Keeping it in the family

2 min read

Katharine McKinnon had traced her family history many generations back, but it was when she received a chance phone call about a forthcoming auction that the importance of tracing family sideways and forwards in time really struck her. Read on for Katharine’s cautionary tale.

I was told that my maternal great-grandmother, Annie Newman (b.1871, Coleby, Lincolnshire) was one of seven sisters who grew up in a tiny two-up two-down cottage, in Coleby near Lincoln. My nan, Mabel, was Annie’s only daughter. In 1985, I started researching my family history, starting with these seven sisters. Pretty early on, with the help of the Lincolnshire Family History Society, I found the marriage of their parents, Robert (b.1821) and Sophia (née Crampton b.1830) Newman in Coleby in 1854. Tragically, their only brother, Charles, born in 1855, died shortly afterwards. But hang on, I counted eight daughters, what happened to the missing sister?

Fast forward to 2009. I was about to attend the graduation ceremony for my MA in History. With days to go, I got a surprise phone-call. It was the Head Teacher of Coleby Primary School who had got my contact details via the Family History Society. Was I aware of the Victorian sampler that was up for auction on Saturday? The girl who had sewn this was Jane Newman, aged 12, who had attended Coleby School in the 1870s. I thought, yes, this is one of the sisters. How on earth had it come up for auction? It turned out that there had been a house removal a few weeks prior and in one of the boxes was this sampler.

I live in Merseyside, and the auction was to be the day of my graduation. I had not traced my family history forwards to my 21st century cousins. I tried phoning a few family members, but nobody was free or were willing to pay the reserve price or more for the sampler. Back to the Head Teacher – she asked if I would permit the school to bid for the sampler. Jane had been a pupil there, and they wanted to make a feature of the sampler. I was more than happy for the sampler to go to the school.

Sitting in my graduation ceremony, my thoughts drifted to the auction. The sampler had fetched nearly twice the reserve price, but the school were su