ann's burial?

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Rebecca Reid

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Apr 8, 2011, 3:40:25 PM4/8/11
to shield...@googlegroups.com

I am not familiar with the ins and outs of familysearch.org, but I did a search and this record came up for Ann Dunlop. The date we have in new family search right now is not correct.

I cannot find this burial record on any other sites, so it may just have been through the church. I can’t, however, figure out how to view what church she was buried at given this record. I may need to order the film from the family history library, unless you all have a better idea what this really means?

PS Liverpool is just across the water from Birkenhead, about 3 miles.

 

England Deaths and Burials, 1538-1991 for Ann Shields

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Image is not available online.

Name:

Ann Shields

Gender:

Female

Burial Date:

17 Feb 1856

Burial Place:

Liverpool, Lancashire, England

Death Date:

Death Place:

Age:

44

Birth Date:

1812

Birthplace:

Occupation:

Race:

Marital Status:

Spouse's Name:

Father's Name:

Father's Birthplace:

Mother's Name:

Mother's Birthplace:

Indexing Project (Batch) Number:

B03729-0

System Origin:

England-EASy

Source Film Number:

396383

Reference Number:

v/4/3

 

Frank Sorenson

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Apr 9, 2011, 11:04:49 AM4/9/11
to shield...@googlegroups.com, Rebecca Reid
On 04/08/2011 02:40 PM, Rebecca Reid wrote:

I am not familiar with the ins and outs of familysearch.org, but I did a search and this record came up for Ann Dunlop. The date we have in new family search right now is not correct.

I cannot find this burial record on any other sites, so it may just have been through the church. I can’t, however, figure out how to view what church she was buried at given this record. I may need to order the film from the family history library, unless you all have a better idea what this really means?

I've searched, and I don't see a good way to figure this out either.  According to several sites I've found, burial in the graveyard attached to the RC church was common until sometime in the 1850s when Parliament forbade burials within city boundaries.  After that, three large Catholic cemeteries were opened, and other cemeteries had an RC area set aside.

Ford - officially opened in 1855, but no records exist prior to 1859 (a handful of pre-1859 grave markers have been found) - http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~liverpoolindexes/ford.html
Yew Tree -
Ainsdale -


Here's some other info:
http://www.liverpoolhistoryprojects.co.uk/liverpoolrcburials/


I've searched the available records, but haven't found anything.

So yeah, I guess the only way to get more information would be to view the index on that film.


Frank
-- 
Frank Sorenson - KD7TZK
Linux Systems Engineer, DSS Engineering, UBS AG
fr...@tuxrocks.com
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