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<title>Forest of Dean FHT  Forum - Littledean Woodside - Joseph TINGLE of Flaxley</title>
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<title>Littledean Woodside - Joseph TINGLE of Flaxley (reply)</title>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hi Donna,<br />
I'm glad you enjoyed my latest ramblings, and especially Harry's letter.  <br />
His old family home in Cinderford is 3/4 of the way up Dockham Road, at the junction of St Annals road.  You probably already know that in the early days of Cinderford, c1850ish when still a relatively &quot;new&quot; town, and sometimes still known as Bilson Woodside, it had grown from the earlier settlements around the industrial areas such as Bilson down in the valley to the west, and the likes of Dockham and St Annals on the higher eastern ridge, where the iron mines were operating. I suspect you've already seen this excellent history of town (which also mentions the Royal Oak). <br />
<a href="https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/glos/vol5/pp300-325#h3-s2">https://www.british-history.ac.uk/vch/glos/vol5/pp300-325#h3-s2</a></p>
<p>The earliest (online) OS map for the area c1879 still shows the built-up places of Dockham and Littledean Hill to be slightly remote from the rest of the town, and the various mines and pubs are easily seen when you zoom into the central portion. <br />
<a href="https://maps.nls.uk/view/101453397">https://maps.nls.uk/view/101453397</a></p>
<p>Sadly I don't recall ever going into the Royal Oak, although we certainly biked past it umpteen times as kids enroute from Harry's, up Dockham Road, left onto Littledean Hill Road and on north past Latimer Lodge towards Edgehills etc. It was the nearest pub to Harry's home, and less busy than those down in the town centre, so ideal for a discrete teenage pint. In later years (80s and 90s) I occasionally visited the nearby Royal Foresters pub, a bit of a hike but it was near the family homes of other lifelong friends who'd moved away for college and then work, so we'd meet-up especially during Christmastimes when we'd returned home to visit parents - I think my last time there was my niece's engagement party c2011. Sadly both pubs are long gone now, like the vast majority of old pubs across the UK. I recall abt 1980 we did a quick list of all the town's current drinking places, mainly pubs but also social clubs and sports clubs, we were surprised to find well over 20 ! - I shudder to think how few there are left now...   Like you I have ancestors with long careers in local pubs and I mourn the loss of these important focal points for community and business, they were much more than just the drinking places of nowadays. <br />
In case you didn't know, the history of the Royal Oak and other local pubs are detailed in Geoff Sandals' great website.<br />
<a href="https://www.gloucestershirepubs.co.uk/pubs/royal-oak-littledean-hill-road-cinderford/">https://www.gloucestershirepubs.co.uk/pubs/royal-oak-littledean-hill-road-cinderford/</a></p>
<p><br />
I'm sorry to learn your husband is in care, I know how difficult that can be for everyone, but as you say your daily visits and chats are surely of great benefit to you both as you recall your lives and times together. I know I speak for all members of this forum that we are pleased to be helping a little in this respect, and wish him well.</p>
<p>Best wishes to you both, Jeff.</p>
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<link>https://forum.forest-of-dean.net/index.php?id=54393</link>
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<pubDate>Sun, 03 Mar 2024 20:02:39 +0000</pubDate>
<category>General</category><dc:creator>Jefff</dc:creator>
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<title>Littledean Woodside - Joseph TINGLE of Flaxley (reply)</title>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Richard's letter was fun to read and I thank you for sharing the link. He even recalled having a drink at the Royal Oak on Littledean Hill which my ancestor operated from 1838 to 1852 so long before Richard's time! Memories are such fun to share and so very much a part of our history. My husband is now in care and I visit him every day and every day we share memories. We are far more honest about our feelings now than at the time of the memory and we have the benefit of knowing the outcome and that together we made it through the difficult times. We both look forward to sharing our memories on my visits.</p>
<p>The Forest of Dean Family History Trust is an amazing website, so much information and the ability to ask queries and get such helpful answers from locals. I have thoroughly enjoyed this last week of exchanges and as a result, I've learned so much more about where my Tingle ancestors worked and lived.</p>
<p>Thank you.<br />
Donna</p>
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<link>https://forum.forest-of-dean.net/index.php?id=54392</link>
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<pubDate>Wed, 28 Feb 2024 17:55:53 +0000</pubDate>
<category>General</category><dc:creator>Bradley Tingle</dc:creator>
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<title>Littledean Woodside - Georges Folly (reply)</title>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>My goodness! That is so very interesting and new information for me. Thank you.<br />
