- Follow Lifelines Research on WordPress.com
-
Recent Posts
-
My Family Photos
This slideshow requires JavaScript.
Tag Archives: the national archives
Death, taxes and the voices of our ancestors
The inspiration behind this post is twofold; firstly, the ongoing work of Dr Laura King, Dr Nick Barratt, Jackie Depelle and many others to encourage closer co-operation between academic historians and genealogists, but more immediately, a tweet by Hallie Rubenhold, … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged documents, family history, historianscollaborate, research, the national archives, tna
3 Comments
What would I have done?
I’ve very much enjoyed reading all the recent blogs, tweets and news items marking the 100th anniversary of the passing of the Representation of the People Act (1918); that ground-breaking piece of legislation which gave the vote to women aged … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged census, family history, pankhurst, prout, research, suffragette, suffragist, the national archives, tna
Leave a comment
A Wasted Day at TNA
I’ve just got back from a wasted day at the National Archives in Kew. I set off this morning, full of hope that, with three very different cases to investigate in three very different sets of records, and a carefully … Continue reading
Posted in Uncategorized
Tagged assizes, family history, kings german legion, privy council, research, the national archives, tna
Leave a comment