Granger/Harrington Heir Hunters


Granger/Harrington

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Welcome to Heir Hunters,

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where we follow the search for relatives of people who've died

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without leaving a will, hoping to unite them with forgotten fortunes.

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Today, the Heir Hunters are searching for the beneficiaries

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to an estate worth £150,000.

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Somewhere out there are some long-lost relatives

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who have no idea they're in line for a windfall.

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Could the Heir Hunters be knocking at your door?

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'Hello?'

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Coming up on today's programme...

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It's not looking too good on that side now.

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Could the Heir Hunters' worst nightmare be about to come true?

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Reluctantly, this might be one

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that will go directly to the Government, I'm afraid.

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The death of an independent-minded lady from Worthing

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breathes fresh life into one of the 20th century's most notorious scandals.

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I am convinced that he was set up at Clivedon with Christine Keeler.

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And as we delve deeper into her background

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the experts uncover an amazing woman who led an amazing life.

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She was at the centre of activities - combined operations, D-Day and so on -

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and it's no wonder that she retired on a bit of a high, in a sense, at the end of her naval career.

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Plus, how you may be entitled

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to inherit an unclaimed estate held by the Treasury.

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Could thousands of pounds be heading your way?

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Every year in the UK,

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an estimated 300,000 people die without leaving a will.

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If no relatives are found,

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then any money that's left behind will go to the Government.

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Last year, they made £14 million from unclaimed estates.

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That's where the Heir Hunters come in.

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They make it their business to track down missing relatives

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and help them claim their rightful inheritance.

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Well, if we don't give the money to the rightful people,

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then it will end up with the Government.

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In our first case today,

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the team investigate the estate of a man who died in Durham.

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But things don't start out as planned for the Heir Hunters. Can the team get back on track?

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It's 7:00am in the morning

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at the offices of Heir Hunters Fraser & Fraser

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and the Treasury has just released

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its weekly list of unclaimed estates.

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If someone dies without leaving a will with no known next of kin

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and their estate is worth more than £5,000,

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then they will appear on this list.

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-Is that a definite date of birth there?

-That's a date of birth, yes.

-OK.

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There are a few cases that look to be worth quite a lot of money.

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But one in particular has caught boss Neil's eye.

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So the case we're going to be looking at is David Robin Granger.

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Dies on Boxing Day, 2010, in Northampton.

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Where it's going to go, I don't know.

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So fingers crossed.

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David Granger died aged 67 on the 26th of December, 2010.

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He left no will, and no photograph of him can be found.

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His friend Steve Hawkins knew him for 15 years,

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and remembers him as a one-off.

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He was an interesting man.

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Erm... A real perfectionist in everything he did.

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David lived in this house in Northampton

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right up until his death,

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his wife, Anne, having passed away a few years earlier.

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I mean, they were dedicated to one another, you know?

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Everything they did, they did together.

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Um... Between them, they were a real partnership,

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Dave was such a loyal person.

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He'd use the local butcher

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rather than go to the supermarket for his meat,

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because it was a traditional thing to do, you know?

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Erm... He'd have his milk delivered by the milkman,

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because that was the way he was, sort of, brought up, the way things were.

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Dave was old school.

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He was, er... There's not many left like Dave, he was an eccentric.

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Um... An old English gent, if you like.

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Back in the office,

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and the search to find David's heirs is already under way.

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Senior case manager David Milchard, known round the office as Grimble,

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has been put in charge.

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It seems that David Granger owned his home in Northampton.

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As the average house in that area is worth about £150,000,

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the team are hoping that David's estate

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will be worth at least that much.

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The value of estates is really important to the Heir Hunters,

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because they work on commission,

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earning a percentage of the amount that's claimed

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by each heir they sign.

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But they can't earn any money unless they find some heirs.

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-'Hello, Dave.'

-Hi, David.

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So Grimble asks senior researcher on the road, Dave Hadley,

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to go over to the property

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to see what he can find out from the neighbours.

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I... That's where he lived, right.

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Yeah, it looks like he owned that property.

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OK?

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-FROM CAR:

-All right, mate. Bye.

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Heir hunting relies heavily on research done in the office,

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but most investigations require some face-to-face enquiries.

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Senior researchers on the road are based all over the country,

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and it's their job to follow up any lead

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and make sure they get to the heirs ahead of the competition.

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I was just coming to make some enquiries

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about the gentleman that used to live in the house,

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did you know him at all?

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Yeah.

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It looks like Dave's in luck.

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He bumps into one of David's neighbours on the street.

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Was he ever married?

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-Yes, his wife died.

-What was her name?

-Anne.

-Anne?

-Yeah.

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OK. Did they have any children?

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No.

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And I never heard any mention of brothers or sisters.

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-Right.

-Or for that matter, cousins.

-Right.

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Dave goes to phone Grimble to update him.

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Yeah, the neighbour said he didn't think there was any siblings.

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'Yeah, OK.'

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But in the office,

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the team have managed to establish who David's parents were.

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-Jessie E Jones?

-Yeah.

-When is it?

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Marries Charles H Granger, Sep 30, Hammersmith.

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David's father was Charles Henry Granger,

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and his mother was Jessie Emily Jones.

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He was indeed an only child, and had no children of his own.

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-Dominic, do you want to look up Charles's, um...birth?

-Yeah.

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That means the Heir Hunters will need to look further afield

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if they're going to find any beneficiaries.

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But under the inheritance laws of England and Wales,

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they can only go back as far as the deceased's grandparents,

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meaning anyone up to first cousins and their descendants can inherit.

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Grimble's first discovery relates to the maternal side of the family.

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-Lillian Maud.

-Lillian Maud.

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Born in Chelsea.

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And Winifred is Winifred Cissie?

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After referring to the 1911 census,

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he has turned up two maternal aunts for David.

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Lillian Maud and Winifred Cissie.

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If either of these two had any children,

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they would be eligible to inherit from their cousin David.

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But almost as soon as these aunts have been found...

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-Died when?

-Uh... December, 1918, Hammersmith, aged 26.

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..the team comes back with some bad news.

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And he appears to have found deaths for both of them, dying as spinsters.

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So...

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That's not looking too good on that side now.

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Since both of David's maternal aunts died childless,

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this side of the family can now be declared dead in the water.

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Which means that everything is riding on them finding heirs

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on David's father's side.

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Otherwise, the whole of this potential £150,000 estate

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will disappear into the Treasury's coffers.

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Researcher Gareth has been tasked with finding a birth certificate

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for David's father, Charles Granger. And he's feeling the pressure.

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We know he was born in 1905, or he's supposed to be born in 1905.

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We can't find a birth record for him and we can't find a census for him.

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And because we can't find these, we can't really move on. We're stuck.

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So we either need more information, or at the moment, a stroke of luck.

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Without the birth certificate, they can't find out

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the names of Charles's parents, who would be David's grandparents.

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And they need those to search for any of his uncles and aunts.

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But over on the other side of the office, case manager Simon

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has been thinking outside the box and has come up with the goods.

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Well, born on 29 June. Which is the day. It's just '01, and not '05.

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We've found a birth that's Charles Henry, in London.