Donna</p>
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<link>https://forum.forest-of-dean.net/index.php?id=54391</link>
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<pubDate>Wed, 28 Feb 2024 17:39:57 +0000</pubDate>
<category>General</category><dc:creator>Bradley Tingle</dc:creator>
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<title>Littledean Woodside - Joseph TINGLE of Flaxley (reply)</title>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<blockquote><p>Jeff, my sons are probably closer to your age and would have loved to explore the way you were able to in the Forest of Dean. In earlier times you left on your bike to explore and came home for supper and no one worried about you. I think they had too much else to do to be worrying about their kinds in relative safety. </p>
</blockquote><p>Hi again Donna, <br />
I'm glad my ramblings were of interest. Yes we had great times, and yes we were allowed a degree of freedom that modern parents don't like to allow. Then again, we were also firmly schooled on when we HAD to be back home, on good behaviour and looking-out for each other if things got tricky. We also knew that any adults were allowed to deal with us very firmly and immediately if we ever overstepped the mark, and we'd get it all again from our fathers when we got home. And let's not be naive - yes there were some &quot;odd&quot; and even dangerous people around in those days, just as there are now, and our parents probably knew this, but unlike nowadays the newspapers and media wern't full of scaremongering tales, and we were allowed and encouraged to learn by the school of hard knocks. A real worry for our parents were the numerous ponds around the Forest, old mine workings with scrap metal and old steel cables etc dumped in them, but hidden under the calm cool inviting water. Almost every year the papers reported on another local kid drowning after getting tangled in the rubbish or weeds, so we were lectured to not swim in the ponds we fished in, altho' we did swim in the Wye at the Biblins. I remember thinking about all these worries when my son got his first proper bike c2005; sadly we felt unwilling to let him go out on it alone (his closest school mates lived a mile, not yards, away, modern road traffic levels are far worse, and even tho' we lived in a reasonably nice area of a town on the very edge of greater London, with countryside only two mile west, and a large green park next to our house, ??? - different times sadly).  </p>
<p>Finally, I'm sure you already know that this wonderful website is packed full of so many more sources of information than &quot;just&quot; the forum and PRs - just browse thro' the many and various headings under the menu along the top of the home page, you may find good material for your book. For example under &quot;Documents and Articles&quot; you might eventually find this letter my Mum saw in the local paper back in 2012, she was still living in my childhood home in Cinderford up until her passing a few years ago.  The article was written by one of my best mates in the 60s and 70s; we were both born in '62, our mother's met thro the Church, and together we went thro' primary school, Sunday School, Cub scouts, jumble sales and fetes, umpteen birthday parties, etc etc. Sadly we didn't attend the same secondary school, and then lost contact completely while following our own careers away from the Forest. So it was a real pleasure for me to read the letter back in 2012, and learn that after all those years Rich &quot;Harry&quot; Harris, a bit of a tough guy compared to me as kids, yet 30 years later he still cherished all the same lovely memories and respect for the Forest that I'd gained during our shared childhoods.   <br />
After submitting the letter into this site, I'm pleased to say that, with some help from Slowhands, Harry and I are reunited again now. To many casual observers modern-day Cinderford is a scruffy little town, rather tired now compared to all the busy shops and businesses of our childhood, but the Forest people are still as warm and friendly and that counts much more than bricks and mortar. I hope you like Harry's letter, despite the heading it relates to the 70s more than the 60s, and for what it's worth I can also remember his Sunday paper round as I covered for him during his summer holidays in Cornwall - those Sunday broadsheets were heavy, especially the posh Times and Telegraphs with colour supplements, and I didn't get to see the good tippers but I soon got to know the good and notsogood dogs (small Jack Russell terriers were far scarier than the big black Alsation). And after a long morning's toil in the sun, we'd then spend our few quid wages on comics and sweets at the same newsagents who'd employed us, haha. <br />
On the subject of our over-worked bikes, I recall when Harry introduced us to a new game, leading us cycling along the bed of Blackpool brook in perhaps 6 inches of water. Sadly he had the best, newest, bike of us all, in retrospect probably the most fragile one too, and it was his lightweight Coventry Eagle that suffered headset bearing damage on hitting a rather large submerged rock; I recall us all walking back home with him and his broken steed, he knew full well what was in store from his normally mild and gentle and usually smiling father... yes great times, but not without some tears too.</p>
