Surviving participants in WW1, T - Z
TREVELYAN George Charles (Charley) b 29 Jan 1899 SP; 2nd/4 children of William Edward (1871 SP, Labourer) and Mary Ann (née Radford) b 1869 Culmstock. They lived in a Lower Town cottage (2018: site of 16 Court Way). In 1911 census the family had moved out of SP to Whitnage, Uplowman. Charley enlisted in the army – RFA #135577. His elder brother Stanley lost his life at sea in the war and there is more information about the family in the section on him earlier in this book. On 24 Dec 1921 Charley emigrated to Australia, giving his occupation as ‘motor driver’ and his UK address as c/o Thorn & Baker, Cullompton. Always had health problems after the war and lost touch with the family. He died in Australia in 1973. Family tree:
https://www.ancestry.co.uk/family-tree/tree/75014822/family
TREVELYAN Percy John b 6 Sep 1901 SP; 3rd/4 children of William Edward and Mary Ann. Younger brother to George Charles (above) and Stanley, who lost his life in WW1 at sea in Aug 1918. They lived in a Lower Town cottage (2018: site of 16 Court Way). In 1911 census the family had moved to Whitnage, Uplowman. Percy signed up to the RN in July 1917 initially as a cabin boy, but he later enlisted for 12 years starting 6 Sep 1919 (his 18thbirthday). He first saw active service on HMS Impregnable # J74038 on 23 Jul 1917. However he was invalided out of the RN 20 Mar 1918, even before his “official service” started, with Emphysema. He was married Jun 1919 in Tiverton to Maud Pring and they had a daughter in 1921. At some stage he emigrated to Australia and saw active service with the Australian armed forces in WW2. He died in Perth, Western Australia on 28 Feb 1984. Family tree:
https://www.ancestry.co.uk/family-tree/tree/75014822/family
TREVELLYAN Alfred – b 18 Aug 1885, SP; 7th/9 children of George (1847-93 SP, Carpenter) and Caroline Walker (1849-1906). In 1891 the family lived at Always Cottage on Chains Road (2018: 1-3 Chains Road). His father died in 1893 and his mother remarried a John Hooper Parkhouse, an engine driver at the butter factory. The family stayed in Chains Road (number 8) and Alfred was a Stockman on a farm.
In 1904 he joined GWR and was a “Carman” based in Monmouthshire, but shortly after joining was given two weeks’ notice as he was “deficient in reading”. He returned to SP and lived at Chains Cottage with his elder sister Lily, who had married William Goffin, a RN “professional”. Alfred was once again working for GWR, but this time as a labourer. On 20 Aug 1913 he married his second cousin Emma Trevellyan (b Apr 1878 in Burlescombe dr of James Trevellyan and Sarah Ann Saunders). They had a daughter Sylvia Annie, b Apr 1914 in the Wellington area. He enlisted in the Royal Engineers and joined the Railway regiment with rank Sapper, 104843. His brother-in-law Sidney Dunn died in the war (more details earlier in this book). In 1939 register he lived at 4 Mount Pleasant, Exeter and worked for GWR. He died Dec 1968 in Exeter. Family tree: https://www.ancestry.co.uk/family-tree/tree/75014822/family
https://www.ancestry.co.uk/family-tree/tree/75014822/family
TREVELYAN Percy John b 6 Sep 1901 SP; 3rd/4 children of William Edward and Mary Ann. Younger brother to George Charles (above) and Stanley, who lost his life in WW1 at sea in Aug 1918. They lived in a Lower Town cottage (2018: site of 16 Court Way). In 1911 census the family had moved to Whitnage, Uplowman. Percy signed up to the RN in July 1917 initially as a cabin boy, but he later enlisted for 12 years starting 6 Sep 1919 (his 18thbirthday). He first saw active service on HMS Impregnable # J74038 on 23 Jul 1917. However he was invalided out of the RN 20 Mar 1918, even before his “official service” started, with Emphysema. He was married Jun 1919 in Tiverton to Maud Pring and they had a daughter in 1921. At some stage he emigrated to Australia and saw active service with the Australian armed forces in WW2. He died in Perth, Western Australia on 28 Feb 1984. Family tree:
https://www.ancestry.co.uk/family-tree/tree/75014822/family
TREVELLYAN Alfred – b 18 Aug 1885, SP; 7th/9 children of George (1847-93 SP, Carpenter) and Caroline Walker (1849-1906). In 1891 the family lived at Always Cottage on Chains Road (2018: 1-3 Chains Road). His father died in 1893 and his mother remarried a John Hooper Parkhouse, an engine driver at the butter factory. The family stayed in Chains Road (number 8) and Alfred was a Stockman on a farm.
