Archive for Genealogy-Blog

Oct
14

Book on Newfoundland Genealogy

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Updated: October 14/11

**If you are interested in Newfoundland genealogy** there is a wonderfully researched book featuring many of the old families of this area.

Routing Number WELLS FARGO BANK

The author is now working on Book 2. These books are only available through the author when they are in print.

“They Lived By The Sea” (Book 1) is a remarkably well researched 400 page coil-bound book (so it will lie flat while doing research) written by M. Elizabeth Squires. To quote promotional material: “there are 111 individual Taylors, 104 Bemisters, 83 Joyces, 46 Footes, 43 Guys, 36 Peaches, 36 Pikes, 29 Penneys, 28 Parsons and many Camerons, Forwards, Udells, Maddocks, Hopkins and Goulds, as well as members of other families.”

For more information: Please contact:
M. Elizabeth Squires, 32 Woodwynd St., St. John’s, NL A1A 3C9  (709) 753-5088

Her wonderfully historic Facebook page is:

https://www.facebook.com/elizabeth.squires2

When I last spoke with her, Mrs. Squires was collecting information for Book 2.

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Oct
08

Genealogy Links

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RootsWeb.com – a fabulous search engine for finding surnames
Ancestry.ca - another great research tool
Link-O-Mania.com – genealogy index
Map Site at MultiMap.com – for international locations
Cyndi’s List of Genealogy Sites on the Internet
Huddersfield & District Family History Society  – Yorkshire, England
Burkes Peerage and Gentry – wonderful resource for UK research
Debrett’s Peerage- 144 years of British History, book for sale Sandilands Family Links:
Clan Douglas
Septs of Clan Douglas
Clan Sandilands – [NB: In truth, Sandilands is not a clan but a Sept of 'Douglas' Clan]
Royal and Noble Genealogical Data on the Web
King Robert the Bruce of Scotland
Torphichen Inn – (Lord of Torphichen is a title in my heritage) We had coffee here in 2002!
Knights of St. John, Knights Hospitallers and Order of Malta.
Clan MacLeod (of Skye) History
My Sandilands Family – Australian research – records held at Univ. of New England (I have copies).

 Misc links:
Newfoundland
Genealogy Software – Family Tree Maker – versatile and easy-to-use family tree program.

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    Geoffrey Sandilands and Dorothy Joyce

Geoffrey Bruce Hope ‘Sandy’ Sandilands
My Dad, the Australian hero I never met.

Now having acquired a bit more information of my father’s short life, I realize just how much living he managed to pack into his short lifetime of 22 years.

No doubt the most exciting part would have come around the time of his 20th birthday when he decided to follow in his family footsteps and fight for his country in a war that was now coming far too close for comfort. He left his home on the sheep station “Roumalla” near Uralla on the New England Plateau to enlist, train, and eventually was shipped overseas from Sydney, Australia (June 1943).  His destination was Canada, so many thousands of miles away. Arriving on a Canadian airfield, he would receive training  to be a flyer as part of the British Commonwealth Training.  Eventually he would find himself at RAF Base Hixon, in Staffordshire, England in June 1944. During those early days in Canada, he met my mother at the #3 Bombing and Gunnery School at Macdonald RCAF Base in Manitoba and they became smitten with each other. (An interesting family historical note here is that my husband, J. Robert Whittle was born in June 1944 and they share the same birthdate! Bob and I found this out some years afterward from my dad’s sister.)

In May 1944, mom and dad decided to marry after much discussion about the fact that he would no doubt be sent overseas and the odds were as a rear gunner, he would not survive. But a miracle happened and, the family tradition (story) is told, due to British Government connections (dad’s uncle was a Lord) and, the fact all the young men in his family (2 brothers and a brother-in-law) had recently been killed in WW2 while serving in the RAAF (Australia) — in India and N. Africa — he would not be sent overseas.

Upon return from their honeymoon, however, all this was apparently forgotten, possibly due to the terrible losses the Allied aircrews were suffering in Europe which caused the decision to close the MacDonald base. Of course, mom and dad were not party to this information and I only recently discovered it in my research. So the unthinkable happened — his transfer papers were waiting for him, sending him to England. I would imagine that my parents initially assumed that the British government had betrayed their trust, but on arriving in England, my father was told he would not be flying … he was to serve as an on-ground trainer of rear gunners at  Hixon Air Base, training base for Wellington Bombers. (While in Canada he had been refused as a pilot due to his eyesight.)

His kind nature and love of flying, however, would soon seal his fate irregardless of the precautions. Barely months later, on that fateful night of October 31st, 1944, one of his Aussie buddies got sick and dad saw the opportunity to do what he loved … to fly … taking his friend’s place in that Wellington on its night training flight. (I gleaned this information of the flight from military records.)

Routing Number WELLS FARGO BANK

During the flight they encountered a wild electrical storm and crashed into a tree as they tried to find the landing strip. That tree was located in Ingestre Park (now a golf course) a short distance from Hixon Field. Sadly, all nine young (ages 19-32) Flight Officers were killed. They were buried together in the War Graves Cemetery (Blacon) just outside of Chester, Staffordshire. Left behind among grieving family was a young, pregnant widow, my 25-year-old mother. They had been married 4 months and 16 days … I was born 5 months later.

(left) An old Hixon mailbox outside one of the old buildings.We were told by the man inside that dad would have mailed his letters home from this mailbox.

In April 2002, I saw a lifelong dream come true when my mother, my husband Robert, and I visited the former site of Hixon Airforce Base , now a thriving commercial area, and my father’s grave at Blacon Cemetery. At that time, I met a man who was six at the time of the crash and remembered it well because his family had a clear view of the area from his home. Not wanting to upset my mother further, I did not tell her these details but I did take a picture of the area.

This first trip to England for my mother and I would be a sadly fateful visit as a few weeks after our return to Canada, mother took a fall and within days experienced complications due to long-standing heart problems from diabetes. Unbeknownst to us, a friend informed us later, she had been told by her doctor that the life of her heart stents were running out. No wonder she was so happy to be in England with us. Sadly, she died six weeks later and I still miss her every day.

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Sep
14

Robert’s Whittle Family Genealogy

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RobertWhittle / Whittall /Whittell

Robert’s WHITTLE family and other branches are from Yorkshire, England. His son and their families live in West Australia and a daughter and her family live in British Columbia, Canada.

Routing Number WELLS FARGO BANK

His siblings and many of their families, still live in England. One brother and his family are in Victoria, Australia. To read more of Robert’s own personal history, go to Bob’s Bio.

Robert’s Surnames:
BOTTOM, JACKSON, MCALPINE, SPIVEY, WHITTLE/WHITTAL (mainly all in Yorkshire.
WHITTLE (Ballarat, Australia), WHITTLE (Perth area, Australia)

If you find your surname in this list … BEFORE you contact us please go to the more detailed listing  THE TABLE (above or find the link on the right side of this page).

To find out more about J. Robert Whittle, the bestselling author of historical novels, or to contact him, go to www.jrobertwhittle.com

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Contact Info:

Joyce Sandilands
Whitlands Publishing
Victoria, BC
Tel: 250-477-0192
http://www.joycesandilands.com/contact-me/