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  • England and Wales National Register, 1939 • FamilySearch
  • Who Lived in Your House in 1939? - 1939 Register ...
  • 1939 England and Wales Register - Ancestry
  • England & Wales, Birth Index, 1837-2005 - MyHeritage
  • The 1939 National Register of Northern Ireland
  • 1939 England and Wales Register - Ancestry
  • 1939 Register The Wartime National Register Trace WW2 ...
  • The 1939 Register findmypast.com
  • 1939 Register - The National Archives
  • 1939 Register of England & Wales - MyHeritage
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1. What are these records? The 1939 Register provides a snapshot of the civilian population of England and Wales just after the outbreak of the Second World War. As the 1931 census for England and Wales was destroyed by fire during the Second World War and no census was taken in 1941, the Register provides […] The 1939 Register of England and Wales was conducted on 29 September 1939. For each household member the register records name, gender, address, birth date, marital status, place of residence, and occupation. This collection is an important census-substitute for genealogists and family historians. About 1939 England and Wales Register Historical Context Initially taken due to the onset of war with the purpose of producing National Identity Cards, the register later came to be multi-functional, first as an aid in the use of ration books and later helping officials record the movement of the civilian population over the following decades ... This collection contains records from the 1939 National Register, taken in England and Wales on September 29, 1939. Details of around 40 million people were recorded in more than 65,000 transcript books, now held in record series RG 101. The register was used to issue identity cards, organize rationing and more. While the 1939 Register is not a census, it is arranged along similar lines and ... This collection is an index of civil birth registrations for England and Wales from 1837 to 2005. The collection includes images of the index pages for 1837 to 1983. From 1984 and forward there are no index pages as the General Registration Office (GRO) adopted an electronic records system and made this more recent portion of the index ... About 1939 England and Wales Register Historical Context Initially taken due to the onset of war with the purpose of producing National Identity Cards, the register later came to be multi-functional, first as an aid in the use of ration books and later helping officials record the movement of the civilian population over the following decades ... Where To Search the 1939 Register England and Wales. At the time of writing, only the 1939 Register for England and Wales is currently digitised. Findmypast (£) holds digital copies of the enumerator’s transcript books. At the time of writing, a 12 month subscription with Findmypast will provide access to the 1939 Register for no extra charge. Access to the 1939 Register for England and Wales. The National Archives in Kew holds the original returns of the 1939 National Register for England & Wales. FindMyPast, Ancestry and MyHeritage have digitised and published the collection. The collection can be extremely useful for those with Irish ancestors who had emigrated to England and Wales. 41 Million lives recorded in England & Wales at the outbreak of the Second World War. The official home of the 1939 Register Records of people younger than 100 and still alive, or who died after 1991 are officially closed. You can find more details here. Records of people younger than 100 and still ... The 1939 Register is one of the most important twentieth century genealogical resources for England and Wales. The 1931 census was destroyed by fire. No census was taken in 1941 because of the war. So the 1939 register is the only national census-like resource available for this period.

Transcription Help

2021.02.21 17:15 misty_21Transcription Help

Hi!
Would anyone be able to help with a transcription from the 1939 England & Wales Register please? It's for Mary E Taylor (b. 5 Aug 1902) who lives at 16 Reedworth Street in Lambeth,London:
  • Line Number: 31
  • Schedule Number: 9
  • Sub Schedule Number: 5
  • Enumeration District: ANCJ
  • Borough: Lambeth Met B
  • Registration district: 22/2
I believe she was married and it seems that her name changed to Horn but I can find a record of this. There is a very faint date in her address column which indicate when her record was updated with this information and so could help. Can anyone read this date?
Thanks!
submitted bymisty_21toGenealogy [link][comments]

2020.05.10 05:41 martin_19_888Was the 1939 Register completed in one day?

Hi all,
To my understanding, the 1939 Register for England and Wales was carried out on September 29th 1939, so whilst compiling timelines for my ancestor's lives I've been using that date. However, I've just checked the first page of a record from the Register on Ancestry.co.uk out of curiosity and it shows the name of the enumerator, some details about the district and is dated October 3rd 1939. I guess I just want to check if there was any possibility of some parts of the Register being carried out on a later date, or if this was just likely to have been signed and dated a few days after it was carried out.
Sorry if this is a stupid question, but I'm a perfectionist and like all my dates to be exact when possible.
Thanks!
submitted bymartin_19_888toGenealogy [link][comments]

2019.07.03 06:48 subreddit_statsSubreddit Stats: Anglicanism top posts from 2013-03-14 to 2019-07-02 17:31 PDT

Period: 2300.94 days
SubmissionsComments
Total99916561
Rate (per day)0.437.29
Unique Redditors2901204
Combined Score2783574093

