Sunday, 12 April 2026

The Story Of Thomas Farrell

This is the story of my maternal great-grand uncle, Thomas Farrell  (1868 - 1927).  

Our common ancestors are: Michael Farrell and Susan Muldowney — sometimes recorded as Downey or Downie — my 2x great-grandparents.


I have written about Thomas before, but it was really only an outline: born in England to Irish immigrant parents, emigrated to Australia with his family, spent most of his adult life at one address in Charters Towers, and then passed away comparatively young.


I felt the need to return to his story and approach it a little differently. He was not a man who left behind a large paper trail, nor does he seem to have lived the kind of life that draws much notice in the records. There are no dramatic headlines around him, no rich archive of letters, and sadly, no photograph of Thomas himself in my collection.


And yet, I have increasingly felt that his life is worth pausing over precisely because it was so quiet.


Family history is not only about the ancestors who made a stir or left behind plentiful records. It is also about those who lived more modestly — people whose lives were shaped by work, endurance, sorrow, loyalty, and family care. Thomas seems to have been one of those people. The records for him are thin, but they still reveal something strong and lasting: a man who worked steadily, remained close to home, endured much, and at the end of his life was held within the care of family.


That is really the intention of this piece: to try to honour the shape of a quiet life. Not an empty one, and not an unimportant one, but a life lived without fuss, and still deserving to be remembered with tenderness.


Sadly, I do not have a photograph of Thomas himself, but the few family photographs I do have help place him more closely within the family group he belonged to — his parents and the Farrell brothers and sisters whose lives were so intertwined with his own.

The  Farrell  Family

(with the few photos of the Farrell siblings that are in my collection)

A Quiet Life

When I sat down to write this post about Thomas Farrell, I was immediately aware of the gaps.  I could trace him through the official breadcrumbs left in records — a birth record, census records, electoral rolls, a passenger list, and a death record - but these are thin facts. They do not tell me what kind of company he was, what made him laugh, what his voice sounded like, or what private burdens he may have carried. 


Family history can so often be like that. Sometimes it gives us the frame of a life, but leaves the person inside it only partly seen.


Yet, every now and then, one small detail says more than a whole page of records ever could. In Thomas’s case, that detail kept drawing me back.


When Thomas — unmarried and living alone by that stage of his life — became seriously ill, he did not die alone, and he did not die in a hospital surrounded by strangers. He died at Molongle Creek near Gumlu, in the home of his married sister, Margaret McCane, née Farrell, my great-grandmother.


That single fact does not tell me everything about Thomas, but it tells me something that matters very much. He was with family. He was cared for. He was loved.


That feels like the truest starting point for telling his story. Thomas may be one of those relatives who left only a light paper trail, but his life does not feel empty because of that. Instead, it feels quiet in the truest sense: modest, steady, and deeply human. 


The family Thomas belonged to

1868 Birth Record - Thomas Farrell

Thomas was born on 15 January 1868 at East Field House, Holmside, County Durham, England, the second child of Michael Farrell (1834–1917) and Susan Muldowney, whose surname appeared in records as Downey or Downie at times (1842–1919).


Thomas's siblings were:

·         Margaret (1865–1955) - my great grandmother

·         Michael (1870–1873) - who sadly died in infancy

·         Helen Ann “Annie” (1871–1937)

·         Elizabeth (1873–1934)

·         Michael (1876–1918)

·         Patrick Joseph (1877–1917), WWI soldier

·         James “Jim” (1880–1946), WWI soldier

·         Matthew Felix (1887–1922), WWI soldier


Even set out simply as a list, there is something moving about it. It speaks of a large family life — full at first, and then gradually marked by sorrow, distance, war, and loss.


Thomas belonged to that family story in the deepest sense. His life cannot really be separated from the people around him — the parents, brothers, and sisters whose names appear alongside his in the records, and whose own lives shaped the course of his. 


A boy already in the mines: Tanfield, 1881

The Farrell family lived in the Durham coalfield region of north-east England.  They moved around the region regularly, looking for lodging as the family grew, and likely experienced impoverished living conditions, periods of hunger, and poor health.

