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A comprehensive history of the
Rosevear family covering 550 years. The book includes four major
sections. The first section is devoted the early history of
the family in Cornwall, England. The second
section covers the 19th century emigration to
Australia,
Canada,
New Zealand and
the United
States. The third section is
the huge family tree with 14,000 plus members. The last section is
the index to the family tree. 542 pages.
A book of this magnitude is a
story in itself. Very few families can trace their origins 200
years, fewer still 400 years, and only a very few, 550 years.
The Rosevear family, from Cornwall, England, can now enjoy
this fascinating story due to the extraordinary work of one man, Bob
Roseveare.
Bob Roseveare’s career is a
remarkable tale. During World War
II, Britain was suffering devastating
losses from submarine warfare to a technologically advanced and much
better prepared Germany. English
intelligence learned that the German message codes were produced by
a machine, called the Enigma machine, and British cryptographers at
Bletchley Park sought to decode the
changing codes produced by Enigma.
The British code breaking effort
recruited the best and brightest mathematicians. One such
mathematician, Bob Roseveare, was 18 years old and had just
graduated from what we call high school. Bob made major
contributions to the ultimately successful codebreaking effort and
its role in Germany’s defeat.
After the war Bob attended
Cambridge University on scholarship but was unable
to secure satisfactory employment in England. In 1949 he left
for South
Africa and found a position
teaching mathematics. In 1965, he returned to
England and taught
mathematics at several intellectually demanding public schools
(equivalent to our private high schools) until his retirement in
1983.
Sometime in the late 1970s, Bob
began to develop a special mission—to discover his Rosevear family
roots and then, more importantly, to bring the Rosevear(e) family
together for the first time. With a determination
and energy possessed by few people, he contacted people who shared
his name and asked about their roots. He began to
spend hours and eventually thousands of hours researching his family
in parish records, census data, probate data, and marriage
records.
Through his research, a complete picture of
the Rosevear family began to come together. But
Bob knew that the data were only part of his mission.
His true calling was to bring the family
together. Hesitantly at first, and then with more
confidence, Bob wrote to hundreds of Rosevear(e)s proposing the
first family reunion. To the delight of Bob and
many of his “cousins,” almost 400 Rosevear(e) descendants, half from
overseas, traveled to
Cornwall in 1985 to meet
for the first time.
The gathering set this book in
motion. With more momentum and many more
contacts, a second reunion was planned and successfully carried out
in 1990. For that effort, Bob published five
booklets describing his work to bring the family together and the
huge tree that he produced with the participation of hundreds of
cousins.
Bruce Greenberg and Linda
Rosevear Greenberg attended both of Bob Roseveare’s
reunions. For them, learning that they were part
of this far-flung family and meeting their many cousins was a
special experience. They wanted to continue Bob’s
work, and their experience owning a small publishing company—devoted
to American toy trains—proved fortuitous. In
2002, with Bob Roseveare’s blessings and encouragement, they began
the work that created this volume.
Bruce and Linda laboriously
entered Bob’s handwritten 176-page family tree containing 10,000
names into their computers and wrote to the 400 Rosevear families on
Bob’s mailing list. Responses were initially
quite slow, but as the process continued, more family members
responded and updated births, marriages, and deaths.
Each time a family member sent information, Bruce and Linda
would enter the information in the family tree and send back a
proof. Frequently, the family member would make
additional changes or additions, and sometimes this round robin went
four rounds!
At the same time, several other family
members were studying their own branches of the family using
increasingly available genealogical resources.
These family scholars graciously shared their information
with Bruce and Linda. The result of this enormous
collaboration—involving several hundred family members that began in
the early 1980s with Bob Roseveare—is the 541 page book that was
published on July 20,
2005.
As noted above, the book contains four major
sections. The first section is the history of the family in
Cornwall, starting with the earliest documented Richard
Rosevear, in the late 1400s. The second section is the
story of the emigration of the family from Cornwall to Australia,
Canada, New Zealand and the United States. The third section
is the monumental 340 page Rosevear Tree with 14,000
Rosevears and Rosevear descendants. The last section is the
index to the Tree.
The book is available from Brinkmann
Publishing LLC, 5233 Bessley
Place, Alexandria,
VA
22304 for $69.95
plus shipping. Brinkmann
Publishing’s phone number in the United States is
703-461-6991 or write
brucegreenberg@comcast.net. |