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Appears to have the right date of birth.

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It's just born in 1901, not 1905.

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So one of the many things that could have been wrong

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with our not finding the birth was the fact it was the wrong year of birth.

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According to Simon's online research,

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Charles was born on 29 June, 1901, in Holborn.

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His parents, Charles Granger, also known as Henry,

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and Martha Peek, were married in Marylebone in 1897.

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But despite Simon's breakthrough, this search still isn't getting off the ground.

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HE GROANS

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Well, we've now found the birth of the father of the deceased, Charles Henry.

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So we expect then at that point to, you know, be able to leap forward.

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Find the census, start working family.

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But in actual fact, we're stuck again on the census.

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Gareth's looked through all the Charles Grangers

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living in the Holborn area of London in 1911.

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But none of them have parents called Charles and Martha.

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But just then, a member of the team spots something

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and passes it over to Simon.

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It's a page from the 1911 census for a school in West London.

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It's a Charles Henry Granger, on age, as a scholar.

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Unfortunately, it tells you nothing else at all.

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So it could be our Charles H, or it couldn't be.

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If this young boy is David's father,

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then he was obviously away at school in 1911 when the census was taken,

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which explains why they can't find him with his family.

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Just then, out of the blue,

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another Granger child falls into their laps.

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This is pukka? It's pukka.

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Further scrutiny of that same school census entry has revealed a Frank William Granger.

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It seems likely that Frank is Charles's brother

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and both boys have been sent away to school.

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But there's no way of proving this, because there's no record of Frank's parents' names.

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This case is fast turning into an Heir Hunter's nightmare.

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If they can't prove that the deceased's father had any brothers or sisters,

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then there will be no entitled heirs on this side of the family either.

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Which can only mean one thing.

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Reluctantly, this might be one that will go directly to the Government, I'm afraid.

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Which isn't too good.

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Grimble knows that his only chance is to prove that those two schoolboys are brothers.

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If he can do that, and trace Frank's descendants,

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then that £150,000 inheritance will end up where it should be,

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with David Granger's rightful heirs.

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Coming up - Gareth goes out on a limb...

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I'm wondering, have they just abandoned their first two children, Frank and Charles?

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..as the mystery of the missing schoolboys finally unravels.

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So much of it ties in. So much of it looks good. We are working it.

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Heir Hunters solve thousands of cases a year and millions of pounds

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are paid out to rightful heirs, but not every case can be cracked.

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The Treasury has a list of over 2,000 estates

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that have baffled the Heir Hunters and remain unclaimed.

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This could be money with your name on it.

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The Bona Vacantia unclaimed list

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is a list of cases that we haven't found kin for.

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The list goes back to 1997,

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because that's when our case management system came online.

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The idea is to produce a list of all those cases, so there

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should be at least a few thousand there, possibly many thousands.

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The money in these estates is cash that the Government wants

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the rightful heirs to inherit.

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The money raised ultimately goes to the Exchequer

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to benefit the country as a whole.

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But it's important to remember that the Crown doesn't want to grab all estates that it possibly can.

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It's keen for kin to be found and for people to make wills.

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That's the way to stop property becoming Bona Vacantia. Make a will.

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So are today's featured cases relatives of yours?

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Could you be about to receive a lump sum of thousands or even millions of pounds?

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Anna Buglar died in Gillingham, Dorset, in November 2005.

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Buglar is a rare surname in the UK but is most commonly found in the West Country.

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Does the name Buglar ring a bell for you? Do you remember Anna?

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Carol Willem Johannes Van Greuning died in Hove in February 2001.

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Carol's name indicates that he was probably from the Netherlands or Flanders.

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Did you know Carol?

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Did he talk to you about his background or any living family?

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Kathleen Marjorie Daye died in Bordesley Green, Birmingham,

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in June 2001.

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Although Day is a common surname, this spelling is fairly unusual.

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Were you a friend or neighbour of Kathleen's?

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Can you help solve her case?

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If you think you are related to any of the names today, you need to show

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your relationship to the deceased in order to claim their estate.

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People need to prove their entitlement

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by producing documentary evidence,

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various certificates of birth, death and marriage,

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which we will tell them what's required

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and then they will need documents of identity.

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A reminder of the names again.

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Anna Buglar,

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Carol Van Greuning

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and Kathleen Daye.

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So if you're a relative of anyone on today's list

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then you could have a fortune coming your way.

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When a lady from Worthing dies without leaving a will,

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the Heir Hunters uncover a case with hidden depths.

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I'll be finding out more later, but here's how the case began.

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Sometimes, heir hunts provide a fascinating link with our nation's history.

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Never was this more true than on the case of Constance Harrington,

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whose life had been entwined with some of the most tumultuous and scandalous events of our age.

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Constance died aged 87 on January 7, 2011.

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For the last few years before she died,

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Constance lived in this block of flats in Worthing, West Sussex.

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Her neighbours, David and Emma Walford, lived downstairs from her.

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Constance was definitely a good old-fashioned neighbour.

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She'd always be there to say hello to and you know, pick up your mail

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and your parcels if you weren't here. And just generally quite friendly.

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I would have said that Constance was very well presented.

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You could almost see maybe that she'd come from somewhere

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where she possibly had money before, possibly.

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Throughout the time they knew her, Constance never had any visitors to her flat,

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but she seemed to manage very well on her own.

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I think Constance was quite strong willed

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and I would have said she probably was quite feisty,

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because she just came across as being quite confident.

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She'd be there, you know, with five or six big carrier bags from Tesco's.

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I'd sort of say to her, you know, "Would you like me to help you?"

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"Oh no, no, I think I'll be fine. I can get up these flights of stairs!"

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Constance never made a will and shortly after she passed away

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her case came to the attention of case manager Dave Slee.

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We very quickly established that Constance had died,

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having owned her own property in Worthing.

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And therefore we knew that the estate would have some value.

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The estate of Constance Harrington was in fact valued at £130,000.

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But there was no sign of any immediate family who could be beneficiaries.

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The next step was to look for any brothers or sisters

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and, for that, David needed to get hold of her birth certificate.

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It told him that Constance was born in 1922 in Bethnal Green in east London.

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And that her parents were Stephen Harrington and Ethel Mullings.

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So we undertook a search of birth records in England and Wales

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from 1919 up to 1922, when Constance was born.

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And then of course we went past that date for another 20 years

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and we were able to prove that Constance was in fact an only child.

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Constance grew up with her parents in Hackney

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and was educated at the local Coburn High School for Girls.

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She must have done well at school, because after she left,

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she became a secretary to the managing directors of several large London firms.

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But all that was about to change.

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In 1939, the Second World War broke out and by 1943

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Constance had enlisted in the Wrens, the Women's Royal Naval service.

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The Wrens play an absolutely key role in the Second World War.

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There are about 75,000 of them at the peak in 1944.

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There weren't enough male personnel to carry out all the administrative jobs required.

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And clearly the best male personnel tended to be sent to sea.

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So what the Wrens allowed you to get was first class people,

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running the administration of the Royal Navy.

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Christian Lamb also served as a Wren during the war

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and remembers the excitement of being a part of the war effort.

