Sunday, 11 September 2022

32 Ancestors Challenge - Week 34 - Timeline

Timelines are something that hadn’t really thought about until I was asked to review Smith and Bertram’s Tracing your Ancestors using the UK Historical Timeline: A Guide for Family Historians a couple of years ago.

Putting your ancestors into context of their time is a very useful exercise.  We may be able to find their dates of birth; baptism, marriage and death / burial, but what was going on in their place of residence, county, country and the wider world. 

My Great Grandmother was born in 1838 in Poole in Dorset, shortly after the introduction of Civil Registration of births, marriages and deaths.  ‘Poole established successful commerce with the North American colonies in the 16th century, including the important fisheries of Newfoundland, but  By the early 18th century Poole had more ships trading with North America than any other English port and vast wealth was brought to Poole's merchants, with many of the medieval buildings of the Old Town were replaced with Georgian mansions and terraced housing. The end of the Napoleonic Wars and the conclusion of the War of 1812 ended Britain's monopoly over the Newfoundland fisheries and other nations took over services provided by Poole's merchants at a lower cost. Poole's Newfoundland trade rapidly declined and within a decade most merchants had ceased trading.  

The town grew rapidly during the industrial revolution as urbanisation took place and the town became an area of mercantile prosperity and overcrowded poverty. At the turn of the 19th century, nine out of ten workers were engaged in harbour activities, but as the century progressed ships became too large for the shallow harbour and the port lost business to the deepwater ports at Liverpool, Southampton and Plymouth.  Poole's first railway station opened in Hamworthy in 1847 and later extended to the centre of Poole in 1872, effectively ending the port's busy coastal shipping trade’.1

By the time of my ancestors' birth, her father was engaged as a Coal Metre in the harbour area at a time when the shipping trade was declining.  The Dominey family did have connections with Newfoundland further back in time.  My ancestor married for the first time in 1857 in Poole, her husband was a sailor who was lost at sea a couple of years later.   As I noted in a previous blog, she then left her young daughter with her sister and worked locally in service until she moved, perhaps by train, to London in search of a better life.  She married for a second time to my Great Grandfather in 1873, a man several years her junior - her ‘toy boy’.   The couple went on to have three more children, a son (my Grandfather) and two daughters.  His younger sister had a heart condition and died at the early age of 17, the older sister married a Suffolk man in Willian and then lived for many years in Leiston, in Suffolk. Full circle for my paternal family.  The family remained in London until the late 1890s when my great grandfather is found as the Licensee of a ‘pub in Willian in North Hertfordshire.  Running a ‘pub was a long-established occupation in the Nickels family.  The Nickels family originated in Suffolk and moved to London for work in the late 1860s and 1870s, a time of much new building where their trades of plumbers, painters and glaziers (and publicans) was of use.

My Great Grandparents then settled in Hertfordshire and were in my part of the county when the new Garden City of Letchworth was being built in the early 1900's.  My grandfather and his growing family also moved to Hertfordshire in the late 1900s to help build Letchworth.  My great grandmother lived to witness the First World War and the death of her daughter in law, my grandmother.  She and her eldest daughter helped to look after the 6 children before my grandfather married again in 1919. 

My great grandmother led a hard but interesting life.  Born in Poole in Dorset, endured the tragedy of widowhood at a young age, headed to London, remarried and after her second family were grown up moved to a relatively quiet corner Hertfordshire where she died in 1920.  My Dad could vaguely remember his grandmother, ‘a little old lady’, shortly before she died when he was nearly 4 years old.  I wish I had know her – I wonder what stories she could tell!

Have a go yourself!

32 Ancestors Challenge - Week 32 - At the Library

 

The Local Library can often have a section devoted to family history and local history with books, transcripts and sometimes manuscripts that are useful for your research. The Library staff are often knowledgeable on local and family history resources and can assist you.

My local town Library has a good section on local history of the town and county with computer and microfilm access to census and some local newspapers etc.  Some larger public libraries have dedicated spaces for family history research.

In Hertfordshire, we are also lucky to have a dedicated Archives and Local Studies Resource at County Hall in Hertford, the county town. One very useful online resource in Hertfordshire Names Online  to be found in the Hertfordshire Archives and Local Studies (HALS) pages via www.hertfordshire.gov.uk.

