Leonard/Storey Heir Hunters


Leonard/Storey

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Today, the heir hunters take on a case that keeps on growing.

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There were 15 brothers and sisters.

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From a little case we weren't quite sure of into a very long one.

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Another team uncover a sporting celebrity in their research...

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He is now listed as being a professional footballer

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for Hull City.

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..and are left searching for a long-lost family.

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I see where we're going with this one.

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My grandmother was separated from him and she didn't want to talk about it.

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-It's a day...

-Wow!

-..full of family secrets and surprises.

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I was aware of eight cousins

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and it looks like I've got something like 70 cousins!

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Across the UK every year, thousands of people die without making

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a will and with no known relatives.

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In these cases, the deceased's name goes

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on the Government's Bona Vacantia list, which means "vacant goods".

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Estates can remain unclaimed, sometimes for years.

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It's a treasury estate that's just kind of slipped through the net.

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In London, Dave Slee,

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case manager at heir-hunting firm Fraser and Fraser,

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is working one such case that's been on the

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Government's list, unresolved, for four years.

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From our point of view, because this looks like an estate that's

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slipped through the net, the chances are, though you can never tell,

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that there are no other companies researching the matter, so we've got

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the luxury of being able to take our time a little bit on this one.

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Which is just as well, as senior researcher Roger Marsh...

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And that only because it's a different name, that's Harry, not Henry...

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..is struggling to work out the correct name for the deceased.

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We've got this job of a lady called Beryl Joan or possibly Joanna

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and her surname is either Leonard spelled L-E-O-N-A-R-D

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or Lennard, L-E-N-N-A-R-D.

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Or Leonard-Halliwell.

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The team have ordered Beryl's death certificate to glean as much

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information as possible.

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This shows she passed away in a care home in Chelmsford, Essex.

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The only other detail they know about Beryl is that she

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visited the local market regularly.

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Two Beryls that we used to serve that we haven't seen for years.

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One of them I know has died and the other one, I'm not sure.

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We just haven't seen her for years.

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One was from Newcastle and one was from here in Chelmsford.

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With locals unable to shed any light on Beryl,

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the team need to work out her birth name before the case can progress.

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But they can't find a birth record matching her date of birth.

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If we can't identify the birth record of the deceased,

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we have to start looking at variants and sometimes you have to come

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up with some quite unusual combinations of names to try

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and find that record but without that record it is a problem.

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-That's all alive, I should have said, up to there.

-Yeah.

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Working various combinations of Beryl's name, the first thing

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the team do is determine

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whether she was born a Leonard or married into the family.

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Looking at the births for that quarter,

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there were three or four names, double-checking them to Leonard,

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there was a Salter married to a Leonard.

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So what we had then was Beryl Joan Salter as the birth

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and she married a Leonard.

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The team now know she was born Beryl Joan Salter

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and can order her birth certificate.

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It was good work by Roger to play around with the deceased's marriages

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and then that led us back to her birth and of course

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you can't start your research until you know who the person is.

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Records reveal that Beryl had married twice, but her second

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husband had died and she had no children from either marriage.

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The next in line to inherit her estate would be her parents

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if they were still alive, then any brothers

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and sisters she may have and as the team now knew her maiden name

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of Salter, they quickly find records for her father and mother.

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-I spoke to her, she phoned in.

-Right.

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And her mum was a Winifred Mary Jane Hudson,

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who was born in Stafford, which is Manchester area,

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which is where Beryl was born.

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Beryl's father's name was Charles Salter

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and both her parents had died.

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So the team needed to find out if they had any other children.

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She was an only child, so then we had to go back to cousins

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and the side I was working on was her mum's side.

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To do this, the team refer to the census,

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which lists the occupants of every household at that time.

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Put a four-day order on that...

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Beryl's mother grew up in the Edwardian era, having been

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born just before the turn of the 20th century.

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So the 1911 census was the one the team turned to.

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This included much more information than previous censuses

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and also gives the heir hunters a good indication about

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Beryl's mother's family life at that time.

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Robert Hudson, the deceased's maternal grandfather,

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initially started his working life as an engine cleaner and worked

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his way up to become an engine driver at the turn of the century.

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As the family lived in Stafford,

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it's likely Robert Hudson worked for the Midland Railway Company.

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I think Robert's career is fairly typical

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for an engine driver of the period.

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They all started as cleaners, they progressed to firemen

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and then to engine driver.

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It could take a very long time

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and the express engine drivers often didn't make it to that position

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until they were in their fifties, so they didn't do it for very long.

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I think we all know that every boy wanted to be an engine driver.

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They were almost the rock stars of their day.

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The cleaner polished his engine to perfection,

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because the engines were spotless in those days.

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Work for Beryl's grandfather was tough and repetitive.

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What we're seeing here has hardly changed

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since the early days of steam railways of the early 19th century.

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It's the same job. It's just putting coal on a fire, heating water

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to produce steam, to produce horsepower,

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and it's never really changed.

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Imagine doing that for eight hours a day, every day, six days a week!

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Back in the 19th century, the kind of trains that Robert may have

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been driving on branch lines would probably have

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consisted of wooden-bodied four-wheel coaches with plain wooden seats,

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probably nowhere near as comfortable as this one.

