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BBC 1 TV - Who do you think you are?

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  • BBC 1 TV - Who do you think you are?

    Who Do You Think You Are?

    Full circle

    Wednesday 4 October 9.00pm BBC ONE
    www.bbc.co.uk/familyhistory
    Programme copy

    Antiques expert and TV presenter David Dickinson is the latest
    celebrity to go in search of his roots as Who Do You Think You
    Are?, the series that spurred the nation's passion for genealogy,
    continues. David's ancestral quest has been especially meaningful for
    him because he was adopted. His parents, Jim and Joyce Dickinson,
    adopted him as a baby - something he didn't find out until he was
    about 11 years old. But he confesses he had always felt different.

    >From an early age David showed a sharp business instinct, but he
    didn't immediately go into antiques. When he left school at 14 he first
    worked as an apprentice in an aircraft factory, though he left after
    only six months for a job in the textile industry, following - though
    he didn't know it at the time - in his real grandfather's footsteps.

    Once he had discovered, by chance, that he was adopted, Jim and
    Joyce explained that his birth mother was an Armenian called Eugenie
    Gulessarian who had lived locally. David was neither distressed nor
    even particularly surprised by these revelations, and it wasn't until
    he was in his twenties that he made any attempt to track Eugenie
    down. Although they corresponded by letter and talked on the phone,
    they never actually met in person. She died in 1989.

    David explains: "I think as a little boy, having found out that I
    came from this Armenian stock I've always wanted to know more about
    it and as I got into my twenties and thirties I did find out more
    but eventually that came to a stop. So I'm hoping that this programme
    will take me the full journey."

    David was curious about his birth family and his Armenian roots. When
    he acquired some photographs of his birth mother, who was known as
    Jenny, and her parents, Hrant and Marie-Adelaide, he was struck by
    how similar in appearance they were to him. And the similarities
    didn't end there. Hrant had been a successful textiles entrepreneur
    in Manchester, having arrived from Constantinople in 1904.

    Manchester had had close trade links with Turkey through the textile
    industry since the 1840s and when Hrant arrived there was already an
    established Armenian community. He joined an uncle who already lived
    in Manchester and was running a family business exporting cotton and
    other fabrics to Turkey. By coincidence, the address of grandfather
    Hrant's business turned out to be just a stone's throw from where
    David worked when he was in the textile trade.

    At the local Armenian Church, David found records of Jenny's baptism
    and those of her brother and sister, John and Marie, as well as an
    entry for Hrant and Marie-Adelaide's marriage. He also found the
    address of Hrant's family home in the village of Great Warford,
    only 20 minutes' drive from David's own home. He paid a visit, and
    was shown round by the present owner.

    David admits he is fascinated with grandfather Hrant: "I have always
    felt I had been close to him as a little boy. And I think I feel a lot
    of understanding for him. I can see the slight old fashioned-ness. I
    can see the slight toughness. It is in me ... and I think I've always
    looked towards him and, as a teenager growing up, I always - rather
    silly I suppose - I modelled myself on him."

    Hrant was not particularly happy, however. His marriage to
    Marie-Adelaide (who, according to family folklore, was French)
    was stormy, and there were terrible rows. Finally, Marie-Adelaide
    left him for a man with whom she'd been having an affair, but Hrant
    gained custody of the children. When David checked in the Manchester
    Records Office, he found that his grandmother was born Marie-Adelaide
    Jackson, the daughter of a Moss Side baker, so there was no hint of
    French blood. The records further showed that Hrant divorced her for
    adultery with a man called Frederick Williams.

    There was more to come. Through his cousin, Mark Gulessarian, the
    son of David's uncle, John, David learned from Hrant's will that at
    the time of his death in 1963 his fortune had declined radically,
    perhaps on account of the slump in trade that followed the Second
    World War. He died a relatively poor man.

    David travelled to Istanbul to trace Hrant's ancestors. He was
    told that the Turks' resentment of the Armenians was so strong that
    thousands died through persecution between 1894 and 1897. Massacres
    of the Armenians, which occurred from 1915 to 1917, are known as the
    Armenian Genocide and two million are thought to have perished. In
    Istanbul, where the Western press was well-established and there was
    a strong European influence and presence, Armenians could live in
    relative safety; the massacres took place in the remote east of the
    country. However, officially, Turkey still fails to acknowledge what
    took place and discourages research into the genocide.

    David is relieved to find out that his great-grandparents didn't
    die in these massacres. He found a funeral certificate for his
    great-grandfather, Boghos, from which he learned that he died aged
    63 of dysentery at the holiday resort of Yenimahalle, on the Bosphorus.

    David enlisted the help of a local historian to find out more about
    the family business. He discovered that the premises used by his
    family still exist and are still used by textile traders, though the
    Gulessarian business petered out in the late Twenties.

    The chances that any of the Gulessarian family still remained in the
    city were slim, but David decided to place a series of adverts in the
    local Armenian newspaper. Initially there was no response, but towards
    the end of David's visit a gentleman called Hacik Guleser contacted
    the newspaper. He turned out to be David's third cousin. The family
    had dropped the name Gulessarian in the Thirties and adopted the
    more Turkish-sounding name of Guleser. So, through David and Hacik,
    the Gulesssarian family line continues.

    "Most people will have their mother and father, brought up in Doncaster
    or Yorkshire, wherever it may be, and will know their roots and never
    question them," says David. "In my case, there has always been a
    question about my roots because there's never been a certainty what
    it's all about."

    As he ends his journey, David concludes: "I've come full circle now. I
    can sense a certain toughness in them. It's in me. Since I was 11 I've
    been chasing the Gulesserian name. Maybe I've had something to prove."

    http://www.bbc.co.uk/pressoffice/pro ginfo/tv/wk40/feature_whodoyou.shtml
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