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Hi Everyone,
Just a short note to let you know that I may be out of commission for a few
days. I am in a great deal of pain due to fluid on my right knee after
having the last shot of synvisc yesterday (that's the gel that they
injected into my knee) and I have to go rest. Will this ever end???
I will still monitor the list but may not beable to reply to requests or
answer mail for a few days so I would appreciate it if you could bear with
me.
Thank you
Jayne
I forgot to mention to you that Jack has just faxed me a newsletter that he
put together and I think he's done a wonderful job of it.
He would like you all to receive a copy and if possible to pass it onto
other Clayworth's you know SO how would you like me to send this to you?
A: I can fax it to you if you have access to a fax
B: I can e-mail it to you as I have it in a Microsoft Word document.
Just let me know guys and I'll get it to you.
Take care
Jayne
I am going to scream (I think I already did) I have just spoken to Jack and
he says that the John Clayworth I put as being married to Alice Hardy he
has as marrying Mary Thorpe.
We have finally decided that it is safe to say that our John who married
Hannah Slater was from Newark and his parents are John and Alice Hardy but
now we're back to the boxing gloves about who John's parents are now.
For those of you who don't know, Jack and I have this humorous thing going
where when one of us finds something the other usually questions it and
then we put on our boxing gloves until we do find the correct information.
So if I mention Jack and I putting on the boxing gloves you know why.
Anyway, it's back to the drawing board to prove I'm right and if I'm not
then I will be the first to say so.
See ya
Jayne
> 1. William Clayworth married Ann Bloodworth
> January 17th, 1763 in South Scarle.
>
> *John Aug 23 1773 Ditto Alice Hardy (1798)*
Mary Thorpe (1793?)?????????
> *This John ties in with the birthdate and marriage date. He would have
> been 25 when he married Alice Hardy which would be about right.
>
> 2. John Clayworth married Alice Hardy* December 3rd, 1898 in Newark
> (surname was actually spelt CLEAWORTH in Parish Registers) and both were
of
> the parish when they married.
> John Sep 13 1817 Ditto Hannah Slater
Hi Everyone,
This is a copy of what I sent to Jack.
Here is where I think we tie into this line:
1. William Clayworth married Ann Bloodworth
January 17th, 1763 in South Scarle.
Their children were:
Name Birthdate Birthplace Spouse
Alice Feb 3 1764 S. Scarle
William Dec 22 1766 Ditto Mary Priddon (1786)
Ann Jul 15 1769 Ditto Isaac Headland (1791)
Joseph Jun 21 1771 Ditto Winnifred Lamb (1794)
*John Aug 23 1773 Ditto Alice Hardy (1798)*
Mary Jul 28 1776 Ditto William Booker (1803)
Edward Aug 17 1778 Ditto Sarah Stephenson (1808)/Harriet Hind (1835)?
*This John ties in with the birthdate and marriage date. He would have
been 25 when he married Alice Hardy which would be about right.
2. John Clayworth married Alice Hardy* December 3rd, 1898 in Newark
(surname was actually spelt CLEAWORTH in Parish Registers) and both were of
the parish when they married.
Their children were:
John Jul 30 1799 Newark Died: Aug 2 1812
William Feb 3 1801 Ditto
George Jun 6 1803 Ditto Died?**
Samuel Oct 8 1804 Ditto
George Jun 3 1805 Ditto Zeruiah Beall (1826)***
Mary Jun 16 1807 Ditto Died: Aug 25 1812
Sarah Apr 5 1809 Ditto
Ruth Jan 17 1811 Ditto Died: Nov 21 1811
John Aug 18 1812 Ditto Died?****
Thomas Nov 14 1814 Ditto Mary Pollard (1838)
John Sep 13 1817 Ditto Hannah Slater
*Alice died in Newark in Dec 1846. She is the only Alice Clayworth listed
in the whole of the GRO death indexes.
**The first George had to have died before they would name another son
George.
***See notes below on Zeruiah Beall
****This John had to have died before they would have called our John,
John.
--------------------------------------------
Now, onto George and Zeruiah Beall:
This George was baptized into the LDS church in 1851 but it doesn't say
where in the IGI it just gives his birthplace. I found out while I was at
the FHC last week that baptisms in those days were done at the nearest
conference (meaning the nearest Stake Conference where all the LDS from all
wards would meet about every 3 6 months). Well in 1851 the nearest one
would have been Leicester. I then got to thinking that Thomas, son of
Thomas and Mary Pollard was born in Leicester in 1850 so I rechecked the
IGI and found a George marrying a Zeruiah Beall in 1826 in Leicester.
