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Spillage was at Pleck: 'Walsall council said people must avoid an extended area of the canal and towpaths from the Walsall lock flight to the lock flights at Rushall, Ryders Green and Perry Barr.'
The custody record I posted is in the Prisoners of War collection from National Archives available in Find my Past. This Jean Antoine was 2nd Capitaine of the lugger, so an officer, but not the commander of the privateer.
The marriage between John and Mary is by licence. He signs the register...
The Bacchus Bar is very much a going concern, but perhaps because of its location can be easy to miss. I was taken there by a work colleague about five years ago otherwise I wouldn't have been aware of it.https://www.nicholsonspubs.co.uk/restaurants/eastandwestmidlands/bacchusbarbirmingham#/
Good question. A family member, but there is a supporting document which is the page from the Portsmouth custody book. JA is the last entry on the page. I hope it can be read. There is a record of a Jean Antoine being held as a prisoner of war in Portsmouth. He was captured in 1797 whilst on...
Thank you Janice. I appreciate your comment, I'd thought to discount it, but I have little experience of genealogy having taken it up in the last two years. It is so easy to jump to assumptions.
Derek
A John Antoine with spouse Mary baptised Sophia Antoine in Jamaica All Parishes 1847. According to Ancestry but there's no original document in the collection. Looks to be microfilm.
I hit a brick wall.
Jean Antoine was born in France before 1780. He was my 2nd great grandfather. Oct 1798 Portsmouth Hampshire. There is a record of a Jean Antoine being held as a prisoner of war in Portsmouth. He was captured in 1797 on board a French privateer called 'Le Cerf Volant’...
Currently opening is Friday - Sunday, 11am – 4pm.
Things can only get better, we hope.
In 1989-1991 I lived in Davey Road, so was able to get to know Aston Hall and its grounds very well. A beautiful and atmospheric building.
Excellent! Be good to find evidence that Birmingham was notorious for coining before and after 1650 as in the Wikipedia account of William Chaloner. I didn't know about him. Newton's work at the mint has been getting attention. I'm guessing "Birmingham Groat" means a counterfeit one.
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A readable transcription of The Trial of William Booth and his Associates which was published after his execution.
https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/The_Trial,_at_Large,_of_William_Booth_and_his_Associates
And an account of his execution...
Essential reading in our house! Older editions can be read in the British Newspaper Archive: 1884-1896, 1898-1909, 1911-1931.
Harry Harrison had a Black Country dialect poem in the 1960s -1970s.
Heather Shore at Leeds Beckett looks at policing and coining.
https://crimeinthecommunity.wordpress.com/2013/04/13/i-am-now-in-the-service-of-the-mint-police-coiners-and-utterers-in-the-nineteenth-century-old-bailey/
The Barber Institute has a fine coin collection. They may know someone who could discuss the possibilities.
BMAG also has a coin collection, but I think there's no access until at least October.
William Booth is infamous. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Booth_(forger)
You probably know...
Lyn, 'Slow Horses' is based at Slough House, the idea being that agents who screw up are sent there until they resign. It is self- deprecating bit like Brummie humour.
But I imagine that a lot of hard work continues to be done in Birmingham to protect us. Just not glamorous.
Derek