  

1881 England Census - Civil Parish of Tanfield, County Durham, Registration District of Lanchester


One of the records that brings Thomas closest for me is the 1881 England Census, because it shows him before emigration to Queensland, before adulthood, before all the later losses in his life. In the civil parish of Tanfield, County Durham in England, Thomas appears aged 13, living at home with his parents and younger siblings. Unlike many boys of that age, whose occupation might still be given as “scholar,” Thomas already has a job recorded beside his name:

Thomas Farrell — “Screener Collier”

That single line says so much. At thirteen, Thomas was not just growing up in a mining district — he was already part of that working world. He was a child, really, but also a worker who had likely been toiling for a number of years.


The primary duty of a screener collier was to inspect coal as it passed over screens, picking out stones, slate and other impurities by hand. Screeners worked above ground, usually on the brow of a pit or in a screening shed.  The work was physically demanding, carried out in high-dust environments, with the working day often lasting twelve hours.  It is sobering to think that this was his childhood.


Thomas's father, Michael Farrell, is also recorded with a mining-related occupation in the 1881 census:

Michael Farrell — “Coke Drawer (Burner)”

So here we have father and son, both working within the industrial life of County Durham long before the family ever came to Queensland, Australia. It also helps explain why, years later in Charters Towers, Thomas appears again and again in local census records as a miner. Mining was not some new path he stepped into in Australia. It had already shaped him from boyhood.


I always find details like this especially affecting, because they bring a person down from the branch of the family tree and place them back into real life. Thomas was not only a name in a lineage. He was a thirteen-year-old boy who already knew the reality of hard work.


Two sisters go first: January 1886

Before the rest of the Farrell family left England, two of the sisters — Margaret and Helen Ann, known as Annie — emigrated ahead of them in January 1886.


This is one of those family details I particularly love. Margaret, my great grandmother, is the one who was credited by family members with working diligently and saving her money to sponsor the family’s emigration. That gives such a strong little glimpse of her character. She was not simply hoping life might improve — she was actively helping to change its course. 


For Thomas, as for the rest of the family, her determination mattered enormously. It is another reminder that quiet lives are often shaped by the quiet strength of others around them.


The Chyebassa voyage: Thomas follows with the rest


Queensland, Australia, Passenger List - Cheybassa 1887

In September 1887, the remaining Farrell family emigrated aboard the Chyebassa: Thomas, his parents Michael and Susan, and siblings Elizabeth, Michael, Patrick, James, and baby Matthew. They arrived in Townsville on 28 September 1887 and then travelled on to Charters Towers to reunite with Margaret and Annie, who were already there.


The records do not tell us what that reunion looked like, of course, but it is hard not to pause there and imagine it. After the long voyage, after all the uncertainty and upheaval, there must have been great relief in seeing familiar faces in a new land.


For Thomas, still a young man, this was the beginning of the life he would go on to live in North Queensland — a life that, on paper at least, would remain remarkably steady for many years afterwards.


Charters Towers: the steady years on Bridge Street

By the early 1890s, Thomas and his family were firmly settled in Charters Towers.  His parents had moved into a house on Bridge Street that would remain the family home for nearly thirty-five years.   


From 1903 through to 1925, Thomas appears in electoral roll records living at that address for that entire time.  He was the family member who remained in the family home the longest.


·        The 1903, 1905, 1906, 1908, 1913 electoral roll records show him living on Bridge Street with his parents and his occupation was listed as miner.  During the years spanning 1903 to 1908, Thomas's younger brother Patrick was also living in Charters Towers and worked alongside his brother as a miner.

·        The 1919 electoral roll record still shows Thomas living on Bridge Street, but only with his youngest brother Matthew at this time.  Occupation: miner

·        The 1925 electoral roll record shows Thomas living on Bridge Street, but by this time he is living on his own.  Occupation: miner

On paper, it looks like a steady working life: one town, one street, one occupation, repeated across the years. 


There is something about that repeated pattern that feels quietly revealing. Thomas does not come across in the records as restless or showy. Instead, he seems to have been one of those people who remained — living on, working on, and holding to the familiar centre of home as the household around him gradually changed.


That too feels like part of the meaning of his life. It was, in many ways, a quiet life — not empty, but steady.


Loss, war, and what Thomas carried

Thomas’s later years in Charters Towers were marked by a great deal of family grief.


His brother Patrick Joseph Farrell was killed in Belgium on 20 September 1917 at Polygon Wood, West Flanders. Years later, Patrick’s Victory Medal was sent to Thomas in May 1923.