Top Submitters' Top Submissions

  1. 3216 points, 142 submissions: Knopwood
    1. Church of England to hold first service in Farsi after a huge rise in converts (60 points, 2 comments)
    2. Matthew Shepard, whose 1998 murder became a symbol for the gay rights movement, will be interred at Washington National Cathedral (53 points, 37 comments)
    3. Rachel Held Evans, Voice of the Wandering Evangelical, Dies at 37 (50 points, 10 comments)
    4. First Māori woman elected bishop (49 points, 2 comments)
    5. How to Deal with Methodists at your Red Church Doors (48 points, 8 comments)
    6. Rare 700-year-old Bible returns to Canterbury Cathedral, five centuries after it was removed (43 points, 2 comments)
    7. 'Homeless Jesus' statue attracts double takes, compassion at Ottawa cathedral (40 points, 4 comments)
    8. 'No-brainer': Sydney Anglicans vote in support of allowing domestic violence survivors to remarry (40 points, 4 comments)
    9. A little levity from a Toronto parish (40 points, 0 comments)
    10. Christ our Passover is sacrificed for us : therefore let us keep the feast! (38 points, 1 comment)
  2. 2483 points, 93 submissions: bryanglican
    1. Rachel Held Evans has died (81 points, 14 comments)
    2. It’s Friday, so I hope the mods will allow me a meme. 🙏 (67 points, 8 comments)
    3. I’m in my local Catholic book store, when suddenly... (62 points, 56 comments)
    4. Marvel: 'Infinity War is the most ambitious crossover event in history' Me: (53 points, 12 comments)
    5. Bishop Michael Curry’s Full Sermon from the Royal Wedding (48 points, 76 comments)
    6. Breaking via Twitter: The Episcopal Diocese of Cuba has been re-admitted as a member of TEC and its bishop seated in the House of Bishops. (48 points, 37 comments)
    7. My wife and I are expecting our first child. Pray for us? (48 points, 18 comments)
    8. Remember a while back when I found the BCP in a Catholic book store? It’s still there, but it’s been imprisoned in a locked case! (41 points, 15 comments)
    9. TFW your baby 'sings' along to the Our Father at church for the first time. (41 points, 8 comments)
    10. Why Anglo-Catholicism appeals to Millennials (41 points, 29 comments)
  3. 1357 points, 36 submissions: Bede_the_Venerable
    1. Notre Dame update: the interior appears substantially intact! (102 points, 13 comments)
    2. St David's Cathedral, Pembrokeshire, Wales. Posted solely because it's beautiful. (87 points, 6 comments)
    3. Motivation from Thomas CANmer (82 points, 11 comments)
    4. It's easy to forget in this subreddit that when you say 'Anglican' to a significant chunk of British people this is their first thought: (75 points, 39 comments)
    5. Not that this sub skews a bit Anglo-Catholic or anything... (71 points, 7 comments)
    6. You zany Episcopalians, what are you like, eh? (66 points, 70 comments)
    7. How to satisfy your Marian tendencies when your parish isn't into it: (59 points, 18 comments)
    8. This time last year we were in the middle of a cold snap up in North-East England. It did lead to some heavenly moments, though. (59 points, 13 comments)
    9. It’s a wonderful evening here, I thought I’d share it with you all. (58 points, 7 comments)
    10. I turned the list of provinces by population on Wikipedia into a pie chart. (42 points, 18 comments)
  4. 1122 points, 36 submissions: WhiteTwink
    1. When you have Baptist parents (107 points, 10 comments)
    2. When a Low Churchman visits this subreddit (80 points, 48 comments)
    3. A mystery that may never be solved (74 points, 32 comments)
    4. Ven. Archbishop Fulton Sheen (62 points, 5 comments)
    5. 10/10 would do again (48 points, 8 comments)
    6. For born unto in the City of David a savior, which is Christ the Lord. Gloria in Excelsis Deo! Christ was, and is, and is to come! (43 points, 0 comments)
    7. The real problems of church life (34 points, 8 comments)
    8. Today, one century ago the most bloody (percentage wise) war that ever ravaged our fragile home ended. Please pray for all the souls of those who lost their lives in this tragedy. (34 points, 8 comments)
    9. Are memes allowed here? (33 points, 11 comments)
    10. Happy Pentecost (33 points, 0 comments)
  5. 720 points, 24 submissions: OhioTry
    1. Archbishop Justin Welby: 'It is deeply disturbing that the President of the United States has chosen to amplify the voice of far-right extremists.' (138 points, 50 comments)
    2. CANA bishop denounces 'prosperity gospel' heresy - Anglican Ink © 2019 (57 points, 2 comments)
    3. I stepped down as a mod last night. (meta) (55 points, 7 comments)
    4. Presiding Bishop Michael Curry was installed Sunday as the first black leader of the U.S. Episcopal Church (38 points, 2 comments)
    5. TIL that The Cathedral of St John the Divine is listed in the 1939 edition of the Negro Motorist's Green Book as a New York City institution that welcomed African American visitors. (35 points, 2 comments)
    6. Anglicans in Queensland have had enough of global warming + Australian summer. X-post from /Australia (34 points, 1 comment)
    7. Church of England demands ban on anti-gay conversion therapy (32 points, 0 comments)
    8. I'm posting the highlights real from Archbishop Welby's enthronement here because it didn't do well on /Christianity. This is a small sub, but it will be of interest to everyone here, I think. (27 points, 0 comments)
    9. The Church of Nigeria (Anglican Communion) has a very active YouTube channel. (26 points, 2 comments)
    10. Confederate Flag Images Quietly Removed from Washington National Cathedral (23 points, 36 comments)
  6. 699 points, 28 submissions: WpgDipper
    1. If we do not resist evil, we do not follow Jesus: A response to Charlottesville (53 points, 9 comments)
    2. Britain’s direct complicity in the war in Yemen must end: Rowan Williams (45 points, 8 comments)
    3. Trans people are welcomed by Church of England members (43 points, 16 comments)
    4. Prince Harry and Meghan Markle ask US Presiding Bishop Michael Curry to preach at wedding (40 points, 18 comments)
    5. Went to Episcopal church today and thoroughly loved it (37 points, 7 comments)
    6. Archbishop of Canterbury on Trump-backing Christians: ’I really genuinely do not understand’ (33 points, 25 comments)
    7. Statute of Limitations on Sexual Misconduct Claims Against ECUSA Clergy to Be Suspended as of January 1 (31 points, 5 comments)
    8. How the 'Book of Common Prayer' Became a Modern Worship Album (29 points, 10 comments)
    9. Young people hear the call to rejuvenate ageing priesthood: Big rise in younger ordinands after fears that no one would replace the quarter of English Anglican vicars near retirement (29 points, 0 comments)
    10. Trump refuses to say the Apostles' Creed at the Bush funeral service (27 points, 75 comments)
  7. 538 points, 18 submissions: AnglicanPrayerMan
    1. Life as an Episcopal Franciscan Friar Starterpack (65 points, 29 comments)
    2. The faces tourists make when they see me walking in my Franciscan habit as I pass the original Mission Church (built almost 300 years ago) (47 points, 3 comments)
    3. Bishop Frank Weston's famous address to the 1923 Anglo-Catholic Congress. This is where he says, 'You cannot claim to worship Jesus in the Tabernacle, if you do not pity Jesus in the slum.' (46 points, 2 comments)
    4. Friary Update - One Year In (38 points, 0 comments)
    5. Update on Franciscan religious life (with pictures) (35 points, 5 comments)
    6. Today I was Subdeacon at Mass for the first time! (33 points, 8 comments)
    7. That's it! I'm done! (Sort of) (31 points, 5 comments)
    8. We’re getting to new novices! (29 points, 2 comments)
    9. I’m extremely disappointed in the lack of charity illustrated by priests and attendees at GC based off what they are saying online. (28 points, 37 comments)
    10. To the number of people recently asking what Anglicans believe (26 points, 24 comments)
  8. 472 points, 16 submissions: banqu0s_gh0st
    1. A photo inside La Sagrada Familia, Barcelona. (Taken by me) (50 points, 17 comments)
    2. Thr Queens Christmas message, its amazing (50 points, 41 comments)
    3. An interesting style of stained glass I found in York minster (44 points, 2 comments)
    4. Please pray for me (42 points, 15 comments)
    5. A Methodist church that me and my family go to when on holiday (40 points, 15 comments)
    6. What do people think of this stained glass in my local church? (39 points, 18 comments)
    7. Please pray for my persistent ear infections to stop. (26 points, 5 comments)
    8. Found this in my estate. Thought I might share :D (25 points, 8 comments)
    9. I went to another Methodist church! Lovely people and food for a coffee morning (25 points, 5 comments)
    10. I visited this lovely little Anglican church in Durham, one of the stained glass windows (22 points, 8 comments)
  9. 416 points, 12 submissions: KarlBarthMallCop
    1. To the parents of our young children, may we suggest... (127 points, 15 comments)
    2. Please pray for Rachel Held Evans (62 points, 11 comments)
    3. Friendly reminder: If you are sick, please stay home (42 points, 21 comments)
    4. I wish our church was like this. (26 points, 10 comments)
    5. Friday 🌶 Take: A social space can either be affirming or non-affirming, but it can't be neither (23 points, 42 comments)
    6. TIL Ann Davis, famous for portraying Alice on The Brady Bunch, joined an Episcopal community shortly after the show's end and remained for 38 years (23 points, 4 comments)
    7. Very Good Sourdough Pancake Recipe (21 points, 0 comments)
    8. Full Communion Proposal Ready for Methodist Bishops (20 points, 53 comments)
    9. [TEC] Who needs a copy of the Book of Common Prayer? (20 points, 27 comments)
    10. In Praise of the Lectionary (19 points, 3 comments)
  10. 376 points, 7 submissions: chaywardthgod
    1. All Anglican Priests know this feeling. (78 points, 3 comments)
    2. Hope ya’ll don’t mind a good ol’ Protestant Reformation meme! (75 points, 10 comments)
