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Mary Elizabeth (Kelly) Styles (1865 - 1948)

Mary Elizabeth Styles formerly Kelly
Born in Binalong, New South Wales, Australiamap
Ancestors ancestors
Wife of — married 25 Aug 1884 in Limestone Creek,Yass,NSW,Australiamap
Descendants descendants
Died at age 82 in 99 Binalong St, Young, New South Wales, Australiamap
Problems/Questions Profile manager: Roberta Muir private message [send private message]
Profile last modified | Created 28 Sep 2017
This page has been accessed 123 times.

Contents

Biography

Mary Elizabeth Kelly. Given Name: Mary. Surname: Kelly. SECG Elizabeth.

Styles married Surname: Styles. Found multiple versions of name. Using Mary Elizabeth Kelly.

Born 12 Sep 1865. Agency: 6313/1865. ,Binalong,NSW,Australia Map: Longitude: E148.532778. Latitude: S34.549722. COR LAD 34. LAM 32. LAS 59. LAN 1. LOD 148. LOM 31. LOS 58. [1] File . CRE 31 MAR 2013. Time: 16:51:09.

Died 11 Jun 1948. Agency: 10504/1948. Cause: Ateriosclerosis, Uraemia (2 days), Senility. 99 Binalong St,Young,NSW,Australia. Map: Longitude: E148.532778. Latitude: S34.549722. COR LAD 34. LAM 32. LAS 59. LAN 1. LOD 148. LOM 31. LOS 58. [2] Note: #N92792083. File . CRE 31 MAR 2013. Time: 16:51:20.

Residence 1884 ,Bookham,NSW,Australia[3] CRE 23 JUL 2013. Time: 17:28:14. 1885 Park Dale,Yass,NSW,Australia. [4] CRE 23 JUL 2013. Time: 17:45:56. From about 1911. "Barrackville",Pudman,NSW,Australia Map: Longitude: E148.532778. Latitude: S34.549722. COR LAD 34. LAM 32. LAS 59. LAN 1. LOD 148. LOM 31. LOS 58. Note: #N26282840. CRE 28 JUL 2013. Time: 09:07:36. 99 Binalong St,Young,NSW,Australia. Map: Longitude: E148.532778. Latitude: S34.549722. COR LAD 34. LAM 32. LAS 59. LAN 1. LOD 148. LOM 31. LOS 58. Note: #N20882288. CRE 15 SEP 2013. Time: 10:41:26. Kingsvale Rd,Young,NSW,Australia. Note: #N90180402. File . CRE 07 SEP 2014. Time: 16:04:40.

Occupation: small dairy - 40 cows. From about 1911. "Barrackville",Pudman,NSW,Australia Map: Longitude: E148.532778. Latitude: S34.549722. COR LAD 34. LAM 32. LAS 59. LAN 1. LOD 148. LOM 31. LOS 58. Note: #N43458132. CRE 27 SEP 2013. Time: 05:55:20. postmistress. About 1914. "Barrackville",Pudman,NSW,Australia Map: Longitude: E148.532778. Latitude: S34.549722. COR LAD 34. LAM 32. LAS 59. LAN 1. LOD 148. LOM 31. LOS 58. Note: #N78867428. CRE 26 SEP 2013. Time: 21:19:02.

Buried Anglican section. 12 Jun 1948. Young cemetery,Young,NSW,Australia. [5][6] Note: #N23618412. File . CRE 22 JUL 2013. Time: 07:05:48.

Note: #N2189152. #N94505086. #N96301782. #N77696528. #N5642576. #N32317142. #N64121600. #N81200706.

File . RECT {{0.20394596509500518, 0.13394586457405486}, {0.63135190878076997, 0.66309043236503373}}. @O17960042@. RECT {{0.3132814672180888, 0.52318327784958263}, {0.20000000000000001, 0.20000000000000001}}. @O19052460@. @O18570212@.

CRE 31 MAR 2013. Time: 15:07:23.