There are also some Libraries that specialise in genealogical and heraldic research, such as the Institute of Heraldic and Genealogical Studies (www.ihgs.ac.uk) and The Heraldry Society (www.theheraldrysociety.com).  There are also the many county record offices and other archives that may have relevant material to enhance your family history research.  Although nowadays there are many more digital resources, but this is just a small percentage of archive resources - you can’t do it all online.

32 Ancestors Challenge - Week 31 - Help

 

We can always do with some help when we are researching our family trees.  Help can come from a variety of different sources - from your family members, staff in record offices and also from Family History Society members.  You can’t do it all online!

Family History Societies in the UK are usually centered on a specific area or county in the country with a membership of people who have ancestors from that area and also people who live in the area and are researching their families.

One Family History Society that I have been involved with for many years is the Hertfordshire Family History Society.  I joined way back in the 1980s and now serve on the Committee and edit their journal, Hertfordshire People.

The Society was founded in 1977 and is a member of the Family History Federation and a registered charity.   The Society has played an important role in family history research in the county of Hertfordshire.  We have regular meetings, now with a hybrid talks programme.  The Society tries to strike a balance between talks for the experienced researcher and the complete beginner.  Membership is worldwide.  Over lockdown we welcomed r members to online talks, which we are continuing now that we are resuming in person meetings with our talks being delivered in a hybrid way.   

In person meetings, at Woolmer Green Village Hall, include the talk as well as research help from our knowledgeable members and a bookstall.

Our award-winning journal, Hertfordshire People, is sent to members in either printed or digital format.  The Society has undertaken major projects, such as indexing the Hertfordshire Militia Ballot Lists, as close as we can get to a type of census of men between the years of 1758 and 1786, of which Hertfordshire has an almost complete set.  We have also published useful books on the Poor Law records and also the ongoing recording of monumental inscriptions in Hertfordshire churchyards, before they become unreadable.

For more information check out our website – www.hertsfhs.org.uk – and our social media accounts on Facebook and Twitter which are engaging new audiences and existing members alike.

Other Family History Societies offer a similar range of useful talks, transcripts and publications – check out the Family History Federation website - https://www.familyhistoryfederation.com/

Monday, 25 July 2022

32 Ancestors Challenge - Week 30 - Teams

When this topic came up, I immediately thought of my Dad and his long association with Letchworth Town Football Club in Hertfordshire UK.

Dad was always sporty, something that I certainly haven’t inherited!  I am more of an ‘armchair athlete’ although I was ‘average’ in a class of outstanding athletes in my school. I’m small (under 5 feet) and always seemed to be paired with the tallest girl in the class for the 100 metres – I think I did 2 strides to her 1.  I was quick out of the blocks but had sadly faded by the end!

I was a ‘reserve’ in the Rounders team, a sport that I enjoyed and was good at.  Whilst I was at school, we did Hockey and Netball in the winter and Tennis, Rounders and Athletics in the summer – with swimming and Gym activities all year around.    I was average at most sports and took part in the annual House sports day representing my House in the Long Jump, 100 metres and the ‘fun’ events such as the Egg and Spoon, which I won one year, and the 3-legged race.  However, from my Dad I learnt how to kick a ball as soon as I learnt how to walk.  On one Sports Day we had a ‘beat the goalie’ event where I managed to get 2 goals past the Letchworth goalkeeper in my 3 attempts.  Not bad. 

But I digress, back to my dad’s story and his involvement with local football teams in his life.

Dad was born on 2 July 1916 in Letchworth in Hertfordshire UK, the sixth child, and fourth son, of Alfred Charles and Alice Nickels.  Dad was born at home in Shott Lane in Letchworth.  The birthday day is interesting as it was also the same day and month as his elder brother Dick and his step Auntie Gert.

Dad’s sports passion was Football.  Whilst still at Pixmore School in Letchworth he was in the football team.  A few of his school friends also mirrored his involvement with other local football teams.


Pixmore School Football Team - Dad is in the back row, far right.