    3. I think we can all agree that an Anglican Organist is the loudest thing God ever created. (67 points, 9 comments)
    4. DROPPING ANOTHER FIRE ANGLICAN MEME!!! (66 points, 0 comments)
    5. When the congregation forgets not to say alleluia. (34 points, 11 comments)
    6. GET REKT ROMAN GUARDS (32 points, 2 comments)
    7. JESUS IS RISEN! (24 points, 0 comments)
  11. 366 points, 15 submissions: Come-My-Fanatics
    1. Church leaders offer prayer and solidarity after New Zealand mosque attacks leaves 49 dead (40 points, 0 comments)
    2. Church of England attacks Home Office for saying Christianity 'not peaceful' to reject asylum seeker (34 points, 13 comments)
    3. Presiding Bishop Michael Curry wins top broadcasting award for Royal Wedding sermon (34 points, 1 comment)
    4. Eucharistic Prayer C - Star Wars Style (29 points, 16 comments)
    5. 'Clergy in Cars’ shows feature Episcopal priests taking their faith talk on the road in Texas - Episcopal News Service (28 points, 4 comments)
    6. anglicanism_irl (26 points, 43 comments)
    7. truly we live in a society (25 points, 12 comments)
    8. On the episcopate (23 points, 45 comments)
    9. Christians face 'imminent extinction' in the Middle East, Archbishop of Canterbury warns (22 points, 8 comments)
    10. Today is the Feast Day of St. Michael and All Angels! (20 points, 1 comment)
  12. 328 points, 5 submissions: ag23thomas
    1. My wife and I were officially Confirmed into the Episcopal Church! (104 points, 33 comments)
    2. I got confirmed today! (90 points, 27 comments)
    3. Happy Trinity Sunday! (70 points, 6 comments)
    4. Happy Pentecost! (45 points, 3 comments)
    5. Do you pray to Saints? (19 points, 30 comments)
  13. 318 points, 11 submissions: VexedCoffee
    1. I'm back from my Lenten fast and I'm a deacon now! (106 points, 18 comments)
    2. Gay Marriage does pass in ACoC. There was a miscount in the order of clergy. (43 points, 33 comments)
    3. TIL that there is a tartan designed for Episcopal Clergy (25 points, 0 comments)
    4. [Video] Lambeth’s young monastic community hailed a major success (23 points, 4 comments)
    5. Cuban synod votes to return to Episcopal Church (20 points, 7 comments)
    6. Episcopal Presiding Bishop Michael Curry addresses Syrian refugee crisis: “Be not afraid!” (19 points, 1 comment)
    7. Rowan Williams Interviewed By Church Times (18 points, 2 comments)
    8. Video: Presiding Bishop Curry responds to primates’ actions (18 points, 2 comments)
    9. Bones of Thomas Becket to return to Canterbury - via Hungary (16 points, 1 comment)
    10. The Community of St Mary, an Episcopal religious order for women, is having a vocations discovery program June 3-10. (16 points, 2 comments)
  14. 316 points, 12 submissions: _dpk
    1. An Order for the Orderly Disposal of a Lemon Pig (54 points, 7 comments)
    2. Potential ongoing brigading of this sub (50 points, 79 comments)
    3. Millennials shun modern liturgy for ‘bells and smells’ [article in comments] (36 points, 20 comments)
    4. Wednesday hot-take hot take: ‘hot take’ threads are bad and the moderators should ban or restrict them (24 points, 42 comments)
    5. What are we to do about the decline of the Church? (23 points, 94 comments)
    6. How was church? (Advent II) (22 points, 31 comments)
    7. How was church (16 Sept. 2018) (21 points, 49 comments)
    8. Why is the word ‘holy’ missing from ‘one catholick and apostolick church’ in the 1662 Book of Common Prayer’s Nicene Creed? (20 points, 2 comments)
    9. Finding, not fixing: We don’t need prayer book revision in the church; we need prayer book recovery (18 points, 5 comments)
    10. How was church? (First Sunday after the Epiphany) (17 points, 26 comments)
  15. 272 points, 14 submissions: diverseandsundry
    1. [Urgent prayer request] For HM Government, Parliament and Brexit. (28 points, 14 comments)
    2. Archbishop of Dublin welcomes return of stolen crusader head. (25 points, 0 comments)
    3. Anglican Orders may not be invalid says Cardinal in charge of legislative texts. (24 points, 23 comments)
    4. Anglican Myths (20 points, 82 comments)
    5. CoE: come and confess your sins but we might have to report you to the Police (20 points, 87 comments)
    6. Living with Cranmer’s Lectionary (19 points, 8 comments)
    7. 'I timed the sermon at seven minutes' - The Presiding Bishop on Radio 5 (18 points, 21 comments)
    8. Should Deplorables receive Holy Communion? (18 points, 17 comments)
    9. Today, the 21st of March, is the Anniversary of the Martyrdom of Thomas Cranmer. (18 points, 23 comments)
    10. The Apostles’ Creed - Not the Nine O’Clock News (17 points, 1 comment)
  16. 240 points, 5 submissions: TECDigitalEvangelist
    1. Would there be interest in an IAmA with Presiding Bishop Curry? (128 points, 45 comments)
    2. The first episode of Presiding Bishop Curry's new Way of Love podcast is available now. Let us know what you think! (34 points, 4 comments)
    3. Someone in another thread hoped for a group of BCP prayers read by Presiding Bishop Curry, like the one in yesterday's @PB_Curry tweet. We have them all collected here. (29 points, 0 comments)
    4. An Invitation to Eucharist - Preview of the How2charist: Digital Instructed Eucharist (26 points, 47 comments)
    5. In the Philadelphia area? The Episcopal Church is looking for folks to join filming for a Digital Instructed Eucharist on Sat., August 25. (23 points, 7 comments)
  17. 236 points, 6 submissions: Flaxmoore
    1. The strange moment of 'I am Episcopalian.' A thought moment for the converts. (61 points, 23 comments)
    2. Episcopal Church handling allegations of sexual abuse right- open the doors, punish the wrongdoers, no matter how long ago! (48 points, 8 comments)
    3. Being Received as an Episcopalian, considering making it formal. (43 points, 25 comments)
    4. Diocese of Michigan starts Pride Month with a bang- elects Bonnie A. Perry, a happily married lesbian, as 11th bishop (40 points, 62 comments)
    5. Can my wife and the church Search Committee get some prayer? They're interviewing a new priest tonight. (22 points, 2 comments)
    6. Hanging on to my Patron Saint, despite crossing over to the Episcopal side of things. (22 points, 39 comments)
  18. 235 points, 3 submissions: jerzeyjohn
    1. Trinity Episcopal Church (Columbus, OH) (86 points, 6 comments)
    2. Christ Church Cathedral (Nashville, TN) (81 points, 2 comments)
    3. Trinity Episcopal Church (Princeton, NJ) (68 points, 12 comments)
  19. 231 points, 7 submissions: abhd
    1. I attended an Episcopal Inquiry class tonight and they gave me a new BCP and a Walk In Love! (93 points, 10 comments)
    2. Diocese of Chicago Convention text on Resolution G-181: Affirmation of the Inherent Dignity of Transgender and Nonbinary Persons as beloved by God (30 points, 41 comments)
    3. Presiding Bishop’s Pride Month statement honors LGBTQ Episcopalians (25 points, 2 comments)
    4. CNY Episcopal Bishop: Gay marriages still welcome here despite Albany bishop's refusal (23 points, 7 comments)
    5. The Only Way We'll Survive This Thanksgiving (22 points, 1 comment)
    6. [META] Let's give a warm welcome to our new mods! (22 points, 29 comments)
    7. Episcopal Church’s advocacy for LGBTQ people pre-dates Stonewall uprising (16 points, 1 comment)
  20. 226 points, 9 submissions: CiderDrinker
    1. I think I've just been 'born again' after 20 years of completely missing the point. (43 points, 16 comments)
    2. Seven things I like about Anglicanism (feel free to add your own). (38 points, 28 comments)
    3. Anglicans for Christian Socialism (28 points, 106 comments)
    4. Happy Commonwealth Day to all of those who are Commonwealth citizens. (The vast majority of Anglicans worldwide are.) (25 points, 12 comments)
    5. A quick reflection on Notre Dame (22 points, 6 comments)
    6. An Evangelical Anglican, Liberal Anglican, Reformed Anglican, and Catholic Anglican in discussion on what divides and what unites them. (21 points, 25 comments)
    7. Being Anglican and republican (in the 'no king' sense, not the GOP sense) (17 points, 16 comments)
    8. Eucharist is a dangerous thing (16 points, 0 comments)
    9. Livestream of Rachel Held Evans' funeral. Nadia Bolz-Weber preaching; Winnie Verghese presiding. (16 points, 3 comments)
  21. 212 points, 7 submissions: phil701
    1. broadchurch.jpeg (84 points, 10 comments)
    2. Who are some cool people that others might not know are/were Anglican? (25 points, 59 comments)
    3. Friday Hot Take: Praying to saints should be a fully established and integrated part of liturgy. (23 points, 68 comments)
    4. The results of the Marian Survey, for those who want them. Scroll past the questions, select Submit, and then See Previous Responses. (22 points, 50 comments)
    5. A stupid question perhaps: Why do priests wear robes, garments etc. when Jesus wore poor man's clothes? (20 points, 26 comments)
    6. TIL of the Inclusive Orthodoxy movement, which seeks to combine Same Sex Marriage and Ordination of Women with the One Holy Catholic and Apostolic faith. It is led by Episcopal Clergyman Justin R. Cannon. (20 points, 26 comments)
    7. I made a quick survey for your guys' beliefs on Mary, Jesus' Mother. I'd appreciate some input. (18 points, 19 comments)
  22. 204 points, 4 submissions: revtrev92
    1. Praise God! #doxology (62 points, 5 comments)
    2. Worship with a baptism today at my local E.C. parish in Ashland, Kentucky. I took this picture 10 minutes before service so it doesn’t do the crowd justice. Great crowd, great service! (57 points, 12 comments)
    3. Mid-Week Chapel at my Local Parish (56 points, 4 comments)
    4. Conservative Episcopalians? (29 points, 46 comments)
  23. 203 points, 4 submissions: such_reddit_wow
    1. Happy Ascension Day! (70 points, 8 comments)
    2. Happy Ascension Day! (56 points, 11 comments)
    3. Weather Forecast but It's in Anglican Chant (51 points, 3 comments)
    4. Merry Christmas! (26 points, 5 comments)