<p>Wishing you all the very best with your book.</p>
<p>Best regards, Jeff.</p>
<p><a href="https://forest-of-dean.net/downloads/Stories_Articles/Cinderford%20Childhood%20Memories%20of%20the%2060%27s.pdf">https://forest-of-dean.net/downloads/Stories_Articles/Cinderford%20Childhood%20Memories...</a></p>
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<pubDate>Wed, 28 Feb 2024 01:14:53 +0000</pubDate>
<category>General</category><dc:creator>Jefff</dc:creator>
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<title>Littledean Woodside - Georges Folly (reply)</title>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>HI</p>
<p>Littledean Hill area is a mile due south of the Tingle Level -  they lived and worked close by<br />
(marked top middle of map referenced below)</p>
<p>Regulator Colliery, including Regulator, Waterloo, Oak and George's Folly Gales<br />
Map ref SO 6520 1480       George's Folly</p>
<p><a href="https://maps.nls.uk/view/101453391">https://maps.nls.uk/view/101453391</a><br />
top left hand corner Hollyhill Wood and Tormentor colliery are marked - Georges Folly is probably the shaft nearest the edge of the map.</p>
<p><a href="https://maps.nls.uk/view/109725355">https://maps.nls.uk/view/109725355</a>  Tormeadow colliery marked upper right corner, again old shaft workings to the north is the area where Georges Folly was , on the edge of Holly Hill inclosure.</p>
<p>Today this is Upper Bilson / Bilson Green part of Cinderford, where Valley rd heads toward Steam Mills - area also known as Whimsey after the colliery there.</p>
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<pubDate>Tue, 27 Feb 2024 23:22:32 +0000</pubDate>
<category>General</category><dc:creator>slowhands</dc:creator>
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<title>Intestate Administration (reply)</title>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I think you are spot on. Unfortunately there isn't a copy of the inventory but I think it was to formally transfer Tingle's Level aka Tingle's Pit to the younger Tingles. <br />
Thank you.<br />
Donna</p>
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<link>https://forum.forest-of-dean.net/index.php?id=54388</link>
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<pubDate>Tue, 27 Feb 2024 19:01:11 +0000</pubDate>
<category>General</category><dc:creator>Bradley Tingle</dc:creator>
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<title>Littledean Woodside - Joseph TINGLE of Flaxley (reply)</title>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Thanks for the links, Jeff and Slowhands. I'd have had great difficulty finding the iron pit on my own. I'm amazed at all the paths and trails in the Forest. </p>
<p>On George Tingle's application as a Free Miner he referenced George's Folley as being the mine he was working on in 1838. I imagine with that name it didn't produce much except hard work. I hope it was closer to home than Tingle's pit seems to be.</p>
<p>Jeff, my sons are probably closer to your age and would have loved to explore the way you were able to in the Forest of Dean. In earlier times you left on your bike to explore and came home for supper and no one worried about you. I think they had too much else to do to be worrying about their kinds in relative safety. </p>
<p>I've decided, because it is unique to the Forest of Dean, that I will have an addendum to the family history that I'm writing devoted to explaining the Free Miner system and about Tingle's Level aka Tingle's pit with a snip of the map showing its location. I'm thinking in a self-published family history book that will not be sold outside the family I'm probably ok with a snip of the OS map page.</p>
<p>George Tingle lived at Littledean Hill. Roughly how far away would this pit have been? </p>
<p>Slowhands and Jeff, I can't thank you enough for helping me with this project. <br />
Donna</p>
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<link>https://forum.forest-of-dean.net/index.php?id=54387</link>
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<pubDate>Tue, 27 Feb 2024 18:46:21 +0000</pubDate>
<category>General</category><dc:creator>Bradley Tingle</dc:creator>
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<title>Littledean Woodside - Joseph TINGLE of Flaxley (reply)</title>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hi Donna,<br />
you're very welcome for my interest, most enjoyable for me to try to help out. Apologies for perhaps repeating what you already knew, I hadn't realised you'd already and quite literally trodden this ground in the past, and with Ian and Dave you most definitely had the right people to show you around !. </p>
<p>Here's an earlier edition of the map Slowhands posted, from about 1880, and as you say at that time it was labelled as Pingle's Pit. <br />
<a href="https://maps.nls.uk/view/101453373">https://maps.nls.uk/view/101453373</a></p>
<p>For the next edition from 1901 they'd corrected their error.<br />
<a href="https://maps.nls.uk/view/101453370">https://maps.nls.uk/view/101453370</a></p>
