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Edith Emily Hodson

 

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   8629 1.0 Edith Emily Hodson   also known as Edith Emily Goodwinfemale
Mother originally thought to be Mary Ann Susannah Danes, but Edith's name was given as Hodson when she 1st married.
8628 Mother: Hannah Hodson    b. about 1853 at Cranford, Northamptonshire (apparently unmarried)
Father probably George Solomon Goodwin
Birth: about 1881, at Kettering, NorthamptonshireCensus

Pedigree
Mother of the following, apparently unmarried, child's father unknown

   180412.1 Dorothy Hodsonfemale
Birth: about 1902, at Kettering, NorthamptonshireCensus

   4901
Married: Fred Panter  1903 (marriage source reads: Fred Panter and Edith Emily Hodson) BMD
b. about 1874, at DesboroughCensus

   180452.1 Fred Pantermale
Birth: about 1904, at DesboroughCensus
   2491
Married: Frederick Coe  1906 (marriage source reads: Fred Coe and Edith Emily Panter) BMD
b. about 1867, at DesboroughCensus

   180422.2 Ronald Coemale
Birth: about 1907, at DesboroughCensus

   180432.3 Clifford Coemale
Birth: about 1908, at DesboroughCensus

   180442.4 Cyril Coemale
Birth: about 1909, at DesboroughDerived/Parish Reg
Death: about Mar 1910 , at 34 New St, Desborough, age: 1yDerived/Parish Reg
Burial: 28 Mar 1910 at DesboroughNhants PRs

 


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Estimated dates of birth (treat with caution - they could be decades out!)
:- where there is a marriage or children recorded, the date is estimated at 16-18 years before the earliest date;
:- where there is only a burial known, if the person or their spouse is described as "old", the birth is estimated at 50 years earlier; if they are described as "very old", the birth is estimated at 60 years earlier; if neither, the birth is estimated at 18 years earlier.

Estimated dates of death are given as a visual aid to point up whether or not they survived their spouse.

Before 1752 the calendar year started on 25th March; dates where the year appears as, eg: "1650/51" show the year as it would have been given at the time (in this example 1650), and the year by the modern calendar (1651). Jan-Mar dates before 1752 which don't show this "double-dating" are from secondary sources which haven't made clear which dating system has been used.


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