Friday 21 December 2018

Last-Minute Christmas Presents?


Merry Christmas graphic



We've all been there - you're wrapping up the presents and suddenly you remember that you forgot to get anything for Aunt So-and-So, or Uncle Whatsisname.

Or wait! Your sister said she was gonna be away for Christmas! And now she's not! You haven't got her a present yet!

What do you do?!

Well, instead of running out to grab the last battered box of chocolates in the shop, or a bottle of bargain booze, why not turn that last minute panic into something special?

I can help you out.

If you e-mail me with the details before December 24th, I can create and e-mail back a personalised gift-certificate.

Sounds good, but what does it mean?

Let me break it down:



  • You tell me what you'd like the gift certificate to say

  • I create the gift certificate and e-mail you a PDF (printable) copy, along with an order form for the recipient to fill in with the information I need to start researching.

  • You print out the certificate and form (or e-mail it,) and give it to the intended recipient.

  • I will invoice you for the full amount of the package you selected, plus £10.50 P&P. If the recipient wants extra copies of the research, or for it to be printed in a different format, that will incur extra fees.

  • Once I have payment, and the information I need from the recipient, I'll get started on fulfilling the special gift you ordered!

As long as you e-mail me BEFORE 24th Dec 2018, I should be able to help you out!

If you're not sure, feel free to ask any questions you want; my e-mail address can be found on the order information page of my website.


Have a good Christmas everyone!



Sunday 11 November 2018

1918-2018 11.11



What candles may be held to speed them all?
      Not in the hands of boys, but in their eyes
Shall shine the holy glimmers of goodbyes.

- Anthem For Doomed Youth, Wilfred Owen






One hundred years on from the moment when the guns finally fell silent, it's too easy to forget just how young the boys were who died in the First World War - many of the fallen were teenagers, or in their early twenties.

Of all the beautiful and touching memorials we've seen this year, I think one of the most haunting and the most poignant is the 'ghost sculptures' in Slimbridge, Gloucestershire, standing guard at the graves of the young men buried there.




Thursday 4 October 2018

Wait... It's That Time Already?! Christmas Order Dates





It's time to think about Christmas!


Don't panic! You haven't fallen into a time-warp, it's still October, I promise!

But in order for me to have your research all wrapped up and shiny under the tree, I need time to do it in!

That means that my Very Last (with capital letters) order date for that special Christmas gift is 31st October.

After this date, I just can't get it done in time.

And of course, the earlier you order, the more time I have to make that gift extra-special!






Check out my website, with updated prices and order information, and get in touch to discuss your research!



I can also arrange gift certificates for those of you who've left it too late!

This is something that I personalise to the order and to the recipient, so be sure to get in contact if you want a gift certificate, and I'll see what I can do for you.







Monday 27 August 2018

WDYTYA? Series Finale - Jonnie Peacock





Last Monday's episode of Who Do You Think You Are? was the last in the series and featured Paralympian Jonnie Peacock.



peacock feathers



I have to admit that I'm a big fan of Jonnie Peacock, so I was looking forward to this episode!

Jonnie's episode actually showed what a lot of the episodes this series have shown - that the poverty of the past, and the living conditions of many of our ancestors, were exceptionally poor.



One key frustrating note (for me at least,) that seems to crop up a lot is the celebrity being completely bemused when people sign with an X.

So, to clear this up and spread the word, let me explain:

If someone signs with an X it usually means they are illiterate. The only other explanation, really, would be if a disability affected someone's ability to write.

Early records, particularly among women, and among lower/working-class people, are usually signed with an X.

So now you know!



I think the interesting thing to me with this episode was the connection with anthrax, and its relative prevalence at the time.

Just goes to show that health and safety is there for a reason, I suppose!






So that was it for this series of Who Do You Think You Are? - I'll try to add some blogposts between series this time, but if I'm quiet it's because I'm busy researching your ancestors!

Thursday 16 August 2018

WDYTYA? - Marvin Hulmes + Robert Rinder



As I didn't have time to do my write-up of Marvin Hulmes' episode of Who Do You Think You Are? last week, I figured I'd combine that write-up with the write-up for this week's episode, featuring Robert Rinder.




vintage butterflies





Marvin Hulmes' episode showed the difficulty of coming to terms with the past from where we are in the present.

