Question Home

Position:Home>Genealogy> Someone with access to 1901 Engllish census please?


Question:I said I would send images but I'm having problems.

Is itsjustme or someone else around that could help?

Poster's email tamilgal7025@yahoo.ca

Link to question:
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;...

Link to 1901
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;...

Link to 1891

http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;...

Can you please let me know if you have sent them and I'llstop trying.


Best Answer - Chosen by Asker: I said I would send images but I'm having problems.

Is itsjustme or someone else around that could help?

Poster's email tamilgal7025@yahoo.ca

Link to question:
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;...

Link to 1901
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;...

Link to 1891

http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index;...

Can you please let me know if you have sent them and I'llstop trying.

1901 England Census
Name: Walter H Crisp
Age: 6
Estimated Birth Year: abt 1895
Relation: Son
Father's Name: George
Mother's Name: Mary A
Gender: Male
Where born: Hove, Sussex, England
Civil Parish: Aldrington
Ecclesiastical parish: St Leonard
County/Island: Sussex
Country: England
Occupation: student
Condition as to marriage:
Education: in school
Employment status: none
Registration district: Steyning
Sub-registration district: Shoreham
ED, institution, or vessel: 31
Household schedule number: 275
Household Members: Name-- Age
George Crisp-- 40
Harry M Crisp-- 9
Mary A Crisp-- 47
Walter H Crisp-- 6
William R Crisp-- 14
Winifred E Crisp-- 3

Crisp Name Meaning
1. English: nickname for a man with curly hair, from Middle English crisp, Old English crisp, cryps (Latin crispus), reinforced in Middle English by an Old French word also from Latin crispus.
Americanized spelling of the German cognate Krisp, from Middle High German krisp, krispel ‘curly-haired man’.
Americanized form of German Krisp, from a short form the medieval personal name Krispin (see Crispin).

Crispin was especially popular in France in the early Middle Ages, having been borne by a saint who was martyred at Soissons in adc. 285 along with a companion, Crispinianus (whose name is a further derivative of the same word).

Walter
English, German, and Scandinavian: from an old Germanic personal name composed of the elements "wald" rule + "heri", "hari" army, warrior. There was a native Old English form of the name, Wealdhere, but it was replaced at the time of the Conquest by the Continental forms in use among the Normans. In medieval Germany, the most famous bearer was the minnesinger Walther von der Vogelweide (c.1170-c.1230). Variants: German: Walther. Scandinavian: Valter.
Cognates: Scottish Gaelic: Bhatair, Bhaltair. Welsh: Gwallter. Dutch: Wouter, Wolter. Low German: Wolter. French: Gaut(h)ier. Italian, Spanish: Gualtiero.

Short forms: English: Wat (medieval, occasionally revived); Walt (esp. U.S.). Dutch: Weit. Pet form: English: Watkin


www.findagrave.com
Walter Crisp
Birth: unknown
Death: Sep. 28, 1916
Note: Private, Canadian Infantry (Manitoba Regiment). Age: 22.
Burial:
Vimy Memorial , France
Plot: No Known Grave; name is listed on the Vimy Memorial.
(a picture of the war memorial is shown)


www.ancestry.com--1901 English Census
Walter's father??
Name: George Crisp
Spouse: Mary A
Birth: abt 1861 - Mumbshone, Suffolk, England
Residence: 1901 - Aldrington, Sussex, England