<p>As kids in the 70s we spent most of our school holidays &quot;muckin about&quot; in the Forest around Cinderford, sometimes cycling south thro' Soudley to the Middleridge area around Blackpool Brook and ponds, or more west to Cannop ponds and Speech House woods.  If it wasn't the fishing season, or was just too hot and sunny for such things, we'd cycle up and into the denser conifer woods in the Edgehills / Collafield area. We spent long summer days hidden away in the shade, building camps and suchlike, and always on the lookout for the old mine shafts which thankfully were pretty-well sealed, not that we were adventurous or daft enough to try to enter them.  However we did try dislodging stones from the top of the sheer faces of the disused quarries at Edgehills, a &quot;game&quot; that terrified me,  or clambering on the old buildings and fishing the pit ponds at Fairplay to the north. We also visited the radio mast that you saw, although if my memory serves me right (I've not lived in the Dean for 40 years now), in those days it was a Fire lookout tower, before the age of telecomms. <br />
I just wish we'd had access to these great old maps, would have saved us getting lost a few times !  </p>
<p>Thanks again to you Donna for helping take me back to these great days, we were so very lucky having such a wonderful playground on our doorstep. </p>
<p>atb J.</p>
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<pubDate>Mon, 26 Feb 2024 22:04:46 +0000</pubDate>
<category>General</category><dc:creator>Jefff</dc:creator>
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<title>Tingle working Edgehills Inclosure (reply)</title>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Thank you. I would never have found it on that series of maps without your help.<br />
Donna</p>
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<pubDate>Mon, 26 Feb 2024 18:38:31 +0000</pubDate>
<category>General</category><dc:creator>Bradley Tingle</dc:creator>
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<title>Tingle working Edgehills Inclosure (reply)</title>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a href="https://maps.nls.uk/view/109725337">https://maps.nls.uk/view/109725337</a><br />
although not marked pretty sure the land feature 964 is there where you describe in the top left quadrant above the Lodge.</p>
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<pubDate>Mon, 26 Feb 2024 12:26:02 +0000</pubDate>
<category>General</category><dc:creator>slowhands</dc:creator>
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<title>Intestate Administration (reply)</title>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hi so my interpretation is that Grandfather dies without a formal will (intestate) - the surviving family share the estate - his wife if she was alive and sons etc.   Life carries on, as far as the family are concerned they have done the &quot;right&quot; thing...</p>
<p>at some point  there is a family dispute or maybe an asset that was &quot;inherited&quot; needs to be sold.</p>
<p>At this point the ownership is still recorded as the deceased grandfather, and to &quot;put this right&quot; or sell the asset legally the Grandfather's estate needs to be &quot;Administered&quot;.</p>
<p>The transcript I think hints that an audit of what was Grandfathers was drawn up so that the correct legal process could be followed - many years behind </p>
<p>I am imagining the list being mainly disputed items, or ones that needed ownership transferred.</p>
<p>the 20 pounds probably represents the point at which Tax would be due for estates larger than £20</p>
<p>hope this helps</p>
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<pubDate>Mon, 26 Feb 2024 12:21:31 +0000</pubDate>
<category>General</category><dc:creator>slowhands</dc:creator>
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<title>Littledean Woodside - Joseph TINGLE of Flaxley (reply)</title>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Thank you, Jeff. I will investigate the links and appreciate your interest.</p>
<p>Years ago, when on a trip to the area Ian Pope took my cousin and I to the remains of Tingle's Level. It was marked on the 6&quot; Map Gloucester  31NE (1927), 100 yards north of the large radio mast. It lies a quarter of a mile NNW of Edgehills Lodge. It was sold in 1856 (a few years after the death of George Tingle) and again in 1873 and surrendered back to the Crown in 1888. If I recall correctly it was labelled on the map as Pringle's or something similar.  I was there again in 2017 with yet another cousin with thanks to David Tuffley who helped us find it. </p>
<p>I love this FOD site for helping us from afar with your local knowledge. I thank all who have responded. </p>
<p>Now to dig further with this extra knowledge. </p>
<p>Donna</p>
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<pubDate>Sun, 25 Feb 2024 21:32:31 +0000</pubDate>
<category>General</category><dc:creator>Bradley Tingle</dc:creator>
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<title>Littledean Woodside - Joseph TINGLE of Flaxley (reply)</title>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<blockquote><p>Joseph Tingle's application as a Freeminer gives his date of birth as 27 Nov 1769 at Little Dean Hill but his baptism shows him being baptised 16 Feb 1773 at Little Dean.  He married Jane Cooper of Flaxley 19 Dec 1796. In 1838 (on his Free Miner application) he stated that he was a collier who worked at Middleridge which is interesting. So, with your help I think we've figured out how my Tingle family related to the foundry Tingle family and I'm grateful for your help.</p>