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It was very difficult to get in,

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because lots and lots of people wanted to join.

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The girls came from absolutely any background.

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It was the war, you must remember this.

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And everybody felt desperate to help in any way they could.

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Wrens fulfilled every role, from drivers and cooks,

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to aircraft mechanics.

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But Constance's experiences as a high-level secretary

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meant that she was involved with the actual operational planning of the war.

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After a first posting to Combined Operations headquarters,

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Constance was sent to Norfolk House,

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where she worked directly for Lord Louis Mountbatten

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as the Allied Expeditionary Force prepared for D-Day.

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We all knew, of course, that D-Day day was coming up.

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But we didn't talk about our own particular part in it.

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We were sworn to secrecy.

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You just knew that you were living history,

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in the sort of way that nobody could imagine that you ever would do

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as a girl of, what, 25 or something.

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The most extraordinary situation.

0:20:380:20:40

As a key member of the support staff, Constance was intimately involved

0:20:420:20:46

in the creation of what's been called the greatest ever masterpiece of naval planning -

0:20:460:20:50

Operation Neptune.

0:20:500:20:52

On 6 June, 1944, 7,000 ships landed over 150,000 troops

0:20:540:21:00

on the Normandy coast to begin the Allied invasion of France.

0:21:000:21:04

The coast was divided into five sectors - Utah, Omaha, Gold, Sword, and Juno.

0:21:060:21:12

Constance was assigned to Force J, whose destination was Juno Beach.

0:21:140:21:18

It demonstrates the complexity of the planning required,

0:21:200:21:23

that all these forces, with air support too,

0:21:230:21:25

had to be brought in at the right time and in the right place.

0:21:250:21:28

And there was, considering the difficulty of the operation, remarkably little confusion.

0:21:280:21:32

And that was a tribute to Constance and the other planners.

0:21:320:21:35

A few days after the successful completion of Operation Neptune,

0:21:350:21:39

one of Constance's commanding officers wrote a letter

0:21:390:21:43

recommending her for promotion to officer.

0:21:430:21:45

His admiration for Wren Harrington and her work is very clear.

0:21:450:21:50

'The success up to now of the small part of the operation

0:21:500:21:52

'for which I have been responsible' - quite a large small part, actually -

0:21:520:21:56

'is in no small measure due to her hard work and efficiency.'

0:21:560:22:00

Clearly, a key role in a key operation.

0:22:000:22:03

Back in the office and Dave Slee was engaged in a detailed operation of his own,

0:22:050:22:10

tracking down the heirs to Constance's £130,000 estate.

0:22:100:22:15

Having established that she was an only child,

0:22:150:22:18

he now had to look for any uncles, aunts or cousins.

0:22:180:22:22

Through online research,

0:22:220:22:24

he discovered that her paternal grandparents were William Harrington and Elizabeth Hawksbee,

0:22:240:22:29

who were married in Bethnal Green in 1870 and had seven children.

0:22:290:22:34

Dave needed to know if any of these aunts and uncles

0:22:340:22:37

had had children who would be Constance's cousins.

0:22:370:22:41

So he set about tracing each and every one.

0:22:410:22:44

We know that Constance had two paternal aunts,

0:22:440:22:47

one named Florence and one named Beatrice.

0:22:470:22:50

And we quickly established that it would appear that they both died in Dartford as children.

0:22:500:22:57

Now, in view of the fact that the family never appeared to leave Bethnal Green,

0:22:570:23:01

it made me think that there must have been some reason why they were in Dartford.

0:23:010:23:05

And I kind of had the hunch that probably they died in a hospital.

0:23:050:23:09

Dave's hunch turned out to be correct.

0:23:110:23:14

Florence and Beatrice's death certificates revealed that they both died in 1894.

0:23:140:23:18

Their place of death was given as the hospital ship Atlas,

0:23:180:23:23

one of two ships moored on the Thames that were used to house smallpox patients.

0:23:230:23:27

Smallpox was probably the most feared disease

0:23:300:23:33

from about 1600 onwards, or 1700 onwards.

0:23:330:23:38

After the end of the Plague, smallpox was probably

0:23:380:23:42

the biggest widespread killer that affected people in the British Isles.

0:23:420:23:47

Although smallpox has now been eradicated

0:23:470:23:49

thanks to effective vaccination, in the late 19th century

0:23:490:23:53

the big problem was how to isolate sufferers and prevent its spread.

0:23:530:23:57

As soon as Constance's aunts were suspected of having the disease,

0:23:570:24:01

they would have been taken to a designated wharf on the river,

0:24:010:24:05

where they were assessed by doctors.

0:24:050:24:07

From there, they were taken by converted paddleboat

0:24:070:24:10

out to the two hospital ships - the Atlas and the Endymion.

0:24:100:24:14

We know that of the 20,000 people who went from London

0:24:160:24:21

to the hospital ships over the 17 or so years that they were in operation,

0:24:210:24:26

that about 4,000 died, about 20%.

0:24:260:24:30

But at the same time, 16,000 eventually came back home to London.

0:24:300:24:36

Sadly, Constance's aunts never returned

0:24:360:24:39

to their family in Bethnal Green.

0:24:390:24:41

As children, they were particularly vulnerable.

0:24:410:24:44

Florence died first, aged 13,

0:24:440:24:47

followed three weeks later by her sister Beatrice, aged five.

0:24:470:24:51

It turned out that, out of Constance's six uncles and aunts, only two of them had married

0:24:540:25:00

and had children who could be Constance's heirs.

0:25:000:25:04

The eldest one, William, had married a Caroline Tovee

0:25:040:25:06

in 1893 in Bethnal Green, and they had a son called Reginald.

0:25:060:25:11

He in turn had married and had a son, also called Reginald.

0:25:120:25:16

It looked like Dave was finally closing in

0:25:170:25:20

on his first beneficiary to Constance Harrington's estate,

0:25:200:25:23

but little did he know that this investigation was about to lead him

0:25:230:25:27

to the heart of one of the defining events of 20th-century Britain.

0:25:270:25:30

From talking with family members, I discovered that Constance

0:25:320:25:36

worked for a famous, if somewhat infamous, person

0:25:360:25:40

who was involved in a scandal

0:25:400:25:42

that rocked the whole of the British Establishment.

0:25:420:25:45

Before we uncover the twists and turns that happened in the hunt for Constance's heirs,

0:25:480:25:53

I've heard that the team have discovered more information about her life and times.

0:25:530:25:59

I've come to central London to find out exactly what this is.

0:25:590:26:03

It turns out that during the process of dealing with her estate

0:26:030:26:07

boss Neil Fraser has discovered paperwork

0:26:070:26:10

that sheds yet more light on Constance and her amazing career.

0:26:100:26:14

-Hi, Neil.

-Hi.

0:26:140:26:16

-So, what have you found?

-Well, we've been through Constance's house,

0:26:160:26:20

trying to find information about her family and financial information.

0:26:200:26:24

While having a look through we found a couple of photo albums and quite a few letters.

0:26:240:26:28

Inside the photo albums, which are particularly interesting,

0:26:280:26:33

we have photos in here of Constance's time as a Wren.