In 1904 he joined GWR and was a “Carman” based in Monmouthshire, but shortly after joining was given two weeks’ notice as he was “deficient in reading”. He returned to SP and lived at Chains Cottage with his elder sister Lily, who had married William Goffin, a RN “professional”. Alfred was once again working for GWR, but this time as a labourer. On 20 Aug 1913 he married his second cousin Emma Trevellyan (b Apr 1878 in Burlescombe dr of James Trevellyan and Sarah Ann Saunders). They had a daughter Sylvia Annie, b Apr 1914 in the Wellington area. He enlisted in the Royal Engineers and joined the Railway regiment with rank Sapper, 104843. His brother-in-law Sidney Dunn died in the war (more details earlier in this book). In 1939 register he lived at 4 Mount Pleasant, Exeter and worked for GWR. He died Dec 1968 in Exeter. Family tree: https://www.ancestry.co.uk/family-tree/tree/75014822/family
TREVELLYAN Charlie Charles Leonard Trevellyan was born in Uplowman in 1890, but was from a family with strong Sampford Peverell roots. His grandparents, William and Martha Trevellyan, spent their whole lives in the village and his brother, James, who died in WW1, lived here with his family. There is more about James Trevellyan here: James Trevellyan. Charlie, as he called himself, was actually (according to the Uplowman parish baptism record) the illegitimate son of Martha Trevellyan, daughter of William and Eliza Trevellyan. He was born on 18th August 1890 and was baptized on 19th Oct 1890, the same day as Eliza Maud, daughter of William and Eliza, who had been born a month earlier on 16th September, so baby Eliza was actually Charlie’s aunt. In the 1891 census Martha (mother of Charlie), then 20, was a servant in Gold Street, Tiverton. It looks like her parents, William and Eliza, decided to bring up Charlie as if he were their son rather than their grandson; he lived with them and they always called him their son in the censuses. Charlie’s birth mother Martha married William Gillard in Lewisham in 1893, was living in Fishlake, Yorkshire, in 1901 with three children, and in 1911 was in Enfield, Middlesex with eight children.
Charlie doesn’t appear in the 1911 census, because by then he had emigrated to Canada where he worked on a farm. According to a 1920 passenger list declaration Charlie had originally gone to St Johns in Canada in 1910. This declaration also says that he left Canada, where his home had been Yorkton, Saskatchewan, in December 1914 “to join the home forces”, ie to fight in the first world war. His medal card tells us that he was a private in the Devonshire Regiment, service number 17822. Charlie was wounded in October 1916 and presumably recuperated back in England because in the last quarter of that year he got married in the Tiverton area to Kate Cotterill. On 4th September 1917 Charlie’s wife Kate gave birth in Tiverton to a boy whom they named Charlie James Leonard, referred to in later documents just as James. Perhaps the name James was for Charlie’s brother James. Charlie was back in the war and on that same day, 4th September, a casualty list came out saying that he had been wounded again. It must have been a very difficult time for his wife. Charlie’s brother James was killed in France just a month later, on 2nd October 1917.
Charlie Trevellyan survived the war and travelled back to Canada with his wife and son on 4th April 1920, leaving Liverpool on board the ‘Minnedosa’ to return to Yorkton, Saskatchewan, where the family settled permanently. Judging by the photo of him, above, he kept in touch with his WW1 regimental colleagues. Charlie died in Canada in 1984 at the age of 94 and his son James died the same year, leaving many Canadian Trevellyan children and grandchildren.