I always stop over details like that. A medal arriving years after a brother’s death — an official token of service and sacrifice — and it is Thomas who signs the receipt and receives the engraved medal.


Whether that happened because he was the next-of-kin contact, or because he was the one still at the family address, it feels meaningful. Thomas became the one who received that tangible reminder of Patrick’s absence.  He seems to have been the family member who remained at the centre of things when others were gone.


By 1917, Thomas’s sisters - Margaret, Elizabeth and Helen (Annie) had long since married and left Charters Towers.  Thomas's brother James had also married years before, moving out of the family home but still remaining in Charters Towers.  The family home on Bridge Street had become a much quieter place.  Then, after Patrick's death, other losses followed in quick succession:

·       18 November 1917 — his father Michael died in Charters Towers, a mere two months after the loss of Patrick in WW1.  

·         7 July 1918 — his brother Michael died in Charters Towers

·         14 January 1919 — his mother Susan died in Charters Towers

·         23 July 1922 — his brother Matthew Felix died at Charters Towers District Hospital, four years after returning from WWI

Undoubtedly, after his father's death, Thomas (aged 49) would have stepped more fully into the role of head of the household and carer of his ageing mother.


The death of mother Susan left just Thomas and his younger brother Matthew still living together on Bridge Street. Then, by mid 1922, Matthew too was gone. After that, Thomas (aged 54) was left on his own.


There is something especially poignant in that. The earlier Farrell years must once have been full and busy, with parents, brothers, sisters, and all the ordinary life of a crowded household. Then, little by little, over a period of just six years, that household thinned significantly through marriage, war, illness, and death. Thomas’s story seems to carry much of that quiet aftermath.


A shift in working life: miner to auctioneer

After the death of his younger brother Michael in 1918, it appears Thomas took over Michael’s auctioneer business, possibly in an effort to support Michael's widow and fatherless children.


Queensland, Australia, Government Gazettes, 1859-1918

The Queensland Government Gazette has Thomas's name recorded on a list of Auctioneers' Licenses issued at the end of September 1918.  


Newspapers published a few years later gives one of those wonderful little glimpses into the practical everyday world of his later life.



On 12 March 1920,
The Northern Miner published a full auction notice under the name “T. Farrell, Auctioneer.”


The notice advertises his “usual weekly auction sale” at “the old address,” given as Carg’s Buildings next to Carr Bros., Saddlers, with the sale to begin “tomorrow at 11 o’clock.” 


What I love here is how practical and ordinary it all is. Poultry in the yard — prime ducks, hens, and good turkeys — and then, in the mart, produce, fruit, vegetables, and useful items such as fly veils for horses, an ice chest, and confectioner’s scales. The tone is brisk and businesslike: “No reserve. Terms cash.”



Then, on 4 April 1925, Thomas appears again in
The Northern Miner, this time in the paper’s “To-Day” auction listings:

“T. Farrell, mart sale, 11 a.m.”

It is only a very brief notice, but it says a lot. By then, a T. Farrell sale was familiar enough to be part of the town’s ordinary weekly rhythm.


Taken together, these newspaper mentions help explain why Thomas’s death certificate lists him as an auctioneer, even though earlier records over many years call him a miner. Lives do not always fit neatly into a single label. Sometimes the paperwork preserves one part of a life while another part is already unfolding.


The closing chapter: illness, and a sister’s home


Thomas died on 7 February 1927 at Molongle Creek near Gumlu, Queensland.


Death Certificate 1927


He had celebrated his 58th birthday less than a month before this.  His cause of death was pulmonary tuberculosis.


Now here comes the detail that moves me most in his story.

Death Notice - published in a prominent northern Queensland newspaper


Death Notice - published in a Charters Towers newspaper 
(his home town in Australia)



Thomas died at the house of his older sister, Margaret McCane, née Farrell.


In the years before effective antibiotic treatment, pulmonary tuberculosis could mean a long and difficult decline. It was a feared illness, and often a lonely one. So, the fact that Thomas was taken in and cared for at home by family feels deeply important. He was not left to face that closing chapter alone.


At this point, it is hard not to notice the quiet echo of Margaret’s place in this story. She is remembered as the sister who worked and saved to help bring the family out from England and at the end of Thomas’s life, she is there again — the sister whose home became his refuge. 