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As well as his profession, the census also reveals that

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Robert and Selina had a very large family.

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There were 15 brothers and sisters.

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So it suddenly went from a little case

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we weren't quite sure of into a very long one.

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This is just the maternal side,

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because we're still waiting for the marriage of the parents to come

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back so we can work out the father's side, see how old he was

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and work out which is the correct birth for him.

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Now armed with all the names of Beryl's 14 aunts and uncles

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on her mother's side, the team needs to try and see

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if they can find some of their children.

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Dave hits the phone straight away.

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Good morning, I'm David Slee.

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Hello there.

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I've been in contact, I'm sure as you know,

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with other members of your family in connection with an estate

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we believe that you may be entitled to a share in.

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Speaking directly to living family members often fills in any gaps

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the team may have with tracing other living relatives.

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But it's not always the case.

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I think the trouble is as well though, it's such a large family

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that you've got this huge gap between the ages of first cousins...

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-Yeah.

-..that a lot of them didn't know each of their cousins.

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-No.

-I suppose they wouldn't.

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So asking them about aunts and uncles and other cousins,

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-I don't think they'd know too much, to be honest.

-No.

-No.

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Because there's so many what we would call "top line" aunts and uncles...

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Let's just have a quick look through this top line.

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..each stem that we contact doesn't particularly know

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about the other stems, so we have to research each individual stem.

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Although the team are finding potential heirs,

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the lack of family information means they have to work each aunt

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and uncle separately. They need to find someone who knows more.

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Gladys, no issue...

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I'm going to talk to a cousin once removed who's NOT entitled,

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because her mother's still alive who's quite elderly.

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So I want to talk to the daughter first.

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It's always nice to talk to the children,

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than obviously upset elderly people unnecessarily.

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When we're looking at cases with large family, really you're

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looking at trying to work up every stem as efficiently as possible,

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so occasionally you get that feeling of dread,

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because there's that one sticky stem that you can't trace the heirs to.

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It's not unusual for us, especially on a common surname, to,

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and it's happened on this estate,

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to phone people you think are entitled parties

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and just the research is coincidental, really,

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so it happens a lot.

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If we can phone people and contact them early enough

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and they've got good family history,

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then we can eliminate them from our enquiries, but it does happen.

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But researcher Shannon has found something about the Hudson family

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that is making the search a little easier.

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So far, we've come to the conclusion they are certainly an area family.

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They get married in the same churches.

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We've managed to narrow it down to two churches

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in the whole Staffordshire area.

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So it's kind of helping us along the way.

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We can work out, basically, the whole family

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are getting married within these two churches,

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which is helpful for us.

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But with 14 families on just the mother's side to trace and contact,

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there could be a lot of heirs who are entitled to

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a slice of Beryl's inheritance.

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There's still a lot that we have to do, filling in gaps and people.

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With families like this, you lose touch.

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So not everyone knows everyone.

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So it makes our job a bit harder.

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Your mother was born in '05, Lily was born in '07.

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The more information we can gather from individuals,

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the better it is from a research point of view.

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The less research needs to be done the more a family can tell us.

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But at the same time, we still have to make sure

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that what they're saying is correct,

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so they're not missing out a brother or sister

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they don't like, or something.

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We have to find everybody.

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And no-one expected what the research was going to uncover.

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They've got an Australian grandad...

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..and a grandmother from Devon.

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In the business of probate research, finding living heirs is the goal.

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But sometimes, they uncover family stories lost for generations.

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He was born at the workhouse and left there.

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One case that revealed plenty

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is from the village of Roberttown in West Yorkshire.

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Doreen Storey lived there until she was 86.

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She died on 20th February, 2012 with no known family.

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Although she was a quiet lady,

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neighbour Jean Hawley remembers Doreen as a cheerful spirit.

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She was a lovely lady, was Doreen. Very warm.

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And a lovely sweet smile.

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And she used to go for her hair setting.

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Doreen loved her garden and our friend Gill tended it for her.

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And really, it was lovely back and front.

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She liked it to look nice.

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She had two brothers and one sister.

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She never spoke about them, apart from one brother

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that was in, during the war, in one of the services.

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Come on, let's have a look at you.

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Neighbour Christine Allen knew Doreen for 42 years.

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She loved animals.

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She always sent cards with dogs on, birthdays and everything. Yeah.

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She was a lovely lady. You could tell her anything

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and she listened. You knew it wouldn't go any further.

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I miss her. Yeah, I do, I miss her.

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I just miss her stood in the window and not waving, or anything.

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Doreen's house remained empty for some time after she died,

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so a concerned neighbour contacted London heir-hunting firm, Finders.

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Suzanne Rowley was one of the researchers on the case.

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Neighbours, they tend to refer a case to us

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instead of it going to the Bona Vacantia list.

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Hi, Ryan. That's the Doreen Storey case.

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They want the money to go to the family

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and the right people, rather than the Government.

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-All right, then, thank you.

-No worries.

-Cheers.

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One of the benefits of a neighbour-referral case

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is that we can get some more detailed background information

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that we may otherwise not receive.

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If I can find her family, then you know she's wrong.

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Case manager Amy Noyes began

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the process of trying to find out if Doreen had any family.

