Evergreen Ancestry

Evergreen Ancestry Professional genealogy and family history research If you're new to family history or simply hit a brick wall in your research get in touch!

Evergreen Ancestry is a professional genealogy service which can help you find out about your ancestors, who they were and how they lived. If you need help researching your family tree, either for yourself or for someone else as a gift, let Evergreen Ancestry help. With set packages, hourly research or training available there's something to suit all family history projects and budgets. If you're unable to visit a record office yourself Evergreen Ancestry can help!

I will be running a series of six interactive family history talks starting on January 23. They will take place weekly f...
08/01/2025

I will be running a series of six interactive family history talks starting on January 23. They will take place weekly from 23 January 2025 on Thursday mornings at 10:30 in the Stoodley Room at Tod College.

The talks will teach you the skills you need to start your family history or if you've already made a start, provide you with the skills to improve your research and make best use of the many resources out there. The six talks will cover: Getting started with family history; Births, marriages and deaths; Censuses; Genealogy databases and websites - making the most of subscription and free resources; Finding missing people; Military records.

Each talk will leave time at the end for you to ask questions about how to approach your research. Come along and learn how to research like a professional!

You can book for individual talks or book for the whole series. £7 per talk or £35 for all six.

More details: https://evergreenancestry.com/family-history-talks/

To book: https://www.ticketsource.co.uk/evergreen-ancestry

Report on my (scandalous!) talk to Hebden Bridge Local History Society this week
11/02/2023

Report on my (scandalous!) talk to Hebden Bridge Local History Society this week

Scandal! Cases before the B***y Courts. Anne Mealia

It’s not often that a talk to Hebden Bridge Local History Society starts (tongue in cheek) with a warning about scenes of a sexual nature, but Anne Mealia, genealogist and researcher, was about to open up some of the cases brought before the York Ecclesiastical Courts. These records, kept at the Borthwick Institute at the University of York, have been digitised and can be searched online. (Look for York Cause Papers) The so-called ‘bawdy’ courts dealt
with offences against canon law, separate from the civil law system. This included offences against the Church and spiritual and moral behaviour.

Complaints to the court could have dire consequences, the most extreme being excommunication, which cut off the offender from many roles and rights. The disapprobation of the community was probably the strongest deterrent. Offenders could be humiliated by being made to stand in church for three Sundays, barefooted and dressed in a white shift, confessing to their misdeeds.

Drinking often featured in the complaints about unsuitable behaviour: George Bannister was a parish clerk accused of ‘loose life and conversation’ as he also ran an alehouse, and was suspected of using the communion cup and church flagons to serve his customers. Bannister won this case, but later he was accused again, with the added charge of having fathered ‘bastard children’. The motivations of the accuser were a little suspect as the two men were involved in a property dispute.

A large number of the cases involved pews. Getting and defending a prominent pew in Heptonstall Chapel was clearly an important show of your place in the community. Families built or extended their pews, with incursions into what was claimed as someone else’s space. Pew disputes could also lead to violence, as in the case of one woman aiming punches at another who was kneeling piously to pray.

Accusations of sexual misconduct were most damaging and could be the hardest to contest. Unless there was a child born, witnesses’ statements were often just gossip. Sometimes a very sad story emerges, such as the case of Ann Beane who left her marriage to Henry Clayton to live a life of ‘loose and scandalous behaviour’ at an alehouse. Her defence was that she was thrown out by her husband, but witnesses testified to having seen her in bed
with men or heard gossip about her. Divorce wasn’t a possibility, but ‘separation from bed and board’ was imposed, ruling out any re-marriage.

The cause papers provide a window into the daily lives of people who lived in this valley more than 300 years ago and whose concerns are often unrecorded. Anne showed us that this is a very rich resource.

With thanks to Sheila Graham for this report.
Image (c) Borthwick Institite

15/07/2022

If you require some help with your genealogy then you can . We have expert researchers working across England and Wales. https://www.agra.org.uk/

World's oldest family tree created using DNA
23/12/2021

World's oldest family tree created using DNA

Scientists have created the world's oldest family tree from bones interred at a 5,700-year-old tomb.

