#11
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Found my Dad! Can't be sure about his father though as he has a more common name, will have to wait till the end of the week and payday when I'll renew my sub
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Sue |
#12
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I've found two of my grandmother's brothers, a postman and a telephone engineer. I've also found my Mum, a telephonist who joined in 1941.
I'm not on there though , despite the records apparently going up to 1969. The latest ones I've found are 1956 . I joined in 1965. It also looks as though my Mum's paternal grandfather was a postman for a while - I didn't know that.
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"What you see depends on what you're looking for." Sue at Langley Vale |
#13
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This bit of the Postal Museum Family History guide might be of interest:
Please be aware that if somebody left the Post Office before they became eligible to receive a pension, we would not have much information on them. The appointment minutes are essentially a list of names with the dates that they started employment on, therefore confirming that a particular person began their employment with the Post Office on a particular date. The pension or gratuity records though are far more useful in that they not only confirm the date a pension or gratuity was granted, but give a brief summary of individuals’ careers, the different positions they had, the different salaries they received and any notable achievements they may have made. These records are therefore the best place to start looking for ancestors. (The pension records aren't online as far as I know) Link to the Postal Museum site: http://postalheritage.org.uk/page/genealogy |
#14
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You can browse the records by date, and there certainly are some from 1969 but it doesn't look as though there are very many.
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