<p>I'm beginning to think that the dates of birth given on the Free Miner Applications are best guesses and not necessarily accurate even within years of birth.</p>
</blockquote><p>Hi again Donna,<br />
apologies for intruding into your question to Slowhands, hopefully neither of you mind too much.<br />
I just wanted to say I agree with your view that the dates of birth on Free Miner Applications are likely to vary from reality.  This was, of course, a time when literacy levels amongst the general public such as our ancestors wasn't high - they'd not been formally educated, they didn't keep overly accurate records about such things as birthdays, or perhaps care much about dates at all; their daily lives were dictated by their local situation regarding the seasons, the cycles of the sun and moon, the prevailing weather and the local Church clock (which was often wrong even compared to Greenwich Mean Time, which was only introduced across the UK with the spread of railway networks c1850, and as late as 1880 hadn't been fully achieved throughout the UK). <br />
Also, don't be concerned that Joseph wasn't baptised until three years after his birth, this forum has seen many examples of much later baptisms, for various reasons, such as the family being non-Conformists as Slowhands mentioned was the case here. The birthdate obtained from the 1851 census confirms his birth was in 1769, and this is more accurate a reference than can be inferred from the less-precise 1841 census.<br />
Also, and I'm not suggesting it's relevant here, to qualify to be a Freeminer he had to be at least 21 years old - I can easily imagine there being some men in those times who would &quot;adjust&quot; their birthdates to alllow them to qualify, in the same way that ages quoted at a marriage ceremony sometimes differed from reality.</p>
<p>For more info about the Freeminers I suggest you see this website, and perhaps contact Jonathan Wright for his view on any queries you might have.  For many centuries the Freeminers organisation was an integral and important body regarding the governance of the Forest and it's mining rights, so it was right and proper that they strictly controlled applications to join their membership.<br />
<a href="https://www.forestfreeminers.org/">https://www.forestfreeminers.org/</a> </p>
<p><br />
Finally, the Middleridge location you mention is a little way from the usual Cinderford(aka Bilson Woodside) / Littledean Hill / Edge Hills / Haywood location we've previously associated with the Tingles (all part of the East Dean township admin district).  Centuries ago the Forest was divided into several Inclosures for admin purposes, one of them is still called Middleridge, it's only about a mile and a half southwest of East Dean.  <br />
<a href="https://getoutside.ordnancesurvey.co.uk/local/middleridge-inclosure-forest-of-dean">https://getoutside.ordnancesurvey.co.uk/local/middleridge-inclosure-forest-of-dean</a></p>
<p>In more recent times there doesn't appear to have been much mining in that area (of coal I mean, def not iron stone). I cannot find any evidence online of a pit there being operated by the Tingles, but that may just be because most of the available records relate to the latter half of the 1800s and afterwards, long after most of the small pits had been worked-out, abandoned, or swallowed-up underground by one of the bigger concerns (the underground roads to the seams could spread for miles from the pithead). Of the latter big concerns the nearest to Middleridge that I can think of was the New Fancy pit. <br />
Apologies if I've already mentioned this website to you in the past, but detailed history of many of the Dean's coal mines (not iron) are in this excellent site created by Ian Pope, a Cinderford historian like his father Alec. To navigate the numerous pages of the site, click on the headgear emblem at base of each page.<br />
<a href="https://lightmoor.co.uk/forestcoal/Coalopen.html">https://lightmoor.co.uk/forestcoal/Coalopen.html</a></p>
<p>From this website, this 1894 map of the Forest shows the principal coal pits (black blobs) and iron pits (brown blobs). <br />
<a href="https://lightmoor.co.uk/forestcoal/Overviewmap.html">https://lightmoor.co.uk/forestcoal/Overviewmap.html</a><br />
Clicking on each section will enlarge it, this is the one relevant to your family, you can see &quot;Tingles&quot; iron pit at top right hand corner on the ridge up above Cinderford, and if you follow the blue railway line southwest can find the New Fancy etc coal pits.<br />
<a href="https://lightmoor.co.uk/forestcoal/EastDean.html">https://lightmoor.co.uk/forestcoal/EastDean.html</a></p>
<p><br />
Hope this helps, I look forward with interest to Slowhands' reply regarding your admin document.</p>
<p>J</p>
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<pubDate>Sun, 25 Feb 2024 17:18:13 +0000</pubDate>
<category>General</category><dc:creator>Jefff</dc:creator>
