when it is nearer completion at a later date. One other thing that I've just remembered. David's death certificate may suggest that he was married twice. It states 'David Barclay, Taylor, Married to Mary Garrison (? surname is di97Ifficult to read), p.... (illegible) to Mary Clark. Were you aware of that?? Occupation -Tailor. Married twice: to Mary Clark from Hawkhill, Dundee - they lived in the Overgate. then to Mary Kerrigan (when he was aged 59) a widow livin8Ig in the same close at Lilybank Road, Dundee.. Died of heart attack at 17 Watson Street, just north of the Dundee docks.;IJohn B and Harriet G married 1846 Gloucester - British VRI Birth date and place unknown. Occupation - Distillery and Brewery Worker (worked in the Seggie Whisky Distillery in NE Fife, then in a brewery in Dundee). He moved from Seggie to :IDundee between 1836 and 1840 (due to redundancies in the distillery?). The family lived in Temple Lane, Dundee. Death thought to be about 1839/40 - the 1841 census shows a new baby (George) aged 1, but William is not present. CExtracted birth or christening record for the locality listed in the record. Search performed using PAF Insight on 29/08/2007> AJANET GRANT; Female; Birth: 24 MAR 1798; Christening: 25 MAR 1798 Kilmany, Fife, Scotland; Father: ROBERT GRANT; Mother: JANET RITCHIE; Batch No.: C114372 Dates: 1706 - 1821 Source Call No.: 1040165 Type: Film Printout Call No.: 6900779 Type: = AFilm Sheet: 00@IDundee Burial Registers searched by Fiona Hendry see my ref 961 Also called Jessie. Born at Myre in Fife (a farm in Kilmany Parish). Buried in the Howff Burial Ground in Dundee in 1847 and recorded as 'Widow of William Barclay, Brewe?Ir'.!IN!IN:ۼ$MMNIWhere did birth date come from ? - -why not about 1780? Talk to Fiona HendryCIPhillip Grimshaw was born aboard "The Seven Sisters", a vessel said by Albert B Barclay (Alex Barclay's Uncle) to have been captained by his father James Grimshaw and registered in Boston (UK or USA??). (Note There is a UK register of shippingDBI and seamen. I think I checked it out looking for the Seven Sisters many years ago but no luck. I need to check again.) ABB also says Phillip was in the American Navy and missed his ship whilst in Dundee and was therefore wanted as a deserter.ECI So he changed his name to Fraser, his mothers name. ABB says Phillip had a (twin?) brother who died as a result of being flogged (also USN?) and was buried (at sea??) at St Helena. ABB says Phillip remembers his Grandfather at the age of 100 FDIclimbing up and trimming vines in his vinyard at Lower Falls, Canada (now part of USA??). ABB says many families in this area today named Grimshaw. (note if his grandfather was a resident I presume he goes back into earlyish collonial americanEI times) Marine Register (from 1855) includes births on British-registered merchant vessels at sea, where it appears that one of the child's parents was usually resident in Scotland. Probably too late but try it ??.IMarried at Myre, a farm in Kilmany Parish, Fife.2ILived with her husband in Rutters Close in the Westport, Dundee. The old houses there had steep flights of outside stairs - Isabella fell from these and died from the injuries. She was buried in the Howff graveyard, Dundee.J5Imoved to dundee, became a mechanic married there & moved to St Vigeans Arbroath his wifes home town before retuning to Dundee For info contact Jimmy Barclay Dunn 21 Clachnaharry Rd Inverness IV3 8QH 01463 250908 Occupation - Mechanic, KI5IIron Turner. He married in Dundee but then moved to his wife's home town of Arbroath - they lived in Green Street in the town centre. They remained there for about 7 years and then moved back to Dundee in about 1855. In the 1860s they LJ5Ilived in the Scouringburn and in 1871 were in Park Wynd (to the west of Marketgait). By 1881 they had moved to Glasgow and were living at 22 Armour Street in Dennistoun. They then moved to Carbeth Street, Maryhill, Glasgow where his wife AK5Ignes died in 1901. William went to live for a short time with his daughter Robina, but was then admitted to the Barnhill Poorhouse where he died a few years later in 1904.<IIsabella died from Cholera during the epidemic which swept through the city.RItel 01793 523256 32 Argyl street SwindonUIborn at leigh - all other siblings born DorkingaIcharles e and mary s married 1899 melksham wilts - british VRIRcIDied age 29 at Blaina 21 oct 1856, of pneumonia after taking infant son to Scotland to see his Grandparents Anns mother always wore traditional Welsh costume including pointed black hat try Monmouthshire merlin & South Wales Advertiser aQcIt Ref library , John Frost Square, Newport. try searching 1851 census of Newport for Morgan Edwards head with Ann age about 24 1841 age 14, 1831 age 4gIFell in engine crank pit burried at Port SaidhIHAD 6 CHILDREN INCLUDING A ROY WHO WORKED AT HEATHROW FOR AIR INDIA ??iIENGINE DRIVER GIPR WIFE DIED IN CHILDBIRTH D RUTH ADOPTED BY MOTHERS RELATIVES & WENT TO AUSTRALIAmIbenjamin t & joni l married 1701 corcham wilts - british VRIoIborn w basset or lynehamsIinfo source - Aunt ElsieZIThe naming and blessing of Gemma Lee Barclay by her father Alex Barclay, assisted by Brothers John Saldeba, David Cuthbert, & Ken Goddard on Sunday 5th July 1992 at Nottingham 1st Ward. Our Father which art in Heaven. In the name of thy be[YIloved son Jesus Christ and with the Holy Melchizedek Priesthood that He has bestowed upon us, we come before Thee this day and present before Thee this child to give her a name and a blessing. The name that we give her is Gemma Lee Barclay and\ZI by this name she will be known during her time on this earth and on the records of the Church. Father, we thank Thee that Thou hast heard the prayers of her parents and blessed them by sending her to us. With Thy leave Father, we now give ][IGemma a blessing. Gemma, we bless you that the Spirit may be with you as you grow from strength to strength. We bless you that you may grow in understanding and that you may recognize that the source of joy in your life is the Gospel of Jes^\Ius Christ. We bless you that you may obtain a testimony and an understanding of the Gospel and be able to commit yourself to living the principles of the Gospel and being able to enter the Temple and to be married for Time and All Eternity and_]I to have a family of your own. We bless you Gemma with health and strength. We bless you with protection at those times when it will be necessary in your life. We bless you that you may recognize and know that the Lord is watching over you^I, that you will see and recognize his hand in your life at these times and at other times also. We say these things to you and we give you this blessing in the name of our Saviour Jesus Christ. Amen.aIYou were born at 3.00pm on 5th July 1988 at Queens Medical Center, weight 10lbs, almost 9 months to the day after our wedding. You were named Joseph in honour of the Prophet Joseph Smith, who has done more for the salvation of men in this worl0Fq |&b}7$MeFq |&b:$MFq |&bT<$M F DWHM!Fq |&bwG$M#"Fq |&bFJ$FV#Fq |&bK$O$M$Fq |&b O$FG-dHq |&ba4 $FFq |&ba#F)Fq |&ba#M]Fq |&ba>$F %H-dHq |&bye$/!