01/12/2021

The fourth episode in the new series of podcasts is now live! Listen to ‘Manorial & Estate Records in England and Wales’ here: https://agra.org.uk/podcasts

Leeds Leodis Archive looking for help identifying people in images.  Are your ancestors in these pictures?
26/08/2021

Leeds Leodis Archive looking for help identifying people in images. Are your ancestors in these pictures?

The Leodis archive wants help to identify people or places in several mystery pictures of Leeds.

A report of my talk last week on the Fieldens at Hebden Bridge Local History Society
17/11/2020

A report of my talk last week on the Fieldens at Hebden Bridge Local History Society

The Alan Petford Memorial Lecture

The Fieldens and their legacy in Todmorden: Anne Mealia

The story of the Fieldens in Todmorden is one of rags to riches, Anne Mealia, local historian and genealogist, told her audience at the well-attended Zoom meeting of the Hebden Bridge Local History Society. There’s hardly any aspect of life in 19th century Todmorden that the Fieldens didn’t influence is some way, and their mark is found in the striking buildings that give the town much of its character.

The Fielden name is found in Todmorden from the sixteenth century and is still common today, and Anne pinpointed the growth of the family’s fortunes to the decision by Joshua Fielden to move his business from Edge End Farm on the hillside, into the town itself. At Edge End Farm Joshua, like many other yeomen farmers, operated as a woollen manufacturer selling cloth in both Halifax and Manchester. He obviously saw an opportunity to make use of the newly opened turnpike road as well as abundant water supply when he bought three cottages at Laneside in 1782. In these cottages he installed spinning jennies and the business rapidly expanded with carding and weaving, moving to new premises along the road at Waterside mill (on the site of Morrison’s supermarket). After Joshua’s death the business passed to his sons and Fielden brothers became one of the biggest and most successful textile manufacturers with a reputation for good quality.
The success of textile manufacturing meant that the next generation of Fieldens had the security of capital, and made investments in the rising industries such as railways, gas and property development. Their business interests stretched way beyond Todmorden, to South America and New York. In a generation Fielden brothers had gone from three cottages to an international business.

The most famous Fielden is ‘Honest’ John, who became a Radical MP for Oldham, alongside William Cobbett. He had left school at ten and worked with his father Joshua, learning the business at first hand. He became a champion of a minimum wage for weavers, of the Ten Hour Act which limited child labour and a fierce opponent of the new Poor Law, which meant that Todmorden held out against establishing a Union Workhouse for thirty years. For many years he and his family had lived opposite the mill, at Dawson Weir, but he moved from the noise and bustle to a house which better reflected his wealth and status – Centre Vale.

He was also a strong supporter of Unitarianism, abandoning the Quaker faith of many of his forebears. He set up a Unitarian chapel, paying all the expenses of a minister, and after his death, his three sons – Samuel, John and Joshua - though following separate business paths, united to build a lavish new Unitarian church, bringing in celebrated architect John Gibson, who designed a stunning Gothic style building, with materials such as Sicilian marble and stained glass from Brussels no doubt helping to inflate the price from the planned £6000 to £36000.

John Gibson became the Fieldens’ favourite architect, and when John Fielden junior wanted to build a castle on the hills for his bride, Gibson presented him with Dobroyd Castle. Its Gothic exterior of local stone contrasts with a classical interior again using the most opulent materials. The so-called ‘Brass Castle’ (designed to show off new wealth) was not a home to Fielden and his wife for long though. In the latter part of the century John and his second wife tried to fight the scourge of drunkenness by establishing a Coffee Tavern and Temperance Hotel, next to the Golden Lion, offering smoking and billiards along with sarsaparilla and the mysteriously named ‘Che-oak’ herbal tonic. The people of Todmorden clearly didn’t flock there and it closed within a few years.

