Tracing Your Seafaring Ancestors (ePub)
A Guide to Maritime Photographs for Family Historians
Imprint: Pen & Sword Family History
File Size: 7.8 MB (.epub)
Pages: 172
Illustrations: 60
ISBN: 9781473880498
Published: 2nd February 2016
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Tracing Your Seafaring Ancestors Paperback Add to Basket | £11.24 |
Photographs of your seafaring ancestors may tell you more about their lives than you realize, and Simon Wills’s helpful and practical guide shows you how to identify and interpret the evidence caught on camera. Since maritime roles have been so vital to Britain’s prosperity and military might, they are among the commonest professions depicted in photographs of our ancestors, and his handbook is the ideal introduction to them.
Maybe your ancestor was a seaman in the Royal Navy, a ship’s captain, a steward on an ocean liner, or an officer in the naval reserves? This book shows you how to spot photographic clues to an individual’s career. Whether your ancestor served in the merchant navy or the Royal Navy or in another seagoing role such as a fisherman, a lifeboatman, or even a ship’s passenger, Simon Wills’s book will be your guide.
As featured in
Who Do You Think You Are
As featured in
Family Tree
As featured in
Who Do You Think You Are
As featured in: 'Settlers in Canada'
Family Tree
As featured in
Family Tree October 2021 Edition
As featured in
Family Tree September 2021 Edition
Featured in
Who Do You Think You Are? Magazine - Issue 180, Summer 2021
Author article ‘Netting your ancestors’ as featured by
Family Tree, March 2021
Simon Wills features as a reviewer and Tracing Your Seafaring Ancestors is referenced
WDYTYA? Magazine, June 2020
Author features as expert in Q&A
WDYTYA? Magazine, August 2019
As referenced in author article 'A Fishy Business'
WDYTYA? Magazine, August 2019
Author article 'Passenger Lists' as featured by
WDYTYA? Magazine, April 2019
Author article 'Women at Sea' as featured by
WDYTYA? magazine, January 2019
Author article part of their 'Focus on' feature: Naval reservists as featured by
WDYTYA?, July 2018
Author article 'My ancestor went to sea' as featured in
Discover Your Ancestors, issue 7
Author article as seen in (part of the Ship Building Ancestors feature)
Family Tree, April 2017
Simon Wills author article on the working life of a ship stoker
WDYTYA? Magazine, April 2017
As featured in
West Surrey FHS Dec 2016
Tracing one’s ancestors is certainly a pastime gaining in popularity. And it’s not just paper records that are helping us build up the family tree. Photographs of seafaring ancestors can tell a great deal about their lives, and Simon Wills’s helpful and practical guide shows how to identify evidence caught on camera and interpret the photographic clues to an individual’s career. Who knows – do you have a Jellicoe or salty able seaman in your family’s past?
Action-Adventure Historical Fiction, Julian Stockwin
As would be expected, the book is filled with interesting photographs that are used as an informative example, where caps, badges, buttons, medals, uniform and the backdrop are to be studied, an explanation is given and then after the reader is provided with web site links with which to seek further knowledge. For us maritime enthusiasts, a modestly priced diverting publication.
Warship World, November-December 2016
As featured in part of author article
Family Tree, October 2016
As featured in part of author Q&A
Family Tree, September 2016
As a retired mariner, amateur genealogist and photographer, I was delighted to have the opportunity to review this book. Dr Willis has brought to life an important and interesting aspect of UK family research showing us how to look in detail for clues to interpret old photographs of salty ancestors.
Nautilus August 2016
A useful and practical guide for learning more about ancestors who were at sea from photographs as well as providing an insight into British maritime history.
Essex Family Historian No.159
As featured in.
Family Tree Magazine August 2016
Although a huge subject, Mr. Wills has provided an excellent guide to this, and also to helping anyone understand much of the information that can be gathered from old photographs.
Merchant Navy Assc
If you have photographs of sea going ancestors this book would be invaluable for ongoing research and further study; it is also a jolly good read!
Rotherham Family History Journal Sept 2016
A well-illustrated new book has been published as a guide to help family historians and other researches find out more about maritime photographs.
Picture Postcard Monthly, July 2016, no.447
As featured in.
Family Tree Magazine July 2016
I found this book absolutely fascinating and learned things I didn't know I needed to know.
Who Do You Think You Are? Magazine July 2016
It is packed with photographs and examples, so it is visually a treat. I for one will be keeping a copy of this permanently on my desk as a reference guide. An absolute must for interpreting that maritime family album.
There are some great tips and clues: from questions to ask yourself as you begin analysing your photographs, and the difference between the Royal and Merchant Navies, right down to what cuff stripes can tell you. Whether 'your' seafarer was in one of the naval services, was a fisherman, a Royal Marine or even a ship's passenger, this clear and easy-to-read guide will help you learn more about their lives.
Family Tree June 2016
As featured in.
Family Tree June 2016
As mentioned in
Wrexham Leader
It is the subtitle - 'A Guide to Maritime Photographs for Family Historians' - that really tells you what this book is about.
Your Family History April 2016
As well as providing background information on the development of uniforms he also suggests various avenues for further research.
This volume is a comprehensive guide to interpreting photographs of seafaring ancestors from 1850-1950. It is aimed at helping you identify your ancestor's roles at sea, and it explains their ranks and medals and will provide the researcher with tips for investigating careers. The book is a fascinating insight into Britain's maritime history, so if like me, you have sea salt in your blood, then it is worth taking a look.
Nick Thorne - The Nosey Genealogist
As featured in.
Your Family History - Spring 2016
I am not a Naval expert by any stretch of the imagination, but this book could easily help me become one. There is a lot of extremely useful information contained within these pages, and not just information regarding the identification of naval photographs.
Amazon Review - Paul Nixon
The scope of the book, considering its modest 170-odd pages, is wide and yet it seems to cover all the bases. I particularly like the way in which photographs have been overlaid with specific detail when the author is expanding on cuff stripes, shoulder straps or branch badges, and he is to be congratulated on putting together a first class guide to seafaring ancestors whether they be Merchant Navy, Royal Navy or other seafarers in general. This is going to be an extremely useful resource and there is obvious cross-over with the army with detail on Royal Marines and Royal Naval Division.
About Dr Simon Wills
Dr SIMON WILLS is a genealogist, historian and journalist and a regular contributor to Family Tree, the BBC’s Who Do You Think You Are? and other magazines. He writes mainly about maritime history and genealogy, but he also has a special interest in health and disease in the past. He has given presentations and interviews all around the UK for history, genealogy and literary festivals, and for organisations such as the BBC, National Trust and National Archives. His most recent publications include a guide to maritime photographs, Tracing Your Seafaring Ancestors, and a popular account of our forebears' illnesses, How Our Ancestors Died.