0:26:330:26:37

There's a photo here of what looked to me like quite high-ranking

0:26:370:26:41

Army, Navy and Air Force officers.

0:26:410:26:43

And then four women in the middle and Constance is the second one in.

0:26:430:26:47

-There she is. Just the four of them.

-Standing in uniform.

0:26:470:26:50

And then, if we look further through this album, there's one picture which

0:26:500:26:55

to me is particular interesting, it's a bit more about the history.

0:26:550:26:59

And it appears to look like quite an old, almost Wild West photo.

0:26:590:27:04

-Yeah.

-But it says here it's from the 2nd of August, 1919.

0:27:040:27:08

It's the wedding of Daddy and Mother, so this must be her parents,

0:27:080:27:13

just got married. They're taken down here, this is in Eastbourne.

0:27:130:27:16

And we think that's where they went on honeymoon.

0:27:160:27:19

So... Absolutely unique snapshot into Constance's life

0:27:190:27:24

and her family life, which has never really been seen

0:27:240:27:27

by many people at all.

0:27:270:27:29

And then, as we go into the other albums, we've just more

0:27:290:27:32

and more of her family photos and pictures of her

0:27:320:27:36

-through her life and different bits of her again in uniform.

-Yeah.

0:27:360:27:41

There she is again.

0:27:410:27:42

Photo albums and things like this just help us

0:27:420:27:46

put a bit more emotion onto the family.

0:27:460:27:48

And changing from a name on a list onto an actual person,

0:27:480:27:52

and obviously all these photos will now be passed over to the beneficiaries.

0:27:520:27:57

It helps them with the emotional connection back to the deceased.

0:27:570:28:01

Heir hunting's not all about money, it's about bringing the families back

0:28:010:28:06

together, it's about trying to show people their relatives

0:28:060:28:11

and hopefully, when we've found a beneficiary, that'll spur them on

0:28:110:28:15

to making a will so we don't have to deal with a case like this again.

0:28:150:28:18

It's fascinating to see first-hand these snapshots of Constance's life

0:28:180:28:23

over the years. She obviously loved her job as a Wren,

0:28:230:28:27

and as we've already heard, was very, very good at it.

0:28:270:28:31

So what else have you got here, what are these letters?

0:28:310:28:33

What we have here is a few letters, a few bits of correspondence.

0:28:330:28:38

This is describing Wren C Harrington,

0:28:380:28:43

and it's commending her excellent work in the South Asia Command.

0:28:430:28:47

And this from...

0:28:470:28:49

-Mountbatten.

-Mountbatten.

0:28:490:28:51

And there's a few coming through from commanders in the Royal Navy

0:28:510:28:55

about how Third Officer Harrington of the Wrens...

0:28:550:28:58

"She carried out her duties with marked zeal and ability,

0:28:580:29:01

"displayed intense loyalty to me personally

0:29:010:29:04

"and to organisation as a whole. She's hard-working,

0:29:040:29:07

"is not discouraged or ruffled by difficulties."

0:29:070:29:10

Aw!

0:29:100:29:11

"She has a pleasant personality and is a very good mixer."

0:29:110:29:15

And these go through, I think,

0:29:150:29:16

every single one of the letters we have here commends Constance

0:29:160:29:20

as a very worthy Wren, very worthy, and it seems like everyone is...

0:29:200:29:27

It seems a shame to actually move her on as she gets promoted

0:29:290:29:33

through the ranks.

0:29:330:29:34

I mean, it's just amazing when we look through here about some of

0:29:340:29:37

the roles she had and some of the people she worked for

0:29:370:29:41

throughout the wartime period.

0:29:410:29:43

"I have formed the highest opinion of her character

0:29:430:29:46

"and have no hesitation in recommending her

0:29:460:29:48

"for a position of responsibility and trust."

0:29:480:29:51

And they're all like this.

0:29:510:29:52

Just incredible references. "She's tactful, has a good manner,

0:29:520:29:57

"is always cheerful.

0:29:570:29:58

"Entirely trustworthy and extremely loyal."

0:29:580:30:02

These letters are truly amazing - as amazing as Constance herself.

0:30:020:30:07

It's wonderful to think all of this documentation will one day go

0:30:070:30:11

to her long-lost relatives, who can begin to get to know her

0:30:110:30:14

and her achievements.

0:30:140:30:15

The revelations don't end there.

0:30:150:30:18

Neil has discovered a very rare document indeed.

0:30:180:30:21

It's a CV, it's Constance's CV.

0:30:210:30:24

Written probably sometime in 1956,

0:30:240:30:27

cos of her last appointment down here.

0:30:270:30:29

It gives her name, date of birth, that she went to grammar school

0:30:290:30:32

and some of her education. And also her typing speed

0:30:320:30:35

of 75 words a minute.

0:30:350:30:36

Some of her time through the army and the Wren and who she was working for.

0:30:360:30:43

And then the last bit where she finished up her career.

0:30:430:30:47

There's a bit here from 1945 to 1949

0:30:470:30:50

when she was commissioned in the Women's Royal Navy Service.

0:30:500:30:52

Assistant Secretary to Navy Officer in Charge of Londonderry.

0:30:520:30:56

Secretary of the Joint/AS School, Londonderry from its inception.

0:30:560:31:01

This part here links into this letter from 9th of February, 1950.

0:31:010:31:06

"Miss Constance Harrington served as Third Officer WRNS

0:31:070:31:11

"under my command from January 1947 until October 1947,

0:31:110:31:15

"in the capacity of Secretary to the Joint Anti-Submarine School, Londonderry."

0:31:150:31:19

This is amazing.

0:31:200:31:22

All this stuff you've brought today is absolutely fascinating.

0:31:220:31:26

Thank you for all this information.

0:31:260:31:27

I now want to find out all about the Anti-Submarine School.

0:31:270:31:30

'So join me later, when I'll be diving into yet another chapter

0:31:300:31:34

'of this amazing woman's life.'

0:31:340:31:36

Let's return to the case of David Granger.

0:31:410:31:44

Can the heir hunters solve the mystery of the boys

0:31:440:31:47

separated from their family?

0:31:470:31:49

The team in the office have been trying to find the rightful heirs

0:31:500:31:53

to his £150,000 estate.

0:31:530:31:56

David died in Northampton aged 67, and no photograph of him survives.

0:31:560:32:02

The researchers have discovered that after a successful career

0:32:020:32:05

at a computer firm in Warwick,

0:32:050:32:07

David left to start a wrought iron business

0:32:070:32:10

and started working with his hands,

0:32:100:32:12

a passion he shared with his friend Steve.

0:32:120:32:14

Whatever he did, it was perfection.

0:32:160:32:19

There was always a better way of doing something with Dave,

0:32:190:32:22

and Dave would find a way.

0:32:220:32:24

If you ever needed help, Dave was always there.

0:32:240:32:27

You know, you could ring Dave up

0:32:270:32:29

and he's the first person to help you out.

0:32:290:32:31

David was undoubtedly very generous to his friends,

0:32:310:32:35

but he was naturally quite reserved.

0:32:350:32:37

Dave, as far as I know, was an only child.