Top Commenters

  1. bryanglican (4944 points, 969 comments)
  2. Bede_the_Venerable (2225 points, 341 comments)
  3. Come-My-Fanatics (1839 points, 254 comments)
  4. menschmaschine5 (1641 points, 383 comments)
  5. OhioTry (1570 points, 456 comments)
  6. yibanghwa (1486 points, 282 comments)
  7. Knopwood (1345 points, 277 comments)
  8. diverseandsundry (984 points, 211 comments)
  9. chillenchillada (974 points, 304 comments)
  10. Cwross (891 points, 199 comments)
  11. KarlBarthMallCop (841 points, 107 comments)
  12. ErikRogers (791 points, 199 comments)
  13. Auto_Fac (783 points, 126 comments)
  14. tauropolis (762 points, 128 comments)
  15. milburncreek (721 points, 189 comments)
  16. WpgDipper (695 points, 220 comments)
  17. DicitEiPilatus (688 points, 110 comments)
  18. TotalInstruction (667 points, 90 comments)
  19. keakealani (661 points, 141 comments)
  20. WhiteTwink (614 points, 159 comments)
  21. KonradX (591 points, 121 comments)
  22. liliesofthefield (581 points, 89 comments)
  23. VexedCoffee (552 points, 118 comments)
  24. themsc190 (496 points, 74 comments)
  25. candydaze (493 points, 90 comments)
  26. PersisPlain (489 points, 113 comments)
  27. palaeologos (480 points, 160 comments)
  28. primitive_thisness (458 points, 150 comments)
  29. gnurdette (453 points, 45 comments)
  30. CiderDrinker (432 points, 81 comments)
  31. AnglicanPrayerMan (419 points, 68 comments)
  32. Machinax (407 points, 53 comments)
  33. texanmason (405 points, 90 comments)
  34. BrotherHausel (375 points, 66 comments)
  35. tryingforsomething (361 points, 105 comments)
  36. bobo_brizinski (359 points, 74 comments)
  37. Ghibellines (351 points, 87 comments)
  38. elrealvisceralista (333 points, 79 comments)
  39. sl150 (331 points, 44 comments)
  40. revdeac06 (328 points, 60 comments)
  41. icantbelieveibelieve (323 points, 58 comments)
  42. phil701 (313 points, 56 comments)
  43. steph-anglican (305 points, 161 comments)
  44. cnumbers (288 points, 56 comments)
  45. Sacerdotal (280 points, 44 comments)
  46. number9muses (271 points, 34 comments)
  47. RingGiver (260 points, 39 comments)
  48. your_cheese_girl (259 points, 38 comments)
  49. grameno (258 points, 41 comments)
  50. SoWhatDidIMiss (256 points, 35 comments)

Top Submissions

  1. Archbishop Justin Welby: 'It is deeply disturbing that the President of the United States has chosen to amplify the voice of far-right extremists.' by OhioTry (138 points, 50 comments)
  2. Would there be interest in an IAmA with Presiding Bishop Curry? by TECDigitalEvangelist (128 points, 45 comments)
  3. To the parents of our young children, may we suggest... by KarlBarthMallCop (127 points, 15 comments)
  4. When you have Baptist parents by WhiteTwink (107 points, 10 comments)
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2019.04.19 06:32 arobertson28Missing death record: Scotland or Canada

I've been trying to trace my paternal family to fill in some blanks, and I think I've hit a dead-end. I'm pretty new to this, so maybe I'm just searching in the wrong places? I'm searching for my great-grandfather, William Terry Robertson.
He was born in 1913 to Margaret Terry (https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/details/G9DJ-T95) and David Liddell Robertson (https://www.familysearch.org/tree/person/details/G9DV-QSV), in Dunbartonshire, Scotland.
In 1935, he married Isabella McCann McSeveny (spelled in literally a million ways... I've seen McSeveny, McSevney, MacSevney, MacSephny, and even McGeony) in Bridgeton, Scotland. (https://www.familysearch.org/photos/artifacts/79430562?p=22655981&returnLabel=William%20Terry%20Robertson%20(G992-D35)&returnUrl=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.familysearch.org%2Ftree%2Fperson%2Fdetails%2FG992-D35&returnUrl=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.familysearch.org%2Ftree%2Fperson%2Fdetails%2FG992-D35))
Shortly thereafter, I know from a family friend that they moved to Weymouth, Dorset, England and William worked fowith a man named Herbert Broadbent at Whiteheads Torpedo Works. I found them in the England and Wales 1939 Register as living in Wykes Regis with Isabella's sister Jean, and I know that they had their first child, Janet, in 1940 in Dorset.
After this is where things get fuzzy. I've been told that they moved back to Scotland in 1943, and had my grandfather (David Liddell Robertson) in 1944 somewhere near Glasgow. I can't find his birth record, and he passed in 2010. I also know they probably immigrated to Canada in 1951, although it may be 1952.