$ZF&-dHq |&bj$ M'-dHq |&bOn$/F!(I-dHq |&b_t$N$;M)-dHq |&bWv$/FD*-dHq |&bSy$/ʋ$ZMc"+-dHq |&b|$ M,-dHq |&baZ$  F#--dHq |&ba$  #$F.-dHq |&b"r  F"/M-dHq |&bSa|$a$$FZ0-dHq |&bSaW$aē$$F1-dHq |&ba$Z $M2-dHq |&b" $F3Fq |&ba$M.4Fq |&ba$Mb5Fq |&b0N$ZF6Fq |&b>Q$Z"M7Fq |&bPT$Z*$F8Fq |&bEW$ZF9Fq |&bJZ$ZM:Fq |&b e$ZM;Fq |&b"h$Z~$M<<Fq |&b9l$mm$MZ=Fq |&b&%$F>Fq |&b0$6M?Fq |&b3$6F@Fq |&bl:$6M.F&r:J<`MO$AF؛i( Ko|vYQ%%FsBF(N!%F%Fom{H/@A< $M%CNFm H*J $FDFr |&bf$I)%(FEFr |&bG$R$(MNFOFq |&b1>$MGFq |&b7?%FHFq |&bh$$M2qF;r |&bRg$g$.$F:rFr |&b/$alj$M;uF?r |&bh$$M<vF@r |&bٓ$%F >wFAr |&bۘ$$MC?xFBr |&b$+$M|@yFCr |&bi$%MAzFDr |&b+$M8{FEr |&bI$$M%8|jFFr |&bE$Q$F\}FGr |&bvk$ M~k-dHHr |&bn$!Fb`Id than any other, save Jesus Christ only. You are also named Joseph after your Grandfather Joseph Turner. Hamilton is a surname on your Fathers side. You were given a name and a blessing on 7th August 1988 at Nottingham 1st Ward by your FathercaI, assisted by Bishop Johnathon Green and brothers Derek Finney and Ron Asher. You were blessed as follows-- "Our Father which art in Heaven, With the authority of the Holy Melchizedec priesthood which thou hast given us and in the name of odbIur Saviour Jesus Christ, we come before thee this day and present unto thee this child to give him a name and a blessing. And the name that we give him is Joseph Hamilton Barclay, and by this name he shall be known among men and also on the recIecords of the Church. At this time Joseph, we give you a blessing. We bless you Joseph with the fullness of the gospel. We bless you with health and strength. We bless you that you may be able to receive at an early age an abiding testimofdIny and knowledge that our Heavenly Father lives, and that he is a reality. We bless you Joseph that you may have a clear mind and a clear understanding , that you may have all the abilities that you need and desire to fulfil your purpose ingeI this life. We bless you that you will have the opportunity to enter the Temple and be married for time and all eternity and to have a family of your own. We bless you that you may have joy throughout your life and also be able to have the strhfIength that you need to overcome the challenges and difficulties that are an ordinary part of life. We bless you that your parents may fulfill their duty and teach you of the Gospel of Jesus Christ and of the Saviour and of his atoning sacrificgIe and mission here on this earth. And we do say these things in the name of Jesus Christ, Amen."IIllegitimate daughter of Mary Ann Barclay (RIN 31), Grandfather William B.IWilts CRO archivist says no record of Elenor Greenaway in period 1790 - 1803 in Broad Blunsden parish register. So suspect link to parents of other children.Ieliz 2 & ellen less than 9 months apartIdate in family bible illegibleIDate in Family Bible illegibleIinfo from Jim Houston of New ZealandIinfo from Jim Houston of New ZealandIinfo from Jim Houston of New ZealandIinfo from Jim Houston of New ZealandIinfo from Jim Houston of New ZealandIinfo from Jim Houston of New ZealandIinfo from Jim Houston of New ZealandIage 14 at time of marriage?? Died after birth of Jane in Nov 1702Imother age 12???Iwilliam p and eliz g married 1725 huntingdon - british vriIthamas f and sophie g married 1864 stafford - british vriIParents John f & Catherine?? see my ref 263 and 957{IThe naming and blessing of Thomas Alexander Barclay by his father Alex Barclay, assisted by Brother John Saldeba, on 4th November 1990. Our Father which art in Heaven. We come before thee this day and we give thee thanks Father for thy lo|zIve for us , and for the blessing that we have as holders of thy Priesthood to be able to present before thee this child to give him a name and a blessing. Before we do so Father, we give thee thanks for the safe delivery of this child and for }{Ithe power of the priesthood which has been exercised on his behalf to make this possible. Father with thy leave now we present this child before thee to give him a name and a blessing. The name that we give him is Thomas Alexander Barclay, and~|I by this name he will be known on the records of the Church and among men. And we bless you now Thomas that the Spirit may be a close companion in your life, that the Spirit of our Heavenly Father may be close to you at all times. We ble}Iss you with health and strength. We bless you that your parents may give you the love that you need and the teaching of the gospel that you need to discover for yourself the truthfulness and importance of the gospel of Jesus Christ. We bless y~Iou that you will be a joy to your family and that you will have all the blessings of the gospel available to you in your life. We bless you that may be able to serve a mission and that you may have a desire to serve a mission as a representIative of the Lord Jesus Christ. And we bless that you may be able to have a family of your own, in this life and also in eternity. And we say these things in the name of our saviour Jesus Christ, Amen THOMAS BLESSING 21 JAN 2006 ThoEl-dHIr |&bn$"a|$m$FmFJr |&bp$#F:FFKr |&br$$MqFLr |&b6u$%u$MFNr |&b;w$&az$FFPr |&b}$'R$$FGFQr |&b$(MQFRr |&b$)FCFSr |&ba: $MCFTr |&bQ$$FJn-dHUr |&bm1$QF0FVr |&b+E$MioFWr |&bR5$FpFXr |&b9$FqFYr |&b<$FPKrFZr |&ba+$L$FIPsF[r |&bI$MPtF\r |&b1X$FPIF^r |&ba"#MPIF_r |&ba#FQF`r |&b$MQQFar |&bT$FQFbr |&bk $FQFcr |&b#$MQDFdr |&bH$QM&RDFer |&ba$QFXRL-dHfr |&b#>$MRLFgr |&ba#QFRFhr |&bA$QFRFir |&bA$Q$F3SFjr |&b_$QMjSFkr |&b=!$QT$MSFlr |&b;%$QFS-dHmr |&b&,$Q-,$F TMFor |&b##MCTMFpr |&ba{##FTFqr |&ba#M 971/5PJane /Hollister/jP 923 lPThomas /Hollister/]IP 972aPMary /Hollister/jP 329 PJames /Shewry/P 919s QMrs Mary /Shewry/mP 921M=QJames /Shewry/Q 869sqQHannah /Shewry/QQ 870aQEsther /Shewry/Q 871eQWilliam /Shewry/jQ 872iRWilliam /Greenaway/Q 874iDR Betty /Young/&R 944y|RWilliam /Greenaway/XR 888iR Sarah /Brain/R 943hRElizabeth /Greenaway/NR 986aSHannah /Greenaway/]R 987aVSGeorge /Greenaway/]3S 988gSDavid /Greenaway/mjS 989dSHannah /Greenaway/]S 990aSAmy /Greenaway/S 991//TWilliam /Greenaway/ T 981imTMrs Elizabeth /Greenaway/CT 941ETThomas /Greenaway/]T 942aTElizabeth /Greenaway/NT 984aUMary /Greenaway/jT 985 MUMrs Joane /Greeneway/h'U 1008oUSarah /Greeneway/mbU 979hUMary /Greeneway/jU 980 UJohn /Greeneway/jU 883 %VJoseph /Greeneway/]V 884p^VBenjamin /Greeneway/9V 880aVHenry /Greeneway/mrV 881yVJane /Greeneway/jV 982 WJohannes /Greeneway/V 890n;WMrs Jane /Greeneway/W 937JqWJames /Greeneway/mOW 977sWJohn /Greeneway/jW 887 WJane /Greeneway/jW 882 XThomas /Greeneway/]W 938aJXWilliam /Greeneway/&X 939iXHenry /Greeneway/m^X 978yXRichardus /Greeneway/NX 975aXJoanna /Winning/jX 935n&YThomas /Greeneway/]Y 885a[YJane /Greeneway/j:Y 886 YAmbrosius /Grenwaie/oY 974oYMrs Ambrosius /Grenwaie/Y 931AZKenelmi /Greenway/Y 932l?ZKellum /Greeneway/]Z 933uxZRichardi /Greeneway/SZ 934aZJhon /Grenwaie/Z 973 ZMrs Jhon /Grenwaie/Z 929J[Thomas /Greenwaye/]Z 926aQ[Elizabeth /Geryn/m/[ 927a[Robert /Gibbs/e[ 60e[ Ann /Page/][ 499/[Mary Ann /Gibbs/j[ 33y\Caroline /Gibbs/j[ 34oL\ Sarah /Gibbs/.