John Gibson’s architecture continued to shape Todmorden, with the magnificent and imposing Todmorden Town Hall glorifying the industry of the valley town. John’s brother Joshua employed Gibson to extend Stansfield Hall with the addition of a billiard room, ballroom, gatehouse and a row of new cottages to block out an unsightly view. When Joshua left the town to head south, he commissioned Gibson to create the lavish Nutfield Priory in Surrey.
The eldest of the three brothers, Samuel, stayed in Todmorden and died one of the richest men in England. He inherited the house at Centre Vale, which Gibson was again set to redesign, including creating the extensive gardens. Samuel was a supporter of cricket in the town, setting aside some land for a cricket pitch. His wife Sarah was also a philanthropist, setting up a school for girls at Fielden school (also designed by Gibson and now Fielden Hall). After her death the building was given to the town with the stipulation that it be used for educational purposes. Centre Vale house succumbed to dry rot and was demolished in the 1950s.
As the textile business was no longer an important source of wealth, the later generations of Fieldens tended to move away from Todmorden. What they saw around them was ‘damp, dirty and dull’ contrasting with the magnificent buildings that they left behind from a time when they had dominated the life of the town. Anne’s researches into the family brings them back into clearer focus.

The next talk for Hebden Bridge Local History Society will be on Wednesday 25th November at 7.30. Anne Kirker will be telling us about Laura Annie Wilson: suffragette, builder and engineer. All the current programme of lectures will be delivered as Zoom webinars and non-members are welcome to sign up for these.
Details on the website www.hebdenbridgehistory.org.uk and on the page.

With thanks to Sheila Graham for this report

Now available on the AGRA website
11/09/2020

Now available on the AGRA website

Just published by Hebden Bridge Local History Society
02/07/2020

Just published by Hebden Bridge Local History Society

Heptonstall and Wadsworth Probate Records 1688 – 1700. Edited by Mike Crawford and Stella Richardson. Published 2020. Hebden Bridge Local History Society Occasional Publication No.9. Paperback. 195 pages. ISBN: 978-0-9933920-4-7. £9.99 (plus £2 towards shipping)

This collection of wills and inventories is a companion volume to publications of probate documents for the Upper Calder Valley townships of Sowerby and Soyland; and of Erringden, Langfield and Stansfield.

The documents offer vivid insights into life and death among the people of Heptonstall and Wadsworth at the end of the seventeenth century. Many were involved in the dual economy of the domestic textile trade and farming. Intriguing insights into family relationships are revealed through bequests, property transfers and the choice of executors. The documents show the desire of the testators and the efforts of the probate courts to ensure that the estate was administered as intended.

The inventories not only describe household goods and personal possessions, but also trade tools and farming implements. They also demonstrate the sizeable sums of money loaned and borrowed, and the role of widows in the economic system.
The volume contains a description of the probate process, extensive indexes of persons, places, belongings and a thorough local glossary of usage for this period.

To order: http://www.hebdenbridgehistory.org.uk/publications/index.html

The West Yorkshire Registry of Deeds is an amazing resource and great news that the next series of A house through time ...
17/06/2020

The West Yorkshire Registry of Deeds is an amazing resource and great news that the next series of A house through time will be set in Leeds.

We are extremely excited to hear that the next series of
BBC Two's A House Through Time is going to be set in Leeds and can't wait to show David Olusoga and the researchers on the programme the archive riches we hold for Leeds and West Yorkshire when we re-open (no date for that as of yet). Just one of our archive riches is the fantastic Registry of Deeds for the West Riding held at our Wakefield office. The Registry is one of only five surviving Registry of Deeds in the whole country and contains memorial copies of seven million deeds between 1704 to September 1970.

Address

Halifax
OL14

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Evergreen Ancestry posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Practice

Send a message to Evergreen Ancestry:

Share

Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Share on LinkedIn
Share on Pinterest Share on Reddit Share via Email
Share on WhatsApp Share on Instagram Share on Telegram

Category