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Saturday 2nd December 2017 - Number 2970

Welcome 
to  the
Laws Family Blog


We reach out to all, regardless 

of Race, Colour, Creed, Orientation or National Origin, with support for researching family and documenting cultural inheritance

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Dear Ancestor,-
Your tombstone stands amongst the rest, neglected and alone
The names and dates are chiselled out on polished marble stone
It reaches out to all who care, it is too late to mourn
You did not know that I exist, you died and I was born
Yet each of us are cells of you, in flesh, in blood, in bone.
Our blood contracts and beats a pulse entirely not our own

Dear Ancestor, 
The place you filled one hundred years ago
Spreads out amongst the ones you left who would have loved you so,
I wonder if you lived and loved, I wonder if you knew
That someday I would find this spot, and come to visit you. 


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SURNAMES IN MY TREE INCLUDE LAWS & LAWES, HARDING ELL ROWELL FULLER LOTHERINGTON BRANT MOONEY 

AT THE

LAWS FAMILY REGISTER 

WE ARE HAPPY TO WORK ON YOUR  LAWS TREE 

(MAYBE WE ALREADY HAVE)

   EXTRACTS FROM OUR DATABASE

BUT PLEASE NOTE
We have excluded records of living people to protect their Privacy -therefore we are not showing births after 1920 or marriages after 1940 these are only available on request

If you are interested in anyone listed here, email us with the name, date and reference number, and we will happily do a look up, you might even get a whole tree! 

We will be happy to publish within this blog Your stories of your LAWS research and also members of the LAWS and LAWES family you are searching for. 

We will be happy to help with you with your LAWS/LAWES research, and in certain instances we may be willing to undertake private research on your behalf.


The content provided on this site is not guaranteed to be error free - It is always advised that you consult original records.

 Contact me via email at registrar@lawsfamilyregister.org.uk 

Family Events from our database for today 2nd December



Family Event

BIRTHS baptisms etc

1691 - Christen: Ann LAWES-32035, Norwich Norfolk England
1798 - Birth: Thomas LAWES-28636, Allington Wiltshire England
1835 - Birth: George LAWS-8249, Old Machar, Aberdeen Aberdeenshire England
1844 - Birth: Mary Ann LAWS-32351, Chatteris Cambridgeshire England



1851 - Birth: Edward Samuel Deverell LAWS-30379, 
1851 - Birth: John Eden Parker LAWS (Farmer) -30369, Quebec CANADA
1855 - Birth: George John LAWS (Brush Finisher) -34989, Stepney Middlesex England



1855 - Birth: Georgiana LAWES (Spinster) -387, Bishopstone Wiltshire England




1860 - Baptism: Rosabelle LAWS-39500, Stepney Middlesex England
1878 - Birth: Henrietta Willermena LAWS-30372, Gaspe, Quebec CANADA
1882 - Birth: Frederick H  LAWS (Electrician)-30948, Battersea Surrey England
1890 - Birth: Frances Willard LAWS-45630, Blanchard OH United States
1894 - Baptism: Matthew LAWS-29048, Bedlington Northumberland England
1903 - Birth: Francis LAWS-45250, Colfax, Jasper IA United States
1903 - Birth: Alonzo Mason LAWS-22890, MA United States
1906 - Birth: Oliver LAWS-36268, San Francisco CA United States
1907 - Birth: Thelma LAWS-24856, Cabool, Texas Co MO United States
1909 - Birth: Reuben LAWS-27360, 
1910 - Birth: Andrew K LAWS (Overhead Wireman) -44387, 
1912 - Birth: Thelma Rose LAWS-21703, Rookwood NSW Australia
1912 - Birth: Evelyn I LAWS-12627, Neodesha Kansas United States
1917 - Birth: Albert Henry LAWS (Carpenter/Joiner) -38800, Nottingham, 
           Nottinghamshire England
1920 - Birth: Stanley John LAWS (Draughtsman Engineering in Sheet Metal 
           & Light Plate Work) -36170, Woolwich Kent England




MARRIAGES

1793 - Marriage: Stephen LAWES (Horse Dealer) -155 and Elizabeth SMALL-156, 
           Basingstoke Hampshire England


1821 - Marriage: William LAWS (Ropemaker) -18534 and Jane BURROWS-24264,                                Bermondsey Surrey England
1848 - Marriage: Thomas Jeremiah LAWS- (Ag Lab) 22975 and Esther DEAL (Servant)                     - 22976, Swingfield Kent England England
1897 - Marriage: George LAWS-41442 and Mary Hannah PEAT-41443, 
            Buslingthorpe Leicestershire England


DEATHS burials etc

1840 - Death: David LAWS-14475, Wilkes County NC United States
1871 - Death: Frederick Joseph LAWS (Master's Mate 85100) -4801, 

1877 - Death: William LAWS (Mariner) -35227, Rochester Kent England
1917 - Death: Ernest Edward LAWS (ARMY Private 33424) -22264, 
1936 - Death: Lewis Alfred LAWS (Electrical Engineer) -3423, New Copse, 
           Medstead, Hampshire England
1952 - Burial: Alan Walter LAWS-3471, Horsford Norfolk England
1964 - Death: Charles Hebron LAWES-40177, Sherringham Norfolk England
1964 - Death: Sybil Irene LAWS-35312, Stamford Lincolnshire England
1964 - Death: Charles Robert LAWS (PVT US Army) -16663, 
1978 - Death: William Eric LAWES (Consultant Anaesthetist) -13232, Wadhurst Kent England
1981 - Death: Frank Wesley LAWS- (Australian Army Sapper) 20616, Sydney NSW                               AUSTRALIA
1983 - Death: Bernard Oswald LAWS (Farmer) -3261, Mooroopna Victoria AUSTRALIA
2001 - Burial: Janat LAWS-19736, Kanab, Kane UT United States
2009 - Death: Paul LAWS-33130, Weston Super Mare Somerset England