George was born in 1805 so he would have been 21 when he married sounds
about right, right?
Not only that but I found Zeruiah and George's deaths in Stamford.
George Stamford Sep 1873 aged 70
(this age has to be wrong because the first George (bn 1803) died as an
infant.
Zeruiah Stamford Dec 1878 aged 77
They were married April 3 1826 in St. Margaret, Leicester
Their children were:
Name Birthdate Birthplace
George Feb 3 1828 Baptist, Oakham, Rutland, Leicester
Henery Wm. Apr 30 1831 Baptist, Oakham, Rutland, Leicester
Zeruiah Abt. 1833 She married in Stamford in 1853 (birthdate
approx.)
John James Jun 1840 Stamford (died 1840 in Stamford)
Ann Maria Jun 1841 Stamford (died 1849 in Stamford)
Ann Maria Dec 1853 Stamford (died 1853 in Stamford) This 12 year
gap makes me think that maybe this is
Zeruiah, the younger's, daughter
--------------------------------------------------------------
Thomas (brother of George) married Mary Pollard Oct 20 1838 in Newark.
I'm not sure who their children were apart from the certificate that you
got of their son Thomas in Leicester in 1850. George and Zeruiah's
children were born in Oakham so maybe it would be safe to say that the
following are Thomas and Mary's?:
Mary Ann Mar 1843 Leicester died Jun 1860 Leicester
Jane Mar 1846 Leicester died mar 1848 in Liverpool?*
Thomas Apr 14 1850 Leicester died Dec 1851 Leicester
William Ths. Mar 1852 Leicester died Jun 1859 Leicester
Sarah Jane Jun 1855 Leicester died Dec 1855 Leicester
John Mar 1857 Leicester died Dec 1858 Leicester
I cannot find a marriage for a Jane anywhere in the GRO indexes all I can
find is the Jane that died in Liverpool in 1848 and if this is the same
Jane and she was in Liverpool when she died then she would have been
staying with her Uncle John and Aunt Hannah, right even if she was only two
years old?
David, you descend from Joseph and Winnifred Lamb, Joseph was the brother
of my John who married Alice Hardy. So there's your connection to me.
Now, Joe & Darcey, I still haven't found the connection between the Notts.
& Lincs. Clayworth's although I know there has to be one if they were born
in Spilsby and buried in Newark. Mmmmm.
Also the Ilkeston Clayworth's have a connection to the Farndon Clayworth's
too which I just found out so maybe we don't all originate from Lincs.
maybe we are all in actual fact from Newark. Notts.
This mystery will be solved and we will find the connection between us all,
we're almost there, aren't we?
Take care
Jayne
Hi Everyone,
Well, what have I cracked you say?
I think I have found the connection between David's line and mine and maybe
some others on this list.
I have still got to get it all together but I am almost 99% sure that I
have found how our two lines connect and we come from William Clayworth and
Ann Bloodworth of South Scarle.
I think I also have found how the Leicester and Stamford Clayworth's
connect to the Newark Clayworth's and I found the link between the Ilkeston
Clayworth's and Farndon Clayworth's which includes your line Eleanor.
Gee this is so exciting, well it is for me not sure about the rest of you.
<GRIN>
Got to go put all this together now before I lose my train of thought and
get it all messed up again.
Take care
Jayne
Well ... lets give this a try. I am Joe Clayworth from Oregon (via
Australia and Lincolnshire .... but more on that later after I figure this
out)
At 10:27 PM 11/18/97 -0800, Jayne wrote:
>Hi Everyone,
>
>Just to let you know that I know have a history of the village of Clayworth
>online and will be adding photos as soon as I can get time to scan them.
>
>I'm still checking out the copyright thing and have found a way to ask for
>permission to put up the census but with our impending mail strike I can't
>mail anything right now, hey Dave, any chance of you writing to the PRO for
>us when you get back home at Christmas? <grin>
>
>I think when it comes to putting up the St. Catherine indexes I don't think
>that would be a problem actually because it's already available to the
>public and anyone can have access to the registration numbers. I think if I
>scanned the actual certificates onto the website then that would probably
>be a copyright breach. What a headache, eh?