Burial: the two unmarried brothers, side by side



One more detail adds a quiet tenderness to the ending.


Thomas never married, and neither did his younger brother Matthew Felix. Younger brother Matthew had served in the First World War, returned home, and then died four years later in 1922.


When Thomas died in 1927, he was buried beside Matthew in the Charters Towers Cemetery — the two unmarried brothers laid to rest, side by side.


Burial plot for the Farrell brothers at the Charters Towers Cemetery
(its present day condition looks rather sad)

It is such a simple fact, but it feels like a deeply human one too. After all the movement in this family story — from Durham to Queensland, from the mines to the auction mart, from a full household to the losses of later years — the brothers were together again. 


What I am left with

Thomas Farrell’s story is still mostly outline, but it is not empty.


He was a Durham boy already working in the mines at thirteen. A young man who crossed the world to Queensland as part of a family migration made possible by his sister Margaret’s determination. A man who spent years in Charters Towers, first recorded working steadily as a miner, and later appearing in the newspaper as “T. Farrell, Auctioneer.” A brother trusted to receive his younger brother Patrick’s Victory Medal. A man who, at the end of his life, was cared for in his sister’s home. Then finally, a brother buried beside his brother.


There is still much I would love to know about Thomas that the records cannot tell me. But I do not think of him as a faint figure at the edge of the tree. He feels to me like someone who lived quietly, worked steadily, endured much, and remained close to the heart of his family.


Perhaps that is the true shape of Thomas Farrell’s life: not a loud one, not a highly documented one, but a quiet life lived within the shelter of family, and remembered with love.


Note:  For those who are interested, my previous post is all about the Farrell home on Bridge Street in Charters Towers.  Here is the link - The Story Of The Farrell Family & Bridge Street

Monday, 6 April 2026

Spotlight On ... An Unexpected Treasure

A Precious Unexpected Treasure

Some family photographs come to us through the usual channels, handed down carefully from one generation to the next. Others arrive quite unexpectedly, carrying with them a special kind of wonder. This photograph was one of those gifts.

Photo shared by my maternal first cousin once removed, Lawrie McCane

It came to me very recently from my maternal first cousin once removed, someone I had not heard from in six years, and only intermittently before that. Lawrie had been attending the milestone birthday celebration of one of his sisters, and during the afternoon they had been looking through old family photographs, including pictures of their Aunty Sarah — my grandmother Sarah Mary Josephine O'Donnell nee McCane. My cousins wondered if I might be able to identify the two children standing with Sarah. 


Yes, I could. Those two children are my brother and me.


That moment of recognition was deeply moving. This was not simply another old photograph. It is THE one and only photo I have of myself and my brother with our maternal grandmother. Sadly, she passed away not long after my 10th birthday, and I never knew a photo of us together actually existed. To receive this so unexpectedly made it feel even more precious, as though a small piece of the past had quietly found its way back to me.


The Surprise of What Survives

Childhood photographs, of myself or my brother, are not abundant. Cameras were not part of our everyday life, and photographs were not taken routinely. More often, they belonged to very special occasions — births, birthdays, weddings, holidays — rather than to the ordinary flow of everyday family life.


Some of my limited childhood photo collection.

Most of my small collection of childhood photographs were taken when I was a baby or toddler. Some were taken when my parents, my brother, and I attended the local show. I have a couple of more formal studio portraits of my brother and I taken to send off to relatives. There is also one primary school photo and a photo from my Communion Day. Not a vast collection by any means and relatively few with family members other than my parents.


So much of our ordinary day-to-day family life was never recorded. Everyday moments passed by unmarked. Faces changed, children grew, older generations slipped away, and often there was no photograph to hold onto them.


That is why the family pictures that do survive feel almost miraculous. They come to us carrying more than likeness. They return a place, a season, a relationship, a mood. And when they appear unexpectedly, after years of silence or absence, they seem to arrive with a life of their own.


My Grandmother, Caught in a Quiet Moment



There is something so gentle about this new photographic treasure. My grandmother stands behind us, her hand resting on my brother’s shoulder in such a natural, protective way. It is a small gesture, but it says so much: care, familiarity, nearness, love without any need for display.


She is not posed stiffly for the camera, nor does she seem especially concerned with it. Instead, she appears to be looking down toward us, as though her attention remained with the children in front of her. That is part of what makes the image feel so intimate. It captures not performance, but presence.