Marriage Marriage According to the rites of the Church of England. 25 Aug 1884. Limestone Creek,Yass,NSW,Australia. [7] File . File . CRE 31 MAR 2013. Time: 16:52:17. Husband William Augustus Styles. Wife Mary Elizabeth Kelly. Child: Beatrice Mary Bud Styles. Pedigree: birth. Child: Mabel M Constance May Styles. Pedigree: birth. Child: Mona Annette Mon Styles. Pedigree: birth. Child: Frederick Livingstone Styles. Pedigree: birth. Child: Horace William Styles. Pedigree: birth. Child: Oliver Mortimer Mort Styles. Pedigree: birth. Child: Josephine Margaret Maggie Styles. Pedigree: birth. Child: Joseph Thomas Andrew Joe Styles. Pedigree: birth. Child: Athol John Jack Styles. Pedigree: birth. Child: Olive Augusta Dub Styles. Pedigree: birth. Child: Douglas Arthur Doug Candish. Pedigree: birth. CRE 31 MAR 2013. Time: 16:51:47.

Marriage 07 Jun 1863. Sts Peter & Paul Catholic Church,Binalong,NSW,Australia. Map: Longitude: E148.532778. Latitude: S34.549722. COR LAD 34. LAM 32. LAS 59. LAN 1. LOD 148. LOM 31. LOS 58. [8] Note: #N65454604. Note: #N40639466. File . File . File . File . File . File . CRE 30 MAR 2013. Time: 13:33:17. Husband William Kelly. Wife Margaret Bellamy. Child: John Joseph Jack Kelly. Pedigree: birth. Child: Mary Elizabeth Kelly. Pedigree: birth. Child: Johanna Grace Hannah Kelly. Pedigree: birth. Child: William Kelly. Pedigree: birth. Child: Margaret Lucy Meg Kelly. Pedigree: birth. Child: Thomas Joseph Kelly. Pedigree: birth. Child: Charles Bernard Kelly. Pedigree: birth. Child: Edward James Ned Kelly. Pedigree: birth. Child: Catherine Kate/Kit Kelly. Pedigree: birth. Child: Lavinia Anne Kelly. Pedigree: birth. Child: Robert Andrew Kelly. Pedigree: birth. Child: William Joseph Kelly. Pedigree: birth. Child: Isabella Agnes Kelly. Pedigree: birth. CRE 11 JAN 2013. Time: 17:01:48.

Notes

Note N20882288.

"Jan Arnold remembers her family used to walk to Binalong St, Young, to visit Grannie Styles every Sunday. It was a long way for a 4 year old." (Joan Limon, 2013).

CHAN 15 SEP 2013. Time: 10:43:15.

CRE 15 SEP 2013. Time: 10:41:42.

Note N2189152.

Which child? (included in above - so delete once added to child).

I remember my mother having to put seven stitches in my brother's injured foot. She used cotton sterilised in methylated spirits. The job was awkward for her as she did not have a curved needle, but my brother did not seem to feel much pain. The foot did not become infected and healed quickly.

(Olive Styles, quoted in "A Blackboard in the Bush: Pudman Creek School & Public Education in NSW" by Philip Hobbs).

CHAN 27 SEP 2013. Time: 06:42:05.

CRE 27 SEP 2013. Time: 06:39:03.

Note N23618412.

William Styles.

Died 6th May 1932.

Mary E Styles.

Died 11th June 1948.

CHAN 29 JUL 2013. Time: 20:23:32.

CRE 29 JUL 2013. Time: 08:17:43.

Note N26282840.

Later, Father bought `Barrackville' at Pudman, now owned by the Frost family.

...

`Barrackville' homestead and stables are wholly convict-built of blue metal quarried out of a hill in front of the property. The original jail is still there in the middle of the house and was, in fact, my bedroom. My brothers removed the bars from the window, and the huge barred door, which fitted over the iron door with a padlock. They also replaced the wooden shingles on the roof, which had become rotten, with corrugated iron. Mounted police were previously stationed there, hence the name `Barrackville'. The blue metal stables where they kept their horses are still there. In the early days, nobody went to church. The ministers of the different faiths in turn came to our houses and held services.

Convict leg irons were found at `Barrackville', the ones that lock on to the prisoner's leg with a big padlock. My brother Joe ploughed them up.

When we bought `Barrackville' there was a detached kitchen, but the boys pulled that down and built a skillion-type kitchen on the rest of the house. It still had the big open fireplace.