TREVELLYAN Walter George b Jan 1880 SP; 6th/9 children to George Trevellyan (1847-93 SP, Carpenter) and Caroline (née Walker) 1849-1906. Older brother to Alfred (above). In 1891 census they lived at Always Cottage (2018: 1-3 Chains Road). When his father died in 1891, his mother remarried John Hooper Parkhouse and they still lived in Chains Road. By 1901 Walter was a bricklayer and was living in Bedfordshire with his newly married sister Rosa – her husband was also a bricklayer. There is no definitive record for him in the 1911 census – there is a George Trevellyan living in SP as a servant b 1883, but this is probably the George Trevellyan b 1883 in Burlescombe. Walter enlisted but there are several possible military records and we cannot be sure which one is his. After the war he returned to the village, but never married. He died in Tiverton Hospital May 1929 and was buried 23 May in SP. Family tree: https://www.ancestry.co.uk/family-tree/tree/75014822/family
TUCKER Herbert John b 10 Jun 1895, bp 14 Jul 1895 at SP; Herbert was the eldest of 6 children of Richard b 1862, Cheriton, Ag Lab and Elizabeth Jane Cottey b 1872, SP. His parents married 4 Jul 1894 at St Johns, SP. His younger siblings Frederick and Ernest both lost their lives during the war – there is more about them in an earlier chapter. His mother Jane died in Oct 1907 in childbirth and her 2-day-old son was buried with her in the same coffin. His father Richard remarried to Annie b 1863 Topsham. The family lived at Smoke Alley, Boobery, (2018: 22-24 Boobery) in both 1901 and 1911 censuses, but by 1911 Herbert had left home and was working as a farm boy (aged 15) for the Dennis family at Jurishayes, Withleigh, Tiverton. We know he served in the war as he was listed in the ER for Ayshford in 1918 as NM, but we cannot be sure which he was of several servicemen with the same name. The 1920 ER shows that he returned to live with his parents in Ayshford after the war. Family tree: https://www.ancestry.co.uk/family-tree/tree/74511558/family
WALLINGTON Lucy (née Harris) b 22 Mar 1889 Glamorgan, youngest of 8 children of William Harris (painter) and Lucy Rees, married William Claude Wallington (b Sep 1876) in Apr 1909 in Glamorgan and they lived in Cardiff. Her brother in law Charles Harold Wallington was a SP man who lost his life in 1917 in WW1 – there is more about him earlier in this book. Lucy joined the war effort as a Red Cross Volunteer nurse in 1915 – the same year as her husband William enlisted. She worked initially in Cardiff, but gave her home address as “Morrells, Lower Town, SP” (2018: 3 Lower Town) which was where her mother-in-law lived. At the end of the war Nov/Dec 1918 she worked at the Beaufort War hospital in Bristol. In the 1939 register she lived in Teignmouth. Her husband William also lived in Teignmouth but in the “Woodhall Household” – a nursing home. She died Dec 1969 in Newton Abbott, aged 80. Her husband William had died 15 years earlier in Exeter hospital. Family tree: https://www.ancestry.co.uk/family-tree/tree/74092134/family
WARE Albert Edwin was b 26 Nov 1885 in Bampton. Albert was the youngest of 8 children of Edwin Ware, a farmer b Apr 1848 in Halberton, and Emma, née Parker, who helped on the farm and was b Jan 1846 in SP. In the 1901 census, Edwin and Emma, together with Albert Edwin and a grand-daughter, Elsie Redwood Ware (the illegitimate daughter of another of their children, Annie Ware) lived at Blackdown Gate farm in Culmstock.
By the time of the next census in 1911, the family had all moved to Holbrook, which is on the border of SP and Burlescombe. Albert, aged 26, was described as single, a joiner and carpenter employing others, whilst his parents continued to be farmers. Albert married Rosalie Morgan b 1890 Burlescombe, in Apr 1911 and by Sep 1911 they had their first child, Bessie May, who was bp at St John’s church, SP on 15 Oct 1911 (died 1988). On 30 Dec 1913 they had a son, Edwin Albert, also bp SP, on 8 Jan 1914. The family moved into Baileys Cottages, Boobery (2018: site of 7-11) around the time of their son’s birth and Albert is on the 1914 Electoral Roll. Boobery remained their home until 1920. Albert Edwin appears on the 1918 E.R. with NM appearing against his name. No service record survived for him, but from this one piece of evidence it does appear that he served during the War. In the 1939 Register, Albert Edwin Ware was the licensee of the Plymouth Inn, Crediton, living there with Rosalie. He died Dec 1970 in Exeter. His wife Rosalie died 10 years earlier.