My Dad had a couple of scrapbooks and many newspaper cuttings which he had kept over the years of his involvement in the local football scene from the mid-1930s to the mid-1970s which I converted to a specially bound book as a gift to him. I still have the book on my family history bookshelf.  I called it ‘The Football Years - 1935 – 1974’.

There is not much about the early years apart from some newspaper cuttings.  I also have Dad’s silver football winners’ medals in the family archive i.e. a box in the attic.  Although we have the cuttings, many are not dated so it took some time to arrange the pages in chronological order.

The earliest newspaper article and photo of Dad ‘in action’ has the caption ‘Nicholls opens the Stevenage score with a lightening shot from a flag kick by Shepherd’.  Thus, I learned that Dad had played for Stevenage, a town about 5 miles from Letchworth, but this would have been before the New Town was built. 


From the cutting relating to this match in the Herts Charity Shield tournament, Stevenage beat Baldock 8:1, with Dad scoring a hat-trick (3 goals).  He also played for the Letchworth Reserves in their 5:2 victory over Welwyn Reserves.

During the 1930s he was in the winning teams for the following matches, where he received a winner’s silver medal.

1936-37 – Spartan League Winners – Letchworth

1938-39 – Greg Cup Winners – Resilia (the Team of the Foster Instrument Company)

1938-39 – Mid Herts League Winners – Little Berkhamsted

Dad told me the story about one match he played in during the winter in the days of leather football boots and leather footballs, which when wet got heavier and heavier.  Dad felt something ‘go’ in his ankle during the first half and carried on playing.  He assessed it himself during ‘half time’ and carried on playing in the second half.   It was only when the game finished and got in the bath and he took off his boots that his ankle swelled up and he was unable to walk on it.  A visit to the cottage hospital in Letchworth confirmed that he had broken his ankle.  I guess the boots which were tightly laced had provided support during the match. 

There is a ‘break’ in the cuttings during the Second World War when Dad was working in a reserved occupation and doing his bit in the Home Guard in Letchworth.

The next photographs I have are of Letchworth Town Football Club, I guess shortly after the War.  With this Team, known as the Bluebirds, he played at Back when they won the Spartan League Division II.


And also Wymondley, where Dad was on the Team that won the North Herts F.A. Division II in 1950-51.


By the 1950s Dad must have realised that his playing days were numbered.  It is then that we have cuttings referring to him as on the committees of various local football teams, such as Ickleford where he became the Chairman.  Many of the photographs we have are from the local newspaper, the Herts Pictorial.  There is also the first of the international trips to play similar teams in Europe.  Ickleford for example, visited Nieppe in France in 1960 and 1961. 

On 19 October 1962 Dad was appointed Chairman of Letchworth Town Football Club, where he had once been a player.  One cutting, which looks like it has come from a LTFC programme states:

'CHAIRMAN  - We are pleased to announce that Mr A.E. Nickels has agreed to accept this office.  We know him to be a keen sportsman, a shrewd businessman and a good leader.  We welcome him and trust he will be with us for many season’.

Further cuttings give more information about Dad.  ‘Joint managing director of the Letchworth firm of Green and Nickels, he is also a director of E.E. Shaw (Letchworth) Ltd and Wilmond Engineering Co Ltd, Hitchin.’

The Letchworth Town Football Ground was in Baldock Road, near to our family home, the same site, as the Hertfordshire County Ground today.


Letchworth Town Football Club Ground c. late 1950s

I remember as a child going to matches in the old wooden stand.  Dad was always quick thinking and keen to ‘get on with the job’.  One newspaper cutting states that on noticing that there were excavators working on the new Jackman’s Estate in Letchworth he mused that they would be just the thing to clear a roadway and car park on the ground.  A hurried phone call to the HQ of the excavators and three hours later a 120 yard long, 15ft wide road had been bulldozed between the Baldock Road gate and the other side of the road.  Cheeky, but it worked.  Dad was not afraid to take a chance!  If you don’t ask, you don’t get.  With his business contacts Dad suggested writing to local businesses asking if they would become ‘Vice Presidents’, over 80 said yes, which showed the interest in local sport in the town.  There were proposals to extend the recreation hall – which I remember as a venue for birthday parties for me whilst all the Dad’s were all at our house watching the FA Cup Final as my birthday weekend always seemed to clash!