0:32:370:32:40

He was brought up in Northamptonshire.

0:32:400:32:44

He never really discussed his personal life.

0:32:440:32:48

So far, this case has been a frustrating one

0:32:530:32:56

for case manager Grimble.

0:32:560:32:58

There are no entitled heirs on the maternal side,

0:32:580:33:02

and on the father's side, his best lead

0:33:020:33:05

is a tantalising glimpse of two boys' names on the 1911 census.

0:33:050:33:09

The census entry for the residential West London District School

0:33:090:33:14

shows a Charles Granger aged six, who could be David's father,

0:33:140:33:18

and a Frank Granger aged eight, who could be his uncle.

0:33:180:33:22

Neil think he knows why the boys aren't registered with their family.

0:33:230:33:28

Is it a poor school? Is it a poor school, is it?

0:33:280:33:32

Yeah, so they've been abandoned in a poor school.

0:33:320:33:35

The school they were at was the West London District School

0:33:360:33:39

and was one of several in London known as poor schools

0:33:390:33:42

that took in children from poor families

0:33:420:33:44

who couldn't afford to care for them themselves.

0:33:440:33:47

It was quite a large building.

0:33:470:33:49

It housed pretty much 700 or 800 children

0:33:490:33:52

and had a large dining hall and very large grounds.

0:33:520:33:56

It had about 70 acres of grounds.

0:33:560:33:58

It was actually its own little community, a little village, almost.

0:33:580:34:01

They were taught shoemaking, carpentry,

0:34:010:34:06

anything that would make them employable in later life.

0:34:060:34:09

They would stay there either until their parents left the workhouse

0:34:100:34:14

and they would be united, or in some cases they would stay there

0:34:140:34:18

until they reached the age of 15

0:34:180:34:21

when they would then be old enough to lead an independent life.

0:34:210:34:25

If the two boys on the census WERE David's father and uncle,

0:34:280:34:32

it seems that they grew up separated from their parents,

0:34:320:34:36

and after they left the school, it's unlikely

0:34:360:34:38

that they would have returned to the family,

0:34:380:34:40

which is going to make it even harder for Neil

0:34:400:34:43

to make the vital connection that will prove he's on the right track.

0:34:430:34:47

But in the meantime,

0:34:480:34:49

all they can do is press on and pursue every lead they have.

0:34:490:34:53

-I, or without the I on his...?

-With the I.

0:34:540:34:57

Gareth has been trying to trace Frank Granger after he left the school

0:34:590:35:02

and has found three marriages that could be relevant.

0:35:020:35:06

What's the first one?

0:35:080:35:11

Emily. B-A-I-L-E-Y.

0:35:110:35:13

One of the marriages to an Emily Bailey seems promising,

0:35:140:35:18

so they immediately put in a request for a certificate.

0:35:180:35:21

It turns out this marriage produced three children,

0:35:210:35:24

who could be first cousins to David.

0:35:240:35:26

Further investigation reveals that Peter and Anne have died,

0:35:260:35:31

but James, it appears, is still alive.

0:35:310:35:34

He's a potential claimant.

0:35:340:35:37

We can't be 100% sure at the moment, but from what we can see

0:35:380:35:43

from the records, there's a good chance he is part of the family.

0:35:430:35:47

And hopefully, by talking to him, he may give us

0:35:470:35:51

some information that may put it all together, so we'll give him a try.

0:35:510:35:56

Dave sends senior heir hunter on the road, Bob Barrett, round to James's house,

0:35:560:36:02

but Bob's been warned that this could be a wild goose chase.

0:36:020:36:06

It may very well NOT be an heir, so the first thing I'll do

0:36:060:36:10

if I manage to find this gentleman is to try and ascertain

0:36:100:36:14

that he comes from the right family.

0:36:140:36:16

-Mr Granger?

-He's in luck.

0:36:200:36:22

James Granger is in, so Bob gets straight down to business.

0:36:220:36:26

-So you don't know your dad's date of birth?

-No, no, I don't.

0:36:260:36:30

But quickly realises he's not going to get the answers he's looking for.

0:36:300:36:34

-Or where he was born?

-No.

-And you don't know when he died?

-No.

0:36:340:36:38

You don't remember any aunts and uncles on his side?

0:36:380:36:41

Nobody has ever mentioned anything about that side.

0:36:410:36:44

It turns out that James's parents split up when he was very young,

0:36:440:36:48

so he knows nothing about his real father, Frank Granger.

0:36:480:36:52

Although Bob still isn't convinced that James is an entitled heir,

0:36:520:36:56

he talks him through the process of claiming on an estate.

0:36:560:36:59

Just one signature just there.

0:36:590:37:01

James is happy for the heir hunters

0:37:010:37:02

to help him make his claim to the Treasury,

0:37:020:37:04

if he turns out to be connected to the family.

0:37:040:37:07

Right, be seeing you, then.

0:37:070:37:09

Everything about this case is still very uncertain.

0:37:090:37:12

Bob may have just signed up his first heir, and if he has,

0:37:120:37:16

then James could finally fill in the gaps in his family history.

0:37:160:37:20

Money doesn't really bother me,

0:37:210:37:23

so it's nice to know, cos I don't know a lot of my relatives.

0:37:230:37:29

Well, I mean, I was too young, put it that way,

0:37:310:37:34

and I was never one for investigating.

0:37:340:37:37

I just take life as it comes.

0:37:370:37:40

-Hiya, Grimble, please.

-Meanwhile, Bob checks back in with the office.

0:37:410:37:45

Would you believe it, the one time when we need someone to know

0:37:450:37:50

something about their father, this Mr Granger doesn't.

0:37:500:37:53

But even as Bob is relaying his latest setback to Grimble,

0:37:550:37:58

downstairs, Gareth is having a eureka moment.

0:37:580:38:02

I'm wondering, have they just abandoned their first two children, Frank and Charles?

0:38:020:38:07

Possibly because they couldn't afford to look after them,

0:38:080:38:11

and at a later date, they've been in a better position and started having kids again.

0:38:110:38:16

Gareth's found an entry on the 1911 census

0:38:160:38:18

for a Henry and Martha Granger.

0:38:180:38:20

It shows them having two children, Thomas and Rose.

0:38:200:38:24

There's no mention of Charles or Frank,

0:38:240:38:27

the two boys who had been sent away to the poor school,

0:38:270:38:29

but Gareth thinks that they are part of the same family.

0:38:290:38:33

We're not sure it's right, but so much of it ties in,

0:38:330:38:37

so much of it looks good. We're working it.

0:38:370:38:40

If his theory's correct,

0:38:410:38:43

then he's just found another aunt and uncle of the deceased.

0:38:430:38:46

James Granger, the newly signed potential heir,

0:38:460:38:49

would also be their nephew.

0:38:490:38:51

If Thomas and Rose had gone on to have children,

0:38:510:38:54

they would also be heirs, but frustratingly,

0:38:540:38:57

this is where the trail runs dry.

0:38:570:38:59

It's like a whole section of the family, for some reason, has vanished.

0:39:010:39:06

It's really hard, this case.