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<title>Littledean Woodside - Joseph TINGLE of Flaxley (reply)</title>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Slowhands, I do have Joseph Tingle in my database which gives me the honour of being his 2nd cousin 5x removed. He is the son of William Tingle and Elizabeth Probert and the grandson of Robert Tingle and Joannah Haynes and great grandson of James Tingle and Ann(a) Rock which is where I connect to this family. Joseph Tingle's application as a Freeminer gives his date of birth as 27 Nov 1769 at Little Dean Hill but his baptism shows him being baptised 16 Feb 1773 at Little Dean.  He married Jane Cooper of Flaxley 19 Dec 1796. In 1838 (on his Free Miner application) he stated that he was a collier who worked at Middleridge which is interesting. So, with your help I think we've figured out how my Tingle family related to the foundry Tingle family and I'm grateful for your help.</p>
<p>I'm beginning to think that the dates of birth given on the Free Miner Applications are best guesses and not necessarily accurate even within years of birth.</p>
<p>I suspect you are the one who can answer a question I've had concerning this Tingle family and why in 1834 his descendants would have to do an inventory regarding their grandfather's death in 1789. Was it to do with the application form as a Free Miner and perhaps to prove the connection to the Tingle's Level Mine? I'm referring to this administration document:</p>
<p>17th July 1834, Admon Robert TINGLE d. 1789<br />
On which day appeared personally Joseph Tingle of Littledean Woodside in the County and Diocese of Gloucester coal miner, deceased and alleged upon oath that Robert Tingle late of the same place coal miner deceased died in the year 1789 Intestate leaving goods chattels and credits wholly within the Diocease of Gloucester Under the value of Twenty pounds - That he the said Joseph Tingle is the natural and lawful grandson the son of a son and next of kin of the said deceased - That he will well and faithfully administer the goods chattels and credits of the said deceased and render an Inventory and Account etc.</p>
<p>Wherefore he prayed that Letters of Administration of all and singular the goods chattels and credits of the said deceased might be granted and committed to him upon giving such good and sufficient security as in this behalf is required and so forth.</p>
<p>Set Admon ? as prayed Security having been given.<br />
(illegible signature) Principal ?<br />
Sworn under 20 GBP Before me<br />
All which I attest<br />
Tho. Hall joint Dep. Regr.</p>
<p>The grandson had to create an inventory over 50 years after his grandfather's death. Why?</p>
<p>Isn't family history research interesting!<br />
Donna</p>
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<link>https://forum.forest-of-dean.net/index.php?id=54372</link>
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<pubDate>Sat, 24 Feb 2024 17:26:49 +0000</pubDate>
<category>General</category><dc:creator>Bradley Tingle</dc:creator>
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<title>Littledean Woodside - Joseph TINGLE of Flaxley (reply)</title>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Instinct (no evidence yet) says this is the prior generation patriach - he is living close to other Tingle family units and he is from Flaxley</p>
<p><br />
 yes these Tingles appear to be non conformist on the whole at least in mid 1800's onwards</p>
<p><br />
Year: 1796<br />
Month: Dec<br />
Day: 19<br />
Grooms_Surname: TINGLE<br />
Grooms_Forenames: Joseph<br />
Grooms_Age: <br />
Groom_Condition: <br />
Grooms_Occupation: <br />
Grooms_Residence: Flaxley<br />
Grooms_Fathers_Surname: <br />
Grooms_Fathers_Forenames: <br />
Grooms_Fathers_Occupation: <br />
Brides_Surname: COOPER<br />
Brides_Forenames: Jane<br />
Brides_Age: <br />
Brides_Condition: <br />
Brides_Occupation: <br />
Brides_Residence: Flaxley<br />
Brides_Fathers_Surname: <br />
Brides_Fathers_Forenames: <br />
Brides_Fathers_Occupation: <br />
Licence_or_Banns: Banns<br />
Date_of_Banns: <br />
Signature_or_Mark: Both mark<br />
Witness_1: Chas Rose<br />
Witness_2: Mark of James Tingle<br />
Other_Witnesses: <br />
Officiating_Minister: Henry Southouse<br />
Event: Marriage<br />
Memoranda: <br />
Notes: <br />
Register_Reference: P145 IN 1/5<br />
Page_Number: 11<br />
Parish_Chapel: Flaxley</p>
<p>some offspring</p>
<p>1797 TINGLE Betty Joseph Jane Littledean <br />
1800 TINGLE William Joseph Jane Littledean <br />
1802 TINGLE Joseph Joseth Jane Littledean <br />
1807 TINGLE James Joseph Jane Littledean <br />
1812 TINGLE Jane Joseph Jane Littledean <br />
<span style="color:#090;">1819 TINGLE Sarah</span> Joseph Jane Drybrook</p>
<p>1841 Little dean Woodside <br />
Joseph Tingle Male 70 1771 Gloucestershire, England Collier</p>
<p>1851 Woodside <br />
Thomas Ford Head Married Male 31 1820 Sawyer Gloucestershire, England<br />
<span style="color:#060;">Sarah Ford </span>Wife Married Female 31 <span style="color:#090;">1820</span> - East Dean, Gloucestershire, England<br />
Miriam Ford Daughter - Female 10 1841 Scholar at home East Dean, Gloucestershire, England<br />
Joseph Tingle Father-in-law Widower Male 82 1769 Haullier Flaxley, Gloucestershire, England</p>
<p><br />
Deaths Jun 1860   (&gt;99%)<br />
TINGLE  Joseph    Westbury S  6a 129</p>
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<pubDate>Sat, 24 Feb 2024 13:56:47 +0000</pubDate>
<category>General</category><dc:creator>slowhands</dc:creator>
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<title>Hope Foundry and Engineering Works,Bilson  Alfred ElamTINGLE (reply)</title>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>?</p>
<p>Do you search:  GOOGLE BOOKS (on line).</p>
