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Since
the 1960s historian Shelagh O'Byrne Spencer has been compiling
biographies of the first wave of British settlers (the term 'British'
encompasses English, Irish, Scottish and Welsh).
Her project covers the
approximately 2800 settlers that came to Natal, South Africa between
1824 and 1857.
The reason why the research stops at 1857 is that a new
wave of immigration began in that year and 1857 functions as a cut off
point between the original settlers and the next group to arrive.
Today Mrs Spencer has published seven volumes of these biographies in
the critically acclaimed series known as 'British Settlers in Natal
1824 - 1857: a Biographical Register'.
At present the register is
published as a series of volumes organised alphabetically - 'Abbot to
Ayres', 'Babbs to Bolton' and so forth. The most recent volume to be
published is volume 7: Gadney to Guy.
Mrs Spencer looks at who the settlers were, where they came from, why
they chose to emigrate, who they married and who their children were.
Each entry consists of a biography of the head of the household (male
or female) or persons emigrating alone.
This is followed, where
applicable, by a list of children, with brief details of their careers,
their dates and places of birth, marriage and death and the places of
birth and death of their spouses. Finally, there is a source list for
each entry.
To date 1057 biographies have been published.
Every volume after the
first contains an Addenda and Corrigenda section where additions or
corrections to biographies already published are included.
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