\ 47a|\ John /Gibbs/4_\ 36n\Charles /Gibbs/\ 35r\William /Gibbs/\ 45l] Henry /Gibbs/\ 42rF]William /Gibbs/&] 956iw] Ann /Fryars/4Z] 957/]/Gibbs/] 46, 993] Mr /Clark/]] 1030lWinifred Slater /Law/NThomas Alexander /Barclay/FAndrew James /Barclay/John David /Warfe/]David /McAleavy/hArthur John /Chambers/Phillip Grimshaw /Barclay/FJessie Currie /Barclay/Lachlan Neil /McEachern/Mary Grimshaw /Barclay/George Arthur /Warfe/hRobina Agnew /Barclay/Robina /Agnew/David /Currie/Norma Joy /Chambers/Albert James /Barclay/ John /Burch/% John /Ford/Elizabeth /McDonnald/Richard Fredrick /FitzGerald/Elizabeth Smith /McClelland/@Mary Harvey /Edward/Robina Agnew /Currie/NJohn Adam /McAleavy/Barry /McAleavy/jWilliam /Trueland/ Agnes /Smith/Margaret /Smith/hNoel Arthur /Chessell/Ross Fredrick /Chessell/Lynda Duncan /Bourri/David Thomas /Chessell/Douglan Neil /Chessell/Glen Phillip /Chessell/Cheryl Ann /Crowston/ Rosemary Jane /Hogg/ Teril Lyn Bourri /Chessell/ Lori Jeanette /Chessell/ Sarah Elaine /Chessell/ Karen Elizabeth /Chessell/FKyle Douglas /Chessell/ John /Clark/William White /Ellis/NAlma Janet /Ellis/Mary Grimshaw /FitzGerald/Helen /FitzGerald/David Barclay /FitzGerald/William Joseph /FitzGerald/|Patricia Anne /FitzGerald/William /Page/Mrs Martha /Page/Hannah /Greenaway/Susanna /Greenaway/Aaron /Greenaway/William /Greenaway/John /Greenaway/Sarah /Coventry/hEleanor /Bendry/h William /Moffat/h! Charles /Ely/"Ellen /Wingrove/h#Ann Amelia /Browness/$Elizabeth /Wilson/%Eugene /l'Feys/& Henry /Duke/%'Edith Emily Tuttleby /Freeman/(Sarah Jane Alice /Duke/|) Jane /Hannah/* Sarah /Cope/T+Edward /Kilmister/,Harriet /James/-Richard /Bolton/h.Richard /Addis//Catherine /Phipps/0Alfred Lee /Williamson/|1Charles /Hollister/2Mrs Elizabeth /Hollister/3John /Hollister/j4Joyce Ellen /Warfe/5William Sutart /Logan/6Cindy Lynn /Logan/]7Robert Stewart /Logan/8Mark Allen /Logan/]9Harold /Rutherford/:Jessie Sylvia Jean /McEachern/;Bruce Alexander /MacKison/F<!Andrew David Alexander /MacKison/=Kathlene Lavern /McEachern/>Robert Murdoch /Matheson/?David Barclay /McEachern/@August /Baltz/AJohn Neil /Matheson/BRobin Anne /Matheson/NCSusan Jean McEachern /Matheson/DSherry /Smith/EJohn Robert Neil /Matheson/F&Michelle Rosvita McEachern /McEachern/GNeil Barclay /McEachern/HNoel Robert /McEachern/IMark David /McEachern/JBarbara Lynn /McEachern/K#Terence Douglas Herbert /McEachern/LWinefred Kate /Cripps/MSarah /Hoskins/NJames Fraser /Warfe/OEdward Lee /Rutherford/PNorman /Rutherford/QGrace Doris /Johnson/NRHollis Ann /Rutherford/SStephen Philip /Allen/TLesile Ann /Allen/]UAndrew Moore /Allen/VEdward Andrew /Rutherford/FWVictoria Anne /Hook/XAnson /Rutherford/YMelissa Lee /Rutherford/ZGeorge Neville /McClelland/|[Agnes /McLuckie M or S Turner/\James Findlater /Law/]Christina /MacLardy/^George Waddell /Law/_Jane /Ogilvie/Hq |&ba_#NHq |&b)#NHq |&baol#NHq |&b}>#NHq |&bNHq |&ba#NHq |&ba"NHq |&bs"NHq |&bE$NHq |&bNH\] r |&b`$;LNHq |&b %xNHq |&bNHq |&b%xNHq |&ba/ %NHq |&bNHZ[ r |&bNH|̓N+1NHq |&bB%NHq |&b?%NH q |&b @%NHbr |&bNH3q |&bNH54q |&b.%NHmn9^~BlZ4ENH;:q |&b(7%NH>=q |&bX$%xNH?@q |&b+%wNHADq |&bNHOQr |&b(%INHSRr |&bI%NHVWr |&b ^%NH^_ r |&bNH`ar |&bNHrs=CtN~aT$NHyBA#1'QNHv{sy7/I'NHvy7/I'NHuzuc}9EJ:C6(2NHuc}9EJ:C6(2NH}~+VFGl*WhNH| nꬦFu> ,NH }A%uNHa(uJFiŽNH$?-fE2W$NHQ8Q >BAe$NH. H|GBB%NH)Qg A鿷%NHh7˓gICyhH$;NH+Z CY#b%NH,QCD~MG$NH-Y%'4F\*g$;NH<\I`D\$3NH`kSr@_L "NH3(L^#*Anfvlb$NH4̽gFC[68nNH5ֻMRU"NH6-R )CG2D~NH7)ET/5%}GE9NH8<4OaP~eNH9lpL5#pcNH:F."/Ehvl`NH;[in Ki )m$NH<50EpxDuBNH=qjn3J)0e2"$;NH>MZW,J3;L<NH?Р8IK|r &VI$;NH[\@\⇼,Bt$"<NHoCꞃ:@n!ݮ-$NHBGwkCA2k3H$NH}1rcI[&|5a$3NHD?>Enh.$hNHEAo GqkZYN$NHF~5+jLkݮaT$NHGSGݠ)iEOҷ0I{[NHH}u@hIsNTFsr |&b#FTFtr |&b#F'UNuFvr |&ba#p#FbUvFwr |&b#FUFxr |&b#FUOFyr |&b##MVFzr |&b#M9VF{r |&by#MrVF|r |&b#MVF}r |&bk#FVPF~r |&bC##MWPFr |&bayN##FOWFr |&bn#MWFr |&br#MWFr |&b&u#FWFr |&bas#-{#M&XN-dHr |&baGy#/{#M^XRFr |&b##MXQFr |&b#MXQFr |&bad#FYFr |&b?#|@#M:YFr |&bdH#FoYSFr |&b"*/#MYSFr |&ba"FYFr |&ba#MZFr |&ba #MSZFr |&ba##MZTFr |&b"}#MZTFr |&ba"FZUFr |&ba"M/[UFr |&baG"Fe[9wFr |&bF$M[9Fr |&bN$O$F[Fr |&bl$F[Fr |&bp$F.\-dHr |&b>b??b@@bpAbBBb}CbDDbEEbFFbGGbHHbwIbJJbKbLbMMbNNbOObPPb{RQb{SRb{TSb{0Tb{VUb{WVb{XWb{YXb{QYb%Zb[[b|.\b!e]b!_^b!`_b!a`b!bab!cbb!dcb!]db\Fr |&bY|$+M\Fr |&bI$+M\Fr |&b$M&]VxFr |&ba!$MZ]VyFr |&baV'$F]Fr |&bI$M]Fr |&ba#M] -dHr |&b9$*M%F^zFr |&b[%M<^Fr |&b_%Mc^eF23.@n'FRAN)%TM^Fr |&bM^ZFr |&bM^eFr |&b$;.%M^[Fr |&b$;F!_\eFr |&ba$xas%MJ_\Fr |&b`$Fr_YFr |&bZ$!&E%M_YFr |&b$F_]Fr |&bF_]Fr |&bM_)Fr |&b%+F"`)Fr |&b@ %;,MI`#Fr |&bMf`Fr |&bM`Fr |&bF` Fr |&ba$M`Fr |&ba$Fa Fr |&bF(a Fr |&bZ$;1%xFNaFr |&bPO%+MsaFr |&bK%+Ma6Fr |&bMa!-dHr |&bq$Vt$-;$;Fa"Fr |&bFa[Fr |&b$Mb`Fr |&b%xMImas Alexander Barclay in the name of Jesus Christ and with the Holy Melchizedek Priesthood which he has bestowed upon me I am able to give you this Fathers Blessing to strengthen and to help you at this time in your life as you start to go forIward into the world and to find your way in the world. I bless you Tom to know that our Heavenly Father continues to love you and care about you, and that the Saviour thinks of you and rejoices in the joy that you find in life. I bless you ITom that you may continue to hold to what you know is right and wrong in chooing the right, that you will be able to see clearly what is right and what is wrong. I bless you Tom that you will be able to stand up for what is right. I bless you Iwith protection from those people and those forces that would attempt to drag you down and make you unhappy. I bless you Tom that you may continue to grow in understanding and appreciation of all that is good in life and come to know betterI the love and truth of the Gospel of Jesus Christ and of his great love and power and the sacrifice that he has made and that you may be able to renew your testimony of his servants in these last days. I bless you with these things Tom. I bIless you that the Spirit may be available to you. I tell you that you only have to ask in prayer in sincerity and speak to your Heavenly Father to ask him and he will indeed bless you and the spirit will be with you to prompt your heart and mIind in quiet ways that you will understand, and have your prayers answered in a way that you can understand and feel and realize that it is good and right and that it comes from our Father in Heaven And I say these things to you in the nameI of our saviour Jesus Christ. Amen.IThe naming and blessing of Andrew James Barclay on 6th March 1994 at Nottingham 1st Ward of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, by his father Alexander Keith Barclay, assisted by John Saldeba, Graham Church, Dennis Hoult and NormaIn Price. Our Father which art in Heaven. We come before thee this day holding the Holy Melchizedek Priesthood which thou hast bestowed upon us and we present unto thee this child, to give him a name and a blessing. The name that we give hIim is Andrew James Barclay and by this name he will be known on the records of the church and among men on the earth. Andrew we now give you a blessing to assist you and to strengthen you