<p>Had a Quick Look for Tingle Freeminers.</p>
<p><br />
The Award as to Iron Miners <br />
Of the<br />
Dean Forest Mining Commissioners of 1838 <br />
Dated 20 July 1841</p>
<p>Etc.</p>
<p>George Tingle, of Little Dean Hill in the said county of Gloucester.<br />
Robert Tingle, of the same hill,<br />
William Tingle of Little Dean Woodside, in the said County.<br />
and Joseph Hale, near Latimer Lodge, in the said Forest,<br />
(as Free Miners, to Tingle’s Level).</p>
<p>……</p>
<p>Just had a Quick Look also on the list of Forest of Dean Freeminers Register on this website.</p>
<p>Family names are very useful.</p>
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<link>https://forum.forest-of-dean.net/index.php?id=54370</link>
<guid>https://forum.forest-of-dean.net/index.php?id=54370</guid>
<pubDate>Fri, 23 Feb 2024 20:45:13 +0000</pubDate>
<category>General</category><dc:creator>MPGriffiths</dc:creator>
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<title>Hope Foundry and Engineering Works,Bilson  Alfred ElamTINGLE (reply)</title>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Thank you Slowhands. I've spent four hours today researching the foundry Tingle family. </p>
<p>I can take the Foundry Tingle family back to John Tingle who married Sophia HARRIS in 1828 in Flaxley. That John TINGLE died 6 January 1875 at the Gloucester County Lunatic Asylum, late of Woodside Road, Flaxley. The grand sum of 5 GBP went to his widow Sophia Tingle of Flaxley. John was an Iron Miner in 1861 and a coal miner in 1851. His age on census records would have him born 1807/08/09. I can find no baptism for him in the FOD anywhere (I also looked on Ancestry and FindmyPast and FamilySearch). I suspect the family were non-conformist.</p>
<p>There was a John TINGLE who applied to be a Free Miner in the FOD who stated that he was born at Little Deans Hill on 12 August 1810 and that he was residing at Little Dean's Woodside in 1838. There is a John &amp; Sophia Tingle living at Littledean Woodside in 1841 with the correct children to match the Foundry family. </p>
<p>Would it be a stretch to think that the Free Miner who said he was born in 1810 be the same man who was married to Sophia HARRIS in 1828 in Flaxley? If yes, both the bride and groom would have required parental consent and that wasn't mentioned on the marriage registration (image now on Ancestry). </p>
<p>I have hit a brick wall at John Tingle b. abt 1808, married Sophia Harris 1828 at Flaxley and died 6 Jan 1875. So far he doesn't connect with my TINGLE family but they lived close to each other. I sure appreciate all the work that you did to take me down that avenue of research. I also appreciate the local FOD knowledge that you have. It sure helps us whose family left 150 years ago. </p>
<p>Donna</p>
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<guid>https://forum.forest-of-dean.net/index.php?id=54369</guid>
<pubDate>Fri, 23 Feb 2024 20:07:08 +0000</pubDate>
<category>General</category><dc:creator>Bradley Tingle</dc:creator>
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<title>Hope Foundry and Engineering Works,Bilson  Alfred ElamTINGLE (reply)</title>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Year: 1828<br />
Month: Dec<br />
Day: 23<br />
Grooms_Surname: TINGLE<br />
Grooms_Forenames: John<br />
Grooms_Age: <br />
Groom_Condition: [not stated]<br />
Grooms_Occupation: <br />
Grooms_Residence: Hund[re]d of St. Briavels<br />
Grooms_Fathers_Surname: <br />
Grooms_Fathers_Forenames: <br />
Grooms_Fathers_Occupation: <br />
Brides_Surname: HARRIS<br />
Brides_Forenames: Sophia<br />
Brides_Age: <br />
Brides_Condition: [not stated]<br />
Brides_Occupation: <br />
Brides_Residence: Hund[re]d of St. Briavels<br />
Brides_Fathers_Surname: <br />
Brides_Fathers_Forenames: <br />
Brides_Fathers_Occupation: <br />
Licence_or_Banns: Banns<br />
Date_of_Banns: <br />
Signature_or_Mark: Both mark<br />
Witness_1: Mark of James Harris<br />
Witness_2: Mark of Elizabeth Harris<br />
Other_Witnesses: <br />
Officiating_Minister: W[illia]m. Crawley Olff[iciating] Miner[ister]<br />
Event: Marriage<br />
Memoranda: <br />
Notes: <br />
Register_Reference: P145 in 1/8<br />
Page_Number: 9<br />
Parish_Chapel: Flaxley</p>
<p><br />
1841 Littledean Woodside<br />
John Tingle Male 30 1811 Gloucestershire, England<br />
Sophia Tingle Female 30 1811 Gloucestershire, England<br />
<span style="color:#009;">Joseph Tingle</span> Male 12 1829 Gloucestershire, England<br />
William Tingle Male 9 1832 Gloucestershire, England<br />
Ann Tingle Female 6 1835 Gloucestershire, England<br />
Elam Tingle Male 3 1838 Gloucestershire, England<br />
James Tingle Male 0 1841 Gloucestershire, England</p>
<p><br />
1851 Woodside St Johns<br />
John Tingle Head Married Male 43 1808 Coal miner Flaxley, Gloucestershire, England<br />
Sophia Tingle Wife Married Female 41 1810 - East Dean, Gloucestershire, England<br />
<span style="color:#009;">Joseph Tingle</span> Son Unmarried Male 22 1829 Engine driver East Dean, Gloucestershire, England<br />
William Tingle Son Unmarried Male 19 1832 Coal miner East Dean, Gloucestershire, England<br />
Ann J Tingle Daughter - Female 16 1835 Scholler East Dean, Gloucestershire, England<br />
Elam Tingle Son - Male 13 1838 Coal miner East Dean, Gloucestershire, England<br />
James Tingle Son - Male 10 1841 Scholler East Dean, Gloucestershire, England<br />