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The neighbour that referred this case to us was able to tell us

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quite a bit about Doreen, which gave us a head start, really.

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For instance, she knew Doreen had lived at the property for some time.

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As far as she's concerned, she'd never married

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and she'd never heard of her having had any children either.

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So, on the Post-it, you think it says Dixon, not Rixon?

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The information that we receive from these referrals,

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they're always classed as anecdotal, rather than concrete evidence.

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So although it's very useful and probably correct,

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we would always verify that

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by checking with the records themselves.

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It's in relation to a cousin of yours who's sadly passed away.

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Doreen's death certificate gave the team her date of birth,

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which meant they could immediately order her birth certificate.

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So my first step, looking at her birth and death,

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would be to look to see if she ever married or had any children.

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Although the heir hunters could see Doreen's name had never changed,

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which suggested she'd never married,

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they searched for any evidence of marriage or births

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with Doreen's name on. Both came up negative.

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The net would have to be widened.

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The next steps were then going to be to work out whether or not

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Doreen had the siblings that the neighbour had referred to.

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In order to do that, the first step was to locate

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the names of Doreen's mother and father.

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Doreen's birth certificate was again the key.

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This gave her mother's name as Esther McQuillan

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and her father, Herbert Storey.

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We can do a birth-index search.

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That threw up the possible siblings

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that the neighbour had referred to.

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We had a sister, Mary Ann,

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and two bothers, an Edward and a Thomas McQuillan Storey.

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And neighbour Christine remembers they all lived together.

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All the four of them were lovely people.

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They all looked after one another.

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Tommy, the oldest, he did all the gardening.

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But they were all together. Never went anywhere,

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never went shopping to Huddersfield, or anywhere like that.

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They just liked their home.

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We needed to work out what had happened to them,

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whether they might still be alive, having all been born in the 1920s,

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or if deceased, whether they'd had marriages and children of their own,

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who, if the children were alive, they would then be potential heirs.

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And, of course, when one died and the other died,

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it was very, very upsetting for them all, it really was.

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And then when Molly died and just left Doreen, um...

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she went downhill a bit, she really did.

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Searches confirmed that all of Doreen's siblings had died.

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None of them had ever married or had children.

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But something on her parents' marriage certificate...

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I see where we're going with this one.

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..suggested there may be another avenue worth exploring.

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It indicated that Herbert had been married previously,

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so we needed to then look into that

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to make sure there weren't any children from that marriage

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which would be half-brothers or sisters to Doreen

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and potential heirs to the estate.

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It's very important to get all the documents

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and certificates in place for the family that we're researching

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in order to prove all the entitlements correctly.

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The team found out that Doreen's father, Herbert,

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had previously married a Mary Ellen Lee.

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A search was done of the birth indexes with those parental names.

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And discovered they'd had one child together,

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who unfortunately passed away when he was about one-year-old or so.

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And so that terminated that line of enquiry, as well.

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So the heir hunters now knew for certain

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that Doreen had no living siblings and no nieces or nephews.

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It's certainly difficult.

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This meant the team would have to go back one generation...

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Do you know what the daughter's name was?

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..to look for aunts and uncles in the hope

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they might have descendants who were still alive.

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It's in connection with a cousin of your mother's.

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From the 1901 census records,

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the team found Esther McQuillan's parents.

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We've got the head of the family is Doreen's grandfather,

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James McQuillan. He is a coalminer.

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He is working at the Boldon colliery.

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With him are his children. We've got Esther, Doreen's mum,

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we've also got some other daughters

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and then the sons, Thomas is young,

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but John and Jonathan are also both working at the local mine,

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as well, along with their father.

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At the time of the 1901 census,

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like many other families who worked in the collieries,

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James and his sons were risking their lives daily deep underground.

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We're now looking across towards the Boldon colliery.

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In them days, the late 1800s, early 1900s, the main danger for them

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was falls of stone, which would come from the roof

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and falls of coal, where they were working.

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Them falls would come, maybe trap them by the head.

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But a lot of the deaths wasn't killed instantly,

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they were actually what you call suffocated.

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Because they couldn't breathe with the weight of the stuff on them.

0:19:040:19:08

And that happened a lot.

0:19:100:19:11

Young John McQuillan, one of Doreen's uncles,

0:19:110:19:14

was only 15 at the time

0:19:140:19:16

and worked as a driver of pit ponies.

0:19:160:19:19

Of all the jobs underground, this was one of the worst.

0:19:190:19:22

At that time, a pony driver, it was a dangerous job.

0:19:220:19:26

A lad at that age shouldn't have been.

0:19:260:19:29

He's in charge of a pony, who's in a seam maybe 2'6"-3' high.

0:19:290:19:34

He's got no headroom, he's working in

0:19:340:19:37

and he's actually riding in-between the tub and the pony

0:19:370:19:39

on what we call limmers.

0:19:390:19:41

That's the part which connects the pony to the tub.

0:19:410:19:44

He's only got to look up at the wrong time

0:19:440:19:46

and he gets his head squashed,

0:19:460:19:47

which happens a lot of times to pony drivers.

0:19:470:19:51

So it was a very dangerous job

0:19:510:19:53

and it depended on what type of pony you had.