In the kitchen we washed up with a wash-up dish and trays: no sinks. We would scrub the tables and benches (there were plenty of them) down with sandsoap and scrubbing bush and keep them white. The fireplaces were whitewashed. The furniture in the house was good. We had big four-poster beds with curtains all round them, three-quarter beds and double beds. The dining room had a chiffonier, sideboard, fireplace, rocking chairs, padded chairs, one of the original sofas covered with red floral material, a redwood dining table and chairs, all cedar. The bedrooms had washstands with jug and basin, and corner wardrobes with a curtain. We had kerosene light, and lanterns for rabbiting, and an Aladdin lamp for special occasions. There were tanks on the house for water. The ceilings were a special shape, still seen in the older houses, originally to catch the condensation from the bark roofs. Our walls were papered with newspaper, then over that with brown paper, which was considered very good. Then if we found a pretty picture, that would be stuck on as a decoration. The outbuildings were the big blue-metal stables, which would hold the wagonette, sulky and buggy, and also contained a big storeroom where we kept casks of meat.

`Barrackville' at first had a wooden shingle roof. Wooden shingles were about 18 inches [23cm] by four inches [10cm] wide. They were placed on the rafters in rows, overlapping downward diagonally, to stop the water from getting in. They are made of a special kind of pine and are watertight until they rot.

Apart from pise, the chief materials used were sawn slabs and blue metal. And all through Rye Park and Pudman there was an abundance of stringy bark. So sawn-slab walls and bark roofs were common. When the bark was taken off the sawn tree trunk, it was laid flat with the sap side down and other timber placed on it to flatten it. Bark was sold in lengths as well as timber.

In my day the men cut their own timber with a cross-cut saw, axe and adze. A morticing axe was also used, e.g., if a dwelling or shed was being constructed, a large sleeper was laid on the ground to form the base of the wall, a string dipped in a tin of chalk was stretched along the dead centre of the sleeper lengthwise, and attached tightly to each end of the sleeper. The taut string was then plucked, and the morticing axe was employed then to cut a channel along the resultant chalk line. The tapered ends of the slabs were fitted into this groove. No nails were used. Another sleeper was similarly grooved for the top of the wall and the other ends of the slabs were fitted into this. My brother [which brother?] was very skilled at fitting the slabs exactlyso that there was no gap between the slabs. The sleepers were bolted to the round corner posts, which had been sunk into post holes.

The mixture used to treat the dirt floors was fresh cow manure and water. This was remarkably effective and looked like slate when dry. 1

(Olive Styles, quoted in "A Blackboard in the Bush: Pudman Creek School & Public Education in NSW" by Philip Hobbs).

CHAN 27 SEP 2013. Time: 06:46:09.

CRE 26 SEP 2013. Time: 20:58:32.

Note N32317142.

"Grannie Styles didn't mind if the boys played cards, as long as there was no money involved. She came in once and saw some pennies on the table so chucked the cards in the fire!" (from Joan Limon's notes).

CHAN 26 SEP 2013. Time: 20:52:44.

CRE 15 SEP 2013. Time: 10:45:50.

Note N43458132.

We had a dairy, milking 40 cows. We'd milk in the morning from 4 a.m. to 10 a.m. and then go back to the dairy at 4 p.m. to do the evening milking. Our [the children's] work in the dairy consisted of turning the separator, turning the butter churn, and cleaning up bails. We had to get three kerosene buckets of hot water from the house to the dairy to wash up with. After school we would change our clothes and then help with the dairy again. There was a lot of handle-turning those days. We kids turned the chaff-cutter handle, the handle of the butter churn, the handle of the mincer and the handle of the milk separator.

We were a registered dairy and the home-made butter and cream were sent in to Yass to be sold in the stores. Butter was one shilling a pound [the then equivalent of 10c] and cream was sixpence [5c equivalent] a pint.

Milking was done by hand. We kids used to put the cows in the yard. We could bail up four at a time. Mother used to milk and we would strip the cows. The inspectors were active, so we had to lime wash all the slip rails daily. The cement floors had to be flushed with buckets.

We used to go out into the hills and gather or cut bundles of dry hop, and tie them in bundles with a handle to make very effective brooms for cleaning the dairy.

