-
CG, I also found Boults article and was confused by the 'K'. I now realise it stands for 'Keltic'. Boult was writing in a time when K/Celtic was generally thought to mean Anglo-Saxon or Old English. The K simply means it was the Keltic name for something.
-
Thanks, Daz. Yes I somehow thought that might be what he meant.
Chris
-
The 'Pennies lane' link I gave on post No. 80 has an incorrect transcription.
I checked the 1841 census and it is recorded as PENNIS Lane. The name appears twice, next to Grove Cottage, copies below:
http://i229.photobucket.com/albums/e...nsus_crop1.jpg
http://i229.photobucket.com/albums/e...nsus_crop2.jpg
This site already had Grove Cottage, Pennis Lane, and the Census reference numbers:
http://yourarchives.nationalarchives...reet_Index_G-K