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The Four Hughs

Posted in Website on May 9th, 2009 by Admin – Be the first to comment

Todays new extract from the Newman family history website comes from the London and Southwark section

A brief biography on four generations who shared the same significant first name. Click here to view the article.

This historic photograph taken on Boxing Day 1910, shows four generations of Newman, each bearing the name Hugh whose lives span a period of a century and a half. The first Newman of our family to be given this name was Hugh Newman (1689-1746), a bricklayer and builder of Epsom. The name passed to several cousins and nephews, who took pride in his success, and provides a link between the family before and after its move to London.

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Joseph Potter’s wealthy relations

Posted in Book, Website on May 6th, 2009 by Admin – Be the first to comment

Todays new extract from the Newman family history website comes from the Joseph Potter section

Joseph Potter recalls an uncle who made his fortune in eighteenth century London as a diamond cutter as well as two of Joseph’s half-brothers who inherited his wealth.

In his Memoirs, recalling the year 1792, Joseph Potter writes:

“We arrived safe in the River Thames and moor’d her abreast of the Tower of London. It came into my mind concerning a rich uncle I had in London which I had never seen, likewise two of my father’s oldest sons of his first wife’s children, Thomas and Ralph Potter …… He died possessed of about one hundred thousand pounds besides all Bell Alley, Coleman Street, belonged to him. He died when I was an infant and my mother alive, but Thomas and Ralph never once wrote to acquaint my mother with his death as the two shared the effects between them….”

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New additions to the website

Posted in Website on May 4th, 2009 by Admin – Be the first to comment

2We here at A Newman Family History are pushing snippets of our website daily, however did you know we are constantly updating the articles and photo gallery.
This week we added two new articles to the London and Southwark  and the Distaff catagories we hope to add more in good time.
We hope to report on these articles in our daily showcase section soon.

As well as website articles and new photos in the gallery we have customised our forums to look a lot nicer, we hope you like the design.
Thank you to all family members who have already signed up and introduced themselves. Hopefully we can become a centre-point for Newman family discussions.

Progress on the book has been good we have now entered editing/proofing stage and hopefully by the end of this month be able to start pushing for release.

Check out all the new additons to the site at http://www.newmanfamilyhistory.com/

This has been a short website update by Trevor the administrator of A Newman Family History.

The Tragic death of a Court Crier

Posted in Website on May 3rd, 2009 by Admin – Be the first to comment

Todays new extract from the Newman family history website comes from the London and Southwark section

Hugh Newman, was Court Crier of the Rolls Court, but met his end at his own hands.

Hugh Newman (1778-1827) was the fourth son of John & Margaret Newman. He was six when the family moved to London. In 1805 he married a young widow, Ann Mathews, who bore him one son before her own early death. Hugh was employed as Porter and Court Keeper (Crier) of the Rolls Court in Chancery Lane, Westminster but lived with his infant son, George, in the same house as his brother-in-law, William Leedle, in Gibraltar Row, St. George’s Fields, Southwark.

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Please check back for more updates and new discoveries posted daily.

The Stickens

Posted in Website on May 1st, 2009 by Admin – Be the first to comment

Todays new extract from the Newman family history website comes from the Distaff & families descended from Newmans section.

Between 1850-1900 the population of Australia rose from 405,000 to 3.7 million, the majority of whom came from emigrants from the British Isles.

Between 1850-1900 the population of Australia rose from 405,000 to 3.7 million, the majority of whom came from emigrants from the British Isles. One of these was Mary Jane Newman (1851-1905), eldest surviving daughter of Samuel John Newman (1826-1886) and Mary Jane Pollard. At the age of 17 she undertook the fourteen week voyage, probably disembarking at Melbourne in March 1868.

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Please check back for more updates and new discoveries posted daily.

Tom the sailor

Posted in Website on April 29th, 2009 by Admin – Be the first to comment

Todays new extract from the Newman family history website comes from the London and Southwark section.
Thomas George Newman (1840-1933), like his grandfather, Joseph Potter, answered the call of the sea to serve as an Able Seaman in the Royal Navy.