>
>Jack called me when we got back from Dave's on Sunday and told me that he
>had found some mistakes in the Lincolnshire family trees so expect your
>ancestry to change, Joe. Something to do with John and Elizabeth Smith and
>his brother Joseph.<grin>
I am looking forward to hearing that information.
>
>Oh, Eleanor, I may have to go into Niagara Falls, NY to mail those family
>group sheets I have for you, OK? When I get the chance I will get that
>done, too.
>
>Now, this is for you American Clayworth's. When I was checking out the
>"Passenger & Immigration List Indexes" by Filby's I found two Clayworth's
>who emigrated to Baltimore, MD, USA in 1820.
>
>Here is what I found:
>
>Clayworth, S. aged 26 - Baltimore, MD - 1820
>Clayworth, T. aged 26 - Baltimore, MD - 1820
>
>Do any of you have any idea who these may be? I have checked all my
>records for them but can't find them, they would have been born about
>1893/4, were they Charles Creasey's children maybe coming from Australia?
No No .... Eighteen20, not Nineteen20. Charles Creasey got to Australia in
about 1875 after a stopover in New Zealand. I have seen that reference on
the Baltimore lists. Never followed it though.
>
>
>Also, through Family Tree Maker's CD 118 I was able to find a Clayworth who
>was a miner during the Yukon gold rush in 1901, his initials were J. F.,
>the only J.F. Clayworth I have been able to find is you, Joe? ;-)
That's really interesting to me Jayne. I would like to find more about
that one, too.
>
>Anyway, I'd better go, remember if you have any Clayworth information
>please share it with us here.
>
>Take care everyone,
>
>Jayne
>
>
>
>
Migration and Urban Dynamics
There was a lot of population movement.
Clayworth (Nottinghamshire): 12 years from 1676-1688: 60% of the population
changed.
Interesting, eh?
Jayne
Black Oak No. 6 school was located two miles northeast of Leighton, Iowa, a
small town in Black Oak township of section 26, among a grove of maple
trees. The record shows that in the early nineteen hundreds as many as
sixty of these sturdy maple trees grew near the school, and some of these
trees still stand today. The land for the school yard was taken from the
John Ryan farm near the year 1870. The school was first named the Ryan
School, but in later years, as school districts were formed, the school was
given the name Black Oak No. 6.
Teachers of Black Oak No. 6
1950-1954 Ursle Clayworth
Is Ursle a relation to someone on this list?
Jayne
Hi Again,
I'm finding so much information today, look what else I found:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-----------------------------------
The University of Nottingham Library
Manuscripts and Special Collections
Catalogue of Denison Estate Papers in the Denison Collection
De C 2/23 23.8.1790
Bequeaths to Elizabeth Wardell and his daughter
Mary Wrigglesworth £ 10 each; devises to his
housekeeper Ann Wardell, widow, all lands and
tenements in Moorhouse, Nottinghamshire including
'Cleats Close' for the term of her life; after her
death lands devised to her son George Wardell;
devises to George Wardell lands in Egmanton,
Nottinghamshire purchased from Joseph Guinever and
John Golland and remainder of estate.
Executors: George Wardell
Witnesses: Thomas Dobbs, Mary Clayworth and Charles
Hudson 2 ff
Does anyone know how to contact Bernice?
Jayne
I found this on a website.
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
---
Texas unique in protecting homeowners
In the past few years, we have sadly seen in many states foreclosures of
homesteads, and now we are being urged, by those who stand to profit from
loans or mortgages, to change the Texas constitutional protection given
homeowners.
Texas is notable for being unique and Texans should be justifiably pleased
that we are the only state with a constitutional homestead act, protecting
all citizens from loss of their homes. No mortgages, trust deed, or other
lien shall ever be valid except for purchase money, improvements or taxes
due.
Perhaps you become very sick, but your insurance does not cover
catastrophic illnesses so the for-profit hospital conglomerate asks you to
give it the deed to your property as collateral. If you are unable to meet
the payments, your home is forfeited.
Or, more likely, as many do today, you are living on plastic, barely
meeting monthly bills. You decide to mortgage your home, only to find that
interest and increased payments are the straw that breaks the camels
back.
Home loans and foreclosures may be big business for banks and mortgage
companies, but they are a real loss to thousands of those whose financial
means are already stretched to the limit.
