Fuller, Annie Caldicot - I6: Difference between revisions

From 'City of Adelaide' History and Genealogy Site
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
{| style="float:right; border:1px;font-size: 0.85em;width:200px"
|-
| valign="top" |
<!--Fill out the table below with any biographical details available on the person. Do not change anything between the "|" and the "=". Delete the entire line for any details that are not known.  -->
<!--Fill out the table below with any biographical details available on the person. Do not change anything between the "|" and the "=". Delete the entire line for any details that are not known.  -->
{{Infobox passenger
{{Infobox passenger
Line 65: Line 68:
| footnotes                =  
| footnotes                =  
}}
}}
Annie Fuller was born in 1840 in the village of Eynesbury, Bedfordshire which today is a suburb of St Neots, now a regional town that spans the boundaries of Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire and Huntingdonshire.
|-
|<tngfamily f=43/>
|}
 
<tng i=6>Annie Fuller</tng> was born in 1840 in the village of Eynesbury, Bedfordshire which today is a suburb of St Neots, now a regional town that spans the boundaries of Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire and Huntingdonshire.


For the [[Voyage to London in 1873|1873 voyage]] of the ''City of Adelaide'' to London, the ship was to have gone by way of Good Hope and stop at Plymouth on the way to London. However, the winds would not allow it, and the ship drifted so far to the South that the Captain decided to go by Cape Horn. The prolonged voyage meant that heavily pregnant Annie gave birth to George Seaborne in Cabin No.2 on 30th January, 1873, just off the Scilly Isles.  
For the [[Voyage to London in 1873|1873 voyage]] of the ''City of Adelaide'' to London, the ship was to have gone by way of Good Hope and stop at Plymouth on the way to London. However, the winds would not allow it, and the ship drifted so far to the South that the Captain decided to go by Cape Horn. The prolonged voyage meant that heavily pregnant Annie gave birth to George Seaborne in Cabin No.2 on 30th January, 1873, just off the Scilly Isles.  




==Sources== <!--DO NOT DELETE THIS LINE-->
==GEDCOM Details==
<!-- Enter your sources here -->
 
{| style=" border:0px;width:800px"
|-
| valign="top" |
<tngmenu i=6/>
|}
<tngperson i=6/>
 
==Researcher==
Researched by Ron Roberts, Adelaide, South Australia


{{Reflist}} <!--DO NOT DELETE THIS LINE-->


[[Category:Passengers]]<!--DO NOT DELETE THIS LINE-->
==References==
{{reflist|2}}


<!-- DELETE/COPY/CHANGE THE FOLLOWING LINES AS NECESSARY FOR RELEVANT VOYAGES-->
[[Category:Voyage to Adelaide in 1864]]
[[Category:Voyage to Adelaide in 1864]]
[[Category:Voyage to London in 1873]]
[[Category:Voyage to London in 1873]]
[[Category:Voyage to Adelaide in 1874]]
[[Category:Voyage to Adelaide in 1874]]
 
[[Category:Passengers]]
<!--SELECT THE CORRECT NATIONALITY BELOW - DELETING NON APPLICABLE LINES - DELETE ALL LINES IF NOT KNOWN-->
[[Category:English]]
[[Category:English]]<!--DELETE THIS WHOLE LINE IF ENGLAND IS NOT THE NATIONALITY-->
[[Category:Last Mail Run]]
<!-- Add an alternative country as necessary using same syntax as above -->
 
{{Passenger-bio-stub}}
 
{{Passenger and Crew Lists}}
{{Passenger and Crew Lists}}
__NOEDITSECTION__

Revision as of 08:01, 6 May 2012

{{safesubst:#invoke:br separated entries|main}}
1840 – 1897
{{#invoke:InfoboxImage|InfoboxImage|image=Anne_Wilcox_oval.png|size=|sizedefault=frameless|alt=Annie Wilcox (nee Fuller)|suppressplaceholder=yes}}
Nationality
Genealogy Data
Voyage Data
{{safesubst:#invoke:br separated entries|main}}
<tngfamily f=43/>

<tng i=6>Annie Fuller</tng> was born in 1840 in the village of Eynesbury, Bedfordshire which today is a suburb of St Neots, now a regional town that spans the boundaries of Bedfordshire, Cambridgeshire and Huntingdonshire.

For the 1873 voyage of the City of Adelaide to London, the ship was to have gone by way of Good Hope and stop at Plymouth on the way to London. However, the winds would not allow it, and the ship drifted so far to the South that the Captain decided to go by Cape Horn. The prolonged voyage meant that heavily pregnant Annie gave birth to George Seaborne in Cabin No.2 on 30th January, 1873, just off the Scilly Isles.


GEDCOM Details

<tngmenu i=6/>

<tngperson i=6/>

Researcher

Researched by Ron Roberts, Adelaide, South Australia


References

{{#invoke:Navbox|navbox}}