Amazing!Slick wrote: ↑Mon Apr 04, 2022 8:58 amWe have had an interesting one come up that we are trying to do more research into.Niegs wrote: ↑Sun Apr 03, 2022 2:53 pmMine's mostly 'farmer' / 'labourer' and 'dressmaker' (rare instances mention of a woman's profession), but there was one 'earthenware merchant' from Sheffield. Would have been fairly common then in that area, and not to today, I imagine? Another (his wife's father), a glass and china dealer from Stoke on Trent.
On my family tree there is a female relative who worked as a domestic servant in the 1800's in a large house on Candlemaker Row in Edinburgh. On my wife's side one of her relatives owned a large house on Candlemaker Row in exactly the same period. Candlemaker Row is not a big street at all so a decent chance she worked for or they knew each other which is a bit mental.
This isn't job-related, but my grandfather (now deceased) had a typewritten family tree book that says during WW2 a distant relative was a POW in Canada and the Canadian branch of relatives visited him! That's all. No other details. I think my uncle has the book so want to get some names and see what's what. That POW likely has living relatives... many even settled here after the war, so he could have stayed? My grandfather's ancestors had come over from Germany before the unification in 1871, so it's mental to me that they must have been writing each other or at least knew of an address during the war to say can you look in on Fritz for us?!