2011 - Death: James Bowmaker LAWS-18356, Murton Durham England

MISC

1862 - Occupation: Thomas LAWS (Steerage Steward) -27163, 


OTHER BIRTHS

1790 - Birth: John LANEHAM-12865, Bishopstone Wiltshire England
1806 - Baptism: Benjamin SEXTON-13590, Frettenham Norfolk England
1812 - Christen: Helen SEPPINGS-38687, Chatham Kent England
1885 - Birth: Emma CORBYN-34682, 
1906 - Birth: Frank Walter EDWARDS (Rotary Kiln Greaser/Labourer) -42983, 

OTHER MARRIAGES



OTHER DEATHS & Burial

1883 - Death: Elizabeth BREEZE (Miller) -5101, Beccles Suffolk England



1967 - Death: Walter Edward DELANO-22584, 
1947 - Death: William Broadus WOOLFOLK-37651, Madison Co TN United States

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A CHILD OF THE 1920's
AS SEEN FROM THE 1990's
by
John Robert Laws 1921-2008


Part 12                
It was never crowded at Walton. Holidaymakers were squeezed off most of the beaches at high tide but there were soon big stretches of smooth virgin sand again and on one of these a beach artist would claim a large pitch well overlooked from the promenade.    He would draw his pictures on the hard damp sand and set his hat to catch the pennies thrown from the prom. Perhaps he doubled as a pavement artist in the winter. The un-crowded beaches were ideal for flying kites and even permitted the continuous swinging of a tethered tennis ball hung on long elastic between a pair of poles. On one holiday I remember a less space consuming toy was rampant, the yoyo, and these spinning discs on strings were in every hand rising and falling, spinning and circling to show off the skill of the owner.

South of the pier was the sunniest part of the cliffs and here and there, were tiers of beach huts rising behind the prom from which one could watch the world go by or change for a swim. The beach hut was not only for swimming from, but also for sitting in the sun sheltered from the east coast wind, and for making tea and eating snacks and ice cream, very rarely for sheltering from rain, I was much better at eating than the sitting but would sometimes stay and watch the sailing barges gliding serenely along the coast, their big red sails filled with the east wind. It was not so funny for them when it really blew hard. Distress flares would go up with a noisy boom and the lifeboat went out from its anchorage by the end of the pier. Even in the summer of holiday time this was not all that unusual.

                                                  
As well as sailing barges there were paddle steamers which called at the end of the pier. These came from Tower Bridge by way of Southend on Sea, and then sailed away into the far distance north to unknown Yarmouth perhaps. 
                                         
These were best watched from the end of the pier itself where the bump could be felt as ropes were thrown and contact made with the big paddle wheels churning in reverse. On the pier too there was entertainment. The man who rode a bike off the high diving board was always worth watching, but the children’s concerts were pretty corny, even for kids.


Part 17
There was time to wander while parents were busy, mother shopping and father at work, and every corner of that little town stays clear in my mind. The crumbling cliffs were ideal for climbing and sliding down the dusty gullies if a piece of wood or tin could be found to sit on. Not so good for my white shorts which would acquire ochre coloured seat. Resulting in the admonition “You be careful now”. These cliffs were gradually being eroded by the North Sea and from time to time a part of a garden or even a house would go sliding down. The sea defences were made stronger by extension of the hefty concrete promenade towards the south which is still holding up well. A walk along the beach beyond its end soon brought one to the more exclusive resort of Frinton, with its wide green lawns along the cliff tops which was usually visited once or twice during a holiday.


                                             Walton on the Naze Essex


The northern part of Walton was lower without cliffs. The end of the High Street came along to the Front and the road and sea wall went on past a sometimes marshy patch of land beyond which the road went into a scattered little residential area and then dying out. Here the cliffs had risen again at the golf course where an old brick tower stands at the highest point. This provided a pleasant evening stroll which my father and I often took as far as the Naze. Felixstowe could be seen across the water as the land on our side ran back to the muddy tidal backwaters behind the coast.

These back waters ran right up behind the town and about twenty five acres of them were cut off from the tides with a dyke and made into a large lake with boats. This was a main attraction of the town to my father and virtually every morning that was fit, he and I would have a sailing dinghy out and sail the seven seas. His father had been a Sea Captain and I am told that only his mother’s insistence had prevented my father going to sea as a young man. As I grew older I was allowed a dinghy to myself and although I was never to become an addict I can understand how others do so. Being regulars and known to the boatman. We were allowed to sail on days when the wind was too strong to risk his dinghies in the hands of strangers and these were the days when it became quite fun.

                              
Continued tomorrow 

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Lord, help me dig into the past
and sift the sands of time
That I might find the roots that made
This family tree of mine

Lord, help me trace the ancient roads,
On which my father's trod
And led them through so many lands
To find our present sod.

Lord, help me find an ancient book
Or dusty manuscript,
That's safely hidden now away
In some forgotten crypt

Lord, let it bridge the gap that haunts
My soul, when I can't find
The missing link between some name
That ends the same as mine


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The content provided on this site is not guaranteed to be error free - It is always advised that you consult original records.


Member of The Guild of One-Name Studies



THE GUILD OF ONE-NAME STUDIES
www.one-name.org

registrar@lawsfamilyregister.org.uk

With grateful thanks to Simon Knott for permission to reproduce his photographs on this site see :-http://www.norfolkchurches.co.uk/
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"This organization recognizes the United Nations' International Decade for People of African Descent 2015-2024. We reach out to all regardless of race, color, creed, orientation or national origin with support for researching family and documenting cultural inheritance.”

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