| Week 27 |
| Wednesday. 01 July, 2026 | |
| 10:30 am | |
| Saturday. 04 July, 2026 | |
| 9:45 am |
North West Kent FHS AGM Annual General MeetingThe 48th Annual General Meeting (AGM) of the NORTH WEST KENT FAMILY HISTORY SOCIETY will be held at DARTFORD SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY COLLEGE, Heath Lane, Dartford, Kent DA1 2LY ON SATURDAY 4TH JULY 2026 at 10:30am Programme for the Day From 9.45am Registration, time for tea / coffee, raffle tickets 10.30 AGM 11.15am Comfort Break 11.30am Kathy Chater on Film & Sound Archives for Family Historians Kathy has been researching her family history for over 40 years. She worked as a researcher at the BBC and still advises on historical sources. She has published several books and also contributes articles and reviews on social and family history to periodicals including Ancestor published by The National Archives. Recorded moving images have been around since the 1890's and recorded sound a little longer. Radio arrived in the 1920's and television in the 1930's. Literally millions of people, some professional performers but mostly ordinary folk, have been preserved in film and sound archives. Kathy will explain how to discover if your ancestors, walking, talking or acting, are in them. 1pm Comfort Break and the hall will be set up for lunch 1.15pm Buffet Lunch for those who have prebooked and paid for lunch, and for those who preferred to bring their own lunch 2.30pm David Annal on Understanding Death Duty Registers Our second speaker of the day is the well known David Annal, an experienced lecturer and author who has been involved in family history for over 40 years and was the principal family history specialist at The National Archives. He is a Fellow of the Society of Genealogists and now runs his own research business and has a YouTube channel. From 1796 to 1903 the Inland Revenue maintained a series of registers recording the payments of death duties. These registers, held by The National Archives, represent one of family history's best kept secrets. David will look at the surviving records in detail and explain how they can be used to uncover some fascinating facts about the lives and relationships of our nineteenth century ancestors. 4pm end of AGM day. |