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Saturday, April 7, 2012

Happy Easter 2012

Gary and Renee Tomlinson
Celebrating Easter
Jerome, Idaho
1945

How Grateful I am to have been born to parents who beleive in the resurrection of Jesus Christ. 


The Importance of Given Names.

 Apology to those who follow this blog.   I have been so remiss in posting on a regular basis. We are doing a full renovation on our townhouse and it is taking longer than we anticipated.   I want to give my full attention in preparing a post on the Hepworth line only to have my mind wonder to all that needs to be done.  


         Recently, I came across information concerning the English pattern in naming children which was very interestng.  I find the Hepworth line and the Kidgell line followed the pattern to some extent. 

The following article explains:   
THE IMPORTANCE OF GIVEN NAMES BY by Donna Przecha.
"Given names are [very] important because they represent a voluntary choice by the parents or, sometimes, by an individual.  A name is usually not given lightly. It represents thought and feelings and can be significant to the researcher.  
You will often see the same names used over and over again in families.  Donna continues.....While certain names are popular in different areas in different times in history, the repetition could represent a pattern.  Many cultures beleive in honoring their elders and do so by naming children after them. 
Naming Patterns of the English was popular in the 1700-1875.
     Example:
  • The first son was named after the father's father
  • The second son was named after the mother's father
  • The third son was named after the father
  • The fourth son was named after the Father's eldest brother
  • The first daughter after the mother's mother
  • The second daughter after the father's mother
  • The third daughter after the mother
  • The fourth daughter after the mother's eldest sister
     Second great-grand father Thomas Hepworth and Mary Fletcher's first son was named after Thomas's father Samuel as well as in the Kidgell line; the first son was named Charles.  Both the Hepworth's and Kidgell's named their first daughter after the mother's mother,  Sarah Julia Hepworth - Ellen Maria Kidgell.  Both families (Hepworth and Kidgell) had a pattern of family names that followed through for the next generation.   In my research of the Hepworth's and Kidgell's this name pattern was very handy at times in helping in identifying them however, there were times it could be confusing when a relative of the same surname in the same time frame used the same names.  
     If you are LDS and are familiar with the new.familysearch.org site;(you need an LDS membership number to be able to registrar on this site.) bringing up the Thomas Hepworth Family File is very frustrating  because their is so many erroneous dates; birth dates that are wrong and incorrect death dates, even names of parents that are not right and other spouses which I know beyond a doubt that Thomas was only married to Mary Fletcher.  This incorrect information is put there by other members who don't realize their Thomas Hepworth is not the same man as my guy.  This family file is really a mess.  For example someone has put in incorrect parents:

      
 Going back to the naming pattern; of all Thomas and Mary's thirteen children, not one is named Richard.   Nor is there a Richard in Thomas's brother John's family of eleven children.   

We are almost finished with the renovation.  Hopefully, I will be posting about the Hepworth's soon. 

Thanks for understanding. 




   
   



    Sunday, March 25, 2012

    1940 Census coming soon!

         Yes, I am ready for the 1940 Census.  Well, maybe not ready but, excited about it.  I am going to volunteer to help in the indexing.
         For many years I spent researching my father's paternal line, a very interesting story which I cannot go into at this time.  My goal was to locate living descendants but, I came to a 'brick wall' (a genealogy term) two years ago and left that line with the thought that I will wait until the launching of the 1940 Census which I am very confident will help me to bring the  'brick wall' down.
                                                                                             
                                                                                         

    Saturday, March 24, 2012

    Cari Lyn always a Team Player.




    Someone you would want on your team.  It could be a team of Sports, Scholastic, or Spiritual.
    You would want Cari on your side.  She ALWAYS gave it her all.  Love you always Cari.  

    Sunday, March 18, 2012

    Found; Digitized original marriage records! A treasure.


    This has been a very productive Sunday afternoon; researching on Ancestry.com.
     I found digitized marriage records for
     Liverpool, Lancashire, England, Marriages and Banns, 1813-1921 
    So far I have found original records for:
    two sets of third great-grandparents.  
    Samuel Hepworth who married Sarah Jackson on
     25 Jun 1820 at Saint John, in Wakefield, York, England 
    parents to John and Thomas Hepworth who joined the LDS church in 1850. 
    Thomas is a gggrandfather I will be blogging about the most whenever I get going on this Hepworth line. 
    The other ggggrandparents are;
    James Fletcher b 16 Feb 1807, he married Julia Lightfoot on 29 Jun 1826 at 
    St. Anne's, in Liverpool, Lancashire, England 
    What's so great about this record is up until now is Julia's maiden name was unknown.  Now we know; LIGHTFOOT. 