We had 2,100 acres [850ha] and most of it was grazing land. A lot of the land was only suitable for grazing. We were lucky. Pudman Creek ran right through our place, and from this and springs we had abundant water. Crops were wheat, oats and barley. Also some corn, which we grew for the dairy cattle. The most lucrative crop was wheat: from it we got a lot of our own tucker, as well as most of the fodder for the animals. We did not grow enough wheat to market the grain, nobody did in our area. We were self-sufficient, and the grain was taken to the mill as needed. The grain was grown also to feed sheep in dry times. We also grew corn to crush for fodder for the dairy cattle. Then the stalks and husks were put through the chaff-cutter. We had no stripping machinery and the wheat was belted by hand in bags to thresh it. We used nulla nullas to do this: sturdy sticks with a knob on the end that the boys cut in the bush. After the bags were beaten and turned, and the grain was winnowed out, the beeswing shellsof grain and straw were carefully gathered and put through the chaff-cutter along with the corn cobs, and also straw from oats. We would take a mixture of so much bran and oilcake (made from linseed: we did not grow this) from the mill and add it to the chaff and feed the dairy cows with it. The oilcake was very much like dog biscuit, very hard. We would break it up into pieces and pour boiling water over it. This would make it swell up and go floury. Oilcake was not expensive and was great for milk production. 1

(Olive Styles, quoted in "A Blackboard in the Bush: Pudman Creek School & Public Education in NSW" by Philip Hobbs). 1

CHAN 27 SEP 2013. Time: 06:34:50.

CRE 27 SEP 2013. Time: 05:55:50.

Note N5642576.

Which child? (delete once added to child).

The horse teams and bullock teams used to take timber to put on the railway trucks at Yass. My brother was working on the train line at Illabo when he cut the main sinew of his leg with the adze. Hundreds of others were working on the line too.

(Olive Styles, quoted in "A Blackboard in the Bush: Pudman Creek School & Public Education in NSW" by Philip Hobbs).

CHAN 27 SEP 2013. Time: 06:51:11.

CRE 27 SEP 2013. Time: 06:41:03.

Note N64121600.

“I rang Ian Styles. … Ian said Grandfather Styles died when he (Ian) was young and still living at Young. The family moved to Rye Park from there. He can remember Grandmother Styles - she was a big woman and wore a large apron, always at the stove cooking. She was a wonderful cook. When I mentioned the biscuits that Aunty Sadie had cooked, Ian remembered they were called "Hard Timers". GM [Grandmother?] used to cook them. (Joan Limon, 2012).

CHAN 17 SEP 2013. Time: 22:43:42.

CRE 17 SEP 2013. Time: 22:43:27.

Note N77696528.

Which child? (NOT yet included in above).

Once Mother had delivered her own baby before Father got back with the midwife. The midwife still had to be paid whether she was late or not. But in many cases it was done by 'the woman across the paddock'. (Olive Styles, quoted in "A Blackboard in the Bush: Pudman Creek School & Public Education in NSW" by Philip Hobbs).

CHAN 27 SEP 2013. Time: 06:41:58.

CRE 27 SEP 2013. Time: 06:37:26.

Note N78867428.

We had the first receiving office [post office] at ‘Barrackville', also the first telephone exchange. That was a good while before the First World War. I remember my mother spent many anxious hours at the exchange waiting for news of my brother, who was overseas at the war ... I took over the exchange when I left school at 13 in 1919. To the best of my knowledge my mother kept the first post office. After we sold `Barrackville' the post office was transferred to the public school residence. I can rememberwhen the telegraph was connected and mechanics fitting the switchboard, and how we wondered how we would learn to use it. This was before the war, about 1914. (Olive Styles, quoted in "A Blackboard in the Bush: Pudman Creek School & Public Education in NSW" by Philip Hobbs).

CHAN 26 SEP 2013. Time: 21:20:11.

CRE 26 SEP 2013. Time: 21:19:07.

Note N81200706.

Death cert lists mother as Margaret Mary Rumble - is this because, Margaret's mother Johanna had remarried to William Rumble? Seems unlikley as she was 21 at the time - and married William Kelly a few months later.

CHAN 22 JUL 2013. Time: 07:18:06.

CRE 22 JUL 2013. Time: 07:04:06.

Note N90180402.

This house is in Kingsvale Road out of Young. It is next door to where Uncle Jack's [Athol "Jack" John Styles] son, Raymond, lives. Uncle Jack's house remains up behind Raymond's house, though it is falling apart after being unoccupied for a long time. (Joan Limon, 2014).

CHAN 07 SEP 2014. Time: 16:11:58.

CRE 07 SEP 2014. Time: 16:11:36.

Note N92792083.