Slavery is, and was, wrong. But it was not only white people who owned slaves.

As Marvin learned during his time in Jamaica, free black people also often owned slaves. Coming to terms with that is not the easiest of things to do, especially from Marvin's position of being descended from both black slaves and black slave owners.

Marvin's episode also showed that it can be unfair to judge people - such as his mother's grandfather, known as 'Old Man Buckingham' and thought of as grumpy and standoffish - without knowing their stories.

Old Man Buckingham's story was one of the worst kinds of luck, encompassing workhouse stays, abandonment by his parents, a painful disease as a child, and being shipwrecked twice. Such a background is enough to make anyone a little standoffish.



Robert Rinder's episode explored a lot of the same themes, albeit from a completely different aspect of geography and history.

Judge Rinder's family story covered the horrors and uncertainties of the 20th Century, and their affects on the lives of those who lived through them.

The Holocaust, as his grandfather's old friend and fellow Holocaust-survivor told Robert Rinder, is something that should never be forgotten - what the Jewish people and other victims of the Holocaust suffered is something we should never let ourselves forget, so that we never, ever, repeat it.

It also showed, very clearly, that the rules are sometimes meant to be broken. Rinder's grandfather lied about his age in order to be allowed to move to the UK, and re-start his life. As uncomfortable as it made Rinder, it seems an exceptionally small sin when compared with those committed against him.



Friday 3 August 2018

WDYTYA? - Shirley Ballas

South African flag



Strictly Come Dancing's new head judge Shirley Ballas featured in Monday's episode of Who Do You Think You Are?

I have to say, it was one of the better episodes of recent years!



Rumors of possible Black ancestry took Shirley to South Africa and a complex history.

Her family were originally Muslim, probably brought into Cape Town, South Africa, as slaves before slavery was abolished.

I found it quite amusing that the Deacon of the Cathedral didn't mention Jesus at all when asked why the Muslim Caroline Otto and her family would convert to Christianity - he was refreshingly honest in admitting that their motives would likely have been an improvement in social status.



I did find this episode quite naïve when it came to the parentage of the Otto family.

There were several generations of the Otto family born to single mothers, no fathers being mentioned.

An  ex-slave-owner, Isaac DaCosta, left one of the generations of ladies named Caroline Otto an inheritance in his will, as well as her children, who were all named individually.

Esther DaCosta, Isaac's daughter, also witnessed an Otto marriage.



There's nothing invalid about the conclusion put forward on the programme, that the DaCosta family valued the Otto family as friends and excellent servants - but it seems impermissible to ignore another strong possibility.

Relationships that are this close between servants and their masters would be rare, especially when the servant was previously a slave, and in such a race-defined society as pre-21st-Century South Africa.

Where servants were that close to their master, I would expect the bequest in the will to contain the words 'to my servant' or something similar. An absence of this doesn't prove anything, but is interesting.

The whole set-up, to me, suggests more of an intimate obligation on the DaCosta family - possibly even a familial obligation, if one of the DaCosta family was the father of one or more of one of those fatherless Otto children.




Again, that's just my take on things, and just a theory at that!

Monday 30 July 2018

WDYTYA? - Boy George




irish flag






Boy George's episode of Who Do You Think You Are?, which aired last Wednesday, was one of those episodes which show the true tragedy that many families faced in the past.

This can be exceptionally evident in the case of Irish history.

Men who were hung as traitors under British rule in Ireland are now seen as Irish national heroes - which does show how history is often simply a matter of perspective.



George was clearly affected by the scene of his great-uncle's hanging. With good reason.

Sometimes the past can be truly hard to face, not least in terms of the hardships and harrowing circumstances that members of your own family may have had to live through.



Likewise the poverty faced by many Irish people in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries is difficult to fathom from where we stand today.

The slums of nineteenth century Dublin were the poorest of the poor, but the places to which children were removed by the NSPCC weren't always better. Often, they were far more abusive than the homes which the children had left, which were poor but loving.




This was an interesting but sad episode, with a highly likeable celeb.

Friday 20 July 2018

WDYTYA? - Lee Mack




Lee Mack's episode of Who Do You Think You Are? aired on Monday, starting us off with Lee finding out about his fellow comedian, ancestor Billy Mac.



autumn leaves




Billy's story encompassed both variety/music hall performances, and the Western Front in World War One.

