Clerk
Station Master
Clerk
He is married to Eva Eveline Blanche Best.
They got married in the year 1914 at New Zealand, he was 22 years old.
Child(ren):
grandparents
parents
brothers/sisters
children
Bertie Felton | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
1914 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Eva Eveline Blanche Best | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Bertie Felton<br>Voter registration:
Year: 1925
Electorate: Avon
Region: Canterbury<br>Address: 8 Templar Street<br>Occupation: Clerk<br>Record #: 3335<br>Reference: F435
Electoral rolls can serve as a substitute for census listings. They are particularly important for genealogy work in New Zealand, because the earliest available census listing is from 1961. In 1893, New Zealand became the first country to grant women’s suffrage.
Bertie Felton<br>Birth: 1892<br>Father: George Felton<br>Mother: Mary<br>Registration #: 3705
Births have been officially recorded in New Zealand since 1848, and were originally under the jurisdiction of the Colonial Secretary. If a birth was a stillbirth it is indicated in the record. The records in this collection are provided by the New Zealand Department of Internal Affairs.
Bertie Felton<br>Residence: C/- NZ Railways Parnassus Cheviot, New Zealand<br>Occupation: Stationmaster<br>Category: Second Reserves<br>Classification: Class B - Reservists who have one child<br>Reference: F435
The majority of the records are from the First and Second Division of the New Zealand Expeditionary Force Reserve rolls. The First Division Roll, created in September of 1916, includes male natural-born British subjects between 20 and 46 years of age who are either unmarried or previously married with no children under the age of 16. The Second Division Roll, created from August to October of 1917, includes a classification based on the number of children of each reservist.