Death cert lists mother as Margaret Mary Rumble - is this because, Margaret's mother Johanna had remarried to William Rumble?.

CHAN 22 JUL 2013. Time: 07:03:53.

CRE 22 JUL 2013. Time: 07:03:19.

Note N94505086.

Raised grandson Douglas … but possibly other children of Beatrice:

"My parents raised 10 children, and 4 of my sister's children, on that. The youngest of those was Douglas, who was delicate." (Olive Styles, quoted in "A Blackboard in the Bush: Pudman Creek School & Public Education in NSW" by Philip Hobbs).

CHAN 26 SEP 2013. Time: 20:52:04.

CRE 15 SEP 2013. Time: 10:54:07.

Note N96301782.

My mother could sew and made every stitch of clothes we wore, boys' and girls'. She used to sit up to all hours of the night treadling her machine and singing songs like I'll Take You Home Again, Kathleen.

My mother could break in horses. She decided to put the saddle on a fiery mare one day and her son cried and begged her not to get on it, but she did, and that horse became Flirt, the one she rode into Yass, when father was drinking.

Mother made bread and also soap, but not candles, though some women did. She also made jam, which was bottled and sealed hot. She didn't preserve vegetables, but salted casks of meat, as well as cured bacon, ham and hands of pork. The meat would be saltedand soaked for days and then hung in the storeroom, where a little fire would be lit to smoke it.

The old houses were comfortable: not draughty. They had big open fires. Mother cooked in a camp oven: roast lamb, poultry, beef and delectable Yorkshire pudding. As well as baked meat, Mother cooked every kind of vegetable (which we grew ourselves) you could mention, and always cooked her Christmas cake in it. The kneaded bread dough was left in a dish in the fireplace to rise. The camp oven hung on an iron bar above the fire, along with a water fountain and a big black kettle, and the fireplace made up one entire wall of the kitchen. Mother said she needed a horse to haul in the log big enough for the fireplace. Granite was used in its construction. Mother had three camp ovens in graduating sizes: the big one was Grandpa, the middle-sized one Pa, and thesmall one was the Baby. She had a big lifter to lift the heavy lid off the camp oven. It was an iron bar with a flat end which she would insert in the small handle in the centre of the camp oven lid. I used to go with the boys to collect the thick bark from the ironbark trees to put on the lid of the camp oven. When lit with hot coals it made the oven very hot for cooking bread and scones. Mother always knew the exact moment the food was cooked, which seems rather miraculous. Then the boys, to impress their girlfriends, wanted Mother to get a fuel stove, as they were coming into fashion. Mother objected, and fought the change, but eventually compromised and a new Ward fuel stove was installed in one end of the fireplace, while she kept her camp ovens at the other end. Mother did all the cooking at our place. She was a good cook, and Father insisted that we eat what was put in front of us. One time I rebelled against this rule. We used to have a black and tan goat that met me coming home from school everyafternoon. One day I came home and the goat was not there. When I asked where it was, my Father said it was on the scaffold. Consequently I refused to eat the meat that was put in front of me and, though I was ordered to leave the table, I would not eat any meat until I was sure all the goat was gone. But we usually ate what was put down because mother cooked beautiful meals of baked beef, mutton, poultry and every vegetable you could mention. Not all our meals were lovely. Once when mother was struck with lightning, Father made us meals which he called 'fill up the gap'. Horrible, made of vegies or something and a bit of meat. But we had to eat it. We had our favourite meals at Christmas, when there was ham and other extras. But fruit cake always disagreed with me, so Mother made a coconut cake for me, but I had to share it round, as we were taught to do. Pancakes were another favourite with me.

We had our own orchard and grew apples, pears, peaches, grapes and plums. We had our own beehives to keep us in honey. Sometimes we would take a whole frame out of the hive, put it on a big plate in the kitchen and cut the honey and wax off the frame, being very careful not to cut the wires. Then the block of honey would be cut into squares for us to enjoy delicious honey in the comb.

Washing was done in the open in a big cast-iron boiler which sat on a row of iron bars supported by two rows of bricks. The fire was lit under the boiler between the rows of bricks. If washing day was windy, Mother would protect the fire with a strategically placed sheet of galvanized iron. The boiler had a handle. Working clothes were put in old galvanised tubs and scrubbed with home-made soap and scrubbing brush and washboard. When dry they were ironed with flat irons sat down in front of the hot coals of the fire to heat.