during your time on the earth. We bless you with heaIlth and strength. We bless you that you may indeed go from strength to strength physically and also spiritually, that you may have an abiding knowledge and testimony that you are loved by our Father in Heaven and that the church has indeed beIen restored to the earth through messengers from heaven. We bless you Andrew that you will be a thoughtful and a kind person and that you will ponder on the truthes of the gospel and that you will come to know and love our saviour and have Ia desire to serve him. We bless you that all of the opportunities that you would want would be available to you, that you may be able to enter the Temple of the Lord and be married for time and for all eternity and to have a family of your ownI. We bless you that you may have a desire to serve our Heavenly Father as a missionary and in any other callings that are given to you. We bestow this blessing upon you in the name of our saviour Jesus Christ, Amen. Andrews Blessing I13 Jan 06 Andrew James Barclay with the authority of the Holy Melchizedek Priesthood which I hold which has been bestowed upon me by servants of God, I am able and rejoice in this blessing of being able to be your father and to give you thiIs blessing to strengthen you and prepare you for the Aaronic Pristhood and to strengthen and prepare and bless you in this coming year and these coming years of your life. I bless you Andrew with health and strength. I bless you that you may fIind joy in standing upright in honesty and truth in all things and in being an example to those around you. To stand up for those that are weaker than you to help them and to be a friend to those in need. I bless you Andrew that your mind and Iyour heart and your spirit may rejoice in the things that you learn in the Priesthood, about the restoration of the Priesthood and the great powers and abilities that you will be able to use in our Heavenly Father’s service. I tell you AndreIw that it is not just in church that we serve Heavenly Father. He tells us in the scriptures that in serving other people that we are really serving him as well. I bless you that you may be able to do this in many areas of your life - with youIr friends outside the church as well as at home and with your family and with your priesthood duties inside the church as well. Andrew Heavenly Father has sent you to be part of our family for a special reason - to love and to help everyoneI and to help us to return to him as a family. And we know that things havnt gone as we would have wanted them to go - things havnt quite gone to plan but Heavenly Father is able to do all things if we exercise faith in him and do what is rightI. I encourage you Andrew to pray as well as to learn of your duties. If you will take the time to speak to your Heavenly Father and to pray to him, you will feel of his Spirit in your heart and in your life - you will feel his influence and hIis direction in decisions that you need to make and you will feel and understand how much he loves you. You will also understand the things that he needs and wants you to do. I give you a blessing of strength and protection to help you thatI you can rejoice in the things that that you learn and understand and do in the service of your fellow man and in the service of your Heavenly Father. I bless you that you can come to understand and love our Saviour more as you learn of him. II say these things to you and give you this blessing by the power of the Holy Priesthood which I hold, in the name of our Saviour Jesus Christ Amen.ISee newspaper cutting for this man. Buried in War Cemetary Rheinberg, Cologne. Flying Vickers Wellington BomberI -----Original Message----- From: Philip and Helen Pellatt [mailto:phelpel@bigpond.com] Sent: 28 February 2003 02:38 To: alexbarclay@telinco.co.uk Subject: Barclay family history Dear Alex I have been doing a bit of surfing and cameI across the Ancestry.com site. David Barclay's (born in 1890) wife Robina Agnew Currie is my grandfather's sister. I have a similar amount of information on this arm of the Currie family who migrated to Canada in the 1920's, my sources beingI from elderly relatives and other sites on the web with some differing information. I notice that you have these two marrying on 16 February 1912 in Collingwood, Ontario. The date is correct, but in fact they were married in St Ninians CatheIdral in Perth Scotland. All three daughters were born before they migrated to Canada (my father remembers them all in Scotland). Apart from one sibling who remained in Scotland from Robina's (Ruby) family, they all migrated to Australia excIept for the Ruby and David. The reason according to the family was that one of their three daughters apparently had polio and they were not accepted in Australia/New Zealand! However, if you are after any other information, just send me a Iline. Thanks Helen Pellatt Canberra, Australia phelpel@bigpond.com-CExtracted birth or christening record for the locality listed in the record. Search performed using PAF Insight on 29/08/2007-AANNE SMITH; Female; Birth: 10 MAR 1829; Christening: 13 MAR 1829 Arbroath, Angus, Scotland; Father: ALEXANDER SMITH; Mother: JANET KEILLOR; Batch No.: C112725 Dates: 1819 - 1838 Source Call No.: 0993332 Type: Film Printout Call No.: 6902945 Ty-Ape: Film Sheet: 00IMarried in Dundee but then returned to her home town of Arbroath with her husband William - they lived in Green Street in the town centre. They remained there for about 7 years and then moved back to Dundee in about 1855. In the 1860s theyI lived in the Scouringburn and in 1871 were in Park Wynd (to the west of Marketgait). By 1881 they had moved to Glasgow and were living at 22 Armour Street in Dennistoun. They then moved to Carbeth Street, Maryhill, Glasgow where Agnes dieId (her husband William was then admitted to the Barnhill Poorhouse where he died a few years later).IBIRTH INDEX SAYS 1886 MENEFEITH 147IDetails for all children other than elenor supplied by post by archivist!Ifather richard, or frederick, or william see my ref 604, 690 & 6971IPossible parents of Charles Hollister 168 suggested by Jan Rogers of 29 Statham Street Derby 01332 450854Iadopted9Idied age 59 bombay sewree cemetry in 1939 born 1881 1881 John Rutherford and wife Jane Richmond (Pringle) Rutherford had a son Harold, born on 21 February 1881, at which time John lived at 16 Harold Street, Sunderland, and worked 9Ias a shorthand writer [Registrar 1881].<IAdoptedNIadoptedcIDied age 7 ?? Baptism & Endowment performed because exact year of birth was unknowneI52 MORRISON STREET RODBOURNE SWINDON 01793644882mIin 1881 census gateshead age 34 1881 John Rutherford, 34, a shorthand writer, was living at 16 Harold Street, Bishopwearmouth (civil parish/township), Sunderland (city or municipal borough), Sunderland (Parliamentary borough), SunderlanmId (town), Sunderland (Urban Sanitary district), St. Paul's (Ecclesiastical parish or district) [Census 1881]. With him were his wife Jane, 34, son Edwin, 9, son Wilfrid, 6, daughter Roverta, 4, and son Harold, 6 weeks, along with a servant SamIrah Hunter, 22 [Census 1881]. His wife was born in Morpeth, Northumberland, and his children were all born in Sunderland, Durham [Census 1881].nIIn about 1846, Jane Richmond Pringle was born in Morpeth, Northumberland, the daughter of James Pringle [Census 1881; Gen. Reg. Ofc. 1870, 1930]. 