I know that a lot of those dates are too late or too early to be public record. But my question is... What happened to William? He has no public records after the E&W Register in 1939. On paper, he never moved back to Scotland, never had my grandfather, never immigrated to Canada and never died. It's possible he died in Canada after 1951, but it would have been prior to 1995 as I never met him and have never seen a photo of him/etc.

If anybody has any suggestions for where I might need to look, I'd be happy to hear it. I have an Ancestry membership but there are so many men named William, and so many families named Robertson, that it feels like I could look for years and never find the right records.

EDIT: Someone pointed out that I should link the images that I've found.....
William Terry Robertson birth record: https://imgur.com/a/zOgN1iV
Isabella McCann McSevney birth record (wife): https://imgur.com/a/sRKQm6U
William and Isabella Marriage Record:https://imgur.com/a/X9jFjEa
submitted byarobertson28toGenealogy [link][comments]

2018.05.15 18:18 ObversaFor those interested, I compiled a full timeline (1926-1940) of events that occurred during Tom Riddle's childhood.

The timeline itself is pretty long and more detailed, so I'll link the Tumblr version here.
I wrote this post quite a while ago, but with a recent thread discussing Tom Riddle's upbringing by Beerus_90, I thought I would share it an edited-for-Reddit version below.
As J.K. Rowling has mentioned that Tom Riddle's Diary is the UK equivalent of a day planner, Tom may have used it, prior to making it a Horcrux, to note down not only important events and assignments at Hogwarts, but events reported in the Muggle and wizarding newspapers as well.
1920's - 1930's
  • Friday, December 31, 1926: Tom Marvolo Riddle is born at Wool's Orphanage in London, England, UK.
  • Tuesday, October 29, 1929: Tom Riddle is only a few months shy of his 3rd birthday. The stock market on Wall Street in New York City (USA) crashes. The Great Depression begins, ushering in a global recession.
  • Sunday, August 19, 1934: Tom Riddle is now 7 years old. Adolf Hitler becomes Führer of Germany.
  • Monday, January 20, 1936: Tom Riddle is now 9 years old. King George V dies, and his son ascends the throne as King Edward VIII.
  • Saturday, March 7, 1936: Germany invades and occupies the Rhineland, beginning Hitler's conquest of Europe. In May, Mussolini's Italy takes Ethiopia.
  • Saturday, August 1, 1936: The Summer Olympic Games in Berlin take place. The games were the first to be televised, and the radio broadcasts reach 41 countries. Over 70 hours of coverage is aired. Blackouts would occur from time to time, and the quality was generally poor. The opening ceremony was held at the Berlin Olympic Stadium. After the parade of nations and a speech by the president of the German Olympic Committee, the games were declared open by Adolf Hitler. Writer Thomas Wolfe, who was there, described the opening as an 'almost religious event, the crowd screaming, swaying in unison and begging for Hitler. There was something scary about it; his cult of personality'. Germany wins the most medals (89), with the United States placing second in numbers (56). The UK places 10th, with 14 medals.
  • Friday, December 11, 1936: King Edward VIII, the eldest son of King George V and Queen Mary, abdicates the British throne. He does so to wed Wallis Simpson, an American divorcee. He famously said, 'I have found it impossible to carry the heavy burden of responsibility, and to discharge my duties as king, as I would wish to do without the help and support of the woman I love.' His brother, Prince Albert, Duke of York, succeeds to the throne as King George VI. George VI's elder daughter, Princess Elizabeth (later Queen Elizabeth II), becomes first in the line of succession, as heiress presumptive.
  • Thursday, May 27, 1937: King George VI and Queen Elizabeth are coronated at Westminster Abbey in London. The return procession to Buckingham Palace was over six miles in length, making it the longest coronation procession up to that time; crowds of people lined the streets to watch it, over 32,000 soldiers took part, and 20,000 police officers lined the route. The event was designed to be a public spectacle, which was also planned as a display of the British Empire. May 1937 included a programme of royal events lasting nearly the entire month to commemorate and mark the occasion. In the lead up to the coronation, guests from across the Empire and around the world assembled on Buckingham Palace, and official receptions were held to welcome them; amongst those attending were Indian princes, and, for the first time, native African royalty. For the event itself, the prime ministers of each Dominion took part in the procession to the abbey, while representatives of nearly every country attended. Contingents from most colonies and each Dominion participated in the return procession through London's streets. It was also the first coronation to be filmed, as well as the first to be broadcast on radio.
  • Monday, December 12, 1937: The Daily Express reports that Lloyd's of London was 'quoting 32 to 1 odds against Britain being involved in a war before December 31, 1939'.
  • Tuesday, December 21, 1937: The Walt Disney animated film 'Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs' premieres at the Carthay Circle Theatre in Los Angeles, California (USA). It is the first full-length, cel animated feature film. The film goes on to be featured on the cover of TIME magazine, 6 days later. The film opens to a tremendous critical success, with many reviewers hailing it as a genuine work of art, recommended for both children and adults. By May 1939, its total international gross of $6.5 million made it the most successful sound film of all time. Noted filmmakers such as Sergei Eisenstein and Charlie Chaplin praised the film as a notable achievement in cinema; Eisenstein went so far as to call it 'the greatest film ever made'. The film inspired Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer to produce its own fantasy film, 'The Wizard of Oz', in 1939. Within two years, Disney completes 'Pinocchio' and 'Fantasia', and had begun production on features such as 'Dumbo', 'Bambi', 'Alice in Wonderland', and 'Peter Pan'.
  • Thursday, December 22, 1937: A strange fish was found on a fishing trawler in East London, South Africa, part of the British Empire (Commonwealth). It was later identified as a coelacanth, previously thought to be extinct.
  • Saturday, December 25, 1937: George VI delivers his first Royal Christmas Message. At four minutes, it was the shortest Message to date.
  • Wednesday, December 29, 1937: The new Constitution of Ireland goes into effect. The Irish Free State was abolished, and the country was renamed simply 'Ireland', or 'Éire'.
  • Friday, December 31, 1937: Tom Riddle turns 11 years old, and is visited by Albus Dumbledore, the Transfiguration Professor at Hogwarts, at Wool's Orphanage. Tom learns that he is a wizard.
  • Sunday, February 20, 1938: Tom Riddle is 11 years old, several months shy of his 12th birthday. Hitler gives a three-hour internationally broadcast speech in the Reichstag, Berlin (Germany), vowing to protect German minorities outside of the Reich, and reiterating demands for 'restoration of German colonies'. Later on, the House of Commons continues to endorse Neville Chamberlain's policy of appeasement towards Germany.
  • Thursday, March 10, 1938: Hitler orders his generals to prepare for an invasion of Austria.
  • Saturday, March 12, 1938: The German army crosses the Austrian border at 8:00 AM, completing 'Anschluss' (union) with Austria.
  • Monday, March 14, 1938: Hitler visits Vienna. British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain makes a speech in the House of Commons on 'the Austrian situation', saying the government 'emphatically' disapproved of Germany's deed, but that 'nothing could have prevented this action by Germany, unless we and others with us had been prepared to use force to prevent it.'
  • Sunday, March 20, 1938: Thousands of demonstrators march in London to protest the Bombing of Barcelona, and the Chamberlain government's refusal to allow arms to the Republicans [in the Spanish Civil War].
  • Sunday, April 10, 1938: 50,000 attend a 'Save Spain' rally in Hyde Park, protesting the British government's policy on the [Spanish] Civil War.
  • Tuesday, April 26, 1938: On Budget Day in the United Kingdom, Chancellor of the Exchequer Sir John Simon introduces the biggest peacetime budget in the nation's history. Taxes on income, gasoline and tea were increased to help pay for the national rearmament program.
  • Friday, June 24, 1938: The Royal Air Force launches a new recruitment campaign, and receives 1,000 inquiries on the first day alone.
  • Saturday, June 25, 1938: Douglas Hyde becomes the 1st President of Ireland.
  • Sunday, July 5, 1938: The famous psychoanalysist Sigmund Freud, 82 and frail, arrives in Paris on the Orient Express, having fled persecution by the Nazis in his homeland of Austria. After a few hours of rest, he continues on his way to London, where he had been granted asylum. The next day, he establishes a residence at a rented home near Regent's Park in London. Freud was also made a British citizen upon his arrival in Britain, despite normally requiring five years' residence.
  • Monday, July 18, 1938: Queen Marie of Romania [Princess Marie of Edinburgh], 62, last Queen consort of Romania, and wife of Romanian King Ferdinand I, dies of pancreatic cancer. She was one of Queen Victoria's five crowned granddaughters and one of three to retain their position as consort after the conclusion of World War I, alongside the Queens of Norway and of Spain.
  • Thursday, July 28, 1938: The Cunard White-Star liner RMS Mauretania is launched.
  • Sunday, August 7, 1938: The RMS Queen Mary sets a record for east-to-west Atlantic crossing of 3 days, 23 hours and 48 minutes. On August 14, the RMS Queen Mary sets a record for the eastbound Atlantic crossing of 3 days 20 hours 42 minutes.
  • Friday, August 26, 1938: Germany sent notes to Britain and France asking them to compel Czechoslovakia to accept the demands of the Sudeten Germans, including giving them the right to autonomy. The British government announces the mobilization of the Royal Navy in response to German military exercises.
  • Saturday, August 27, 1938: Winston Churchill makes a speech in Theydon Bois, saying that war was not inevitable, 'But the danger to peace will not be removed until the vast German armies which have been called from their homes into the ranks have been dispersed. For a country which is itself not menaced by anyone, in no fear of anyone, to place over 150,000 soldiers upon a war footing is a very grave step.' Churchill said that Europe's fate lay in the hands of 'the extraordinary man at the summit of Germany. He has raised the country from defeat; he has brought it back again to the foremost ranks of power. It would indeed be a fatal act if he were to cast away all he has done for the German people by leading them into what would almost certainly become a world war.'
  • Tuesday, August 30, 1938: The British cabinet holds a meeting on the Sudeten crisis, and then issues a vague statement to the public: 'At the conclusion of the meeting the ministers expressed their entire agreement with the action already taken and the policy to be pursued in the future.'
  • Wednesday, August 31, 1938: Winston Churchill writes the Foreign Secretary, Lord Halifax, urging the formation of a united front with France, the Soviet Union and the United States.
  • Thursday, September 1, 1938: At 11:00 AM, Tom Riddle boards the Hogwarts Express for the first time. He sets off from King's Cross Station in London. Later that evening, at the Welcoming Feast, he is Sorted into Slytherin.
  • Sunday, September 4, 1938: A Royal Air Force plane crashes into a residential area in the Edmonton region of London, killing the pilot and twelve other people.
  • Saturday, September 10, 1938: Alfonso, Prince of Asturias, heir apparent to the throne of Spain from 1907 to 1931, dies at the age of 31 in a car accident. He crashed into a telephone booth, and appeared to have minor injuries, but his haemophilia led to fatal internal bleeding.
  • Monday, September 12, 1938: Hitler makes a bombastic speech in Nuremberg, declaring that 'the oppression of Sudeten Germans must end'. The speech was broadcast live to the United States by CBS Radio and was the first time that many Americans had ever heard Hitler speak. The British cabinet held a meeting almost as soon as Hitler was finished speaking. They were relieved that Hitler had only demanded 'justice' for Sudeten Germans, and had not committed himself to war.
  • Thursday, September 15, 1938: Thomas Wolfe, 37, an American writer and playwright, dies of miliary tuberculosis of the brain, after a bout of pneumonia. The next day, The New York Times wrote: 'His was one of the most confident young voices in contemporary American literature, a vibrant, full-toned voice which it is hard to believe could be so suddenly stilled. The stamp of genius was upon him, though it was an undisciplined and unpredictable genius.... There was within him an unspent energy, an untiring force, an unappeasable hunger for life and for expression which might have carried him to the heights and might equally have torn him down.' TIME wrote: 'The death last week of Thomas Clayton Wolfe shocked critics with the realization that, of all American novelists of his generation, he was the one from whom most had been expected.'
  • Monday, October 3, 1938: Irish troops take over the forts of Dunree and Leenan on Lough Swilly, ending 247 years of British military presence in Ireland.
  • Wednesday, October 5, 1938: Winston Churchill delivers a now-famous speech to the House of Commons, calling the Munich Agreement 'a total and unmitigated defeat'. In the British periodical 'The Week', Claud Cockburn writes that Charles Lindbergh, the famous American airman, had recently told a meeting of the Cliveden set that 'the Luftwaffe could defeat the British, French, Soviet and Czechoslovak air forces combined'.
  • Sunday, October 16, 1938: Winston Churchill gives a radio address to the United States, outlining the threat of Nazi Germany, and the need of both Britain and the United States to arm themselves. The speech was titled 'The Defence of Freedom and Peace', but subtitled 'The Lights are Going Out', an allusion to the famous comment attributed to Sir Edward Grey at the beginning of the First World War, 'The lamps are going out all over Europe'.