I find myself wondering about the day it was taken. Although the photograph has the easy feeling of an ordinary family moment, my grandmother seems more dressed up than usual. Her outfit suggests that this may have been more than just a casual snapshot in the backyard. Perhaps it marked a family gathering, or even a birthday. Given the likely ages of my brother and myself, it may possibly have been taken on my grandma's seventieth birthday.


Another possibility could be that it was taken on a visit to Grandma's after Sunday Mass.  That may be the reason my brother and I are also rather smartly dressed.  Sunday Mass was considered the most important event of the week, and we always wore our "Sunday Best".


A Backyard, a Season, a Time Now Gone

The setting itself feels familiar and deeply evocative. The weathered timber fence, the chicken wire, the dry grass, and the sparse plants all speak of the modest backyard of my grandparents, practical and unadorned. There is no attempt here at elegance or display. It is simply the family world as it was.


The bright light and strong shadows suggest a warm day. The faded tones and slightly time-worn colour give the image that unmistakable softness older photographs so often carry. Looking at it now, I feel as though I am not just seeing people, but stepping for a moment into an almost forgotten world.


That, perhaps, is one of the quiet miracles of family photographs. They allow the past to feel briefly touchable.


Those Two Children

My brother, on the left, looks serious and a little uncertain, standing so neatly in his pale shirt, dark shorts, socks, and polished shoes. He has that careful, dressed-for-best look so familiar in children’s photographs of the time.


Then there am I, on the right, less composed and more caught in the moment, with one finger near my mouth as though I had been interrupted mid-thought or mid-sentence. It is such a small, unguarded gesture, but it gives the image life. My patterned dress, pale collar, white socks, and dark shoes place me firmly in that childhood world.


Neither of us look like we're used to posing!


Of course, then there is my adorable haircut!  Absolutely charming.


It is impossible not to smile at it. It looks very much as though someone set a bowl on my head, found a pair of scissors, and impressively completed the task with great precision. That determined little fringe somehow makes the photograph even more dear to me. It reminds me that family history is not made only of solemn faces and grand occasions, but also of awkward haircuts, fidgeting children, and the unplanned details that make a moment real.


A Gift from the Past



Given that my grandmother's face is not really visible in the photo, one could question why this image holds such great value for me. 


Its importance is not really difficult to understand. It is not simply that it shows my grandmother with my brother and me. It is also the way this little treasure arrived — unexpectedly, full of feeling, and so late in my life.


So often in family history we search deliberately, patiently, and with great care. We follow records, dates, certificates, and newspaper notices, hoping to piece together lives from the fragments left behind. But every now and then something comes to us without warning: a photograph, a letter, a memory, a small surviving trace that suddenly opens a door.


This photograph feels like that.


Why do I value images from our past so much? Perhaps because when so few exist, each one carries such a great emotional weight. When photographs are scarce, every surviving image matters. This fleeting family moment, that might so easily have been lost, found its way home and shall be forever treasured.


That, to me, is the real unexpected surprise.


Monday, 30 March 2026

Revisiting and Reflecting on Brick Walls

There comes a point in most family history research when the path begins to narrow.

At first, the records seem to come willingly. One name leads to a certificate, the certificate leads to parents, the parents lead to place, and slowly a family tree begins to take shape. But then the easier discoveries become fewer. The hints slow down. The sources begin to dry up. The generations that once opened so readily begin to resist, and the researcher — in this case, an Australian-based one — finds herself facing that familiar sight: a brick wall.

Lately, I have been revisiting one of mine.

Though truthfully, it feels less like a single wall and more like an entire ring of them.


What the fan charts reveal

When I recently looked at these two 7-generation fan charts, the pattern was hard to ignore.  

(These charts are available on Ancestry.com but only extend to 7 generations at present).


Sources Fan Chart  - Where the Documentary Trail Holds

This Sources Fan Chart reveals where the all important records, documents, and supporting evidence have been gathered across the tree. It also shows where the documentary trail begins to thin, especially beyond my 2x great-grandparents.


Hints Fan Chart - Where the Hints Begin to Fade

The Hints Fan Chart tells its own story. In a few branches, possible leads still appear as far back as seven generations. But for much of the tree, the hints have all but disappeared, suggesting that many of the most accessible online discoveries — on Ancestry and elsewhere — have already been found.