Billy performed with a gallows-humour style comedy troupe called 'The Optimists' on the front lines.




Also part of Lee's episode was a look at his maternal family in Ireland.

Life wasn't that easy for his ancestors, and Lee was perhaps a little quick to judge an unmarried mother who emigrated to Canada while leaving her son in her parents' care.

Often, family members who emigrated would send money home to their relatives - additionally, not having her as another mouth to feed would also have benefitted the family financially.




Of course, not knowing the exact circumstances, it may have been just as Lee suspected at first - or something else entirely.

That's the thing about trying to understand the actions of people in the past - without more context, it can be very difficult to understand how acceptable something was.

Lee did begin to wonder whether he was being too harsh, and judging his ancestor too much by modern standards, when the conditions and economic difficulties his family were in became clearer - it can be worthwhile to understand that survival is often the top motivating factor behind the actions of our forebears!





Thursday 12 July 2018

WDYTYA? - Olivia Colman

Monday's episode of Who Do You Think You Are? featured actress Olivia Colman.

For me, Olivia's bouncy attitude is what made this episode worth the watch - she really did make it interesting just by being there!






Of course, her family's story was also really interesting!

This episode really benefitted from a family that could've waltzed straight out of Dickens or Austen, encompassing India, Portugal, and France, and death, divorce, and some very strong women.



And of course it's hard not to be at least a little envious when someone's family were posh enough to have actual painted portraits!

This episode had all of the amazing twists and turns you would hope for in a episode of Who Do You Think You Are? and hopefully is a great indication of the standard of the rest of the series.




Again though, what really made this episode was Colman's investment in not only the highs, but the lows as well.

Yes, there were the patented Who Do You Think You Are? tears. Many of them, in fact!







Tuesday 12 June 2018

WDYTYA? - Michelle Keegan

Michelle Keegan's episode of Who Do You Think You Are? was a tale of survivors.

One of her main family lines originated in Gibraltar - which, if you don't know, is a British dependency off the coast of Spain.





vintage style collage






Gibraltar was largely evacuated in WW2, due to both its strategic importance, and it's vulnerable position in the heart of Europe.

The civilian refugees - people who, though largely Spanish-speaking, considered themselves Brits - were sent to many locations, including the UK mainland.

These British citizens found themselves in the odd position of being treated as foreigners on the British mainland - strangers in their own country.




Another Gibraltarian ancestor had emigrated from Genoa in Italy, alone, at the age of just 13.

He worked his way to a moderately successful - if slightly on the edge of the law - business at the port.




A separate line of Michelle's family hail from her own native Manchester, where Michelle found that one of her ancestors was a suffragist.

I think that a little more could have been made of the differences between suffragists and suffragettes, since this seemed a bit rushed-in at the end, but I guess it can be hard to decide what to include sometimes!






The BBC are doing one of their patented random gaps between WDYTYA? episodes, so I have no idea when the next one's on!

Monday 4 June 2018

New WDYTYA? Series (+ Info on My Privacy Policy)







The 15th series of Who Do You Think You Are? starts this week with Michelle Keegan, actress from BBC series Our Girl.



Other celebrities featured in series 15 are:

  • Olivia Colman, actress
  • Boy George, musician
  • Shirley Ballas, Strictly Come Dancing judge
  • Lee Mack, comedian
  • Marvin Humes, former JLS member and TV presenter
  • Robert Rinder, TV's Judge Rinder
  • Jonnie Peacock, Paralympian








Here in Wales, the series is premiering at 23.05 (11.05pm) on Wednesday (6th June,) on BBC1 Wales.

In Scotland, it premiers at 21.00 (9pm) on Thursday (7th June) on BBC1 Scotland.

And everywhere else, it premiers at 21.00 (9pm) on Wednesday (6th June,) on your local BBC1.

I'm hoping to write summaries for the episodes again - so look out for that!










Also worth a look for fans of history is Suffragettes with Lucy Worsley, on tonight on BBC1 at 20.30 (8.30pm)




On a business note, you may've heard about the new GDPR EU regulations.

I take your privacy and the collection of your data seriously, and you can see my privacy policy here.