Bernice Clayworth,
Aransas Pass
Wow, looks like we had a few Clayworth's panning for gold in the Yukon, eh?
I'll check out the information and post it here, too.
Main menu
Material for the Pan for Gold database was assembled from many sources by
the Dawson City Museum. The numerice codes attached to some names indicate
file sources, microfilm numbers, mining claims, and some census information
including ethnicity, occupation, social status and religion. Information on
where to get further search results is available.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Result for query "Clayworth"
Test Results
Clary Craig, post office worker list of people dying or leaving Klondike
Name, Depart/Death Date, Address, Location of Death
CLAYWORTH, JOHN T. JUL 20, 1904 Fairbanks, AK
Placermining Applications Vol 1
Name, Claim number, Microfilm number, Year Recorded
CLAYWORTH, J 42376 12 1902
CLAYWORTH, J 65929 16 1901-1904
CLAYWORTH, P 723 04 1899-1908
Placermining Applications Vol 3
Name, Claim number, Microfilm number, Year recorded
CLAYWORTH, P 723 4 1899-1908
CLAYWORTH, J 42376 12 1902
CLAYWORTH, J 65929 16 1901-1904
NWMP records at Lake Bennett: people who entered the Yukon via boats
Date, Name, Checkpoint Entered
MAY 25,26 1898 CLAYWORTH, T.Q. SEATTLE - SCOW 1310
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Summary for query "Clayworth": found 8 matches in 4 files
Jayne
Hi Everyone,
Just to let you know that I know have a history of the village of Clayworth
online and will be adding photos as soon as I can get time to scan them.
I'm still checking out the copyright thing and have found a way to ask for
permission to put up the census but with our impending mail strike I can't
mail anything right now, hey Dave, any chance of you writing to the PRO for
us when you get back home at Christmas? <grin>
I think when it comes to putting up the St. Catherine indexes I don't think
that would be a problem actually because it's already available to the
public and anyone can have access to the registration numbers. I think if I
scanned the actual certificates onto the website then that would probably
be a copyright breach. What a headache, eh?
Jack called me when we got back from Dave's on Sunday and told me that he
had found some mistakes in the Lincolnshire family trees so expect your
ancestry to change, Joe. Something to do with John and Elizabeth Smith and
his brother Joseph.<grin>
Oh, Eleanor, I may have to go into Niagara Falls, NY to mail those family
group sheets I have for you, OK? When I get the chance I will get that
done, too.
Now, this is for you American Clayworth's. When I was checking out the
"Passenger & Immigration List Indexes" by Filby's I found two Clayworth's
who emigrated to Baltimore, MD, USA in 1820.
Here is what I found:
Clayworth, S. aged 26 - Baltimore, MD - 1820
Clayworth, T. aged 26 - Baltimore, MD - 1820
Do any of you have any idea who these may be? I have checked all my
records for them but can't find them, they would have been born about
1893/4, were they Charles Creasey's children maybe coming from Australia?
Also, through Family Tree Maker's CD 118 I was able to find a Clayworth who
was a miner during the Yukon gold rush in 1901, his initials were J. F.,
the only J.F. Clayworth I have been able to find is you, Joe? ;-)
Anyway, I'd better go, remember if you have any Clayworth information
please share it with us here.
Take care everyone,
Jayne
It seems what I did worked. If any of you are not receiving your own
messages or have not seen any messages during the past week let me know. I
just had to unsub me and then resub me and it worked.
Weird way to 'jump' the system but 'eck it worked didn't it?
Take care
Jayne
Hi everyone.
Continuing what Jayne started about us telling each other who we are,
I am Dave Clayworth, age 35 and single. I'm in Canada only for nine
months, until the end of March. So far I've not thought about the
Clayworth name heritage at all, mainly because I knew hardly any
other Clayworths. Now I'm interested in finding out more about the history.
I'm from Lincolnshire, my parents live in Scotland.
--
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
| From: Dave Clayworth | Email: djc(a)asc.on.ca |
| At: AEA Technology ASC | Tel: +1 519 886 8435 |
| | Fax: +1 519 886 7580 |
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_/_/_/ _/_/_/_/ _/ _/ AEA Technology ASC
_/ _/ _/ _/ Unit 4, 554 Parkside Drive
_/ _/_/_/ _/ Waterloo
_/ _/ _/ _/ Ontario
_/_/_/ _/ _/ _/ N2L 5Z4 Canada
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