Together, these fan charts reveal something I have been feeling for some time: there is one very large brick wall surrounding all of my 2x great-grandparents.

That does not mean I know nothing about those families, nor does it mean every line simply stops at that point. Rather, it is at that level that the number of reliable and accurate records begins to fall away sharply. It is where I can no longer always feel certain that every connection is fully correct, proven, and supported in the way I would like.

Inside that circle, I have been able to build a fairly solid picture of many family lines, supported by multiple records and sources. Beyond it, the landscape changes. Reliable evidence becomes scarcer, hints are fewer, and the amount of accessible data drops away sharply.

That contrast is now impossible to miss.

Why the wall is there

Much of this comes down to time, place, and the survival of records.


Country Of Origin Fan Chart - (7 generation only, from FamilySearch)

Many of my ancestors came from Ireland, and Irish family history is well known for presenting these kinds of difficulties. There is the familiar shortage of surviving material before the early nineteenth century, shaped by the destruction of so many census records, the losses in the 1922 Public Record Office fire, and the relatively late start of civil registration for births, deaths, and marriages - 1864.

A large number of my ancestors also came from the United Kingdom, particularly Kent, Cornwall, and Devon. Here too, the smaller number of records from the 18th and early 19th centuries often reflects the nature of what has survived rather than the absence of family lines. Before civil registration began in 1837 in England and Wales, most family history evidence depended on parish registers, bishop’s transcripts, and other local records, which could be uneven, incomplete, lost, or simply hard to trace. Movement between parishes, along with inconsistent spelling of names, can make those earlier generations even harder to follow.

By the time I reach back into those generations, I am often no longer following a neat and continuous trail of records. Instead, I am piecing together fragments — small clues scattered across whatever has managed to survive.

That does not mean the families are not there. It simply means that their documentary footprint has become fainter, more fragile, and much less certain.

And that, really, is the heart of the brick wall: not always a complete absence of information, but the point at which the surviving evidence becomes too thin, too patchy, or too uncertain for me to feel fully confident that I have the right family in the right place.


What has helped along the way

Revisiting this enormous brick wall has also reminded me of something more encouraging: how much has been achieved despite it.

Over the last sixteen years, I have used a wide range of genealogical websites, archives, and resources, with varying degrees of success. These have included:

  • Ancestry, FamilySearch, Findmypast, MyHeritage, Geni, WikiTree, Roots Ireland. The Genealogist (England), Scotland's People
  • Trove (Australian - excellent source of digitised newspapers and government gazettes)
  • the National Archives of Australia (excellent source for immigration and war service records)
  • as well as the National Archives of Scotland (NRS) and Ireland
  • the National Library of Ireland (excellent for Church & Civil records, Census records, Griffith's Valuation records & Irish Townlands),
  • State Library of Queensland
  • BDM (birth, death and marriage) databases in Australia, Ireland, Scotland and England, 
  • family history societies
  • local historical societies
  • Facebook genealogy, family tree & history groups
  • and a wide variety of cemetery indexes and cemetery records.

Not every source has yielded the same results. Some have been rich and rewarding, while others have offered only an occasional clue. But together they have helped me extend quite a number of family lines further than I once thought possible.

Australian immigration records have been especially valuable. Time and again they have provided details that were missing from earlier Irish records, giving me clues about family origin, migration, and identity.

Obituaries have often helped fill in family relationships when official records were sparse.

Catholic parish registers have also been important, though only when I already knew enough to search in the right place. That has meant learning not just names, but geography — understanding the difference between a townland, a parish, a civil registration district, a barony, and a county. In Irish research, place matters deeply. Without the right place, even the best database can remain silent.

The same has been true of Griffith’s Valuation, which has only been truly useful when I could narrow a family to a specific townland.

I have also learned to look carefully at surname variations. Historical names are rarely as stable as we might wish, and a family can remain hidden until the right spelling — or the wrong spelling — comes into view.

In one Irish-based family line, one of the most valuable breakthroughs came not through a website or archive at all, but through contact with descendants who held an extraordinary bank of family knowledge. That was a reminder that sometimes the next clue lies not in an index, but in another family’s memory, papers, or carefully preserved research.  

