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| Thursday, 10 January, 2002, 09:58 GMT 'I surfed the 1901 census - briefly' Liz Mazonowicz got on to the 1901 census website the day before it launched (only to crash repeatedly until it was withdrawn). Here, in our weekly Real Time series, she tells how in that brief time she "found" her long lost great-grandmother.
I've been looking into my family tree, and information about my great-grandmother has been missing, so I went straight after her. I was particularly anxious to find out if she was still in the country in 1901. Her husband had died in 1895, leaving her with eight children, and at some point she ran off to Canada with another man. Family scandal No-one in my family has ever talked about what happened. As far as I can make out, she used his name but didn't actually marry him.
When I got on the website, I discovered that she was still in England in 1901. She'd had to resort to taking in washing because she had several small children to support. I'm intrigued to see if she'd also resorted to taking in lodgers - running off with the landlady was a fairly common practice in those days. If there was a male lodger, I could try to trace her in Canada using his name. But before I could find out, I was thrown out of the site. ![]() Glimpse of the past: Liz's mother and her sisters
All of this I've found out in the past five years. The furthest back I've got is a brother and sister in Norfolk in the 1750s. He got into a bit of trouble and was transported to Australia, while she stayed in their small village and had five illegitimate children with a man who couldn't marry her for some reason. Net records invaluable My research is not entirely online. I spend a lot of time at the Family Records Centre, the Public Records Office, and at the Society of Genealogists - I'm extremely lucky living in London where all the records are held.
The first thing I did was subscribe to a newsgroup, where people recommended that I should try the Genuki website [see Internet links on the right], which has tips on how to start, directions to all the main archives and loads of links. Addictive pastime My family history has always teased me. I used to look at old photos, wondering who the people were, and thinking to myself: 'One of these days I'll find out.'
I had not realised that it is totally addictive - there's all these strange dramas and scandals falling out of the cupboards. It's this marvellous soap opera, except they are real people and you're related to them. I got completely and utterly hooked. |
See also: 08 Jan 02 | UK 02 Jan 02 | UK 04 Jan 02 | UK Internet links: The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites Top UK stories now: Links to more UK stories are at the foot of the page. | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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