WILLIAMS Albert John b Dec 1890, Tiverton; he was 5th/6 children of John Williams (b 1862 Tiverton-Mar 1931 SP), labourer and his wife Sarah Ann Kerslake (b 1860 Tiverton- Dec 1927 SP). His elder brother, William Henry Williams (see below), also served in the War. In 1891 census, aged 3 months, Albert lived with parents at Westexe, Tiverton. By 1911 census his family were in Back Street SP (2018: 17-19 Higher Town)and he had joined the army and was stationed at Aldershot where he was a driver with RHA (Royal Horse Artillery) - reg no 63083 with the 69th Battalion. He later transferred to RFA (Royal Field Artillery). He returned to SP after the war and he and his brother lived with their parents at Higher Town from 1919 to 1922 per the Electoral Rolls. Unable to trace him after he left the village around 1922.
WILLIAMS William Henry, b 27 Jan 1889, Tiverton; he was 4th/6 children of John Williams (1862, Tiverton) and Sarah (1860, Tiverton). His younger brother Albert John Williams also served (see above). In 1891 census family lived at Westexe, Tiverton. By 1901 they moved out to Little Silver, 3m S of Tiverton, but by 1911 the family were living at Back Street, SP (2018: 17-19 Higher Town). William Henry was shown as a steerman on a traction engine. He enlisted 19 Nov 1915 in the Duke of Edinburgh Wiltshire Regiment (#26227) where he gave his occupation as labourer, GWR. He was mobilised 15 Feb 1916 in the Royal Berkshire Regiment. On 13 May 1916, 3 months after being mobilised, he was promoted to Lance Corporal. Exactly a year later, on 13 May 1917 he was promoted to Corporal (94824) in the 159th Labour Corps of the Royal Berkshire Regiment. He returned to “Base Depot” 29 Jun 1919 and was discharged 15 Sep 1919. He returned to SP and lived with his parents at Higher Town from Autumn 1919 to Autumn 1921 (according tothe electoral rolls). In the 1920 Gregory’s Directory he was employed as a Chauffeur and lived in Boobery. He left the village 1921 and there’s a William Henry Williams in Clayhanger in 1924 (Electoral Roll). In 1939 he was in Chelsea Terrace, Tiverton, with his wife Bessie Williams née Richards. His job was ‘Permanent Way maintenance repair staff’. He died in the Tiverton area in 1964.
WILLIAMS Stanley b 20 Feb 1891, SP; 6th/8 children of William John Williams (b 1851 Uffculme) butcher and Eliza Wright (b 1856 Hemyock). He lived with his parents in 1911 census at Challis, Lower Town (2018: 12 Lower Town), SP where he was a butcher working in the family business He enlisted as a driver in Dec 1915 in the RFA (Royal Field Artillery). He was in France for 18 months between 1917 and 1919. In 1914 he married Dora Elston (b Jan 1891) from Silverton and their first daughter, Stella, was born in 1915. After the war Stanley returned to SP and took over the family butchers business at Challis, Lower Town. He was part of the British Legion committee who set up the village hall in 1933. Stanley and his wife Dora moved to Moorend House before the start of WW2 where his occupation was shown as Farmer, Butcher and Cattle Dealer. He “retired” from the business during WW2 and handed it over to his daughter and her husband. Much more detail of the butchers business is given in a publication by the SP Society on village businesses. Stanley died in 1968, aged 77 and Dora in 1975, aged 84. Family tree:
https://www.ancestry.co.uk/family-tree/tree/54003725/family
Charlie doesn’t appear in the 1911 census, because by then he had emigrated to Canada where he worked on a farm. According to a 1920 passenger list declaration Charlie had originally gone to St Johns in Canada in 1910. This declaration also says that he left Canada, where his home had been Yorkton, Saskatchewan, in December 1914 “to join the home forces”, ie to fight in the first world war. His medal card tells us that he was a private in the Devonshire Regiment, service number 17822. Charlie was wounded in October 1916 and presumably recuperated back in England because in the last quarter of that year he got married in the Tiverton area to Kate Cotterill. On 4th September 1917 Charlie’s wife Kate gave birth in Tiverton to a boy whom they named Charlie James Leonard, referred to in later documents just as James. Perhaps the name James was for Charlie’s brother James. Charlie was back in the war and on that same day, 4th September, a casualty list came out saying that he had been wounded again. It must have been a very difficult time for his wife. Charlie’s brother James was killed in France just a month later, on 2nd October 1917.