  • Sunday, October 30, 1938: A radio drama performance of 'The War of the Worlds', directed and narrated by Orson Welles, airs over the CBS radio network in the USA. It becomes famous for allegedly causing a nationwide panic among people who thought the drama about an alien invasion by Martians was a real news broadcast, but such accounts have been wildly exaggerated.
  • Monday, October 31, 1938: Hogwarts celebrates Halloween, presumably with a Halloween Feast.
  • Tuesday, November 1, 1938: Seabiscuit defeats War Admiral in a special race at Pimlico Race Course in front of a crowd of 40,000.
  • Wednesday, November 16, 1938: The Halifax Slasher scare begins in West Yorkshire, England, when two young women reported being attacked by 'an unseen assailant with a mallet or hatchet'. Scotland Yard is called to assist as reports of the 'slasher' grow. The case is dropped on December 2, when it is revealed to have been a mass hoax.
  • Sunday, November 20, 1938: Queen Maud of Norway ['Maud of Wales'], consort of Norwegian King Haakon VII, and the youngest daughter of King Edward VII of the United Kingdom and Queen Alexandra; the aunt of King George VI, dies from heart failure.
  • Thursday, December 1, 1938: Britain introduces a 'national register' for war service. On this date, or sometime in the week after, Slytherin Head of House (?) Horace Slughorn takes the names of those staying at Hogwarts over the holidays, including (presumably) Tom Riddle.
  • Sunday or Monday, December 18-19, 1938: Hogwarts students leave for King's Cross in London for the holidays. Tom Riddle most likely remains behind.
  • Sunday, December 25, 1938: Hogwarts celebrates Christmas.
  • Saturday, December 31, 1938: Tom Riddle turns 12 years old.
  • Sunday or Monday, January 1-2, 1939: Students return to Hogwarts from London after the holidays.
  • Tuesday, February 14, 1939: Hogwarts celebrates Valentine's Day. (As likely similarly seen in COS.)
  • Tuesday, March 15, 1939: The Nazis take Czechoslovakia. Over the course of the next few months, Nazi Germany allies with Italy, as well as Soviet Russia.
  • Sunday or Monday, April 2-3 1939: Hogwarts students leave back to London for the Easter holidays. Tom Riddle likely remains at Hogwarts during this time.
  • Sunday, April 9, 1939: Hogwarts celebrates Easter.
  • Sunaday or Monday, April 16-17, 1939: Hogwarts students return to school from Easter break.
  • Thursday-Saturday, June 1-10, 1939: Tom Riddle sits for his first end-of-term exams at Hogwarts.
  • Sunday-Sunday, June 11-17, 1939: Tom Riddle receives the results of his first-year exams.
  • June 18-30, 1939: End-of-term. Hogwarts celebrates with a Farewell Feast. Tom Riddle boards the Hogwarts Express back to London, and returns to Wool's Orphanage.
  • Friday, August 25, 1939: Britain signs a Mutual Assistance Treaty with Poland; Nazi Germany, in retaliation, signs a 'non-aggression pact' with the USSR. War draws closer. Tom Riddle is still at Wool's Orphanage.
  • Thursday, August 31, 1939: It is the day before Tom Riddle is set to take the Hogwarts Express from King's Cross in London. The British fleet mobilizes; Operation Pied Piper begins in London. On the morning of Thursday, August 31st 1939, news outlets across Britain were all reporting the same thing. In the coming days, millions of vulnerable civilians would be evacuated from the country's centers of industry and shipping for their own safety. The government feared aerial bombardment of cities and towns, something the world had so recently witnessed during the horror of the Spanish Civil War. 'Evacuation Begins To-Morrow,' were the words printed in large type across the front page of newspapers like the Express and Echo in Devon, which quoted the government announcement on evacuation: 'It has been decided to start evacuation of the school-children, and other priority classes, as already arranged under the Government's scheme, to-morrow, Friday September 1st. No one should conclude that this decision means war is now regarded as inevitable.'
  • Friday, September 1, 1939: At 11:00 AM, Tom Riddle boards the Hogwarts Express, and sets off for his second year at Hogwarts. Operation Pied Piper begins evacuations of London. Nazi Germany invades Poland. On September 1, 1939, Muggle children arrive at their school, clutching their gas masks and rucksacks which they had been required to bring to school for over a week in anticipation of the evacuation. They are organized in squads of fifty, with at least five teachers per squad. A banner giving the school name and colors leads each squad. Teachers wear bright-red armbands with the school numbers in black lettering. They were then marched to the train stations. Some mothers followed behind weeping, and a few had to be restrained by the police, from joining their children or snatching them back. Other children mustered at their local primary school, carrying their gas-mask, toothbrush, change of underclothes and label. Many of the evacuees thought they were going on vacation. In his Mass Observation diary, Joseph Welbank describes a conversation with a school mistress the night before the evacuation. 'I said 'I bet the kids feel miserable don’t they?' She said 'No fear, they are looking forward to it. Some of them are sorry there wasn't a war last September. They want the holiday. That's the best way to look at it.' This shows that many of the children did not know what was really going on, or why they were being evacuated. Some younger children had even arrived with shovels and pails, having been told by their parents that they were going to the seashore. The biggest problem for the evacuees during the long journey was a lack of food and water. Teachers had forbidden the children from bringing any water, the 'official' reason being to avoid broken glass, but in truth, they did not want to worry about children having to use the bathroom. Fruit, such as apples, oranges, and pears, were used as thirst quenchers. When the children arrived at the railway platforms, they were loaded onto whatever train was available, with little effort to control their destinations. School groups and families were broken up in the rush to get everyone on trains. Parents were told that their children would send them a postcard notifying them of where they were once they had reached the reception area. One mother was overheard saying, 'She (her youngest child) cried a lot last night…wish I knew where she was going.' Other parents saw the disorganization and secrecy as reasons to evacuate their children privately.
  • Sunday, September 3, 1939: Britain, France, Australia and New Zealand declare war on Germany. By this point, nearly 1,437,000 people had been moved from British cities without a single casualty or accident. Evacuees are lower in number than anticipated by the British Muggle government. In London, only half of the schoolchildren went at this time. Nationwide, 827,000 schoolchildren, 524,000 mothers and children under five, 13,000 expectant mothers, 7,000 handicapped people, and 103,000 teachers and helpers were all evacuated. Aside from the complaints of mistakes in the evacuation, most of the hosts' grievances regarded child guests who were 'verminous, bed-wetters, liars, thieves, had no respect for property, unclean habits, rude, quarrelsome, stuck-up, gave no assistance in the home, and would be too expensive to keep'. Most of these problems were 'diseases of poverty,' which helped to make the middle and upper classes, as well as the poor people of the countryside, aware of the 'deep and shameful poverty which exists to-day in the rich cities of England'. E.A. Stebbing wrote in his diary for Mass Observation, 'If good can come out of evil, then this war is surely doing good in showing people how other people live. There is no doubt that people in this district have been taken aback by the habits and conditions of the life of slum children.' The hosts would have been more sympathetic to the conditions of their evacuees had London been bombed, but since it was not, they felt that the exposure to these dirty habits and 'diseases of poverty' was unnecessary and their moods quickly changed from sympathetic to hostile. There was also the question of decent clothing. Many slum children were ill prepared for evacuation. Some arrived with little clothing, and others had clothes that were not suited for the wear and tear of country living. Kind foster parents felt it their duty to re-outfit children who came ill prepared. They often did this at their own expense, and then asked the parents to pay later, which caused issues because many parents could not afford new clothes for their children. In some towns, charitable funds were organized for children who had insufficient clothes or shoes and the government secretly distributed thousands of pounds for the poorest and most 'necessitous cases'. The children in London, who had not been evacuated, were left without school for several months. Since the government had expected more people to take part in the evacuation, they had re purposed many of the schools for the war effort, and sent all of the teachers to the country with the evacuated children. Doctors and social workers began to note the physical deterioration of the children left behind, because of the absence of school supervision, medical services, and school milk. The government was reluctant to re-open the schools in the evacuation areas, because it meant admitting the evacuation had failed.
  • Monday, September 4, 1939: British Royal Air Force attacks the German Navy.
  • Tuesday, September 5, 1939: United States proclaims its neutrality; German troops cross the Vistula River in Poland.
  • Sunday, September 10, 1939: Canada declares war on Germany; Battle of the Atlantic begins.
  • Wednesday, September 27, 1939: Poland surrenders to Germany. Nazis and Soviets divide up Poland.
  • Thursday, November 30, 1939: The Soviets attack Finland.
  • Monday, January 8, 1940: Tom Riddle is now 13 years old, and midway through his second year at Hogwarts. Rationing begins in the UK. Great Britain begins issuing ration books containing coupons for bacon, butter and sugar. Shortly after, tea, jam, biscuits, breakfast cereals, cheese, eggs, milk and canned fruit rationing were introduced. Later, as the war continued, many more items of both food and non-food items were introduced including meat, petrol, clothes, tea, and soap were rationed. The Ministry of Health records that 43% of the unaccompanied schoolchildren had returned home. Overall, Operation Pied Piper is considered to have failed, because by the beginning of 1940, almost 700,000 evacuees in England and Wales had returned home.
The 1940's
Since compiling a detailed timeline of events that occurred in the 1940's while Tom was at Hogwarts would take up entire books, instead, I summarized a documentary called The 1940's House in another post here. It details how Muggle families and children in London (including Tom Riddle, when he had to return to the orphanage) in the 1940's would've lived, or at least the culture surrounding the war itself.
OP's Note: Scientific and other Muggle discoveries, while also occurring at the time, were not included. You can see a timeline of those here (worth noting that some important antibiotics weren't invented until 1936, when Tom was 10, and douching with water iodine, baking soda, or vinegar; cleaning products, like Lysol; or even Coca-Cola - yes, Lysol and Coca-Cola - was considered the main form of birth control in the 1930's), as well as read about 1930's pop culture and invention happenings here.
An edit, regarding 1930's British culture of the time:
  • Popular culture and working-class taste in Britain, 1930-1939, by Robert James (2010)
Up until the outbreak of war in 1939, British society had retained a rigid class structure, with the educated middle and upper classes tending to believe in their own moral and cultural superiority over the working classes.
Proper models of behaviour were seen to emanate from this section of society, including correct pronunciation, table manners, appropriate dress, and even the courting of wedding partners. With few exceptions, the holders of power and authority came from an upper class background, and had a public school education. They saw themselves as the 'guardians of culture', and those lower down the social order seldom questioned their position.
It was a social and cultural hierarchy that was largely self-policed, with members of different classes rarely willing or able to move to alternative social groupings. It was expected that people would conform to the values of their peer group, and any attempt to transcend this hierarchy was restricted by social convention.
The experience of WWII was to have a profound effect on the way British people saw themselves, both in terms of their role in society, and in the expectations they had of their own quality of life.
Even though [Muggle] Britain’s involvement in the war resulted in great hardships, it also led to many positive changes in British society. Through its efforts to win the war, the country experienced a powerful sense of unity [among Muggles].
The [Muggle] government, realising the importance of morale in sustaining the war effort, actively encouraged this feeling through its own propaganda campaigns. Above all, there was a general belief that after the war Britain would be a better place. In spite of the sacrifices made to sustain the war effort, the population was confident that Britain would eventually see full employment, a universal education system, social welfare, a national health service, and redesigned and modernised towns and cities – all the social amenities that had been lacking for the majority of people before the war.
This momentum for social reform resulted in a surprise Labour landslide victory in 1945, at the first post-war general election.
Out of necessity, many of the nation’s utilities and resources had already been nationalised during the war to allow centralised control and planning. The rationing of food, clothing and other luxury goods had become a way of life. As a consequence of rationing, commodities had for the first time been distributed on the basis of need, rather than wealth.
Ironically, for many less well-off [Muggle] families, there was an improvement in their diet during the war years [due to rationing and by-need basis]. For the most part, rationing continued until 1948, with the availability of some items remaining controlled until 1954. (Source)
submitted byObversatoharrypotter [link][comments]