0:39:060:39:07

But undaunted, Simon and Gareth get stuck into this new challenge,

0:39:070:39:12

and between them, they find out the truth.

0:39:120:39:16

Thomas, it seems, died as an infant, but Rose hadn't vanished.

0:39:160:39:19

She'd emigrated.

0:39:190:39:21

-Where was your guess for Rose?

-Arkansas.

0:39:210:39:24

-They've gone to America.

-Well done.

0:39:260:39:28

Rose Granger may have died, but she has a daughter living in America.

0:39:300:39:35

She is another potential first cousin of David's

0:39:350:39:38

and heir to his estate.

0:39:380:39:40

Simon is delighted.

0:39:400:39:43

So it looks as if they've gone to Arkansas,

0:39:430:39:45

and more importantly, she's on the phone.

0:39:450:39:47

It's 2pm in London, and 8am in Arkansas.

0:39:470:39:51

Grimble rings the possible cousin with what he hopes

0:39:510:39:55

will be a happy wake-up call.

0:39:550:39:56

Right, she was Rose, was she? Right. OK.

0:39:570:40:03

Can you tell me, did your mother have any other brothers or sisters at all?

0:40:030:40:07

It's vital that Grimble establishes a link

0:40:070:40:10

between Rose's daughter and the deceased.

0:40:100:40:12

The two brothers that left home,

0:40:120:40:15

were they older or younger than your mother?

0:40:150:40:17

Amazingly, she seems to know a lot about her mother's family,

0:40:210:40:25

and it looks like it's tying in with Gareth's theory.

0:40:250:40:29

Bye-bye.

0:40:290:40:31

A lovely old girl.

0:40:310:40:32

Well, don't know if it's the right family,

0:40:340:40:36

but everything adds up, doesn't it?

0:40:360:40:38

She's saying that her mother, um, she had two brothers that left home,

0:40:380:40:45

and that's basically our deceased father and his brother Frank.

0:40:450:40:51

The grandmother had two other children.

0:40:520:40:55

Grimble heads down downstairs to share the good news.

0:40:570:41:00

She read out all the details on her mother's birth certificate that she had,

0:41:000:41:05

which gives us date of birth and confirms Henry and Martha Amy.

0:41:050:41:10

-Peek?

-Peek. That's definitely right as far as that's concerned.

0:41:100:41:15

It's a great result for the team.

0:41:150:41:19

All their hard work has finally paid off,

0:41:190:41:22

but there's still one missing piece to this jigsaw.

0:41:220:41:25

Is James Granger, who signed the agreement earlier,

0:41:250:41:29

really David Granger's first cousin and a bona fide heir to his estate?

0:41:290:41:34

The answer is contained on his father Frank Granger's marriage certificate,

0:41:340:41:38

which has just arrived in the office.

0:41:380:41:41

So this is our guy. He is right.

0:41:420:41:44

The certificate proves that Frank and Charles, the two boys

0:41:440:41:47

who were sent away to the poor school, were indeed brothers.

0:41:470:41:52

Frank's father is listed as Henry Granger,

0:41:520:41:55

who was Charles's father as well.

0:41:550:41:57

This means that Frank's son James is a first cousin

0:41:570:42:01

and heir of the deceased.

0:42:010:42:03

Grimble is delighted.

0:42:030:42:05

I think we've got the right family.

0:42:050:42:07

Full marks to all the researchers down there.

0:42:070:42:09

They've done a very good job, I think.

0:42:090:42:12

In the end,

0:42:120:42:14

the heir hunters traced a total of six beneficiaries on this case.

0:42:140:42:18

Fraser & Fraser estimate the estate could be worth as much as £480,000

0:42:180:42:23

based on the sale of David's businesses, but the final value

0:42:230:42:27

will only be confirmed by the Treasury to the heirs.

0:42:270:42:31

All in all, it's was a good day's heir hunting, and Neil knows it.

0:42:310:42:35

Hard work and good research has enabled us to solve a case

0:42:350:42:39

which this morning looked like it may never be solved.

0:42:390:42:42

Here are some more unsolved cases where heirs still need to be found.

0:42:470:42:52

The Government's database has over 2,000 names on it.

0:42:520:42:55

This is money that is owed to members of the public.

0:42:550:42:58

New cases are added all the time.

0:42:580:43:01

Cases get on our unclaimed list after a little while.

0:43:010:43:06

The procedure is that initially the case will come in, we will make some

0:43:060:43:10

enquiries ourselves to see whether we can trace relatives or a will.

0:43:100:43:15

If those initial enquiries don't bring forth anything,

0:43:150:43:19

we will then advertise.

0:43:190:43:21

But these cases do not stay on the list forever.

0:43:210:43:24

Well, it'll stay on the list as long as it's claimable

0:43:240:43:27

and actually, under the Limitation Act,

0:43:270:43:29

people have 12 years to come forward and claim, and that 12 years runs

0:43:290:43:35

from the date the administration of the estate is completed.

0:43:350:43:38

Let's have one last go at finding rightful heirs

0:43:380:43:41

to estates on the list.

0:43:410:43:43

Do these names mean anything to you? Are they relatives of yours?

0:43:430:43:47

Henry Albert Powis died in Chelmsford in November 2007.

0:43:490:43:53

The name Powis is most common in the Hereford area

0:43:530:43:56

and the Anglo-Welsh border.

0:43:560:43:58

Did you know Henry? Do you know anything about his family?

0:43:590:44:03

Elizabeth Baulch died on the 15th of May 2009 in Thamesmead in London.

0:44:040:44:11

Baulch is a very rare name, shared by only eight people

0:44:110:44:14

in a million according to the most recent census.

0:44:140:44:17

Do you share Elizabeth's rare surname?

0:44:180:44:21

Could you be a relative entitled to her unclaimed estate?

0:44:210:44:24

Subhi Subhedar died on the 16th of July 1998

0:44:260:44:30

in St Thomas's Hospital in Lambeth, London.

0:44:300:44:33

I have Subhi's death certificate here.

0:44:330:44:36

It shows that he was born on the 17th of March 1935, in India.

0:44:360:44:41

The death certificate also reveals that Subhi was an architect.

0:44:410:44:45

Was he a colleague of yours?

0:44:450:44:47

If you think you're related to Subhi or any of the people featured today,

0:44:470:44:52

then follow the Treasury Solicitors' advice.

0:44:520:44:55

If people want to find out information

0:44:560:44:58

about Bona Vacantia Division, the first port of call is our website.

0:44:580:45:03

We have a dedicated website and there's information on there

0:45:030:45:06

for them to find out about what we do and how to make a claim.

0:45:060:45:10

A reminder of those names again.

0:45:100:45:13

Henry Powis, Elizabeth Baulch

0:45:130:45:17

and Subhi Subhedar.

0:45:170:45:18

If today's names are relatives of yours,

0:45:200:45:23

you could be entitled to a forgotten fortune.

0:45:230:45:25

Now back to the case of Constance Harrington from Worthing,

0:45:310:45:35

who had been an outstanding Wren in World War Two.

0:45:350:45:39

Constance died aged 87, leaving behind an estate worth £130,000,

0:45:390:45:45

but no will.