Charlie Trevellyan survived the war and travelled back to Canada with his wife and son on 4th April 1920, leaving Liverpool on board the ‘Minnedosa’ to return to Yorkton, Saskatchewan, where the family settled permanently. Judging by the photo of him, above, he kept in touch with his WW1 regimental colleagues. Charlie died in Canada in 1984 at the age of 94 and his son James died the same year, leaving many Canadian Trevellyan children and grandchildren.
TREVELLYAN Walter George b Jan 1880 SP; 6th/9 children to George Trevellyan (1847-93 SP, Carpenter) and Caroline (née Walker) 1849-1906. Older brother to Alfred (above). In 1891 census they lived at Always Cottage (2018: 1-3 Chains Road). When his father died in 1891, his mother remarried John Hooper Parkhouse and they still lived in Chains Road. By 1901 Walter was a bricklayer and was living in Bedfordshire with his newly married sister Rosa – her husband was also a bricklayer. There is no definitive record for him in the 1911 census – there is a George Trevellyan living in SP as a servant b 1883, but this is probably the George Trevellyan b 1883 in Burlescombe. Walter enlisted but there are several possible military records and we cannot be sure which one is his. After the war he returned to the village, but never married. He died in Tiverton Hospital May 1929 and was buried 23 May in SP. Family tree: https://www.ancestry.co.uk/family-tree/tree/75014822/family
TUCKER Herbert John b 10 Jun 1895, bp 14 Jul 1895 at SP; Herbert was the eldest of 6 children of Richard b 1862, Cheriton, Ag Lab and Elizabeth Jane Cottey b 1872, SP. His parents married 4 Jul 1894 at St Johns, SP. His younger siblings Frederick and Ernest both lost their lives during the war – there is more about them in an earlier chapter. His mother Jane died in Oct 1907 in childbirth and her 2-day-old son was buried with her in the same coffin. His father Richard remarried to Annie b 1863 Topsham. The family lived at Smoke Alley, Boobery, (2018: 22-24 Boobery) in both 1901 and 1911 censuses, but by 1911 Herbert had left home and was working as a farm boy (aged 15) for the Dennis family at Jurishayes, Withleigh, Tiverton. We know he served in the war as he was listed in the ER for Ayshford in 1918 as NM, but we cannot be sure which he was of several servicemen with the same name. The 1920 ER shows that he returned to live with his parents in Ayshford after the war. Family tree: https://www.ancestry.co.uk/family-tree/tree/74511558/family
WALLINGTON Lucy (née Harris) b 22 Mar 1889 Glamorgan, youngest of 8 children of William Harris (painter) and Lucy Rees, married William Claude Wallington (b Sep 1876) in Apr 1909 in Glamorgan and they lived in Cardiff. Her brother in law Charles Harold Wallington was a SP man who lost his life in 1917 in WW1 – there is more about him earlier in this book. Lucy joined the war effort as a Red Cross Volunteer nurse in 1915 – the same year as her husband William enlisted. She worked initially in Cardiff, but gave her home address as “Morrells, Lower Town, SP” (2018: 3 Lower Town) which was where her mother-in-law lived. At the end of the war Nov/Dec 1918 she worked at the Beaufort War hospital in Bristol. In the 1939 register she lived in Teignmouth. Her husband William also lived in Teignmouth but in the “Woodhall Household” – a nursing home. She died Dec 1969 in Newton Abbott, aged 80. Her husband William had died 15 years earlier in Exeter hospital. Family tree: https://www.ancestry.co.uk/family-tree/tree/74092134/family
WARE Albert Edwin was b 26 Nov 1885 in Bampton. Albert was the youngest of 8 children of Edwin Ware, a farmer b Apr 1848 in Halberton, and Emma, née Parker, who helped on the farm and was b Jan 1846 in SP. In the 1901 census, Edwin and Emma, together with Albert Edwin and a grand-daughter, Elsie Redwood Ware (the illegitimate daughter of another of their children, Annie Ware) lived at Blackdown Gate farm in Culmstock.