Charity matches and socialising between teams was important for Letchworth and the other local teams such as Hitchin and Stevenage.  There are records of ‘home’ and ‘away’ matches with other teams in the Amateur Cup and Spartan and Corinthian Leagues.  Intense cold during a match at Harlow in 1963 reflected the arctic conditions the country was experiencing.  There is also a photograph of Dad and a colleague kicking a ball on a snow-covered Letchworth pitch.

The 1960s were a time when Letchworth Town were playing well and playing such teams as Uxbridge, Dorking and Wealdstone in the Corinthian League, even getting a mention in the Daily Telegraph ‘Letchworth are now unbeaten for 15 matches and top the table with 24 points, Erith have 23 and Uxbridge 22’.

There were monetary incentives from a local businessman of £1000 if they won the Amateur Cup and a further £100 is they won the Corinithian League, with a second businessman sending a cheque for £50 if they beat Harlow (which they did), £100 if they won the Corinithian League and £1000 if they won the Cup.  No small incentive in the 1960’s.

In less than ten years Letchworth Town FC graduated from Spartan League, through the Delphian and Corinthian Leagues to the Athenian League.  The Ground also improved itself with floodlighting and a new Stand.  The Club had made a profit and these profits were being ploughed back into the facilities it had to offer members and Letchworth citizens.

Dad still had links with Ickleford FC, Baldock and District Youth League and was also Secretary of the Letchworth and District Sunday Youth League. 

Apart from the matches there was the all-important social activities, charity fundraisers and prize giving at the Annual Dinner and Christmas parties.  Shields were given for Player of the Year with the Dinners usually taking place at the Icknield Halls in Letchworth as the Harper Memorial Hall at the Club became too small. There was one memorable occasion when the serving staff dressed up in the Letchworth stripey strip.


Many of the charity raffle prizes were donated by local businesses, no doubt coerced by Dad!  On one occasion in 1963 ‘the top prize – a large hamper – was won by the club Chairman Mr Arthur Nickels.  He not only donated the prize, but it was his wife who pulled the winning ticket from the drum’.  Oops! - Red faces all ‘round!    The hamper was immediately returned to be auctioned; the person who purchased it returned it for another raffle.  The second raffle winner, the Club Secretary, returned it to be auctioned again, with the purchaser returning it for a further raffle.    In the end it was decided to send the hamper to the Dr Barnardo’s Home in Bedford. Such good sportsmanship and support from the club members and supporters.  

In 1964 Letchworth became the second holders of the Hitchin Centenary Cup when they beat Yewsley 4:1. With a membership approaching 1000 the Club realised that there was too little room to accommodate everyone with the Clubhouse was being used like a social club, with a bar, bingo, and dances. A proposal for an extension to the ground floor hall and the building of a luxury lounge and cocktail bar upstairs for those who preferred a quiet drink was agreed which cost the Club £5,000. 

1964 was also the year that Letchworth Reserves won the Athenian League (Division I) Reserve Section.  There was concern however when several key first team players moved on to other local teams.  Dad was also the President of the Letchworth and District Sunday Youth League and presented them with a Shield for presentation to the champions – I wonder where that is now?  Letchworth Town FC was in a healthy financial position but as a cutting header stated ‘Football Club made profit of £1800 but Players leaving ‘frustrating’ says chairman.    There had been a Whitsun tour of Holland, but Dad mused that ‘perhaps the lure of the Isthmian League is too strong’.

1965 saw Letchworth drawn at home to Hitchin in the preliminary round of the FA Cup which meant that one local club would be defeated at the first hurdle.  They also won the Athenian League Memorial Shield, beating Harwich in the final 3:1.  This was also the year when a group of 70 of the Club members, families and supporters went on a Whitsun tour to Amsterdam. 

Dad had recently ‘retired’ from Green and Nickels Ltd as he felt it was time for a change, but he was still a Director of Wilmond Engineering Ltd and of E.E. Shaw (Letchworth) Ltd, roofing contractors. Green and Nickels, founded in 1946 by Dad and Russell Green, had merged with the East India Produce Company in around 1963 with Dad and Russell continuing as joint directors on the Board. It was an amicable arrangement.   He told the newspaper that ‘I’m going to have a good holiday’ and pointed out that he and his wife now had a baby daughter (me) and he had a garden to work on.  At this time, I was 3 weeks old but still I hospital due to my low birth weight of 3lb 5oz. 

