Stepping Stones CD publication. Contents of The 1900/01 Telephone Book for Liverpool. Birkenhead Isle of Man. Chester and Wales. and Ireland. Hundreds of Names and Addresses in alphabetical order of surnames Area's covered: Liverpool. Birkenhead. Isle of Man; Douglas, Onchan, Castletown, Port St Mary, Port Erin, Ramsey. Chester and North Wales; Mold, Buckley, Connahs Quay, Flint, Wrexham, Ruabon, Llangollen, Oswestry, Shrewsbury, Rhyl, Denbigh, Bangor, Carnarvon, Nantlle, Llandu More Info
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**Column headings:** Surname; Forename; Relationship to head of household; Marital status; Age; Occupation; County of birth; Place of birth; Folio number; Page number. **Surnames in Index:** EARLY; EARNSHAW; EASON; EASTWOOD; EATON; EBDIN; ECKERSLEY; EDDISON; EDDLESTON; EDGELEY; EDWARDS; EGGLEY; ELAM; ELBIDGE; ELEY; ELLAM; ELLICKER; ELLIOTT; ELLIS; ELLISON; ELL...More Info
2nd edition (1996) By Colin R. Chapman. Mainly aimed at remote researchers, this is a helpful guide that details many things you can do outside the county you are researching, especially useful to those tracing British ancestors from overseas. This book covers some subjects and areas omitted from other general guides - for example Scotland, Ireland, Isle of Man and Channel Islands are covered - an...More Info
A story from quieter times in Ireland, leading through to the author's arrival in Headley, Hampshire. *Jessie Woodger* Supplied by John Owen Smith
First published in 1966, R. J. Dickson's Ulster Emigration to Colonial America 1718-1775 remains the acknowledged work of scholarship on migration in the eighteenth century of a quarter of a million people from Ulster to the New World. It combines detailed investigation of the economic, social and political background to the exodus with information on the emigrant trade and an analysis of the moti...More Info
Elm Park near Killylea, County Armagh, occupies an important place in twentieth-century educational history in Northern Ireland. In 1920 Seth Smith and Willoughby Weaving acquired the house and grounds known as Elm Park and established a preparatory school for boys aged between seven and fourteen. During the Second World War over 60 boys attended the school, but a decline in numbers after 1945 ...More Info