For toothache and earaches, my mother used to put coarse salt into a small rolled oats bag; she would make one herself, and heat it in the oven. The warm bag was then held on the affected part. She was a great believer in camphor for keeping away colds and flu. She used to make a little muslin bag of camphor on a crocheted string for each of us and we wore these to school, winter and summer.

I remember my mother having to put seven stitches in my brother's injured foot. She used cotton sterilised in methylated spirits. The job was awkward for her as she did not have a curved needle, but my brother did not seem to feel much pain. The foot did not become infected and healed quickly.

We always kept a first aid kit in the house. Mother cherished it because we were so far from a doctor. One day Father got on a spirited mare we had, in spite of Mother telling him not to (she was an expert horsewoman), and he had not gone far before the mare threw him. His foot caught in the stirrup and he was dragged. When Mother got to him she found his head had been split almost completely round the top of the crown and was bleeding profusely. So, with great presence of mind, she pulled her felt hat down over his head to staunch the bleeding and pull the wound together. Then she settled him down and tore home to harness two horses in the wagonette. Then he was loaded on, and she galloped those two horses all the way to Yass. It is amazing to think of the things my Mother had to do in those days. 1

(Olive Styles, quoted in "A Blackboard in the Bush: Pudman Creek School & Public Education in NSW" by Philip Hobbs).

CHAN 27 SEP 2013. Time: 06:39:25.

CRE 26 SEP 2013. Time: 20:52:50.

External Files

  • File O17960042. File: 17960042.jpg. Kelly, Mary & Douglas Candish. CHAN 25 SEP 2013. Time: 06:38:16. CRE 29 JUL 2013. Time: 08:25:00.
  • File O18570212. File: 18570212.pdf. Styles, Olive - Pudman Creek in the Early 1900s: The Pioneering Generation. CHAN 13 JUN 2015. Time: 09:52:42. CRE 26 SEP 2013. Time: 20:38:08. Note: #N10418438.
  • File O19052460. File: 19052460.jpg. Kelly, Mary. CHAN 25 SEP 2013. Time: 06:38:16. CRE 29 JUL 2013. Time: 08:32:39.
  • File O23523056. File: 23523056.jpg. Mary Elizabeth Styles, nee Kelly. CHAN 13 JUN 2015. Time: 09:52:42. CRE 03 MAY 2013. Time: 22:30:11.
  • File O40447872. File: 40447872.jpg. Styles, William & Mary - Kingsvale Rd, Young. CHAN 07 SEP 2014. Time: 16:11:33. CRE 07 SEP 2014. Time: 16:09:27.
  • File O4912336. File: 4912336.jpg. Kelly, Mary Elizabeth - death. CHAN 26 SEP 2013. Time: 07:04:40. CRE 22 JUL 2013. Time: 07:15:29.
  • File O49810175. File: 49810175.jpg. Kelly, Mary Elizabeth - birth. CHAN 26 SEP 2013. Time: 06:14:35. CRE 22 JUL 2013. Time: 07:15:05.
  • File O93419566. File: 93419566.jpg. Kelly, Mary & William Styles - headstone. CHAN 25 SEP 2013. Time: 06:38:16. CRE 29 JUL 2013. Time: 08:15:58. Note: #N32674296.

Sources

  1. Source: #S56868552 Certainty: 3 QUAL P
  2. Source: #S11166526 Certainty: 2 QUAL S
  3. Source: #S56868552 Certainty: 3 QUAL P
  4. Source: #S56868552 Certainty: 3 QUAL P
  5. Source: #S27077976 Certainty: 2 QUAL S
  6. Source: #S11166526 Certainty: 2 QUAL S
  7. Source: #S85160084 Certainty: 3 QUAL P
  8. Source: #S94051556 Certainty: 2 QUAL S
  • Source: S11166526 Death Certificate/Burial Registration 06 AUG 2017 Time: 12:26:56 CRE 24 JAN 2013 Time: 10:14:54
  • Source: S27077976 Headstone 26 DEC 2015 Time: 11:48:13 CRE 13 JAN 2013 Time: 12:31:34
  • Source: S56868552 Birth Certificate 18 JAN 2015 Time: 12:38:48 CRE 03 JUL 2010 Time: 18:22:11
  • Certainty: 2 QUAL S
  • Certainty: 2 QUAL S




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