2017.04.14 03:53 IamMatlockOfficial Weekly Summary (Apr 6 - Apr 13, 2017)

Weekly Summary (Apr 6 - Apr 13, 2017)
Unresolved Mysteries
Thanks for all the nice feedback. I’ve included some summaries I wrote last week but forgot to post. Unfortunately, I left out a number of stories because of limited time and real life obligations. Please explore those stories I missed and let me know if you find any mistakes in my update. ✌
Chag Sameach. Happy Easter! 🐰 Wishing you all a very safe holiday weekend.
Last week's summary (March 29-April 5, 2017)
UPDATES
  • 1939 – Gary Beckman was the son of a single mother in Corinth, New York (US). His mother struggled to provide for him and his sister and signed away her parental rights in the belief that a close family friend could adopt her son. Unfortunately, Child Services removed the boy from his longtime home and put him up for adoption. Throughout the years his sister has been searching for him but has been unable to reunite with her brother. Unsolved Mysteries covered this case... (UPDATE): Fluxistrad has contacted Gary’s family and received an update on their situation… Link
  • 1948 – Tereska Adwentowska - Her name might not sound familiar, but you’ve probably seen her photo in a history or psychology book. She was a young girl in front of a chalkboard, who scribbled large circles after she was asked to draw a picture of her home. She was believed to have lived in a concentration camp during World War II; however, a researcher discovered… (UPDATE): A dedicated researcher has determined her identity and has commented in the reddit thread Link
  • 1963 – Anita Kay Drake (15) disappeared from Louisville, Ohio (US). It was believed that Anita had run away from her home to escape abuse, and then moved to Texas. She changed her name to Linda Tucker Smith and eventually started her own life. Linda died of lung cancer in 1992. (UPDATE): DNA has confirmed that Linda Smith is, in fact, Anita Kay Drake. Link
  • 1970 – Chester (NY) Jane Doe – Body of an unidentified African American woman (believed to be in her 30s) was found in a field off New York route 94. Her hands had been tied behind her back, and she had been shot in the chest, shoulder, and spine. When she died, she fell on her back and was able to shield her hands, which helped in determining her… (UPDATE): Law enforcement believe they have identified Jane Doe Link
  • November 26, 1994 – John Doe – A security guard discovered the body of an unidentified man who hanged himself in a parking garage in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma (US). The man was described as a white male, who was 5’9” but police had no clue to his identity. (UPDATE): A websleuths member has identified John Doe by connecting him to a missing person. Link
  • September 11, 1997 - Peter Kema Jr. (6) disappeared from Honolulu, Hawaii (US). Peter's father had claimed that he took his son to Honolulu to accompany him on a job search. Unable to care for the boy, the father stated he gave his son to a female family friend. Law enforcement was unable to identify this woman and feared she didn't exist. Peter Jr's family confirmed that young boy was a victim of harsh physical and emotional abuse by his parents. In November 2015, Peter's parents were charged with welfare fraud. In 2016, his parents were charged with Peter Jr's murder. Peter's mother eventually pled guilty to manslaughter in the death of her son. (UPDATE): April 6, 2017: Peter's father has pled guilty to manslaughter in the death of his son. Authorities are willing to negotiate with the sentencing if his father provides them with the location of his son's remain. Link
  • June 12, 1998 - Christina Williams (13) disappeared from Seaside, California. Christina's father was in the military, so she spent most of her early childhood in Japan. Christina went missing while walking her dog around her neighborhood. Her parents found the dog, but Christina had vanished. Her body was found miles away from her home on an army base in 1999. A local sex offender has been a person of interest in the case. (UPDATE)April 6, 2017: DNA has linked suspect Charles Allen Holifield, who's a registered sex offender to Christina's abduction. Link
  • July 7, 2013 - Tommy Eastep (30) disappeared from Eufaula, Oklahoma (US). Tommy had gone missing on a family trip to Lake Eufaula. Months later his truck was found abandoned... (UPDATER): Tommy's remains have been found, there is... Link
  • December 8, 2000 - Trevor Deely (22) disappeared in the rainy night from the streets of Dublin (Ireland). Trevor attended a Christmas party and then realized he'd forgotten his umbrella at work (Bank of Ireland). He called his office to pick up the umbrella, and then arrived outside his work at 3:30 am. Trevor entered the building, had a short coffee with a coworker, and then left building within 40 minutes. (UPDATE): Law enforcement have released CCTV video of a man caught outside Trevor's work lurking in the shadows, acting suspiciously and waiting in the rain for over 30 minutes. Authorities are asking the public if they identify this man. Link
  • February 12, 2009 - Pamela J. Butler (47) disappeared from Washington D.C. (US). Pamela was last seen talking to her boyfriend at her home. She had met him on a dating site, but he claimed that she had broken up with him shortly before she went missing. He said the break-up was amicable but had refused to take a polygraph or cooperate with parts of the investigation. (UPDATE) April 2017: Pamela's ex-boyfriend, Jose Rodriguez-Cruz, has been charged with her murder. Link
  • August 2016 - Christine Wood (24) disappeared from Winnipeg, Manitoba (Canada). Christine was last seen leaving a hotel in the evening, she had been visiting her family in Winnipeg. Christine's electronic device (cell phone?) led police to the home of Brett Overdy (30). Overdy had no prior relationship with Christine. However, police found evidence in hi home connecting him to Christine's murder. He has been charged with... Link
THE MISSING
  • August 6, 1972 - Lynn Schuller (25) disappeared from Cedar Rapids, Iowa (US). Lynn was last seen at her home by her husband, who had said that she was sleeping when he left to go fishing. When he returned home, Lynn was gone. Before her disappearance, Lynn had confessed to her parents that she had been having marital problems and that her husband wanted a divorce. Her husband had once threatened Lynn’s life but she had not taken it seriously. After her disappearance, Lynn’s husband filed for divorce seven… Link
  • April 20, 1989 – Patricia Meehan (37) disappeared from Circle, Montana (US). Patricia was last seen on Montana Highway 200 after causing an accident while driving on the wrong side of the road. She emerged from her car in a daze but appeared to be uninjured. Without saying a word, she wandered off into a field and vanished into the night. There have been multiples sightings of Patricia… Link
  • July 11, 1990 - Sarah MacDiarmid (23) disappeared from Kananook, Victoria (Australia). On the day she vanished, Sarah had met with two colleagues to play tennis after work. Together they took a train back to their respective homes and left Sarah behind on the train to the Kananook station. Sarah was last seen exiting the train alone and walking to her car in a poorly lit parking lot... Link
  • January 6, 1994 - Ylenia Carrisi (23) disappeared from New Orleans, Louisiana (US). Ylenia was a free-spirited young woman, who wished to travel the world with nothing more than a backpack and notebook. Her parents were well known Italian singers and actors, and she had grown up in a world of privilege and fame. She even served in Vannah White's role in the Italian version of Wheel of Fortune. Ylenia lived with a 54-year-old street musician who had a history of violence and substance abuse. She had claimed it was a platonic friendship, but... Trail Went Cold
  • May 17, 1995 - Gedhun Choekyi Nyima (6) disappeared from his home in Tibet. Gedhun was named by the Dalai Lama as the 11th reincarnation of Panchen Lama. After his selection, the Chinese government arrested the head of the Panchen Lama search committee with treason. The Chinese government then took young Gedhun to an undisclosed location...Link
  • September 26, 1998 – Belinda Peisley (19) disappeared from Katoomba, South Wales (Australia). Belinda was a young mother of two sons, who had recently inherited a substantial amount of money before she went missing. Belinda is said to have associated with a number of shady people, who had problems with substance abuse. Days after she vanished, these so-called friends and acquaintances broke into her home and stole… Link
  • May 20, 1999 – Frank Nash (35) disappeared from New Fairfield, Connecticut (US). Frank had lived with his parents and was last seen at home by his father. He was described as a quiet individual, who didn’t drink or do drugs and had never had any problems with the law. Before he disappeared, Frank had told his father he was going to stop by the DMV and then meet someone afterward. Frank has never been seen again. A month after he vanished, Frank’s truck was found abandoned in… Missing in Connecticut
  • February 19, 2009 – Leon Edward 'Turbo' Davenport (37) disappeared from Washington, D.C. (US). Leon was a dedicated father, who was passionate about music and his job as a studio engineer. Before he vanished, Leon had some kind of angry confrontation with the mother of his unborn child. He sped off in his car and has not been seen by his loved ones… Link
  • 2012-2017 - Disappearances at Mercer Bay - In the past 5 years, three women have disappeared from Mercer Bay in New Zealand. Mercer Bay is made up of picturesque cliffs and caves along the crystal blue sea. It's not a destination for those faint of heart. Instead, it requires athleticism and willpower. What happened to these three women who disappeared on the rocky trails without a trace? Link
  • August 24, 2015 - Birgitta Silandar (65) disappeared from Helsinki, Finland. Birgitta was a hairstylist, who had owned a small salon in the downtown area for 30 years. She had recently sold her share of the salon to her business partner but worked on and off as a rental chair. On the day she disappeared, Birgitta was last seen at her home by a companion, afterward, she took public transportation… Link
  • October 24, 2015 - Ebby Jane Steppach (18) disappeared from Little Rock, Arkansas (US). Ebby was last seen at her grandmother's home. The next day she called her brother, who she was living with at the time and told him that she was lost but couldn't provide any many more details. Ebby's car was found abandoned a few days later... Link
  • July 4, 2016 – Leila Faulkner (29) disappeared from Pike County, Alabama (US). Leila was last seen outside her home. She had recently moved to her parent’s home after a breakup with her boyfriend. Leila’s family had noticed that her purse, phone, and tablet were missing but all activity and communication seemed to stop that evening… Link
  • September 2016 – Brandi Shontay Brown (23) disappeared from Detroit, Michigan (US). Brandi was a mother and stayed in regular contact with her family. Brandi had recently been injured in a car accident and was treated at a local hospital. She was last seen after she had been discharged from the hospital… Missing and Forgotten
  • January 29, 2017 - $2.5 Million Rare Book Heist - It was like something out of a Mission Impossible film. Picture Tom Cruise rappelling down from the roof of a building, quickly gathering what he needs and then making his way out. This is a lot like what happened in London, England when thieves broke into a warehouse and... Link
  • March 24, 2017 – Bruno Borges (24) disappeared from Rio Branco, Acre (Brazil). Borges was a Psychology major who enjoyed studying philosophy and humanities. A month before his disappearance, Borges had grown increasingly isolated in his room. After he went missing, his family discovered inscriptions on his bedroom walls, encrypted handwritten books and a replica statue of a condemned philosopher…. Link (UPDATE): JorgeAmVF has been keeping track of this story and has provided us with an up to date link. There seems to be more details coming out of this story, and you can find out more at Bruno Borges Updates
UNSOLVED (& UNUSUAL) DEATHS
  • In 1982, people across the world were in a widespread panic over the mysterious poisoning of seven people in Chicago, Illinois (US). Authorities had linked their deaths to an over the counter pain reliever that most people keep in their medicine cabinet... Link
  • April 1982 - Anne Benolken (61) and James Benolken (63) were a married couple who were both found sexually assaulted and stabbed to death in their apartment in Juneau, Alaska (US). Newton Lambert and Emanuel Telles were accused of the crime based on witness statements and circumstantial evidence, but… Murder Alaska
  • January 12, 1984 – Gary Grant Jr. (7) disappeared from Atlantic City, New Jersey (US). On the morning he vanished, Gary had told his mother he had an appointment at 2:30 pm but refused to divulge any details of what it entailed because it was a secret. Gary left his home that day to play with some neighborhood friends at noon and promised he’d return by 4 pm. A few days later, Gary’s body was found… Link
  • February 7, 1987 - Diane Elsroth (23) died suddenly in Yonkers, New York. Diane was a stenographer, who had not been feeling well. Dianne was visiting her boyfriend, and he suggested she take some Extra Strength Tylenol and try to rest. The next day... Link
  • December 12, 1992 - Arnold Archambeau (20) & Ruby Bruguier (19) disappeared from Lake Andes, South Dakota. After a night of drinking, Arnold lost control of his car and crashed into a ditch. Arnold was not alone though, his girlfriend Ruby and her cousin Tracy were passengers in the car. Tracy can recall Arnold had vanished from car immediately after the accident, and she saw Ruby... Link
  • March 23, 2007 – Fort Meyers 8 – When a land surveyor came upon the skulls of two dead bodies in Fort Myers, Florida (US), no one could have predicted that police would end up finding 8 more skeletal remains with very little physical evidence. All of the victims were males between the ages of 18-49, who were believed to been killed between the years 1987-2001. Law enforcement needs the public’s help in identifying... Link
  • January 10, 2010 – Michaela McAreavey (27) was found strangled in a bathtub in a hotel room in Mauritius (an island nation on the Southeast coast of Africa). She was celebrating her honeymoon and spending the day with her husband, but had decided to return to her hotel room alone for some tea. Two hotel workers were… Link
  • April 22, 2016 – The Rhoden Murders – The news of eight people being shot and killed in Pike County, Ohio (US) gripped the nation. The victims of this massacre were all members of the Rhoden family and ranged in ages from 16-44. The killer(s) had viciously gunned down this family but spared the lives of three young children in the homes. Law enforcement believed the killings were premeditated and… Link
  • July 17, 2016 - Aleah Beckerle (19) disappeared from her home in Evansville, Indiana (US). Aleah was disabled and required medical treatment and nursing assistance for her daily activities. Following Aleah's disappearance, her mother has undergone major scrutiny by the public and media for her criminal history and unusual behavior after the disappearance. On March 27, 2017, Aleah’s remains were found in a… Link
THE UNIDENTIFIED (JOHN DOE)