Reaching out more widely has helped as well. Contact with DNA matches, distant cousins I had not spoken to — or in some cases had not even seen since childhood — and the owners of other online family trees has led to some especially meaningful discoveries. Those connections have brought treasured family photographs into my hands and opened the door to conversations about relatives I knew little about, or had never heard of at all. In some cases, they have added previously unknown facts and small personal details that no official record could ever fully capture.


Progress, even with the walls

There has been progress though.


Family Lines Fan Chart - How Far the Lines Reach

This chart shows how far I have been able to extend my family lines. Some branches now stretch back several generations, though usually supported by only one or two records, while others stop abruptly where the records thin to nothing at all.

So, in some branches, the walls stand much higher than in others, and that is where I have arrived now. The easiest discoveries have largely been made. The most accessible online hints have, in many cases, already been followed. What remains is slower work: revisiting old assumptions, searching more widely for context, using place-based research, and paying closer attention to small details that might once have seemed insignificant.


One branch that reaches much further

There is, however, one striking exception to this pattern.

In one particular branch of my family, I have been able to trace the line back as far as my 14th great-grandfather, John Kelsham. That kind of reach is very unusual in my tree, and it certainly has not happened because the records for that line were abundant in the modern sense. In many cases, the trail rests on surprisingly few documents — often wills and probate records, or a birth, marriage, or death record, and sometimes only a small combination of these.

What made the difference was not the sheer volume of records, but the nature of the families involved.

John Kelsham belonged to a branch connected with the Kelsham, Hemersham, and Fullagar families, which were deeply intertwined in Kent during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. These families intermarried across generations and formed part of the Kentish yeomanry and merchant class. Because they were relatively well-established, better known in their local communities, and more visible in surviving records than many of my other lines, it has been possible to push this branch much further back than the rest.

That has meant I have been able to draw not only on the surviving formal records, but also on oral histories and other material that has remained more readily available for these families. Together, those sources have allowed me to extend this line back into the mid to late 1400s.

No other branch in my tree is quite like this.

Most of my family lines do not connect to families who were so prominent, so interconnected, or so well documented. Most do not belong to people whose position or circumstances left such a clear documentary trace behind them. That is why so many other branches meet the familiar limits of surviving evidence much sooner.

So this long-reaching Kent branch is best understood not as the norm, but as the exception — a reminder that in family history, how far a line can be traced often depends not only on effort and skill, but on the kind of lives those ancestors lived, the circles they moved in, and the records their world happened to leave behind.

Where to go from here

So where do I go in my family tree research now?

Perhaps the answer is that the next stage has to be quieter, slower, and more deliberate than the first.



It may mean returning to lines I once thought were exhausted and looking again with more experience.


It may mean shifting away from broad databases and toward local and place-based research.


It may mean studying the people around my ancestors rather than only the ancestors themselves — sponsors, witnesses, neighbours, travelling companions, burial places, naming patterns, and the wider networks that connected families to one another.


It may also mean accepting that some brick walls are not there because I have failed in any way, but because history itself has left gaps that cannot always be bridged.



That is perhaps one of the hardest lessons in family history: not every silence can be broken, and not every family connection can be proved to the standard we would most like.


What remains

I know that a great deal is missing at the outer edges of my family tree, but I am also very aware of what has been built.

Sixteen years ago, many of these family lines were far, far shorter. Some ancestors were little more than names. Now, many of them stand in a fuller context of family, place, migration, and story. I may still be surrounded by brick walls at the level of my 2x great-grandparents, but I am no longer standing at them empty-handed.

What those walls represent is not simply absence, but uncertainty — the point where the surviving records no longer give me the firm footing I would need to say, with complete confidence, that every part of the research is absolutely right.

In the end, I have used Ancestry, my family tree blog, and my own digital storage to gather and preserve the sum total of what I have found so far. Those tools now hold the accumulated results of years of searching, checking, comparing, and slowly building outward from one generation to the next.

So perhaps this is not simply a story about reaching a dead end.

Perhaps it is also a story about reaching a point of reflection.

A brick wall revisited is not the same as a brick wall first encountered. To return to it after years of research is to return with greater knowledge, better tools, and a deeper understanding of the families behind the names.

The walls are still there.

But so is the work already done.

And so is the possibility that one day, somewhere in an archive, a parish register, an obituary, a headstone, a newspaper notice, a descendant’s collection, or a record not yet digitised, another small opening may appear.

For now, that is reason enough to keep looking.