    Next is Thomas Hepworth b 1826 and Mary Fletcher b1832;
    As I have posted before they were married 
    27 Aug 1848
     Then John Hepworth b 1822  and Francis Amelia Fletcher b 1828 
    married 28 Jan 1850 

    What's so special about the original record, it shows the signature  of my ancestors.  Only one witness to John Hepworth and Frances Amelia Fletcher marriage cannot write her name; she has an x as her mark, it reads 
    Jane Spencer her x mark.

    Next post:  Naming pattern's of the English and how my ancestors followed the tradition or NOT.  




     James Fletcher and Julia Lightfoot
     Original digital marriage record for my third great grand father and mother
    (before finding this record Julia's maiden name was 'unknown')
    Father and Mother to Francis Amelia and Mary.
    Samuel Hepworth and Sarah Jackson original digital marriage record
    My third great grandfather and mother.
    Parents to Thomas and John Hepworth 
    Thomas Hepworth and Mary Fletcher digital original marriage record.
    Second great grandfather and mother.
    Migrated to Zion in 1852
    John Hepworth and Francis Amelia Fletcher digital original marriage record.
    Second great granduncle and aunt.
    Migrated with brother Thomas Hepworth and Sister Mary Fletcher
      to Zion 1852







    Sunday, March 11, 2012

    Hepworth Brother's Marries Fletcher Sisters

         Great Grandfather James Fletcher Hepworth's parents are Thomas Hepworth and Mary Fletcher from England.  This is a copy of their Marriage Certificate married on 27 Aug. 1848 at the Church of  St. Nicholas  in Liverpool, Lancaster, England.  The witnesses's are John Hepworth, Thomas's older brother by four years and Frances A. Fletcher, Mary's older sister by four years.  Thomas's father is Samuel Hepworth a Butcher by occupation (this is very important when researching this family) and Mary's father is James Fletcher, his occupation is Painter even though it looks like, Printer on this copy.
    Thomas is twenty one years of age and Mary is sixteen.
    Thomas's occupation is also a Butcher; an occupation he is for the rest of his life.
         Two years later his brother John Hepworth married Frances Amelia Fletcher on 26 Jan 1850 in the same Church of St. Nicholas in Liverpool.  John is twenty eight years old and Frances Amelia is twenty one.  I don't have a copy of their certificate of marriage. I found their marriage information on FamilySearch.org. This is a picture I found on the internet of St. Nicholas Church located in Liverpool, Lancaster, England, Est. in 1360 still in operation today.  Could this be the very Church the Hepworth Brothers married the Fletcher Sisters?  I think I am safe to say, Yes.
         Thomas and Mary along with John and Francis migrate to Zion in 1852.
       
         It has only been the last two years that I know anything about John and Francis.  I spent all of the year 2010 doing newspaper research and went from nothing to a 2 inch binder filled with interesting news.
     
    Stay Tuned to the life histories of the HEPWORTH's.

       


       

    Sunday, March 4, 2012

    James Fletcher Hepworth my great grandfather.

         It's time to come back to posting information about my ancestors.  I hope to post on a regular basis from this date on about the Hepworth family.    

     This is my great-grandfather James Fletcher Hepworth.  Written on the back of this picture is his name and words "abt 19 years old."  To me he looks more like a rough and tough sixteen or seventeen year old.
    The look on his face is a 'no nonsense' type of young boy don't you think?
        James was born on 7 May 1857 in Salt Lake City; he is the fifth child of thirteen children born to Thomas Hepworth and Mary Fletcher.
         James is named after his maternal grandfather James Fletcher.
    James was twenty five when he married my great-grandmother Sarah Ann Kidgell (named after her mother Sarah Ann Cashmore Kidgell) who was eighteen at the time.  She was known as Sadie.  Like James, Sadie was the fifth child of nine children.  They were married on 30 Nov 1882 at the Hepworth house in
    Salt Lake City.  
       
    Sadie Kidgell
         This is the
    tie in into the Hepworth family.
    I am very fortunate to have many treasured pictures of this family that I will be posting the rest of the year. My next post will be on the the parents coming from England to the Salt Lake Territory.