0:19:530:19:55

It's no surprise that when young John McQuillan wasn't down the mines,

0:19:550:19:59

he was doing what many young boys loved best.

0:19:590:20:02

When I was 15, we used to play football.

0:20:020:20:04

You couldn't wait to come out after work.

0:20:040:20:07

You played until you couldn't see, it was dark.

0:20:070:20:09

You could hardly see the ball.

0:20:090:20:12

And can you imagine, especially in the early 1900s,

0:20:120:20:15

when families were large,

0:20:150:20:17

imagine the amount of kids in this back lane playing football.

0:20:170:20:20

And that's what every street was like.

0:20:200:20:23

Back lanes, especially, in colliery villages.

0:20:230:20:26

And it seems every spare moment John put in

0:20:280:20:30

on the colliery football ground over the years

0:20:300:20:32

paid off, as the family record on the 1911 census shows.

0:20:320:20:37

Interestingly, by 1911, although the majority of the family

0:20:380:20:43

were still based around the coal-mining profession,

0:20:430:20:45

John McQuillan had changed professions.

0:20:450:20:49

And he is now listed as being

0:20:490:20:51

a professional footballer for Hull City.

0:20:510:20:54

He also had Doreen's mum, Esther, living with him, as well.

0:20:540:21:00

In addition to those relatives, he was also taking in boarders.

0:21:000:21:05

He had two members of the Hull City team boarding with him, as well.

0:21:050:21:10

John McQuillan had escaped working in the mines

0:21:100:21:13

and fulfilled every young boy's dream of the time.

0:21:130:21:16

This is Boldon Villa Football Club, where John played,

0:21:180:21:20

where he played his football.

0:21:200:21:22

And this is where the scouts would have come and watched him.

0:21:220:21:25

Watched him probably a couple of times just to make sure,

0:21:250:21:28

which scouts did in them days to a lot of the mining villages.

0:21:280:21:32

And this is where John became a professional footballer.

0:21:320:21:35

At the time John McQuillan was playing,

0:21:370:21:39

the clubs were just beginning to start scouting systems.

0:21:390:21:43

Particularly in places like mines in the north-east,

0:21:430:21:46

which were well-known for producing lots of professional footballers.

0:21:460:21:50

John initially played for a very short period for Jarrow Town.

0:21:500:21:54

He was spotted there by Everton.

0:21:540:21:56

And Everton were one of the best teams of the day.

0:21:560:22:00

The year that he was spotted, Everton won the FA Cup.

0:22:000:22:03

They finished in the top five almost every year.

0:22:030:22:06

So this was one of the big clubs.

0:22:060:22:08

Although John did a month's trial at Everton, he wasn't taken on.

0:22:080:22:12

Instead, he signed up for Hull City

0:22:120:22:14

and stayed with them for eight years.

0:22:140:22:17

I think John was certainly a good player.

0:22:170:22:19

To become a professional player for so long,

0:22:190:22:21

John must have been a very good footballer.

0:22:210:22:24

In the early 1900s, it was a very comfortable way to make a living.

0:22:270:22:30

Certainly for someone who had come from a mining background.

0:22:300:22:34

I think it would have been incredibly exciting

0:22:350:22:37

for John to walk out of the players' tunnel for the first time.

0:22:370:22:41

The roar of the crowd, the youngsters who watched him

0:22:410:22:45

would have looked up to him.

0:22:450:22:46

It's very possible John could have been regarded as a local hero.

0:22:460:22:49

It was certainly a change from the mining life

0:22:490:22:52

the rest of the family had lived.

0:22:520:22:55

Football at Boldon would have definitely saved

0:22:550:22:57

John McQuillan from going back down the mines.

0:22:570:23:01

With the outbreak of World War I in 1914,

0:23:040:23:07

John McQuillan's professional football career came to an end.

0:23:070:23:11

John had managed to escape working in the mine

0:23:120:23:15

and he found a reserve occupation

0:23:150:23:17

which would mean he avoided going to war.

0:23:170:23:20

Sadly, that wasn't the case for many of his friends.

0:23:200:23:24

A lot of the photos the families have,

0:23:240:23:26

the last photos of their sons, of even fathers,

0:23:260:23:30

was the football photo took before they went to war

0:23:300:23:34

and never came back.

0:23:340:23:36

And on this pitch is ashes

0:23:360:23:39

from a lot of ex-football players spread on this pitch even today.

0:23:390:23:43

Back at the office, the heir hunters were starting to piece together

0:23:500:23:53

possible descendants of Doreen's mother's 10 siblings.

0:23:530:23:58

It looked as though there'd be

0:23:580:23:59

potentially an extremely large number of heirs.

0:23:590:24:02

And with Doreen's father's side not even started,

0:24:020:24:04

there's still a long way to go to find any of them.

0:24:040:24:07

This family seemed to be getting larger than we originally thought.

0:24:090:24:12

A surprise knock on the door from the heir hunters

0:24:180:24:21

happens to thousands of people in Britain every year.

0:24:210:24:24

I'm not expecting a million,

0:24:240:24:26

it's just going to be exciting to receive it.

0:24:260:24:30

And there are thousands of cases still unsolved.

0:24:300:24:32

Could you be one of the heirs?

