The Tyndall – Crawford Family Tree
Descendants of Aspasha Faria ("Gang") of Plantation Waterloo, Suriname & Ulverston Village, Guyana — 1346 recorded family members, Generations 1–7
Presented by Joseph Adrian Tyndall
Generated in significant part from details and history provided by B. Crawford and members of the Crawford Family
How to explore this tree: every solid, coloured circle holds hidden family members — click a circle to expand that branch, and click it again to collapse it. A white (hollow) circle has no further descendants to show. The small squares (⚭) mark marriages: click a square to reveal the children of that marriage. Drag anywhere to move around the tree, scroll or pinch to zoom, and use the Search box below to find any name instantly.
Disclaimer: This family tree is not complete and may have inaccuracies. New information is continually being added to update the information and to correct inaccuracies. If you would like to communicate corrections or have additional information or history to contribute, please send an email to
jadriantyndall@gmail.com.
How Our Family Began — a short introduction (click here to find out)
Authored by B. Crawford
The Tyndall family began in Suriname, where Aspasha Faria — remembered by all as "Gang" — married Mr. Tyndall, a Surinamese. Together they owned a sugar plantation, Plantation Waterloo, and were blessed with three children: Moses, Lackey, and a daughter remembered as "Aunty Miss Phillips". Tragedy struck when Mr. Tyndall died at sea aboard a ship carrying him from Suriname to Holland, leaving Aspasha a young widow with three small children.
Some years later she met and married Richard Crawford, a Guyanese who had come to Suriname to work as a balata bleeder. She sold Plantation Waterloo to the Sankar Brothers and moved with her three children to her new husband's homeland, Guyana, settling at Ulverston Village. There she bore two more sons, Dalton and Christopher Crawford. Her five children — three Tyndalls and two Crawfords — were brothers and sisters, and so their descendants, the two great families recorded in this tree, are all cousins. Explore the branches below to find your place among them.
Tip: click any circle to open or close that branch. Drag to pan, scroll to zoom. Solid circles hold hidden descendants.