1870 On 4 May 1870, John Rutherford, 23 (bachelor, reporter, r. Mt. Pleasant, St. Edmund's ParnIish), married Jane Richmond Pringle, 24 (spinster, r. Harle Str., St. Edmund's Parish, daughter of James Pringle, brick contractor), in St. Mary's Church in the Parish of Gateshead, County of Durham, in the presence of George Ficter(?) and JannIe Gibbons, by the Vicar of St. Edmunds, after Banns, in the Parish Church [General Register Office, 1870]. 1930 Jane Richmond Rutherford, 85-year-old wife of John Rutherford, died 2 May 1930, at 13 Park Parade, Sunderland, of broncho pneumonInia and myocarditis [Gen. Reg. Ofc. 1930]. Future searches: Obituary for Jane Richmond (Pringle) Rutherford, May 1930 Will & grant for James Pringle (after 1871?) to find wife's name (Jane's mother?) DeatnIh record for James Pringle, brick contractor, to find wife's name Death record for Pringle, James' wife, if he dies a widower Birth date? Mother's name?oI1871 John and Jane's son Edmund Rutherford, was born at 8 Harold Street, Sunderland (Durham), England, on 9 November 1871 [Gen. Reg. Ofc. 1871]. John's occupation at that time was newspaper reporter [Gen. Reg. Ofc. 1871].pI1875 Wilfred Rutherford, son of John Rutherford and Jane Richmond (Pringle) Rutherford, was born at 8 Harold Street, Sunderland (Durham), England, on 10 January 1875 [Gen. Reg. Ofc. 1875]. John's occupation at that time was newspaper reporterpI [Gen. Reg. Ofc. 1875].qI1877 Roberta May Rutherford, daughter of John Rutherford and Jane Richmond (Pringle) Rutherford, was born at 6 Salem Street South, Sunderland (Durham), England, on 28 March 1877 [Gen. Reg. Ofc. 1877]. John's occupation at that time was shorthqIand writer [Gen. Reg. Ofc. 1877].Fb`Fr |&bFlbaFr |&b%xMbbFr |&b%xMbFr |&b#*%xMbaFr |&bF cbFr |&bF/cFr |&b:%F[cFr |&bWB%FcFr |&bYE%FcFr |&bB%FcFr |&beF%McFr |&bZK$ZMd,Fr |&ba$MBdFr |&b%.%%/FedFr |&bFdFr |&bFdFr |&bMdFr |&bM eFr |&bF5eWFr |&ba4 $MTeWFr |&bFveFr |&b@$Q0FeFr |&bB$Q1FeFr |&bE$Q2MeFr |&bK$Q3MfFr |&bO$Q4M$fOFr |&bFEfRFr |&bFff5Fr |&bMf:Fr |&bMf;Fr |&bFf>Fr |&bFf7Fr |&bFg<Fr |&bM/g=Fr |&bMLg?Fr |&bF{g@Fr |&bFgAFr |&bFgBFr |&bC$FgJFr |&bMhGFr |&bF!hEFr |&bMBhKFr |&bMbh3Fr |&bFh4Fr |&bMhHFr |&b$MhHFr |&bFhdFr |&ba3#MieFr |&b%F@ieFr |&baw%MgiFr |&b01%FiFr |&b5%MiFs |&b?%Mi-dHs |&ba$,MigFs |&b%xF'jgFs |&b %UMRjFs |&b=%MjhFs |&b %xFjhFs |&b %xMjiFs |&b %xMkiFs |&b %|F#kjF s |&b&%%xMHkF s |&b)%FnkF s |&bA6%FkjF s |&bFkF s |&bC%MkFs |&b,%xF lFs |&b.%xMIlFs |&bP2%xMqlFs |&b4%x6%MlFs |&b8%FlFs |&ba:%xMl&Fs |&bFm*Fs |&bFBa$MБfFjVE*@҈Fma$FFl#A =}a$,MF,bOCO(=a$,MAFφFNrsqaݸ$,FjpF <:GV˟a]$$M`Donald /MacLardy/aJane Elizabeth Brown /Slater/b Joseph /Cope/cAgnes McL /Barclay/dCatherine /Kennedy/e David /Lewis/fElaine /Lewis/gPamela /Lewis/h //Skinneriivor /Sawyers/jnelson /Sawyers/hkruth /Sawyers/lZoe Eugene /Ellis/]mJohn /Rutherford/mnJane Richmond // PringleoEdwin /Rutherford/]pWilfred /Rutherford/qRoberta May /Rutherford/rRobert /Rutherford/sJane // CumberledgetAnn /Rutherford/juJames // CumberledgevChristopher /Rutherford/wSarah /Rutherford/]xIsabella /Rutherford/NyJames /Pringle/zAnn //{Sarah /Fenwick/|John /Fenwick/}Robert /Rotherford/~Isabel /Peacock/hChristopher /Peacock/ Elizabeth //% Ann /Jobling/Mary Elizabeth /Rutherford/Isabel /Rutherford/John /Rutherford/mElizabeth /Rotherford/Francis /Rotherford/Robert /Rotherford/Francis /Rotherford/Rachel /Rotherford/Margaret /Rotherford/hRobert /Rotherford/Elizabeth /Rotherford/James /Barclay/gJames Barclay /Dunn/BJimmyB Ninian /Dunn/Margaret Georgina /Robbie/F Mary /Flynn/Sarah /Brannan/Sadie/Lindsay Margaret /Dunn/Robert Lockhart /Dunn/Agnes Smith /Barclay/NhNans James /Dunn/ James /Dunn/ Dennis /Dunn/Robert /Flynn/ Mary /Gray/ John /Gray/Annie /McGarvie/j John /Gray/Isabella /McGeachin/ James /Flynn/Margaret /Keilty/m Peter /Flynn/Margaret /Quin/James /Brannan/Sarah /Davidson/jWilliam /Brannan/Helen /McGill/Sarah /Shepherd/jWright Wilson /Shepherd/Elizabeth /Wallace/Bridget Donaghue /(Donahoe)/@Dennis /Donaghue (Donahoe)/| Marjory /Lee/Jean Blair /McFarlane/John /McFarlane/jJanet /Fleming/James /Fleming/ Jean /Blair/%John /McFarlane/hLetitia /Stafford/]Charles Sharp /Robbie/Margaret Stevenson /Taylor/William /Davidson/Sarah /McAulay/ Owen /Keilty/Margaret /Kelly/hEdward /McGarvie/m Mary /Brady/4Robert /Grant/ 1025tAlexander /Smith/mJanet /Keillor/Charles Alexander /Robbie/FAgnes Strachan /Sharp/Malcolm /Taylor/jGeorgina /Crawford/Malcolm /Taylor/jMaggie /Stevenson/]Daniel /Taylor/ Jane /Smith/tMalcolm /Taylor/hElisabeth /Donaldson/John /Donaldson/jPeter MacKay /Robbie/Alice Ann /Lee/ John /Robbie/Marjory /Cameron/mJoseph /Robbie/Helen /Thomson/David /Robbie/Elspett /Couttie/m John /Robbie/Jean /Mitchell/Andrew /Robbie/ Jean /White/5Janet Fleming /Barclay/ JessielJames /Barclay/John /Barclay/William /Barclay/mThomas McFarlane /Barclay/FGeorge /Barclay/jHenry /Barclay/Robert G /Barclay/]Sydney Stone /Barclay/John /Campbell/George /Barclay/jMary Jane /Murdoch/John /Murdoch/Elizabeth Hart /(?)/Fraser James /Dunn/Benjamin /Barclay/]Jessie /Barclay/jAgnes /Barclay/William /Barclay/mHannah /Barclay/jGeorge /Barclay/jAlexander /Barclay/IRobina (Robertina) /Barclay/@Robina(Joseph /Barclay/ James /Cowan/William /Cowan/Jane /McLelland/hMary /Kerrigan/$Catherine /Barclay/ 996eU James /Dunn/8Jimmy/Robert Lockhart /Dunn/kBobby Sydney Lewis Barclay /Dunn/John Iain /Dunn/jAgnes Nancy Smith /Dunn/Hannah /Balfour/hdMargaret /Aitchison/?Peggye Olive /Clark/ Tom /Barry/Charles /Sharp/Sarah /Alexander/mAndrew /Sharp/Jean /Ogilvie/Annie /Alexander/mAnnie Alexander Sharp /Robbie/Alice /Robbie/ Mary /Robbie/ John /Robbie/¦Jack/ James /Lee/ Ruth /Clark/Angus /Cameron/nMarjory /Smith/NMayo  James /Smith/ Charles /Thomson/m Helen /Wattie/  John /Lee/]  Jane /(Lee)/Charles /Robbie/jAlexander Dalgety /Robbie/FJohn Cameron /Robbie/NAnnie Fraser /McIntosh/William /McIntosh/Mary /Barclay/Isabella Mary /Walker/Cameron N /Robbie/Thomas /Walker/Margaret /Smith/hJohn Cameron /Robbie/hSusan Taylor /Savege/NStewart /Savege/hMargaret /Lyon/Patrick /Dunn/ Dennis /Dunn/Mary /Mcmanus/Patrick /McManus/ Bridget /Brody/!Grace Anne /Steele/"James /Steele/#Mary /Docherty/$ Dennis /Dunn/% James /Dunn/&Patrick /Dunn/'Grace Ann /Dunn/j(William /Dunn/) John /Dunn/*Bridget /Dunn/+ Dennis /Dunn/,Margaret /Dunn/- Mary /Dunn/.Patrick /Dunn//William /Dunn/0Elizabeth /Dunn/j1Elizabeth /Dunn/j2 Mary /Dunn/3Marjory /Dunn/4Margaret /Dunn/5Dominic /Dunn/6 John /Dunn/7 Sarah /Dunn/48 George /Dunn/9 Robina /Dunn/:Amelia /Cameron/j;Mary /Cameron/<Donald /McDonald/m=Marjory /McDonald/]>Ann /McDonald/?James /Paterson/j@William /Paterson/]AAngus /Paterson/jBAngus /Cameron/|CEmelia /Buttar/DRobert /Buttar/E Sarah /Ayson/FRobert /Cameron/hGChirstan /Brown/hHCharles /Robbie/jIMargaret /Robbie/JJoseph /Robbie/KJanet /Robbie/ aICCB C/.;C32BC76EC:9HC=<IR@?LC EG DG M G (G 'G 0G )G XGKJVMLGrI1851 census shows this family at Planet Row, Gateshead 1851 Robert Rutherford, 38, railway labourer, was living at Pianet Row, Gateshead Parish, St. Mary's Ecclesiastical District, Gateshead Borough, Durham County, England [Census 1851]rI. Living with him were his wife Jane, 29, daughter Ann, 6, and son John, 4 [Census 1851]. Jane was born at Tweedmouth [Census 1851]. Robert's (and, presumably, Jane's) daughters Sarah and Isabella were born in about 1856 and 1859, respectrIively, in Bensham , Durham [Census 1861]. 