I think the last 2 words say house keeper but I'm not to sure.
Cheers guys...
Cordwainer and beer(?) house keeper
Researching: HOEY(Fermanagh, other Ulster counties and Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada) BANNIGAN and FOX (Ballyshannon, Donegal, Ireland and Portland, Maine, USA) REYNOLDS,McSHEA, PATTERSONandGOAN(Corker and Creevy, Ballyshannon, Donegal, Ireland) DYER (Belfast and Ballymacarrett) SLEVIN and TIMONEY (Fermanagh) BARNETT (Ballagh, Tyrone and Strangford, Down)
Co-ordinator for PoW project Southern Region 08 Researching:- Wieland, Habbes, Saettele, Bowinkelmann, Freckenhauser, Dilger in Germany
Kincaid, Warner, Hitchman, Collie, Curtis, Pocock, Stanley, Nixey, McDonald in London, Berks, Bucks, Oxon and West Midlands
Drake, Beals, Pritchard in Kent
Devine in Ireland
Most of the villages I've researched in were very small and didn't have specific names for all the streets, although some might be named - e.g Back Street, York Road.
I think your example is Schedule no 12.
The schedule numbers are interesting. I've researched the village where I live in each census 1841 - 1911; the schedule numbers do not follow the same "route" around the village settlement and wider parish for each census. Some returns start with the Rectory as number 1 whilst another starts with North Field farm (outside the village settlement) as number 1 or the school house, whilst yet another starts in North Road, but on the edge of the village settlement.
So, comparing the residents of schedule 1 in each census won't tell me who lived in the same property at each successive census.
However, because I know some information about the village & its former residents (my lot were here before 1841) I can use that to help me work out the census "route" plotted for each decade and also who was in the same property and who had moved to a different location within the village. Knowing the history of the place helps me understand that "Chapel cottages" meant the original Wesleyan chapel converted into 2 residences, and NOT the present-day terrace named "Chapel Row," built after and next to the replacement Wesleyan chapel, but recorded in census as "New Cottages."
It's the 1861 census.
In 1841 they are in the same village- children are being born between 1840-50.
In 1851 they are in the same village- house 15 this time.
In 1871 - N/A
In 1881- Middlesbrough- 37 Jamieson/Jameson Street.
In 1891- Middlesbrough- 2 grandchildren living with him- don't know parents yet.
Hi guys I have a new JOB taken from the baptism of Ellen Elizabeth Phillips. Cheers guys...
constable
Researching: HOEY(Fermanagh, other Ulster counties and Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada) BANNIGAN and FOX (Ballyshannon, Donegal, Ireland and Portland, Maine, USA) REYNOLDS,McSHEA, PATTERSONandGOAN(Corker and Creevy, Ballyshannon, Donegal, Ireland) DYER (Belfast and Ballymacarrett) SLEVIN and TIMONEY (Fermanagh) BARNETT (Ballagh, Tyrone and Strangford, Down)
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