In the course of my work as a family history researcher, I access many parish records. These records not only record valuable baptisms, marriages and burials, but on many occasions they offer up wonderful snippets of social history by the curates and ministers who put pen to paper. I have come across some fascinatic scribblings down the sides of pages - infectious disease deaths and stories that support them, a triplet baptism was a real surprise in the 1830s, why someone was buried at 9.00 p.m., what happened to the dead woman's 15 children. Reading about the farming fatalities with one farmer not only losing a son, but two other employees to horrendous accidents gives an indication of how dangerous farming was in the 19th century. Weather conditions, earthquakes and double murder all there in our parish records waiting to be retold in stories from the parish records.
Views: 287 | Enquiries: 0I am a retired Primary School Teacher and Assistant Headteacher. I have lived in Fordham Essex since 2012 and was pleasantly surprised that the small village had a History Society; that I immediately joined. I became chairman and organiser of Fordham History Society back in 2017. I have been a family history researcher since 1986 after my father died and my mother came to live with me. An old battered suitcases of family treasures started my interest in family history, although I have always liked history. In Fordham we are fortunate to have an archaeological dig site. My brother is a professional archaeologist and in the past I have worked with him on digs in Norfolk over a period of 10 years. Fordham History Society has a very good archive of documents and over 2000 photographs. From this archive, books have been written by our members. I have written a book about Fordham and WW1 to commemorate the Centenary of WW1 and with the help of Heritage Lottery money I was able to write the book, organise a week long exhibition, write a Scheme of Work for the village Primary School and having researched all our casualties on our war memorial; had ten more missing names added to the memorial. I am now in the process of writing a book about Fordham and WW2 and I am working on other village projects such as a photographic project of all the gravestones in the village churchyard. I have been giving historical talks to groups for eight years. These talks are varied, they include a range of talks relating to family history, photography and parish records, there are military themed talks covering Waterloo, WW1, WW2, Jutland, Raid on Zeebrugge, Women's Land Army and Conscientious Objection (the village school headteacher was an objector) and two that I do in costume; one as a pilgrim and another as a suffragette.
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