Al Kirtley - and another thing...

  • Welcome
    • Links
  • Discography
    • Band List
    • Albums (plus a few other tracks)
  • Blow-by-blow biography
    • The Bournemouth Years (Washboard)
    • The Bournemouth Years (Lead Guitar)
    • The Bournemouth Years (Piano)
    • Jerry Stooks, The Downstairs Club and the naming of Zoot Money’s Big Roll Band.
    • The London and the South East Years
    • Unveiling of blue plaque outside the Downstairs Club (later Le Disque a Go! Go!), Bournemouth 14 September 2014
      • The Full Story of the Blue Plaque at the Downstairs Club, Bournemouth (aka Blue Plaques for Dummies)
  • Galleries
    • Gallery 1950s
    • Gallery 1960s
    • Gallery 1970s
    • Gallery 1980s
    • Gallery 1990s
    • Gallery 2000s
    • Gallery 2010s
    • Gallery 2020s
    • Gallery: the future?
  • Odds and Ends
    • (Musical) sweepings from the factory floor
    • My Books
    • Genealogy
    • Music
    • My Family
    • The Pub
  • What’s New? (and occasional blog)
  • Contact Al

Genealogy

I was first lured into the highly addictive hobby of genealogy by Shaun Montgomery, younger brother of the late Michael “Monty” Montgomery, my fellow musician and good mate. (Monty was my best man when I got married for the first time, to Susan in 1966.)
Shaun, whose daughter Janet is a well-known film and TV actress (see Wikipedia article), was at the time a semi-professional genealogist, and he gave me invaluable advice to get started on tracing my ancestors, who mostly hail from County Durham. Since then I’ve traced my father’s line back to 1630, and some branches of my mother’s (the Blacketts) back to well before the Norman Conquest. You can take a look at The Blacketts site by clicking here.
The photo above is of my 2nd cousin, John ‘Kav’ Kavanagh and me with Sally Magnusson, who came down and interviewed us for BBC Radio 4’s Tracing Your Roots programme. For a recording of the show, (which includes me playing and singing a music hall song that my great-uncle, Johnny Kavanagh used to perform in the 19th century) please click here. (It’s the third item in the programme.)

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