0:24:320:24:35

Today, we have two names

0:24:350:24:36

from the Government Legal Department's Bona Vacantia list

0:24:360:24:40

whose estates are yet to be claimed.

0:24:400:24:42

The first is that of Irene Barta,

0:24:440:24:47

who died aged 90 on 16th January, 1994

0:24:470:24:51

in Chichester, West Sussex.

0:24:510:24:52

She's listed as born on 4th September, 1903, in Austria,

0:24:540:24:58

but it's thought she came from Hungary and may have had a sister.

0:24:580:25:01

She spoke several languages.

0:25:030:25:05

Hungarian, Yugoslav, French and English.

0:25:050:25:09

So, does the name Barta ring any bells with you?

0:25:090:25:12

It's of ancient Arabic origin

0:25:120:25:14

and is most prevalent in Hungary and the USA.

0:25:140:25:18

Do you have any connections with Hungary,

0:25:180:25:20

or do you have any clues that would help crack this case?

0:25:200:25:23

Next, the unsolved case of Rose Irene Beckwith.

0:25:250:25:29

She was 85 when she passed away on 11th January, 2010,

0:25:290:25:34

in Guisborough, North Yorkshire.

0:25:340:25:36

She was born in the area on 14th September, 1924,

0:25:390:25:43

so could well have lived there her whole life.

0:25:430:25:46

The name Beckwith derives from

0:25:470:25:48

a village of the same name near Harrogate,

0:25:480:25:50

so the family may have relatives there.

0:25:500:25:53

It's thought Rose may have been an only child.

0:25:540:25:57

Her mother was Alice Maude Phillips, who died in 1976.

0:25:570:26:01

If you think you may be related to either of these people,

0:26:020:26:05

you would need to make a claim on their estate

0:26:050:26:08

via the Government Legal Department.

0:26:080:26:10

Do you know anything that could help solve the cases

0:26:120:26:14

of Irene Barta or Rose Irene Beckwith?

0:26:140:26:18

Could YOU be their next of kin?

0:26:180:26:20

In London, heir-hunting firm Fraser and Fraser

0:26:290:26:32

are investigating the case of Beryl Leonard.

0:26:320:26:35

She lived most of her life in Chelmsford, Essex,

0:26:350:26:37

and passed away in a care home there aged 85.

0:26:370:26:41

The eldest child started to marry and have children

0:26:410:26:45

when their brother and sisters were being born.

0:26:450:26:49

So you have cousins 20 or 30 years apart in age.

0:26:490:26:53

Any beneficiaries they find will share any estate Beryl left.

0:26:550:27:00

Got the tree there?

0:27:040:27:05

The team have made great inroads

0:27:050:27:07

in finding descendants of Beryl's mother's 14 siblings.

0:27:070:27:10

And Dave Slee is calling many of the relatives.

0:27:100:27:13

I'm trying to make contact with

0:27:140:27:16

what would be a maternal first cousin once removed.

0:27:160:27:21

While Dave is still calling the heir on the mother's side,

0:27:210:27:25

the certificates they need to tackle

0:27:250:27:27

Beryl's father's side of the family have now arrived.

0:27:270:27:29

We've managed to locate the paternal side of the family

0:27:300:27:34

by going through the marriage certificate.

0:27:340:27:38

We managed to get the dad's name and his occupation.

0:27:380:27:41

The grandfather of the deceased, Beryl Leonard,

0:27:410:27:46

was actually a William Salter, who was a prison warden in 1921.

0:27:460:27:51

We've actually matched it up with a family living in Stafford

0:27:510:27:54

in the 1911 census,

0:27:540:27:56

which does have her father on the census with them.

0:27:560:27:59

So we know we have the correct family.

0:27:590:28:01

And Dave's phone-bashing has helped cut down some of their research time

0:28:010:28:06

on the mother's side of the family.

0:28:060:28:09

That's a good example, really, of an heir being able to provide me

0:28:090:28:12

with an address of their brother,

0:28:120:28:15

which means that we don't have to undertake

0:28:150:28:18

the research in America to find them.

0:28:180:28:19

So it cuts down a lot of work.

0:28:190:28:22

They sometimes give you a little snippet of information.

0:28:220:28:25

You just need that little bit of information that helps the research.

0:28:250:28:28

And the investigation is coming together on the father's side too.

0:28:280:28:33

Shannon's now been able to put together a family tree

0:28:330:28:38

relating to the deceased's paternal family.

0:28:380:28:41

Fortunately, from our point of view, it doesn't look as large

0:28:410:28:46

as the maternal family.

0:28:460:28:48

We have one stem with what looks like first cousins alive.

0:28:480:28:53

And I'm about to go and ask Ewart

0:28:530:28:56

to go off to Chelmsford to see the heirs.

0:28:560:29:00

Ewart is one of the team's senior travelling researchers

0:29:000:29:04

who can carry out investigations on the ground

0:29:040:29:07

and hopefully visit any potential heirs.

0:29:070:29:10

But before he can go anywhere,

0:29:100:29:12

he has to get to grips with the family tree.

0:29:120:29:15

-There's two first cousins and a cousin once removed.

-Okey dokey.

0:29:150:29:19

While Ewart plans his investigation,

0:29:220:29:25

Shannon is finding the father's side may be smaller

0:29:250:29:28

but is just as challenging.

