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I'm doing my family tree at the moment and I need to research a branch of the family that spent some time in Middlesbrough in the mid-early 1870s.

Can anyone help?
 
ancestry.co.uk is pretty good - basic free searches but you have to pay for more in-depth info - local libraries usually have it for free
 
I should have mentioned, I've done all the ancestry.com/.co.uk and census stuff already, so I know roughly when the family were there and where they lived, I'm hoping that someone with local historical knowledge might help fill in the why part...
 
What sort of info are you after?

My Grandmother is into all this stuff and has done research around her family in the Stokesley area back to 16something.

What did the family do? There are good records for people in the navy (merchant and royal). There were friendly societies acting as a pre-nhs health service which you may be able to track down. (The other day I was given the records of the 'Ancient Order of Druids' lodge for our village from 1850 on. Was in with some legal papers I needed. Lists names, occupations sickness/injury/death).
 
When you say you know 'roughly' when and where they lived, have you not found them in the census returns to tell you 'exactly' where they lived and when, this will also help you with their occupations & can tell you something of 'why' they lived there, depending on the what it is exactly you mean by 'why'.
 
The Mormon Church hold excellent records. I think they are even on line now.
My dad found a great amount of info from them when doing our tree, seem to be stuck at 493AD at the moment.
 
I'm doing my family tree at the moment and I need to research a branch of the family that spent some time in Middlesbrough in the mid-early 1870s.

Can anyone help?

Me probably. I do family history myself and grew up in Middlesbrough.

What you have to take into account is that there was no Middlesbrough as late as 1830. There were a couple of rural parishes, a few hamlets and a number of farms, so everyone in 19th century Middlesbrough is a migrant from somewhere else.

From about 1800 there was a definite migration from the rural areas of Teesdale, Swaledale and Wensleydale down the Tees valley, first to Darlington and Stockton (the railways were a draw) and then futher on to what became Middlesbrough. The town also drew people from rural NE Yorkshire and SE Durham as well.

The oldest part of the town is the area known as "Over the Border", which lies in the area between the railway station and the Tees. This is where industrial and commercial Middlesbrough began.

Middlesbrough was found to be perfect for a number of early industries.

The presence of large quantities of ironstone in the Cleveland Hills made it a natural early centre for mass steel-making (I believe Sir Henry Bessemer perfected his converter in the area). In fact, for several decades the Cleveland ironstones were the most lucrative source of iron ore in the world.

Cleveland also produced alum (for the dye industry) and potash and phosphate for the chemical industries which developed along the north bank of the Tees at Billingham and Haverton Hill (think ICI) and produced fertilisers and explosives.

The configuration of the bends in the Tees made it possible to build bigger ships on the Tees than on the Tyne or Wear, so the steel produced locally was used for ship-building and for other huge engineering projects - Dorman Long, for instance, built the Sydney Harbour Bridge, shipped it to Australia in sections and bolted it all together down under.

You don't say where your relatives came from. I know from my own family history that iron and steel workers from South Wales migrated to Teesside just before the 1871 census, and merchant seamen ended up there from SW Wales. Basically, your family would have migrated to the area because of the industries being set up, and they may have stayed or later moved somewhere else.
 
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I havea grandparent living in 'boro.

Could drop her a line and get some history for you?
 
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