Bing

Members
  • Content Count

    124
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    1

Posts posted by Bing

  1. Thank you very much for these pointers, I'll follow them up. The main one I'm interested in, Isaac Turney, a blacksmith of Lenton, married just before 1837. I use "Brothers Keeper" to hold all my data and I have started a separate database just for Turneys of Nottingham. It makes it so much easier.

  2. Is anybody interested in the Turney family of Nottingham? The famous one is Sir John Turney of the leather works at Trent Bridge. But I'm interested in finding the earlier ones.

    There's a whole bunch of them, probably brothers and sisters, who were born in Lenton between c1808 and 1820 and they tend to have biblical names like Samuel, Abraham and Isaac. But I can find none of their baptisms, nor indeed their parents. I suspect they were non-conformist and the registers of whatever chapel they attended are now lost.

    There was also a family of Turneys in the Chilwell/Attenborough area.

    Any help most gratefully received, even just a pointer!

  3. I used to know a Clifton girl called Adrienne Black, very beautiful she was. She had two brothers, Chris Black and Lyne Black. One of the brothers, and I can't remember which, was the drummer in a one-hit-wonder Nottingham group. I been wracking my brains (the little I have left) but can't remember the group. Can anybody please help out? This would be in the mid to late 60's.

  4. I'd hate for Fairham to just disappear down the list, as if nobody cared. So here's a picture of the lads from 1965,

    only 50 years ago.

    http://i1301.photobucket.com/albums/ag119/lungbing/Fairham-1965a_zpstfadj85f.jpg

    I'm the tall, good looking one, back row, far right. (deluded fool that I am!)

    Names I remember: Malc Whitt, Alan Curtis, Kevin Gallagher (Wag), Bob Abdy, Stuart Inger, Pete Griffiths, Bob Griffiths,

    Alan Carver, Dave Donoven, Dave Shaw, Chris Shardlow, Bob Dodd, Dave Bingley, Alan Brough, Tony Shuman, ? Kerry (family had grocers at Clifton), Pete Norman, and of course last but most certainly not least, Paul Irons who played for Notts. RFC and became a teacher himself. I recognise so many other faces, but can't put names to them. Sorry, if you're one of them.

    Fairham was a very good school. Notice the two different types of tie. If it has the phoenix and crown from the school badge you were a prefect or sub-prefect. The striped ones were in 8 different colours depending which house you were in.

    Nostalgia ain't what it used to be.

    • Upvote 4
  5. Don't forget that the 1881 census was taken in early April 1881 so the ages given were for the year ending April. eg if I was born in 1850 my age would be given as 30 in the 1881 census if my birthday was after 3rd April that year, or 31 if my birthday was Jan 1st to April 2nd 1850. And some women miraculously managed to age only 9 years between each 10 years census!

  6. I remember the remains of the folly. We called it the ruined castle. Us kids would go past it to the railway line and the stream that ran at the side of the line (not the Leen) and fish for sticklebacks. This would be 1955-58 time. No problem with young kids being out on their own in them days, part of growing up.

    • Upvote 2
  7. I emailed the Nottingham Records Office and had a reply almost by return of post. They have some records but not the lodges I wanted. I wonder who kept the records when a lodge closed?

    I have emailed the RAOB themselves, but have had no reply.

  8. Seriously, has anybody given any thought about making a series of recordings of old Nottingham language. Because when the likes of us are gone, so will be gone the language we speak. Children today all speak 'estuary English' with it's glottal stops (eg bo'ul for bottle). There's easily enough source material on these pages. The weather report in Nottinghamese was just a joke to them, and the girl didn't pronounce half the words correctly.

    (edited for spelling)

    • Upvote 1
  9. I have lived in Thailand for 13 years now and I do not think I could ever go back to the UK. Food good, weather warm to hot, once a year visa, transport good, roads good (but dangerous). A more relaxed style of life. What do I miss? Going to the City Ground occasionally. Everything else is here, even HP sauce and Branston Pickle.

  10. Thanks for everybody's help. I love the photo and I vaguely recollect dad having a sash like theirs, but it didn't survive. Also an ornate certificate? I'll have to contact the RAOB by their website as I live in Thailand. Mind you, we have the real buffaloes here, and the phrase "wait 'til the cows come home" has meaning as you still see the herder driving them home in the evening, usually across busy roads depending where the lush grass is growing.

    Thanks again.

  11. Not the army regiment with the nickname 'The Buffs" rather members of the Royal Antediluvium Order of Buffaloes.

    My father, a Nottingham born and bred man, and you'd know it if you had heard him speak, died a couple of years ago aged 92. I inherited all his paperwork, photos etc which pleased me as for many years I have been trying to trace our family tree.

    Among his war medals I found two medals of membership of the RAOB. One, is inscribed on the rear

    "BRO.

    JIM G. WHITTAKER

    RAISED

    25.8.60

    BELVOIR LODGE

    3809"

    At the top of the blue medal-ribbon, itself marked with "RAOB GLE" (Grand Lodge of England) there is a clasp with buffalo horns and the word "Primo", which I think is a rank.

    I have no idea who Jim G. Whittaker is or where dad picked up the medal, could have been anywhere. If anybody has an idea or if the Belvoir Lodge 3809 still exists please let me know.

    The other medal was dad's. Same description, but inscribed "

    BRO.

    DONALD BINGHAM

    RAISED

    4.12.1949

    DUKE OF PORTLAND

    LODGE 1222

    Can anybody help me with this? Where was the lodge? Does it still exist? At the time, 1949, I was one year old and we lived down the right hand side of The Plough Inn on St. Peters Street, Radford. The houses were demolished in 1958. Perhaps the RAOB lodge meetings were held at The Plough, I don't know.

    Any help would be most gratefully received.