0:29:280:29:29

So the grandad of deceased was born in Sydney, Australia.

0:29:310:29:36

So we've got an Australian grandad

0:29:360:29:38

and a grandmother from Devon,

0:29:380:29:41

who end up in Stafford

0:29:410:29:43

and go to London on the way.

0:29:430:29:46

It's kind of already slowed down before it's really begun.

0:29:460:29:50

Back on Beryl's mother's side,

0:29:510:29:53

the team have managed to speak to some of the descendants

0:29:530:29:55

of her many siblings.

0:29:550:29:57

The research has revealed some fascinating history.

0:29:570:30:01

One of the interesting facts is one of the deceased's aunts, Ada Hudson,

0:30:010:30:05

it appears she married a chap called Arthur Cook.

0:30:050:30:08

Who, in the 1920s,

0:30:080:30:11

was a professional footballer with West Bromwich Albion,

0:30:110:30:14

The Baggies, in the year, the only time they won the league.

0:30:140:30:18

So the family were understandably very proud of their grandfather.

0:30:180:30:23

Yeah, I saw that. Yeah, that's him there.

0:30:230:30:25

-That's him there, isn't it?

-Yeah.

0:30:250:30:28

Arthur Cook, there he is. Arthur Cook.

0:30:280:30:31

Research now is reaping results.

0:30:340:30:37

And one of the heirs they've found

0:30:370:30:38

is Beryl's first cousin once removed.

0:30:380:30:41

John Cook is the grandson of the West Bromwich Albion footballer,

0:30:410:30:44

Arthur Cook.

0:30:440:30:46

This is my grandfather's league medal.

0:30:480:30:51

Division One Championship, with a presentation watch and chain that

0:30:510:30:56

he was given at the presentation by West Bromwich Albion.

0:30:560:31:00

You can still read all the inscription,

0:31:000:31:02

but it is nice and shiny.

0:31:020:31:04

The only thing I ever learned about my grandfather

0:31:050:31:08

was that he was a professional footballer.

0:31:080:31:10

It's been a very big talking point over the years.

0:31:100:31:13

Not only did he win the League Division One Championship,

0:31:130:31:17

he also won the runners-up medal in the FA Cup.

0:31:170:31:20

When my grandfather played in the FA Cup final,

0:31:200:31:24

which was at Crystal Palace,

0:31:240:31:26

the evening before the FA Cup match,

0:31:260:31:29

he was on a night shift at Seamans.

0:31:290:31:32

So he had to work the night shift

0:31:320:31:34

prior to playing in the FA Cup final.

0:31:340:31:38

Be interesting to see if Rooney would be able to perform as well.

0:31:380:31:42

John knew all about his grandfather,

0:31:420:31:45

but he hadn't quite realised how large his extended family was.

0:31:450:31:48

From the information I've had, there are quite a number of heirs involved.

0:31:490:31:54

I was surprised to find it's approaching 70.

0:31:540:31:57

So it shows how large the family is, or was.

0:31:570:32:02

In the office, the team are making contact with many of John's cousins.

0:32:040:32:08

Would you like me to come and see you?

0:32:080:32:11

On Beryl's father's side, a cousin who grew up with her

0:32:110:32:14

has given Ewart some idea of the type of person she was.

0:32:140:32:18

Perfect. Thank you. Take care now. Bye-bye. Bye.

0:32:180:32:22

She said she became quite strange in her later years

0:32:220:32:26

and they lost contact.

0:32:260:32:28

So she hasn't seen her for about ten years.

0:32:280:32:30

And she thinks she remembers her becoming, you know, quite reclusive.

0:32:300:32:36

Across the office, Dave thinks he's finally got to grips

0:32:360:32:40

with the huge family on Beryl's mother's side.

0:32:400:32:43

Trying to make contact with

0:32:430:32:46

the last few remaining maternal beneficiaries on Leonard.

0:32:460:32:50

Shannon has completed Beryl's father's side of the family

0:32:520:32:55

and Dave is preparing the final tree

0:32:550:32:57

that they hope will confirm all their research.

0:32:570:33:00

The computer system we use congratulates me on 100 names

0:33:000:33:06

being added to the family tree.

0:33:060:33:08

It goes without saying that means inevitably, it's a huge family

0:33:080:33:12

that we're researching and there's a lot of beneficiaries.

0:33:120:33:14

So if you're doing your own family tree, you'd welcome seeing that.

0:33:140:33:18

From my point of view, I hate it.

0:33:180:33:20

When you crack a case that's particularly large

0:33:200:33:23

and there's an awful lot of heirs,

0:33:230:33:25

there's a definite sense of satisfaction at the end.

0:33:250:33:28

Beryl Leonard's estate is slightly unusual in as much as

0:33:280:33:31

this is an estate where the deceased died over four years ago

0:33:310:33:36

and, er, really, it's slipped through the net.

0:33:360:33:39

But I'm pleased to say it's an estate that won't be going to the Crown.

0:33:390:33:43

I was aware of eight cousins

0:33:430:33:45

and it looks like I've got something like 70 cousins.

0:33:450:33:49

And they most probably weren't aware of me either.

