Notebooks filled with information from past research forays
Getting my research plans in order isn't going quickly. I'm still stuck on the first family line I looked into, the Argents. Sorting through the information I have on my 3 x great grandfather, James Argent, has tripped me up. His story intrigues me and for someone who was born sometime in the 1760s (I haven't found his birth record yet but it's probably somewhere in my paperwork) there is quite a lot of information about his life.
Among the records I found a transcript of the 1824 will of Samuel Goody of Halstead, the same parish that James came from. In this will Samuel named one of his beneficiaries as "my daughter Elizabeth Argent wife of James Argent Officer of Excise No. 14 Hope Place Whitechapel Road London". That's probably where I obtained the information that James worked for the Excise. Of course that led me down the rabbit hole of trying to find out more about his work so I looked on the National Archives website at the information on Excise and Inland Revenue officers but was unable to find any mention of James Argent in those records that had been digitized.
But then, thinking that I shouldn't duplicate previous research when I embark on my next research trip, I decided to check out some of the notebooks I've amassed over the years. There, in a notebook from 2015, I found what I was looking for. It showed my notes from when I visited the TNA at Kew in person and there they were, entries in minute books from earlier than Samuel Goody's 1824 will, mentions about James Argent's time in the Excise service.
I wonder what other information I have in those notebooks. It looks like it's time to check them out but in the meantime I've started to do a timeline of James Argent's life. It looks like he had children by more than one woman. That could complicate things when it comes to my DNA research.