1861 Robert Rutherford, labourer, was living at Low Teams, in the Parish (Township) of Gateshead, city of Gateshead, West municipal ward, ParliamerIntary Borough of Gateshead, St. Mary's Ecclesiastical District [Census 1861]. In the same household were his wife Jane, 38; daughter Ann, 16; son John, 14; daughter Sarah 5, and daughter Isabella, 2, as well as William Horn, 34, and his wife rIMary Horn, 34 [Census 1861]. Robert was born in Tanfield, Durham; Jane was born in Berwick Upon Tweed, and his children were all born in Bensham, Durham [Census 1861]. 1874 On 13 October 1874, Robert Rutherford, Pointsman, made out his wilrIl, leaving his house at 17 & 19 Cumberland St., Gateshead, and all his effects to his wife Jane until she remarries or dies, at which time his estate would go to his three daughters: Ann Rutherford, Sarah Rutherford, and Isabella Rutherford [rIPrinc. reg. 1878]. Robert Rutherford's will was probated on 19 February 1878, at Durham, his entire estate (valued at under £100) going to his wife Jane [Princ. Reg. 1878]. 1877 Jane's 63-year-old husband, Robert Rutherford, died on 30 JrIanuary 1877, at 17 Cumberland Street, Gateshead, of softening of the brain (6 years) [Gen. Reg. Ofc. 1877]. Sarah Laidler, of 13 Cumberland Street, Gateshead, was present at his death and provided information for his death registration [Gen. rIReg Ofc. 1877sI1818 Jane Cumberledge, daughter of James and Ann Cumberledge, of East Ord Parish of Tweedmouth and County of Durham, was born 24 December 1818, and baptized 11 January 1819 [Census 1851, 1861; St. Mary's 1841-1845; United Presby. 1785-1853]. sI 1844 Jane Cumberledge (spinster, of full age, living at Gateshead, daughter of James Cumberledge, a labourer) married Robert Rutherford, of full age (bachelor, living in Whickham, and working as a labourer, son of Christopher Rutherford, a lsIabourer), in St. Mary's Church, in the Parish of Gateshead, in the County of Durham, England, on 3 February 1844 [St. Mary's 1841-1845]. The marriage took place in the parish church according to the rites and ceremonies of the Established ChusIrch after licence, and was witnessed by John Cooke and Eleanor Anderson [St. Mary's 1841-1845]. Robert and Jane Rutherford were living in Gateshead, on 26 December 1844, when daughter Ann born [Gateshead Parish 1843-1848]. Future searches:sI Will and grant of Jane Rutherford to identify daughters' married names Death record for Jane (Cumberledge) Rutherford, after 1878 (in 1886?) Will and grant for James Cumberledge to see if died widower <sISomerset House> Will and grant for Ann Cumberledge if James died first Death record for James Cumberledge Death record for Ann Cumberledge IOccupation - Cabinet Maker. Lived at 22 Armour Street, Gallowgate in the east end of Glasgow before his marriage (as did his future wife Jean). Married at 19 Sydney Street, Dennistoun, Glasgow.IOccupation - Aircraft Fitter (completed apprentice in Clyde shipyards, then employed for most of his working life in Rolls Royce aero engine factory, Hillington). Grew up in Glasgow, then lived for most of his married life in Alexandria.IOccupation - Grocery manager. Worked in Lipton's Grocery shop, then opened his own shop which was not successful. Enlisted in Highland Light Infantry (City of Glasgow Regiment) in WW1 and was sent to France and the Western Front.IBorn at 22 Jamieson Street, Hutchesontown (Gorbals), Glasgow. Occupation - Cap Maker (as was her older sister, Jessie). Lived at 24 Hutcheson Street, Gorbals, until she married. Married in St Luke's RC Church, Glasgow. Lived in Mosspark AvIenue, Glasgow, then emigrated (after her husband died) to Australia to live with her daughter Nancy in the 1960s, but returned a few years later.IOccupation - Textile Factory Labourer Spent all of his adult life in Vale of Leven.IOccupation - HousekeeperIBorn at 26 George Street, Glasgow (just west of the High Street). Occupation - Umbrella Coverer. Married at 29 Sydney Street, Glasgow. Lived at 22 Armour Street, Gallowgate, Glasgow (as did her future husband James Barclay). Died oIf a heart attack in bed in the early hours of New Year's morning at Bankhead Avenue, Knightswood, GlasgowIBorn Ireland. Lived in Parish of Mearns before marrying. Occupation - Baker (but also recorded as mechanic). Married at 3 New Vennel, where his wife had grown up.IOccupation - Muslin Warehouse Worker. Died in Royal Infirmary, Glasgow - UR 19 Sydney Street, Calton HER WORK HAS BEEN DUPLICATED IN ERROR IN THE PRETON TEMPLE BAP 21 SEP 2007 ETCIOccupation - Carter. Married in Ireland? (as his son John was born there).IBorn and married in Ireland? - her son John was born there.IOccupation - Depot Engineer at Alexander's Bus Depot in Stepps.IOccupation - Paper Bag Maker.IMarried at Myre, a farm in Kilmany Parish, Fife.IOccupation - Shoemaker.pF+#BmE#n f$CFF$dH7/æ/$FӒtF}(BsIMrFkև|)Dmi(M!FR*9#A+kcMSa$sFDF| Cs.{a.$sFjqF`CY`MtF`FK_QRFrFH$t$KQG2uFwF6rOݥaA#"F&F:PLI)vz}a#FוzFr hLAѝM'F[^FO౴Waas#F"{(-dHGB)$Z$%SMB|)qF}Ϗ3J<&ƫge%M}}*qFy7#Bdsu>$;M|+qFC>ONfrɊ2#%FƖ},-dHYMZE cvD4$_%F-qFD'NE|Ap@_x$F.qFQ4Yft@J}O%FA~/-dH><еN?> $%%BMh~0qF@ea'D˔y$;{K%;F1Fyb'dO+Q$%%bM2qFc NeGLlS"$;Mܗ̒Fm!~l@8J""M3-dHFg4+$ @*LPy"!p3% M4-dHFQ:"-@"#% F55-dH.zIL?H"a;MQ6-dH^#Gӌ*F"t@Fr-dH6xzI&A "a;MCť?W LmmTF7-dH3yKh.k$Mј8-dHD긐HrK$ FbC2?0BfkZ5MbC}O)F19qF!rMկl2"q$MQ:qFt9LKW"$FrC3ɨ}@kL-MC5VV5jBWcF;-dH )N^OGPp"*$;FԙCB[;FO?mHg"[MCPJ6?JQݐMF!<-dHQޜE6"n]$%FNC H#M}NY`/MzC(y MŇ"F{=F}Gb&ѩX$; %;F>-dH؎!B'۱/"M?F_qqH˛CbKi$;$;FCF`NoVM C4EXL1F bF=-EqMmw M^@-dHJiE"$;FAqF(鸕aCMBqF7qYE0mXW"FԛbCpE4A<M̒F 輸zE;>J"FbCљM(HWM5bCE~M#QFV-dHMGcjxh",Mx-dHVLC@tZ"?F-dH]%2J#*}"RMɜ_-dHHɸ|D]2"eVM_-dHiRDSѥ&"xVF C-dHT*Ke6E"M6D-dH/kL4$F]E-dH<>b"B^"M~-dHA3OE'kt"FF> E4d=/4Iܝc"+MÝDOB!$8">FG> EIHO ~ݩ o*"QMDmAz%HnV"dF#> E퐎rN|dMMDHDsMrGyMeɧFj> EvnDK¢@"wMIFڱAbLzX}$%MJ-dHivEWC".