0:33:490:33:52

London heir-hunting firm Finders

0:33:580:34:00

are looking into the case of Doreen Storey,

0:34:000:34:02

who lived most of her life in this house in Roberttown, West Yorkshire.

0:34:020:34:06

She was a private person, very private.

0:34:080:34:11

So she didn't like neighbourliness,

0:34:110:34:14

such as they call it in Yorkshire.

0:34:140:34:16

She wouldn't ever come for a cup of tea.

0:34:160:34:18

Going off to the last one?

0:34:180:34:19

All right, good luck with that and I'll speak to you in a bit.

0:34:190:34:22

The heir hunters have been looking for possible heirs

0:34:220:34:25

on Doreen's mother Esther's side of the family.

0:34:250:34:28

The McQuillans.

0:34:280:34:30

So Esther was one of seven children.

0:34:300:34:32

One of them passed away in 1916 as a bachelor.

0:34:320:34:35

Another passed away married, but never had any children.

0:34:350:34:40

And then, obviously, there was the infant death.

0:34:400:34:42

So there were three lines to look at.

0:34:420:34:45

It looks as though they were all coalminers in the Durham area.

0:34:450:34:49

Doreen's mother had three brothers and sisters

0:34:500:34:52

who could have had children.

0:34:520:34:54

If the team can find them, they could be heirs.

0:34:540:34:57

If they do a same-day service, we'll send something.

0:34:570:35:01

They really need to speak to someone

0:35:030:35:04

who can help shed some light on the family tree.

0:35:040:35:08

Unfortunately, with Doreen's family, all the first cousins have died,

0:35:080:35:11

so we really have no-one of any great age that we can speak to.

0:35:110:35:15

So the research went on and on, um, and became very extensive.

0:35:150:35:20

The first family they had any luck with

0:35:210:35:23

was that of Esther's brother, John McQuillan,

0:35:230:35:25

who'd escaped the mines and become a professional footballer.

0:35:250:35:29

The line of John McQuillan was a little easier as we'd already found him on the census

0:35:290:35:33

with his sister, Esther, the deceased's mother.

0:35:330:35:36

So we already had a bit of a head start with this stem.

0:35:360:35:38

We knew he had two children.

0:35:380:35:40

We did a search for any further

0:35:400:35:42

and it just looked like it was the two of them.

0:35:420:35:44

So we could carry on our research into that line.

0:35:440:35:46

And the first heir they were able to locate

0:35:480:35:50

was John McQuillan's estranged grandson, David Milne.

0:35:500:35:54

I know very little about my grandfather,

0:35:550:35:56

other than he was supposed to have been a footballer.

0:35:560:35:59

He was supposed to have played for, I think it was Hull City at that time.

0:35:590:36:02

And he was apparently earning something like £8 a week,

0:36:020:36:06

which was a lot of money in those days.

0:36:060:36:08

But that's all I know. Nothing else was ever mentioned.

0:36:080:36:12

My grandmother was separated from him and she didn't want to talk about him.

0:36:120:36:15

Ah! My grandfather.

0:36:160:36:20

This is fascinating, looking at him.

0:36:200:36:23

Yes. I've never...

0:36:230:36:25

..never seen a picture of him before.

0:36:270:36:29

And David is grateful his grandfather changed professions.

0:36:330:36:37

Football must have saved him from the mines and I suspect

0:36:370:36:40

it may have helped save him from fighting in the war as well.

0:36:400:36:43

Probably saved the line of the family and, er, why I'm here today.

0:36:430:36:48

And not having worked down a mine, or anything like that.

0:36:500:36:53

In the end, seven heirs were found on Doreen's mother's side of the family,

0:37:000:37:04

but the team still had to look into

0:37:040:37:06

the side of her father, Herbert Storey.

0:37:060:37:08

He had been a cloth-wringer and a greengrocer.

0:37:100:37:14

And a copy of his birth certificate told us

0:37:140:37:17

that he had been the son of an Edward Storey and a Rosina Rose.

0:37:170:37:21

Herbert Storey was born in 1893,

0:37:210:37:24

so the team looked at the 1911 census

0:37:240:37:27

to get an idea of the size of his family.

0:37:270:37:29

There were seven children on the census, seven living.

0:37:310:37:34

To double-check that, we went back to the 1901 census and 1891 census

0:37:340:37:40

and in fact, we found there were actually ten.

0:37:400:37:44

So this family seems to be getting larger than we originally thought.

0:37:440:37:48

And the investigations were revealing that

0:37:480:37:51

five of Herbert's nine siblings

0:37:510:37:53

went on to have children of their own.

0:37:530:37:56

These nieces and nephews of Doreen's father,

0:37:570:37:59

or their descendants, would be beneficiaries to Doreen's estate.

0:37:590:38:03

We have paternal uncle Ernest Storey,

0:38:050:38:08

who probably had the largest family of the entire paternal side.

0:38:080:38:13

He had one, two, three, four, five, six, seven children.

0:38:130:38:19

Um, of those seven, five have living descendants.

0:38:190:38:24

The other two passed away either in infancy,

0:38:240:38:27

or without having had any issue.

0:38:270:38:30

There are quite a number of heirs on this stem.