By the time of the next census in 1911, the family had all moved to Holbrook, which is on the border of SP and Burlescombe. Albert, aged 26, was described as single, a joiner and carpenter employing others, whilst his parents continued to be farmers. Albert married Rosalie Morgan b 1890 Burlescombe, in Apr 1911 and by Sep 1911 they had their first child, Bessie May, who was bp at St John’s church, SP on 15 Oct 1911 (died 1988). On 30 Dec 1913 they had a son, Edwin Albert, also bp SP, on 8 Jan 1914. The family moved into Baileys Cottages, Boobery (2018: site of 7-11) around the time of their son’s birth and Albert is on the 1914 Electoral Roll. Boobery remained their home until 1920. Albert Edwin appears on the 1918 E.R. with NM appearing against his name. No service record survived for him, but from this one piece of evidence it does appear that he served during the War. In the 1939 Register, Albert Edwin Ware was the licensee of the Plymouth Inn, Crediton, living there with Rosalie. He died Dec 1970 in Exeter. His wife Rosalie died 10 years earlier.
WILLIAMS Albert John b Dec 1890, Tiverton; he was 5th/6 children of John Williams (b 1862 Tiverton-Mar 1931 SP), labourer and his wife Sarah Ann Kerslake (b 1860 Tiverton- Dec 1927 SP). His elder brother, William Henry Williams (see below), also served in the War. In 1891 census, aged 3 months, Albert lived with parents at Westexe, Tiverton. By 1911 census his family were in Back Street SP (2018: 17-19 Higher Town)and he had joined the army and was stationed at Aldershot where he was a driver with RHA (Royal Horse Artillery) - reg no 63083 with the 69th Battalion. He later transferred to RFA (Royal Field Artillery). He returned to SP after the war and he and his brother lived with their parents at Higher Town from 1919 to 1922 per the Electoral Rolls. Unable to trace him after he left the village around 1922.
WILLIAMS William Henry, b 27 Jan 1889, Tiverton; he was 4th/6 children of John Williams (1862, Tiverton) and Sarah (1860, Tiverton). His younger brother Albert John Williams also served (see above). In 1891 census family lived at Westexe, Tiverton. By 1901 they moved out to Little Silver, 3m S of Tiverton, but by 1911 the family were living at Back Street, SP (2018: 17-19 Higher Town). William Henry was shown as a steerman on a traction engine. He enlisted 19 Nov 1915 in the Duke of Edinburgh Wiltshire Regiment (#26227) where he gave his occupation as labourer, GWR. He was mobilised 15 Feb 1916 in the Royal Berkshire Regiment. On 13 May 1916, 3 months after being mobilised, he was promoted to Lance Corporal. Exactly a year later, on 13 May 1917 he was promoted to Corporal (94824) in the 159th Labour Corps of the Royal Berkshire Regiment. He returned to “Base Depot” 29 Jun 1919 and was discharged 15 Sep 1919. He returned to SP and lived with his parents at Higher Town from Autumn 1919 to Autumn 1921 (according tothe electoral rolls). In the 1920 Gregory’s Directory he was employed as a Chauffeur and lived in Boobery. He left the village 1921 and there’s a William Henry Williams in Clayhanger in 1924 (Electoral Roll). In 1939 he was in Chelsea Terrace, Tiverton, with his wife Bessie Williams née Richards. His job was ‘Permanent Way maintenance repair staff’. He died in the Tiverton area in 1964.
WILLIAMS Stanley b 20 Feb 1891, SP; 6th/8 children of William John Williams (b 1851 Uffculme) butcher and Eliza Wright (b 1856 Hemyock). He lived with his parents in 1911 census at Challis, Lower Town (2018: 12 Lower Town), SP where he was a butcher working in the family business He enlisted as a driver in Dec 1915 in the RFA (Royal Field Artillery). He was in France for 18 months between 1917 and 1919. In 1914 he married Dora Elston (b Jan 1891) from Silverton and their first daughter, Stella, was born in 1915. After the war Stanley returned to SP and took over the family butchers business at Challis, Lower Town. He was part of the British Legion committee who set up the village hall in 1933. Stanley and his wife Dora moved to Moorend House before the start of WW2 where his occupation was shown as Farmer, Butcher and Cattle Dealer. He “retired” from the business during WW2 and handed it over to his daughter and her husband. Much more detail of the butchers business is given in a publication by the SP Society on village businesses. Stanley died in 1968, aged 77 and Dora in 1975, aged 84. Family tree:
https://www.ancestry.co.uk/family-tree/tree/54003725/family