0:45:450:45:47

I found out from heir hunter Neil that Constance worked

0:45:470:45:50

for the Anti-Submarine School in Londonderry.

0:45:500:45:53

To find out more,

0:45:530:45:55

I've asked naval historian Eric Grove to investigate further.

0:45:550:45:59

-Hello, Eric.

-Hello, nice to meet you.

-Nice to meet you.

0:46:010:46:04

So what was the Anti-Submarine School

0:46:040:46:07

and why was it in Londonderry?

0:46:070:46:08

It was the main centre where air

0:46:080:46:12

and naval tactics against submarines were developed.

0:46:120:46:15

And it was in Londonderry because Londonderry was a major base

0:46:150:46:18

in the Second World War for operations against the U-boats.

0:46:180:46:20

It was as far west as we could get in the United Kingdom

0:46:200:46:23

and it and Liverpool were the two major anti-submarine bases

0:46:230:46:26

in the Second World War.

0:46:260:46:28

The U-boats were so called by the British because of the German name

0:46:300:46:34

for submarines - unterseeboot - basically, "under sea boat".

0:46:340:46:39

The German U-boat fleets were a major thorn in the Allies' side

0:46:390:46:42

during World War Two.

0:46:420:46:44

It wasn't so much the damage they did to warships,

0:46:440:46:47

but merchant shipping instead,

0:46:470:46:49

stopping crucial supplies crossing the Atlantic to the UK.

0:46:490:46:52

By the end of the war, it's estimated that 3,000 Allied ships

0:46:540:46:58

had been sunk by U-boat torpedoes.

0:46:580:47:01

And about 2,800 of those ships had been merchant vessels.

0:47:010:47:06

The Anti-Submarine School was key to helping end this threat forever.

0:47:060:47:10

So Constance would have been at the Anti-Submarine School

0:47:150:47:18

between 1945 and 1947. What would she have been doing?

0:47:180:47:22

The first big thing, and I think she was transferred there

0:47:220:47:25

to help administer this, was Operation Deadlight.

0:47:250:47:28

-And what's Operation Deadlight?

-Disposing of the German U-boat fleet.

0:47:280:47:32

The British insisted that the vast majority of the available German

0:47:320:47:36

submarines left at the end of the war should be sunk,

0:47:360:47:39

because they'd been the biggest threat during the war

0:47:390:47:41

and they didn't want these to get into the hands of a country

0:47:410:47:44

that might be a threat after the war.

0:47:440:47:46

So, of about 156, I think, were surrendered at the end of the war,

0:47:460:47:49

40 went to the various victor powers

0:47:490:47:51

and over 100 were sunk in various ways in the Irish...

0:47:510:47:56

well, at the entrance to the Irish Sea off Northern Ireland.

0:47:560:47:59

The plan was that they would lay charges in the bow and the stern.

0:48:040:48:07

Trouble was, they were in such a bad state.

0:48:070:48:09

They had been badly built to start with,

0:48:090:48:11

many of them in the latter part of the war.

0:48:110:48:13

And they really didn't get to where they were supposed to be scuttled,

0:48:130:48:17

so they were sunk by gunfire, most of them.

0:48:170:48:19

Some were sunk by depth charges dropped by aircraft

0:48:190:48:22

to practise anti-submarine techniques.

0:48:220:48:24

And they were all got rid of, and it was quite a remarkable operation.

0:48:240:48:28

The sea to the north of Ireland is scattered

0:48:280:48:32

with wrecked German submarines.

0:48:320:48:34

Even with the German U-boat fleet destroyed, their legacy lived on.

0:48:340:48:38

Constance and the Anti-Submarine School were also thinking

0:48:380:48:42

about the future threat of the submarine.

0:48:420:48:45

And there was a joker in the pack too.

0:48:450:48:47

The Germans, at the end of the war, had developed submarines

0:48:470:48:49

of a new design, with very high underwater speed.

0:48:490:48:52

And this required new weapons and new tactics,

0:48:520:48:55

so it was crucially important that there should be a centre of excellence,

0:48:550:48:58

like the Anti-Submarine School,

0:48:580:49:00

to try and develop means of countering what could be

0:49:000:49:02

an even greater threat in a new war than the U-boats had been in the Second World War.

0:49:020:49:06

And why was there all this effort to counter submarines?

0:49:060:49:09

Submarines had been the main threat to Britain's control of the sea

0:49:090:49:12

in the Second World War, the main threat to Britain's survival perhaps.

0:49:120:49:15

And we needed to counter submarines in the Second World War

0:49:150:49:18

and there was the prospect that somebody else -

0:49:180:49:20

as time went by, it looked as if it would be the Soviet Union -

0:49:200:49:23

would threaten Britain with submarines in a future war.

0:49:230:49:27

So yet again Constance was right in the middle of the action.

0:49:270:49:31

From his research into this amazing woman,

0:49:310:49:33

this comes as no surprise to Eric.

0:49:330:49:35

The anti-submarine warfare experts insisted that

0:49:350:49:38

the Joint Anti-Submarine School be retained after the war,

0:49:380:49:41

that it be established and Constance was there

0:49:410:49:43

when it was established as a permanent establishment.

0:49:430:49:46

And it was really perhaps the most important thing

0:49:460:49:49

in the Royal Navy at the time.

0:49:490:49:50

This is all too typical, from what I know about Constance,

0:49:500:49:53

she was at the centre of activities, combined operations, D-day and so on.

0:49:530:49:58

And it's no wonder that she retired on a bit of a high,

0:49:580:50:01

at the end of her naval career because she'd always been at the centre of things

0:50:010:50:05

and you couldn't have been more at the centre of things than being in Londonderry at this time.

0:50:050:50:10

Now let's discover how Constance's case came to a conclusion.

0:50:130:50:17

She died aged 87, leaving no will and an estate worth £130,000.

0:50:170:50:23

Heir hunter Dave Slee's search for Constance's heirs has brought him

0:50:260:50:29

to the brink of his first major breakthrough.

0:50:290:50:32

By tracing the descendants of her Uncle William,

0:50:330:50:36

he had arrived at her first cousin once removed, Reginald Harrington.

0:50:360:50:40

Reginald was Dave's first live heir on this case,

0:50:410:50:45

so he didn't waste any time getting in touch.

0:50:450:50:48

It was a complete surprise to me, I had no idea, in fact,

0:50:480:50:52

that I had a cousin, once removed, named Constance.

0:50:520:50:57

It turned out that, for some reason, Reginald's father,

0:50:570:51:01

also Reginald, had had very little contact with his family after he married.

0:51:010:51:05

I didn't come across my family until I was a young man myself,

0:51:050:51:10

so my paternal family is quite distant to me,

0:51:100:51:14

which is one of the reasons why I'm now so keen to learn more.

0:51:140:51:19

Did she talk about any of the others?

0:51:190:51:20

Dave was able to tell Reginald about his cousin Constance's

0:51:200:51:24

illustrious wartime career, but as it turned out,

0:51:240:51:28

this was only her first step along the corridors of power.

0:51:280:51:31

As the investigation continued and Dave spoke to more

0:51:310:51:35

of Constance's descendants, he made a fascinating discovery.

