Hi all.
One of my ancestors came in on a ship to Liverpool in 1950 and under the class section it says D.B.S rather than 1st class, 2nd class etc. What does this mean.
Also. Passenger lists don't usually include ship workers do they? If this is the case then this must have been the year that my ancestor injured himself abroad and was brought back to the UK as a passenger as he usually worked on ships and wouldn't have been a passenger.
Thanks
Dan
http://search.ancestry.co.uk/iexec/?htx ... d=28616633
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Incoming Passenger list - What does D.B.S mean?
- northmeols
- Non Member
- Posts: 897
- Joined: 18 Oct 2006 22:52
- northmeols
- Non Member
- Posts: 897
- Joined: 18 Oct 2006 22:52
probably. when a seaman is stranded abroad for any reason, health, shipwreck, or family emergency etc. this was and still is the means by which sailors got/get home
southport woman long way from home. aka "Tide is always out at Southport Wombat"
Rimmer, Unsworth, Hough, Lee, Quine, Howarth, Johnson, Bromilow, Bigland, Cullen, Clague, Orme, Walker, Livesey, Stone
Rimmer, Unsworth, Hough, Lee, Quine, Howarth, Johnson, Bromilow, Bigland, Cullen, Clague, Orme, Walker, Livesey, Stone
Hi my "Cornie" grandad was a DBS.
He died some months after leaving his ship from "sugar diabetes"..
Tina
He died some months after leaving his ship from "sugar diabetes"..
Tina
- Tina
Cornthwaite,Milburn,Coll,Gaffney,Pearce,Singleton,Hazlehurst,Cuthbert,Mackintosh,McAllister,Morana, Corfield
Any census/bmd information within this post is Crown Copyright from http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/