Thomas George Newman (1840-1933) was the fourth and youngest son of Samuel Hugh Newman and Elizabeth Myres Potter. As a grandson of Joseph Potter, doubtless he had been told many tales by his grandfather. Bored with school, from which he frequently truanted, and unhappy with living with an aunt who seemed to favour her dogs more than him, he began to think of running away to sea. Twice he set off for Chatham Dockyard but at that time was not tall enough to serve, so was brought back until, finally, having grown to 5 foot 6 inches tall, he was accepted on HMS Waterloo as a Boy 2 Class on 9 August 1857 for ten year’s service.

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Please check back for more updates and new discoveries posted daily.

Joseph Potter’s remarkable career

Posted in Book, Website on April 28th, 2009 by Admin – Be the first to comment

Joseph Potter was not only an important link between the older generation of Newmans and their later descendants, but also a remarkable character himself.

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Ship Yard, Strand & the Newmans

Posted in Website on April 24th, 2009 by Admin – Be the first to comment

Here is an extract from our new website article on London in the 1840s to read more please click here.

Between 1843-1857 Samuel Hugh Newman and his family, lived at various addresses in Ship Yard, Strand. Ship Yard took its name from the Ship Tavern, which stood at the south corner, just at the east end of Butcher’s Row (which fronted the Strand to the rear of St. Clement Dane’s Church). To the left, marking the junction of Strand and Fleet Street, stood the historic Temple Bar. From the Strand, Ship Yard was barely visible as it was entered through a narrow archway beneath 246 Strand, the double-fronted Temple House, then occupied by Griffiths, Linen Draper. Ship Yard’s narrow entry gave on to a tiny court on the right before turning sharply to the left and opening out into a street almost as wide as Butcher’s Row itself. Its importance was increased, however, by the fact that it wasn’t a cul-de-sac but debouched into Little Shear or Shire Lane (a thoroughfare joining Boswell Court on the west with Shire Lane on the east).

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Extract from the will of Robert Newman 1682

Posted in Website on April 22nd, 2009 by Admin – Be the first to comment

Here is an transcribed extract from the last will and testiment of Robert Newman 1682, a photo of the original document can be found by following the read more link

In the name of God Amen the thirtieth Day of August In foure and thirtieth years of the Reigne of our Souv[er)aigne Lord Charles the Second By the grace of God of England Scotland France & Ireland King Defender of the Faith &c Anno Dom[ini] 1682. I Robert Newman of Dorking in the County of Surrey gent[leman] being sickly and diseased in Body But of Sound mind & good memory praised be the Lord therefore doe make and declare this my last will and testament And first and principally I will and bequeath my soule into the hands of Almighty God my creator trusting by the only Meritts Death and passion of my Deere and only Saviour and Redeemer Jesus Christ to have free and full pardon and remission for all my sins And to enjoy eternal happiness with those that are forever Blessed in the kingdom of heaven And I will my Body to the Earth from whence it was derived to be decently and Christianly buried at the discretion of my Executors hereafter named….. Read more

To view the rest of this document click here to go to the newman family history website


A Newman Family History website opens

Posted in Book, Forums, Social, Website on April 21st, 2009 by Admin – Be the first to comment

The story of nations is composed of millions of personal family histories and the launch of this Newman Family History website, following only a couple of weeks after the opening of our dedicated Forum, is a further step towards making the research on this particular Newman Family available online to all those with interested. At the present we are anticipating the detailed research in book form to be ready for the printers by the end of May, so we planning a June publication date.

This will be a significant step in almost half a century of gathering material relating to this family. Now seems to be an appropriate occasion to pay tribute to two of my kinsmen, whom sadly I never met, but whose work – quite independent of my own – will have been brought to completion. Bertha Voysey (1915-1996) and Leonard Townsend (1915-2001) were first cousins, whose mothers were two daughters of Thomas George Newman (1840-1933). Following their respective retirements, they embarked on their genealogical adventure, Bertha having the advantage of living close to the National Archives at Kew but Leonard making good use of early computerisation to collate data. Through their efforts much material has been preserved which otherwise would almost certainly have been lost.

The website will continue to be updated and, through its Forum, we intend to continue the task of unravelling and recording one family’s past.
Full can be found at http://newmanfamilyhistory.com
Visit our community forums at http://newmanfamilyhistory.com/forums

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