%FўKFy:cA$OPw$w$4:J$MLqF*WAC"{$^$FMF#1v!KN nªf"ay$M1NFt ~Klʪ~"xO$O;$FQO-dH]F\gxMՁAG"zMp-dHTT"H aY"RFP-dHOdXLqq*B+Ɛ"M-dH_{OLOP,O"FП-dH֕AB"M-dH*F~Vο7G1pgO"F Qz1Ee.QqHoeK $FLR> E d!HINU$MlS&DjR9Aap"-$MT&D"',I~6?"MU-dHp 3N[^zO$;MؠVqFpPFC©c9pg9$;]$;MW&DΥID멇,$MXqFY;RHŎ, e$;M<YqF(aLiܑR$;ad%Mc&D]02soEQ髪" MZqF mso=KC9V"kZM[&DM}0&OǸ"o"3FIBorn in Allerton on the southeast outskirts of Liverpool wher his father worked as a gardener. Moved north to the family smallholding at Caldhame, Forfar as a child. Occupation - Worked as a ploughman as a young man in Angus, then joinedI the police force and was posted to Lanarkshire where he spent the rest of his life.IOccupation - Domestic Servant.IOccupation - Coal Miner.IOccupation - Stocking Factory Worker.IOccupation - Coal Miner.IOccupation - Coal Miner.IOccupation - Coal Miner.IOccupation - Market Gardener (also worked as dairymand and quarrier). Died at South Street, Forfar.IOccupation - Dressmaker.:CForm submitted by a member of the LDS Church Search performed using PAF Insight on 29/08/2007:AJOHN ROBBIE; Male; Christening: 14 APR 1831 Aberdeen, Aberdeen, Scotland; Father: JOSEPH ROBBIE; Mother: HELEN THOMSON; Batch Number: 7405117 Sheet: 46 Source Call No.: 0934359 Type: FilmIMarjory grew up at Wester Pearsie hillfarm, north of Kirriemuir, where her father, Angus, was a shepherd. She left in her early teens to work as a domestic servant.;CExtracted birth or christening record for the locality listed in the record. Search performed using PAF Insight on 29/08/2007;AHELEN THOMSON; Female; Christening: 17 APR 1803 Strathdon, Aberdeen, Scotland; Father: CHAS. THOMSON; Mother: HELEN WATTY; Batch No.: C112405 Dates: 1763 - 1820 Source Call No.: 0993299 Type: Film Printout Call No.: 6902866 Type: Film Sheet: 0;A0IBorn Sydney Street, Dennistoun, Glasgow. Occupation - Cap Maker. Married late in life (aged 36) to John Campbell, Shipyard Labourer (aged 50) in 1922 at St Enoch's Parish Church, Glasgow. Both families lived in the same close at 24 NichIolson Street, Gorbals, before Jessie and John married. John died (date unknown) and Jessie then lived with her ageing father and her bachelor brother, Robert (Bert), in Bankhed Avenue, Knightswood, Glasgow.IBorn Jamieson Street, Glasgow. Occupation (at time of marriage in 1915) - Private, 8th Battalion, Scottish Rifles. Married at 123 Cathcart Road, Glasgow.IOccupation - Carter Lived at 24 Nicholson Street, Gorbals (in same close as Barclay family).IDied of croup at age 3 at the family home, 10 Park Wynd, Dundee.IOccupation - Jute Spinner.IOccupation - Plumber and GasfitterIOccupation - Jute Worker.IOccupation - Factory Worker.IOccupation - Factory Worker.IKnown as Robertina and Robina. Occupation - Cotton Mill Worker. After her marriage she lived in Armour Street, Calton, then 119 Saltmarket, then Dalmarnock Road, Bridgeton, Glasgow. HER WORK HAS BEEN DUPLICATED IN ERROR IN THE PRESON ITEMPLE BAP 21 SEPT 2007 ETCIOccupation - Railway Brakeman, then Woodyard and Sawmill Worker. After marriage he lived in Dalmarnock Road, Bridgeton.IOccupation - Van Driver and Railway Lorryman (Carter). Lived with his parents at 22 Armour Street, in the same close as the Barclay family. After his marriage he lived in Armour Street, Calton, then 119 Saltmarket, then Dalmarnock Road, IBridgeton, Glasgow.IOccupation - Carter He worked in the Goods Department of the Glasgow and South West Railway in Saltcoats, Ayrshire, and retired in 1902HI6@ݙFqhbw$ NHJ'6QBk>NHK]DSKu^:{&" NHL|Iڊ8s$^NHM?g3F-OʂNH  Nr)=O|yɯNHOA9MQN$NHP̒Z7Bz'u#NHqm JMeŘ$;NHz=Y_r\AL"w2$;NH[vNu<NH!$BX$;NHj/1MI*8{$;NHfUNkFsNH}s Dm =jNH.y2I qA4uZNHrF'?BͥNH{5iMLخnɌNHCI F2.$NH~6Q F@ǏNH!_'CQ!Ol $NNH?7[tKum0;Q$NH 7ZHCmr.RNH"#YcPH WNH?::wĶ0Hwf[z$ NH<;V3?9F Ι.|a$ NHFG}DoSԻa$F NHDE!{L'pNHHLGt E EퟗJFM> E6 CP2F4 -dHU@/od]"FVo> Et[CLeď""Fp> Ex?D"G;XmFq> EE94:L_RdF¦rz1EҋG5k[6'Ms -dH0t{:G,;iB"M-dH?G!bD" F!(ebffb-gb~ihb~*ib~kjb~lkb~hlbmmbnnbAobqpbrqborbssbttbubvv bxwbyxbIybzzb{{b||bC}b~~b2bbb!b$b%b&b'b(b)b*b+b,b-b.b/b0b1b2b13b4b5b6b7b8b9b:bL;b=b>b@bAbBbCbHbIbKJbKbLbObPbQbRbSbTbWbXbuYb]b^b_b`bab=bbcbdbebfbgbhbibjbkbIWidow of Thomas Clinton (?), shipyard workerIMarried Hannah Balfour from Ashton Under Lyne and went to live in Manchester where he worked as an engineer in the cotton factories.IMarried Margaret (Peggy) Aitchison in Glasgow.IBorn at 6 Dunellan Street, Glasgow. Died on 23 April 1930, aged only 7, months on board the SS Eagle III in Clyde Estuary opposite Dumbarton Rock. The family had been on holiday 'doon the water' when Sydney became ill. He died of cerebralI spinal fever (meningitis) 5 days after he became ill as the family was returning home to Glasgow.IBorn at 6 Dunellan Street, Glasgow. Married Olive Clark from Dumfriessshire. Travelled widely as civil servant. Spent many years posted in Singapore, then lived in Leeds when he returned, and then in Paisley.IBorn in 1936 at 800 Mosspark Drive, Glasgow. Married Tom Barrie from Kirkintilloch and emigrated to Wollongong, Australia.IOccupation - Domestic Servant.IOccupation - Farm Servant.IOccupation - Domestic Servant / Housekeeper. IOccupation - Gardener. He moved south from Low House Farm (the family farm) on the edge of the floodplain of the River Lune to oakfield Cottage in Garston Township, southeast of Liverpool. He was employed as an agricultural labourer to sta Irt with, then as a gardener.=CRecord submitted by a member of the LDS Church Search performed using PAF Insight on 29/08/2007=AAngus Cameron; Male; Christening: 10 MAR 1797 Kirkmichael, Perth, Scotland; Father: Angus Cameron; Mother: Emelia Buttars; Film Number: 446226 Page Number: 0040 Reference number: 47491IOccupation - Shepherd Moved from Kirkmichael Parish (in Highland Perthshire) to work at Wester Pearsie sheep farm, north of Kirriemuir, where he worked for most of his life. In old age he moved to live at Garlow Bank farm, just outside KIirriemuir, where his daughter, Amelia, lived. He died of senile decay at the age of 75.IMarjorie lived at Wester Pearsie hillfarm with her husband Angus and 3 daughters, but then left her husband and moved to the nearby farm of Nether Ascreavie with her daughters. She continued to live there after her daughters had married, neIxt door to her daughter, Amelia (Paterson). She died of heart disease at Garlow Bank farm where Amelia had moved to and where her son in law worked. IOccupation - Farmer. Born at Kellet, Lancashire. He had a 150 acre farm and employed three men - Low House Farm, on the edge of the River Lune, on the northeast outskirts of the village of Claughton, Lancashire (a short distance east of Ke Illet). IJane was born at Westhouse, c2km northwest of Ingleton, Yorkshire.IBorn at Cotton (Cottar's Town) of Balmuckety. Died from croup, aged only 4.IOccupation - Fruiterer and Confectioner, selling the produce from the family smallholding at Caldhame. Died of heart attack at very young age of 28, less than 2 years after his marriage. His wife, Annie Fraser McIntosh, continued the fruIit and confectionary business - her younger sister, Maggie, moved from Glamis and lived with her, helping to run the shop.IOccupation - General Law Clerk inEdinburgh, then promoted to 'Keeper of Records'. Married late in life - age 50 (in Tron Church, on the Royal Mile, Edinburgh). Died of cirrhosis of liver.IContinued the Fruit and Confectionary business in Forfar after her husband died - her young sister, Maggie, moved from Glamis to live with Annie and helped to run the shop.IOccupation - Seedsman.IOccupation - General LabourerIOccupation - Block Printer Lived in Busby, then moved to Ireland (Belfast) in the mid 1860s - then to Alexandria, Dunbartonshire (Burn Street, Bonhill). Died of Hemiplegia (paralysis of one side of body) 1 year - Bed sores 2 months - in IBurn Street.IOccupation - Block Printer.IOccupation - Labourer.RVK¦ :.DNX§:Jek?