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ENDS SUNDAY 12 APRIL!
Posts by Family and Community Historical Research Society
Great Ellingham One-Place Study. Image: Photo looking along a village street on a sunny, blue-skied day. On the left is a two-storey, four-bay cottage with white walls and a tiled roof, with further cottages and their gardens further along that side of the street. On the right, part of another building with white walls can be seen in the foreground, with the spire-topped tower of the village church a little further long the street, partially hidden by a couple of trees. One-Place Studies, where family history and local history unite.
The story of Brick Kiln Farm (and those who lived there) continues on Heather Etteridge’s Great Ellingham One-Place Study website, with two posts added so far this month. Some #OnePlaceStudy reading for you on #OnePlaceWednesday!
Do you have a Ten Minute Talk idea to share with us? We're always looking for new stories of local history research!
Find out more: www.balh.org.uk/news-promote...
#WeAreLocalHistory #LocalHistoryForAll
It's not too late to buy a ticket for our conference on 09 May 2026! You don't have to be a member but you may want to join afterwards!
Scottish Family History Month: Back in 1746, The Dress Act forbade the wearing of Highland Dress – and that included tartan. This wasn’t repealed for three decades. It wasn’t until the Victorian era and the Highland Revival that most clan tartans were standardised.
Our next talk is by one of our own Committee members, Lynn Haseldine-Jones, who looks at Woodford in Old Postcards.
Next Monday 9th Feb in the Gloucester Room - 7 for 7:30pm.
Great Ellingham One-Place Study. Image: Photo looking along a village street on a sunny, blue-skied day. On the left is a two-storey, four-bay cottage with white walls and a tiled roof, with further cottages and their gardens further along that side of the street. On the right, part of another building with white walls can be seen in the foreground, with the spire-topped tower of the village church a little further long the street, partially hidden by a couple of trees. One-Place Studies, where family history and local history unite.
On Sat 25th and Sun 26th April, our member Heather Etteridge is staging a free #LocalHistory exhibition relating to her #OnePlaceStudy of Great Ellingham in Norfolk: Every House has a Story – Every Story has a Family!
10am to 4pm each day, at St James's Church, Great Ellingham. #OnePlaceWednesday
One for the diary.
Online Workshop: One-Place Studies with Helen Shields. 2.30pm - 5.00pm, 21 March 2026, via Zoom. £5 per person. Please note that this workshop will not be recorded. Image: Devon Family History Society logo (a tree, surrounded by the Society's name, in a white circle). Part of a series of 50th birthday online workshops. www.devonfhs.org.uk
On March 21st Helen Shields @helenshields.bsky.social will present an online workshop on #OnePlaceStudies as part of a series of workshops celebrating the 50th birthday of Devon #FamilyHistory Society @devonfhs.bsky.social. Open to non-members and just £5 – book your place! #OnePlaceWednesday
We will be attending the East Surrey Fabulous Family History Show on 24 January!
Putting Your Female Ancestors into Context. Throughout the course you will have the opportunity to create and work on a case study of a chosen female ancestor. www.pharostutors.com/putting-your...
Take a look at our family and local history online short courses to see if there's something you'd like to learn: www.pharostutors.com/coursesmains... #Genealogy #FamilyHistory #DistanceLearning #OnlineCourses #GenealogyCourses
Congratulations to our @ihr.bsky.social MA student Amy Walker @amywalkerhist.bsky.social, who completed the course this autumn, on this blog post - giving an insight into her fascinating research into social history and ordinary lives in #Greenwich.
globalmaritimehistory.com/windows_maps...
Our podcasts feature a range of guests on all manner of #FamilyHistory topics. www.exploreyourgenealogy.co.uk/podcast
Are you drawn to family history AND poetry? Do you live near Cheltenham? If so, you’re warmly invited to a reading & a very rare workshop I’m giving on Sun Feb 8, Buzzwords, Exmouth Arms, 167 Bath Road, Cheltenham. GL53 7LX. Workshop 7pm, Reading/Open Mic 8. £5, or £3 unwaged.
Temperance buildings in Letchworth, Hertfordshire which feature in Andrew Davison's new book. 👇
BBC News - Letchworth Garden City pub features in temperance movement book - BBC News
www.bbc.co.uk/news/article...
Don't forget that this is tomorrow!
@xanthh.bsky.social this is the podcast I was telling you about #OnePlaceWednesday
Part of a page in the stock diary of Robert Tait Little, showing details of "Lambs Sold of Exmoor" from August 14th to October 15th, at Worcester, Bridgewater, Taunton and Hagley.
In the collections of Friends of Hoar Oak Cottage are the fully digitised and transcribed stock diaries of Robert Tait Little, Head Shepherd on Exmoor (1873 to 1907). Follow the link to find out more—and contact the Friends if you’d like to see more of these extraordinary diaries. #OnePlaceWednesday
How many have you got in your place Liz?
I’m participating in the @fachrs.bsky.social 2026 mini project on nurses. I’ve made a list of nurses from my #OnePlaceStudy & today I started researching my grandmother’s monthly nurse Elizabeth Brown. What a rollercoaster! 😳
#OnePlaceWednesday
Wow! Two ‘Black Country stocking filler’ book bundles on sale in our online shop! Seven books for just £10.00 means you don’t break the bank making sure everyone gets a little something for Xmas. Ho ho ho! www.blackcountrysociety.com/shop
Just about to record an interview about this for That's TV Solent ...
... and more here:
www.port.ac.uk/news-events-...
Free, but booking essential. Talks cover E. M. Forster and Trees; The First and Second Land Utilisation Surveys of Britain; John Constable and the Stour Valley in Suffolk; and Watermeadows, their operation and variety. Potentially of interest to #OnePlaceStudy and #LocalHistory researchers.
A formal portrait of a group of men and women all wearing ceremonial collars / sashes.
Does anyone know about either Friendly Societies or Temperance Societies in England? This photo was shared on a Facebook group relating to the Forest of Dean in Gloucestershire. My hazy knowledge of clothing and hairstyles for the women made me guess c.1900 +/– ten years.
This podcast on the Black Country Living Museum might be of interest to anyone who lives in or near the West Midlands: is.gd/VVU7Ju
A black and white image of women putting up a Christmas tree.
Look at how festive charity shaped the Christmas experience for Hampshire's poor at a virtual event on 10 December.
Find out more: www.balh.org.uk/event-balh-c...
#WeAreLocalHistory #LocalHistoryForAll
Our talk this month is ‘Christmas at Home’ from the Yorkshire Dialect Society. December 3rd 7:30 at the Quaker Hall New Earswick. Mince pies optional extra! @federationfhs.bsky.social @balhnews.bsky.social @clemhallhistory.bsky.social @ypsyork.bsky.social @cecs-york.bsky.social