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  • 1947 - Two young brothers were killed in Vancouver, British Columbia (Canada)... Link
  • January 27, 1993 - Ina Jane Doe is the name of an unidentified woman found in Ina, Illinois (US). Ina's severed head was found in Wayne Fitzgerrell State Park, and she was estimated at being between the ages of 30-50. Ina is believed to have suffered from a condition known as torticollis, which can be defined as having an asymmetrical or rather crooked neck or head. There were no other parts of her body recovered.. Link
  • March 2, 1998 - Victim is a 35-45-year-old, white female who was found on the sidewalk in New York, New York (US). Her nude body had been placed in a cabinet and wrapped in two sheets (one white & the other had cartoons). She had short brown hair, shaved at the sides with one inch over the top... Link
BIZARRE, PARANORMAL, & UFOs
  • 1899-1950 – Adam Rainer was diagnosed with dwarfism early in his life, and stood at 3 ft 10 inches at age 21. However, when he reached his later 20s, he began to grow at an alarming rate. He is the only person in recorded history to be a dwarf and a…Link
  • the 1980s - Toynbee Tiles – “For the last three decades, somebody has been secretly leaving strange, cryptic messages in dozens of cities all over the United States and South America.” Who do you think is doing them? What do these messages in the ground mean? Strange and Unusual Mysteries
  • December 20, 1980 – Jean Hilliard (19) was driving home on a cold winter’s night in rural northwestern Minnesota (US) when her car skidded off the road into a ditch. Stranded and alone, Jean decided to leave her car and walk to a nearby friend’s home that was 2 miles away. The temperatures dropped to −22 °F (−30 °C) that night, but Jean persevered and was feet away from her friend’s door when she suddenly collapsed. She spent 6 hours in the snow that night and was frozen solid when her friend discovered her the next morning but…Strange and Unusual Mystery
  • November 22, 1987 - The Max Headroom Broadcast Signal Intrusion - In Chicago, Illinois (US), local television networks were hacked by a group of individuals, who interrupted scheduled programs to broadcast a black screen followed by the tv character Max Headroom moving around. In the next broadcast, the individual dressed as Max sits in front of the camera, then references a local popular sportscaster and makes a number of offhanded remarks. Max Headroom is best known for being the spokesman for New Coke in the 1980s. 🌊🌊 C-c-catch the wave! 🌊🌊.
  • 1997-2002 – Fallon, Nevada (US) is a small farming town with a population of 8,200. The town certainly feels as a refuge for people hoping to escape the pollution and crime of larger cities, but recently health officials and citizens have come to the realization that the town they call home holds the national record for the highest incidence of leukemia in children… Link
  • July 1, 2003 - Raymond Lemme was found dead in a motel room in Valdosta, Georgia (US). Law enforcement called it a suicide, but his friends, family and his work colleagues are not so sure...Ray was an investigator for the Florida Inspector General's office, who was looking into allegations of voter fraud and software manipulation by Republican computer programmer whistleblower (Clint Curtis). Ray's death suspiciously occurred before... Link
  • February 2007 – The Kuykendall family in Washington (US) begins receiving mysterious phone calls from an anonymous number. The caller would threaten and harass them with personal details that were downright chilling and creepy. When the family decided to trace the number, the story takes a strange turn… Phone Call Madness
  • June 2014 – The Westfield Watcher - A couple with three small children in Westfield, New Jersey (US) buy a million dollar dream home. Shortly after moving into their home, the couple begins receiving unusual letters from an individual who calls themselves “The Watcher.” The letters appear to threaten the… Link
THE ACCUSED
  • 1931-1932 – Albert Johnson was a seemingly average, clean-shaven man in his 30s that settled in a cabin in the rugged terrain of Fort McPherson, NWT (Canada). Upon his arrival, the local indigenous populations believed that Johnson was responsible for a series of… Mysteries from the North
  • July 2001 – Kirstin Blaise Lobato (18) was arrested and accused of murdering and mutilating in a man in Las Vegas, Nevada. Kristen had told friends that she had thwarted a potential sexual assault by using a knife to mutilate the attacker’s penis. Months later the dead body of a homeless man was found and…Link
  • June 2002 - Richard Ricci (48) was arrested in Salt Lake City, Utah (US) on a parole violation, nine days after Elisabeth Smart was kidnapped from her home. Ricci had once worked as a handyman in the Smart home and became the chief suspect in the abduction due to his criminal background (despite a lack of evidence to the actual crime). Law enforcement was adamant of his guilt… Link
ARTICLES & OTHER STUFF

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  • Can the badger be to blame for a number of cold cases? Link
  • 'Outside Magazine's article about the murders and disappearances of women along BC's Highway of Tears' Link
  • “Why Noah Went Into the Woods Outside Magazine”: article on the 2012 disappearance of Noah Pippin (30), an Iraq War veteran who was recently found dead in the Montana wilderness. Link
  • “Smiley Face Killer - Mysterious Deaths of Young Men Found in Bodies of Water Discuss
  • Rosamaria Lauria (68) boarded the wrong train and then burned alive... Link
  • “36 years ago, a temporary home became a mausoleum for a South Dakota family.” Link
  • “Disappeared: Kortne Stouffer TV Discussion Thread” Link
ASK THE SLEUTHS
  • “Podcasts that Cover Solved Mysteries.” Discuss
  • “Most Disturbing Unsolved Internet Mystery” Discuss
  • Help me remember a case: around summer 2014, small town, college educated and the pretentious guy gets run off the road and first responders let him die. (Solved) Link
  • “The Missing are often are found in the water in the Boston area. Why is this?” Link
  • Does anyone have information on a trapper who was ambushed in Canada in 1947? Link
  • Long Island Serial Killer: Shannon Gilbert and her relationship to doctor Discuss
  • Help me remember a case: Australia missing person, 10 years ago or so, woman having affair with married man, he was the last person to see her, volatile relationship, he drops her off at a remote location and she vanishes? Discuss
  • “What are similar stolen identity cases (a la Lori Erica Ruff, Joseph Newton Chandler III, etc) or unknown identity cases (Lyle Stevik)?”Discuss
  • 'Why do mushroom hunters seem to frequently find human remains?' Discuss
  • 'What are some of the creepiest unresolved pieces of video footage?' Discuss
  • 'Unresolved mysteries related to children.' Link
  • 'Know of any cases of children being trafficked/sold by their parents to pay debts?' Link
  • Any updates on the men who escaped from Alcatraz? Link
  • California's Good Samaritan Ruse - The attack on lone females in the 1960's and 70's Link
  • “Woman throws herself into train tracks, body nowhere to be found, ‘turns up’ later.” Discuss the story. Link
  • Lesser known unresolved mysteries Discuss
  • When it comes to unresolved murders/kidnappings, why don't the perpetrators give the family closure?Discuss
  • “What mystery do you hope is solved next?” Discuss
  • Does anyone use an FOIA (freedom of information act) request on the cases they're researching? Have you developed any new theories outside of the media's ‘evidence’? Discuss
  • 'Are there always this many (unsolved mystery) resolves in a short time span?' Discuss
  • Do you believe Noreen Gosch was visited by her missing son (Johnny Gosch)? Discuss
  • Found any new crime blogs? Discuss
  • “What are your unpopular opinions when it comes to unresolved cases?” Discuss
  • Super Recent Unresolved Mysteries Discuss
  • Looking for information on Cecile Moch Link
  • Murder convictions with no remains Discuss
  • 'How plausible/implausible is the trope of secret clubs of rich people paying to torture and kill people?' Link
References
The Charley Project
Unresolved Mysteries
Wikipedia
submitted byIamMatlocktoUnresolvedMysteries [link][comments]

England and Wales National Register, 1939 • FamilySearch

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