0:38:300:38:33

They're all traced and they're all a couple of generations down

0:38:330:38:35

from Doreen's own generation itself.

0:38:350:38:38

Their research found that four of Doreen's father's siblings died

0:38:400:38:43

with no living descendants.

0:38:430:38:46

We also had an uncle Alvin Storey, born in 1899.

0:38:460:38:51

But he was sadly killed during World War I.

0:38:510:38:54

The team needed to find contact numbers and addresses

0:38:560:38:59

for all of the living children or grandchildren

0:38:590:39:02

from Doreen's aunts and uncles.

0:39:020:39:04

These would be cousins and cousins once removed of Doreen.

0:39:050:39:09

With the paternal research, it turns out

0:39:110:39:13

that the vast majority of the heirs were all second generation.

0:39:130:39:16

Aside from two, none of them were direct cousins of Doreen's.

0:39:160:39:20

It's not unusual, particularly when you have a large family,

0:39:200:39:23

and in this instance, Doreen is coming from a father

0:39:230:39:27

who was one of the youngest of his brothers and sisters.

0:39:270:39:30

So if you can imagine the ages of her cousins

0:39:300:39:33

right through the family tree,

0:39:330:39:36

there's probably a 20-30 year age gap.

0:39:360:39:39

So the majority of her cousins have passed away.

0:39:390:39:41

And the relatives we're looking at are much further down the line.

0:39:410:39:44

With so many aunts and uncles on the father's side,

0:39:440:39:48

there were a lot of families to trace.

0:39:480:39:50

After our research was complete,

0:39:500:39:51

we discovered there were 29 beneficiaries.

0:39:510:39:55

And these were on six of the lines, as three of them died out

0:39:550:39:59

and the last one was, of course, the deceased's father, Herbert.

0:39:590:40:02

One of those heirs is Alan.

0:40:050:40:06

His father Fred was Doreen's first cousin.

0:40:060:40:10

My mum remembers Doreen.

0:40:100:40:12

She said she was a very quiet lady, never married.

0:40:120:40:16

Went on to explain exactly who Doreen was,

0:40:160:40:19

where she fitted into the family and everything.

0:40:190:40:21

And she actually said that there was quite a bit of contact

0:40:210:40:26

between our family and theirs right up to my father passing.

0:40:260:40:29

My father passed when I was 18,

0:40:290:40:32

so that side of the family has disappeared,

0:40:320:40:34

apart from the cousins I know of.

0:40:340:40:37

The inheritance has given Alan more than just financial gain.

0:40:380:40:42

What a very large family I have!

0:40:420:40:44

Wow!

0:40:460:40:47

So there must have been 11 brothers and sisters on my grandma's side.

0:40:470:40:52

I'm not surprised I don't know half of the family.

0:40:520:40:55

It's like a shroud has been lifted.

0:40:550:40:57

It's absolutely amazing.

0:40:570:41:00

I never knew my grandma and grandad got married in 1905.

0:41:000:41:05

How wonderful!

0:41:050:41:06

But the detail of the death of his great uncle Alvin in World War I

0:41:080:41:12

is particularly poignant for Alan.

0:41:120:41:14

And here he is listed.

0:41:150:41:17

"Storey, Lance Corporal, Alvin.

0:41:170:41:20

"2nd and 5th Battalion Sherwood Foresters.

0:41:200:41:23

"Died of wounds on 21st April, 1918.

0:41:230:41:27

"Aged 19, son of Edward and Rosina Storey

0:41:270:41:31

"of Tenner House, Watergate, little town in Liversedge."

0:41:310:41:35

How so sad. And only months from the end of the war.

0:41:350:41:38

I've been in the military myself and I've seen some good men pass.

0:41:410:41:44

Well, I'm sure it must have been a great loss to the family.

0:41:460:41:50

They must have felt a great bereavement and sadness.

0:41:500:41:54

I think it's going to be absolutely wonderful and intriguing

0:41:550:41:58

finding out about this.

0:41:580:42:00

And I'm pretty sure my mum down the road, at 91,

0:42:000:42:04

is also going to be intrigued.

0:42:040:42:06

But I think it will also spark some memories.

0:42:060:42:09

In total, 36 of Doreen's living heirs were found.

0:42:090:42:14

Just over £116,000 from the sale of Doreen's house and belongings

0:42:140:42:19

were split between them.

0:42:190:42:21

With the Doreen Storey case, I think one of most satisfying aspects

0:42:220:42:25

is to be able to complete a huge family tree in good time

0:42:250:42:28

and to be able to tell the heirs a bit more about their family history

0:42:280:42:31

and to leave them with this, um, quite enormous heirloom.

0:42:310:42:35

I feel extremely honoured to be getting some inheritance from Doreen's estate.

0:42:370:42:41

It wasn't expected.

0:42:410:42:43

It's a great honour to receive it

0:42:430:42:45

and I will treat it with the respect it deserves.

0:42:450:42:47

I'm very grateful to Doreen because she's connected me with, er...

0:42:470:42:52

with my roots, really, as a family, you know, from the family tree.

0:42:520:42:56

And also connected me with my grandfather,

0:42:560:42:59

whom I knew nothing about at all.

0:42:590:43:01

Never mentioned in the family.

0:43:010:43:03

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