֨H?Y_p̩<& $,JiG"[!Ϫ*',.I8%h/6+$ī*-42,!&=(\1{503-2٬,1)79S'p7BCFͭ=>Z<<1@AP?q?:D:ծCL;3 TOuPQدMEL;\SH~IKؐODUPgTWVʑ  a(!Ila`֒^b]a=g`efdiehcٓgfl3Ujt.tF/1rKODJF$F F$u =y$ MNuqFSLuH" ^$ FvK$Ep]^Y)nHz(p $M-dHl=FB " M§> E\ՎB(J" F-dHWC.2H,"  M-dHY|4Y,F=ECCA"= P FwFEB)g$ :$ M:xF O;̛Lߢi8E$6$MeyFi0eG]̓" % Mz EW#\2HU%a">F EJL^M/ŰayM֨ E]=FI jF{-dH:(FW2ThO$ F| E5CTO< M? En^oߘBR,uM_ E#TXLCjiF}-dH,koxJd M̭"T M~ E-Ij;J"T F̩ EE~LrpM EF}LYʾF qF@ToX"Z$g M,qFh'#KZ=" $%MJF\9wN@{7Rnt" `$%Fi  Eu$KyH1@L+M Ey.8JrAF-dH߮EY,o"$g FϪ!K$E\.xKB'OeM Eja%{N`+Ы+QF"FjB6  $ M,#Fe .l̳Fm| $ MI$-dH̪hOJؗr@6$ MhF wd4>B%Arڣ$ F%F49ϩHn:$F MF".B|DA4M$t MīFy ;I WP&̜$ MF]*QA<ֈ$ M"IOccupation - Soldier.$IOccupation - Printfield Worker Born Clarkston Toll, Cathcart.%IOccupation - Printfield Worker&IOccupation - Printfield Worker, then Sewing Machine Builder Did he die an infant and another child of same name born to PD & GAS on 11 nov 1859 as per IGI ??(IOccupation - Printfield Worker-IDied of enteric fever (typhoid).1IOccupation - Printfield Worker2IOccupation - Printfield Worker3IOccupation - Printfield Worker4IOccupation - Printfield Worker HER WORK HAS BEEN DUPLICATED IN ERROR IN THE PRETON TEMPLE BAP 21 SEP 2007 ETC5IOccupation - Printfield Worker, then House Painter7IHER WORK HAS BEEN DUPLICATED IN ERROR IN THE PRETON TEMPLE BAP 21 SEP 2007 ETC9IDied in infancy. HER WORK HAS BEEN DUPLICATED IN ERROR IN THE PRETON TEMPLE BAP 21 SEP 2007 ETC>CExtracted birth or christening record for the locality listed in the record. Search performed using PAF Insight on 29/08/20070>AMARY CAMERON; Female; Birth: 14 DEC 1836; Christening: 24 DEC 1836 Kingoldrum, Angus, Scotland; Father: ANGUS CAMERON; Mother: MARY SMITH; Batch No.: C112954 Dates: 1820 - 1855 Source Call No.: 0993440 Type: Film Printout Call No.: 6902980 Typ/>Ae: Film Sheet: 00<IOccupation - Shepherd. Donald worked with Mary's father, Angus, at Wester Pearsie.?CForm submitted by a member of the LDS Church Search performed using PAF Insight on 29/08/2007?AANGUS CAMERON; Male; Christening: 25 FEB 1755 Kirkmichael, Banff, Scotland; Father: ROBERT CAMERON; Mother: CHRISTIAN BROWN; Batch Number: 7627452 Sheet: 43 Source Call No.: 1058759 Type: FilmBIOccupation - ShepherdCIHER WORK HAS BEEN DUPLICATED IN ERROR IN THE PRETON TEMPLE BAP 21 SEP 2007 ETC@CExtracted birth or christening record for the locality listed in the record. Search performed using PAF Insight on 29/08/20078@ASARAH AYSON; Female; Christening: 25 JUL 1730 Kirkmichael, Perth, Scotland; Father: DONALD AYSON; Mother: JANET MCDONALD; Batch No.: C113702 Dates: 1650 - 1654 Source Call No.: , 1040121 0102748 Type: Film Printout Call No.: 6903089 Type: Film7@A Sheet: C113702 1691 - 1693 , 1040121 0102748 Film NONE C113702 1709 , 1040121 0102748 Film NONE C113702 1720 - 1783 , 1040121 0102748 Film NONEACForm submitted by a member of the LDS Church Search performed using PAF Insight on 29/08/2007AACHARLES ROBBIE; Male; Birth: 06 MAY 1833; Christening: 24 JUL 1833 Old Machar, Aberdeen, Scotland; Father: JOSEPH ROBBIE; Mother: HELEN THOMSON; Batch Number: 7331309 Sheet: 87 Source Call No.: 0934259 Type: FilmHIOccupation - Aricultural LabourerBCRecord submitted after 1991 by a member of the LDS Church. Search performed using PAF Insight on 29/08/2007BAMargaret Robbie; Female; Birth: 1837 Of, Kirriemuir, Angus, Scotland; Death: 26 JAN 1855 Southmuir, Kirriemuir, Angus, Scotland; Burial: Kirriemuir, Angus, Scotland; Father: Joseph Robbie; Mother: Helen ThomsonJIAre parents Joseph Robbie and Helen Stewart or Helen Thompson or Helen Donaldson as per IGI ?CCExtracted birth or christening record for the locality listed in the record. Search performed using PAF Insight on 29/08/2007ACAELIZABETH ANDERSON; Female; Birth: 05 DEC 1835; Christening: 09 DEC 1835 Newtyle, Angus, Scotland; Father: JAMES ANDERSON; Mother: CATHERINE HAGIE; Batch No.: C113144 Dates: 1820 - 1855 Source Call No.: 0993501 Type: Film Printout Call No.: 69F HMM$1UA$ F!&F64W-KYѱU$ _$%F=FNHnMnB'$ M\FWcHcHpei$ M{FG.}MXe$ F'-dHxO^ɔv"Y F(-dH ZOOcJ"  F٬)-dH]GM*!$%F*Fw*Cjو$%F+FOquGۿv$%M7F |/@C-"$%MS,FuDhM27MŸ|^9W$%FpFƃ*bC3OV;F$%F-FoxYtC:2IT`$%FFVO Iu$Fu"fRv$^F$ FͭF N;OtP9-a]~$ $ >F1-dH5k,6Js "  MF#7yG;ia$ F1FJvO6-Ua $ FP-dHr/1zDZ" MqF?xH9'YkJѡ$ M-dHAmN6ҍ?1a$ M4F-XEt< $F  $2 ?Mծ5FXAl9C|åa7$F F"E@[MDk^MFKnyЍED[ a"#F #u @F3"EX+HH}ibMT"Eެ\33FEmINFu;F|yB|\z$\ z$\ A$ MF“PCt"d ay$  BF>-dHf%D6cJOiD}a$ a$ MدK$E5 CF%̹ՍP" FF[LN֫2B~$ F~$ CF;K$E/cCdfY%dM\K$EPeL5#aa$F~FơD&C\a+$ M-dHFB^rIzas$F@CA03017 Type: Film Sheet: 00ZIOccupation - a 'foreman' in Dundee (presumably in one of the jute mills)]IOccupation - Umbrella Coverer^IOccupation - Brass Moulder_IOccupation - TinsmithdIOccupation - Machine ScrewereIAgnes died age 11.jIOccupation - Domestic Servant.Mref 284 hillhead, 1928MCRecord submitted after 1991 by a member of the LDS Church. Search performed using PAF Insight on 29/08/2007MADavid Barclay; Male; Birth: 25 JUL 1820 Leuchars, Fife, Scotland; Death: 03 MAR 1883 Dundee, Angus, Scotland; Spouse: Mary Kerrigan; Marriage: 20 OCT 1879 Dundee, Angus, ScotlandNCExtracted marriage record for locality listed in the record. Search performed using PAF Insight on 29/08/2007NAGRACE ANN STEELE; Female; Spouse: PATRICK DUN; Marriage: 06 AUG 1852 Carmunnock, Lanark, Scotland; Batch No.: M116314 Dates: 1819 - 1855 Source Call No.: 1042970 Type: Film Printout Call No.: 6902216 Type: Film Sheet: 00%LElizabeth /Anderson/LBetsyeMJames /Anderson/hNCatherine /Hagie/mOCharles /Robbie/jPMargaret /Robbie/mPMaggietQElizabeth /Robbie/]ؐQBetsye.R Ann /Robbie/TRAnnieoSCatherine /Robbie/]TMartha /Haunton/jUJames /Haunton/VAlexander /Smith/WAlexander /Smith/mX David /Smith/Y Janet /Smith/ZGeorge /Simpson/h[Matthew /Stafford/\Letitia /Galbraith/]Letitia /McFarlane/^James /McFarlane/m_John /McFarlane/j`Henry /McFarlane/maWilliam /McFarlane/bThomas /McFarlane/]cWilliam /Cowan/d James /Cowan/e Agnes /Cowan/f Alex /Cowan/4g John /Cowan/ThRobert /Cowan/i Alice /Cowan/jMary A /Campbell/mkMary /Barclay/lWilliam /Campbell/mMary /Cuthbertson/ؐ-dHS"EiBoHa$FF!nj IZ$ FDF']ΏIEt''a$ FgFwנ^ARM9J$?FK$EpnOڋI<MK$EGj%|%N$hgMʑK$E_C3\-X 7$MK$EVE{iREGD<&;$M K$Ec zw`Ah.n>$F( B%E7vCUF>BMI-EGAG8L,Ml-EX-D^(| FCFiopEO'a$dFD-dHp]Ka$M-dHCoJBa$M=-dHJ3j I_pal$M`qF'NILa$;MFqFYHYʒa$;MGqFB;$ұCUha$;a@$;FqF#AFQEN"-;MٓqFkSFA㞐qa$;M-dH EH_G^af$;MqFcp$w{SOqia@$;F3HqFripW e(M-Ea؎N%0pF,St Ninians Cathedral, Perth, ScotlandUGorbals, Glasgow, ScotlandRNew Zealand ??|Victoria, British Columbia, CanadaChepstow, Monmouthshire, EnglandChevy Chase, Maryland, USASt Mary's, Gateshead, Co Durham, EnglandP West Derbyshire / Lancashire, England ?Gallowfauld, Angus, Scotland Carmunnock, Lanark, ScotlandRutherglen, Scotland<6 January 18 65Wiltshire County Record OfficeCounty HallTrowbridgeWiltsBA14 8JG012214753641NRegister of Shipping and SeamenCardiffNFamily History Library35 N. West Temple StreetSalt Lake City, Utah 84150USAwww.familysearch.orgN