Amos Tingle Son - Male 1 1850 - East Dean, Gloucestershire, England</p>
<p><br />
Hope Foundry and Engineering Works, Cinderford</p>
<p>Year: 1828<br />
Month: Jan<br />
Day: 28<br />
Parents_Surname: TEAGUE<br />
Child_Forenames: Ann Abia<br />
Fathers_Forenames: Edward<br />
Mothers_Forenames: Ann<br />
Mothers_Surname: <br />
Residence: Littledean Hill<br />
Occupation: <br />
Officiating_Minister: John Horlick<br />
Event: Baptism<br />
Memoranda: Daughter of: Born Jan 7th<br />
Notes: <br />
Register_Reference: D6026 8/1<br />
Page_Number: 13<br />
Parish_Chapel: Mitcheldean Congregational</p>
<p>Marriages Dec 1852   (&gt;99%)</p>
<p>Teague  Ann Abiah    Westbury on Severn  6a 391  <br />
<span style="color:#009;">Tingle  Joseph </span>   Westbury on Severn  6a 391 </p>
<p><br />
Births Dec 1863   (&gt;99%)<br />
<span style="color:#090;">TINGLE  Alfred Elam</span>    Westbury S  6a 212</p>
<p>Deaths Sep 1869   (&gt;99%)<br />
<span style="color:#009;">TINGLE  Joseph  40</span>  Westbury S.  6a 135</p>
<p><br />
1871 St Johns Cinderford<br />
Anabiah Tingle Head - Female 43 1828 Iron &amp; brass founder East Dean, Gloucestershire, England<br />
Frances E Tingle Daughter - Female 18 1853 - East Dean, Gloucestershire, England<br />
Henry Tingle Son - Male 15 1856 Moulder East Dean, Gloucestershire, England<br />
William Tingle Son - Male 13 1858 - East Dean, Gloucestershire, England<br />
George Tingle Son - Male 11 1860 Scholar East Dean, Gloucestershire, England<br />
Alfred Tingle Son - Male 7 1864 Scholar East Dean, Gloucestershire, England<br />
Jane Tingle Daughter - Female 3 1868 - East Dean, Gloucestershire, England</p>
<p>1881 Bilson Green<br />
Annabiah Tingle Head Widow Female 53 1828 Iron founder Cinderford, Gloucestershire, England<br />
George Tingle Son Single Male 21 1860 Wheelwright Cinderford, Gloucestershire, England<br />
Alfred E Tingle Son Single Male 17 1864 Mechanic &amp; fitter Cinderford, Gloucestershire, England<br />
Jane Tingle Daughter Single Female 13 1868 Scholar Cinderford, Gloucestershire, England</p>
<p>1891 Foundry Lane Cinderford nr Bilson Green<br />
George Tingle Head Single Male 29 1862 Proprietor of iron foundry Cinderford, Gloucestershire, England<br />
<span style="color:#090;">Alfred E Tingle </span>Brother Single Male 27 1864 Proprietor of iron foundry Cinderford, Gloucestershire, England</p>
<p><br />
1901 Foundry Lane<br />
Alfred E Tingle Head Married Male 37 1864 Engineer East Dean, Gloucestershire, England<br />
Rosa Tingle Wife Married Female 30 1871 - East Dean, Gloucestershire, England<br />
Evelyn A Tingle Son Single Male 7 1894 - East Dean, Gloucestershire, England<br />
Dorothy J Tingle Daughter Single Female 5 1896 - East Dean, Gloucestershire, England<br />
Cressa E Tingle Daughter Single Female 3 1898 - East Dean, Gloucestershire, England<br />
Joyce Tingle Daughter Single Female 2 1899 - East Dean, Gloucestershire, England<br />
Clarence H Tingle Son Single Male 0 1901 - East Dean, Gloucestershire, England</p>
<p><br />
1911 Station Rd Cinderford<br />
Alfred Elam Tingle Head Married Male 47 1864 Mechanical engineer Glos Cinderford<br />
Rosa Agnes Tingle Wife Married Female 41 1870 - Herefordshire Ross<br />
Evelyn Arthur Tingle Son Single Male 17 1894 Fitter Glos Cinderford<br />
Dorothy Ina Tingle Daughter Single Female 15 1896 - Glos Cinderford<br />
Cressa Alexa Tingle Daughter - Female 13 1898 - Glos Cinderford<br />
Harold Clarence Tingle Son - Male 10 1901 - Glos Cinderford</p>
<p>1939  49 st whites rd Cinerford<br />
Alfred E Tingle 12 Nov 1863 Male Engineer Retired Mechanical Married 178 1<br />
Rose A Tingle 19 Jan 1871 Female Unpaid Domestic Duties Married 178 2</p>
<p><br />
Year: 1949<br />
Month: Dec<br />
Day: 29<br />
Surname: TINGLE<br />
Forenames: Alfred Elam<br />
Residence: 49 St Whites Road<br />
Age_at_death: 86 years<br />
Officiating_Minister: Tom T Haines Vicar<br />
Event: Burial<br />
Cause_of_death: <br />
Memoranda: <br />
Notes: 83/49 written in margin<br />
Register_Reference: P85/1 IN 1/16<br />
Page_No: 38<br />
Parish_Chapel: Cinderford St John</p>
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<pubDate>Fri, 23 Feb 2024 11:33:02 +0000</pubDate>
<category>General</category><dc:creator>slowhands</dc:creator>
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<title>Marrying at Gloucester Cathedral (reply)</title>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Interesting. Thank you.<br />
Donna</p>
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<pubDate>Thu, 22 Feb 2024 22:33:01 +0000</pubDate>
<category>General</category><dc:creator>Bradley Tingle</dc:creator>
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<title>Marrying at Gloucester Cathedral (reply)</title>
<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Just in case …..</p>
<p><br />
In the marriage licences there appears only one other mention of the surname JASON and in the City of Gloucester.  No mention of JASON  in the FOD records.</p>
<p>31 August 1728 </p>
<p>Elizabeth JASON aged 24 Spinster Brides Residence : Over,  to Thomas BOND aged 24 Batchelor residence : City of Gloucester.</p>
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<pubDate>Thu, 22 Feb 2024 21:31:44 +0000</pubDate>
<category>General</category><dc:creator>MPGriffiths</dc:creator>
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