0:51:350:51:38

I found out from a family member that, incredibly,

0:51:390:51:42

Constance at one time was working as the private secretary to John Profumo

0:51:420:51:49

who, later on, as the Minister of War,

0:51:490:51:52

was involved in the Profumo scandal.

0:51:520:51:55

John Profumo was a Conservative politician

0:51:560:51:59

who served as Secretary of State for War from 1960 to 1963.

0:51:590:52:04

During this time, he had an adulterous affair with

0:52:040:52:07

a glamorous call girl named Christine Keeler, sparking off

0:52:070:52:11

one of the greatest political scandals of the 20th century.

0:52:110:52:14

Profumo famously fell for Christine's charms

0:52:170:52:20

when they met by the swimming pool of Cliveden House,

0:52:200:52:23

where they were both guests at a house party.

0:52:230:52:26

The year was 1961.

0:52:290:52:31

Profumo and Christine embarked on a brief affair that ended

0:52:310:52:36

after he was warned about her friendship

0:52:360:52:38

with society osteopath Stephen Ward.

0:52:380:52:40

It was known to the security services that Ward had

0:52:410:52:47

some connections and had been trying to make contact with the Russians.

0:52:470:52:52

Ward seems to have been a bit of a fantasist

0:52:520:52:56

and was trying to sell secrets to the Russians and find ways of doing that.

0:52:560:53:02

Fast-forward 18 months,

0:53:020:53:04

and the press have got wind of the affair and are hounding Christine.

0:53:040:53:08

It's become known that another of her boyfriends,

0:53:080:53:11

also introduced to her by Ward, was Yevgeni Ivanov,

0:53:110:53:15

a Russian naval attache to the Soviet embassy in London.

0:53:150:53:19

One of the reasons why the Profumo affair becomes so toxic

0:53:190:53:24

is because it could be associated with security scandals

0:53:240:53:29

and with the whole idea of spying

0:53:290:53:34

in the wake of a series of spy scandals

0:53:340:53:37

which had broken over the previous year or so.

0:53:370:53:40

Profumo offered to resign,

0:53:410:53:43

but when questioned in private by members of his own party,

0:53:430:53:46

he denied that he had had a relationship with Keeler.

0:53:460:53:49

He went on to reaffirm that in the House of Commons

0:53:490:53:55

in his statement on 22nd March 1963,

0:53:550:53:58

and it's that statement that,

0:53:580:54:01

"There was no impropriety in my acquaintanceship with Miss Keeler"

0:54:010:54:05

which came back to bite him later on in the year,

0:54:050:54:10

when it became apparent that this was untrue.

0:54:100:54:13

Having previously worked with Profumo, Constance would have taken

0:54:140:54:18

a lot of interest in the case,

0:54:180:54:20

but would of course remain entirely professional and discrete.

0:54:200:54:24

Good private secretaries would have been brought up not to have enquired

0:54:260:54:31

into things that don't directly concern them anyway.

0:54:310:54:35

But it turned out nothing could save him.

0:54:350:54:38

On 5th June 1963, after sustained pressure by the press and MPs,

0:54:380:54:44

John Profumo finally admitted his lie

0:54:440:54:46

and resigned from the Government.

0:54:460:54:48

He devoted the rest of his life to charity,

0:54:480:54:52

and in 1975, 20 years after his fall from grace,

0:54:520:54:56

he was awarded the CBE.

0:54:560:54:58

By the time he dies in 2006,

0:55:000:55:04

he's felt to have fully atoned for his crimes, such as they were,

0:55:040:55:10

and to have made a signal contribution to society,

0:55:100:55:16

but in a rather different way from during his parliamentary career.

0:55:160:55:20

Constance had an astounding career

0:55:220:55:24

and had been a loyal secretary to all the important figures

0:55:240:55:27

that she worked with over the years.

0:55:270:55:29

For Dave Slee, it was a successful and eye-opening investigation.

0:55:290:55:33

Thank you now, bye-bye.

0:55:330:55:35

Initially, we just thought this is in a state of hover.

0:55:360:55:40

A lady that's lived in London and retired, as so many people do,

0:55:400:55:43

onto the south coast, and it wasn't until we delved deeper

0:55:430:55:47

into Constance's background that we discovered

0:55:470:55:50

what a fascinating life she led.

0:55:500:55:52

So, from our point of view, to research estates where people have

0:55:520:55:57

this connection with famous events is, of course, really rewarding.

0:55:570:56:02

In the end, the company found 30 heirs

0:56:040:56:07

to Constance's £130,000 estate,

0:56:070:56:10

15 on each side of the family.

0:56:100:56:13

The investigation was over,

0:56:130:56:15

but the heir hunters had accumulated some fascinating information

0:56:150:56:18

about Constance which they wanted to share with their cousin Reginald,

0:56:180:56:22

so senior researcher on the road, Dave Hadley, went over to meet him.

0:56:220:56:26

-Mr Harrington.

-Hello.

-Hello.

0:56:260:56:29

-It's good to see you.

-And you.

0:56:290:56:30

-As well as the Harrington family tree...

-That's Constance.

0:56:300:56:34

-Constance, yes.

-And there's you.

-Yes.

0:56:340:56:37

..Dave has also brought a letter written by Constance

0:56:370:56:40

to one of her maternal cousins.

0:56:400:56:42

-I'll let you read the letter.

-Thank you.

0:56:420:56:45

In it, she speaks of an enduring friendship with Profumo and his wife.

0:56:450:56:49

"He invited me to stay with him

0:56:490:56:52

"and his wife at their country cottage in Sawbridgeworth.

0:56:520:56:56

"I felt very honoured."

0:56:560:56:58

The letter also offers an intriguing glimpse into her thoughts

0:56:580:57:01

about the scandal that put an end to her old boss's career.

0:57:010:57:05

"I am convinced that he was set up at Cliveden with Christine Keeler.

0:57:050:57:11

"People who did not want him to rise to the top and were jealous of him.

0:57:120:57:18

"He was a top man. He made a mistake,

0:57:180:57:22

"but we are all sinners, are we not?"

0:57:220:57:26

Hearing Constance's point of view is a moving experience

0:57:280:57:32

for both heir hunter and heir.

0:57:320:57:34

Somehow, I feel I almost have a link with her.

0:57:340:57:38

I was in the Royal Marines myself.

0:57:380:57:41

She was a Wren and, I don't know, there's a closeness

0:57:410:57:45

that seems to have developed now which I didn't dream would happen.

0:57:450:57:49

It's been absolutely fascinating.

0:57:490:57:51

It turns out there are other family similarities as well.

0:57:520:57:56

Like her cousin Constance before her,

0:57:560:57:59

Reg's younger daughter Claire has also had a high-flying career.

0:57:590:58:03

As a PA at 10 Downing Street, she's worked for three Prime Ministers

0:58:030:58:07

and travelled all over the world on state business.

0:58:070:58:10

There's a parallel there, isn't there, that they both have worked

0:58:100:58:15

at the highest level, so I'm very proud of both of them, I really am.

0:58:150:58:21

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