Up to the ‘off’ it was doubtful if Dad would be going on the Amsterdam tour where the Letchworth team were due to play A.N.I.M.O., who had visited Letchworth in 1962, and Z.S.G.O.  Among the party was the Chairman of the Letchworth U.D.C. Cllr. D. Kennedy and a rep from the local paper, The Citizen. There was also the doll mascot, which my Aunt Nellie dressed, and which I still have in the loft.  The party flew from Luton Airport, with Dad who did go in the end, as I had much improved.


January 1966 saw a ‘rebirth’ of the Letchworth Sports Development Council in response to a government initiative to obtain grants for development schemes for all sports in the town.  Dad had initially agreed to become a Vice-Chairman but decided to withdraw.  The subject of Sunday afternoon soccer was raised, which Dad supported.  Meanwhile Dad was still Chairman of Letchworth Town FC in its Diamond Jubilee year; a year that saw a rebuilding of the team following the exodus of several players to other local teams.   Both my parents were often pictured at football related events in the local newspapers such as dinners and fundraising events.  The Diamond Jubilee was also the catalyst for the Diamond Jubilee Appeal, primarily to modernise the Club facilities with an appeal to local industrialists, tradesmen, and citizens of Letchworth to ‘support us in our efforts and confirm our belief that the people of Letchworth do care for the future on their football club’.  Initial donations were promising, but a second ‘push’ was needed via the local press.  A fundraising dinner was held at the Icknield Halls, Spurs player Pat Jennings came to a match at Baldock Road, and there were preliminary talks to visit Kristiansand in Norway which had recently been ‘twinned’ with Letchworth.   Letchworth Town FC had been made full members of the F.A. in 1950.

The team were mentioned in the Sunday Telegraph on 15 October with a critique of the match between Letchworth and Chesham United by Frank King.   There was also coverage of the lifting of the suspension of local man Sid Stapleton who had been banned from all football grounds in the country by the FA in 1964 for admitting taking illegal payments – nothing is new!  Mr Stapleton had been a President of Hitchin Town FC.   Local newspapers reported on the Club financial position, the ground developments and their aspiration to ‘be out for promotion to the Premier Division of the Athenian League next season’.  The Annual Dinner, still held at the Icknield Halls, had 200 guests.

Letchworth didn’t have such a dominant season in which they were described as ‘unpredictable’ and ‘inconsistent’ and failed to gain promotion in the Athenian League but did win the Athenian League Memorial Shield for the second time beating Hertford 5:3.

In 1967 Letchworth Town hosted a visit from the 21 strong Kristiansand youth football team Start, who played four matches on their visit – two against a Letchworth and District Youth team, one against Borg Warner Ltd (a local firm) and one against Stotfold.  Their team manager Ejil Kjell Drosdal who I remember, even though I was only 2½, as he and another Norwegian official stayed with our family.

1968 - 69 saw Letchworth in the Memorial Shield final again, but the Club was having problems with the local Council over parking.  There were moves by the Council to stop football fans parking on roads outside the Club ground.  Dad locked horns with a local councillor and told him to ‘do his homework more thoroughly’ over the question of a car park for the club.  There was a fall in ticket sales, dwindling support and the club found itself ‘in the red’.  There were then talks regarding a car park and sports facilities including athletics track at the Ground which were favourably supported by the Council.  Dad was often in the papers stating that an active social committee was essential for the running of a club – a statement that can be applied to any sort of club activity.   The charity raffle was a fixed feature with the donated prizes exceptional, including a Ford Anglia deluxe.

1970 saw the Club financially stretched with local newspaper reports aplenty.  Lack of volunteers to run the Club and social activities, troubles facing other similar clubs, such as Harlow Town, Erith and Belvedere, Hounslow and Eastbourne United, regarding the costs of being in the Athenian League.  These costs, ever rising, would have been Referee expenses, the cost of travelling to away fixtures, laundry bills etc all added up to the club needing to find c.£3000 a year to ‘live’ in the Athenian League.  The club’s main source of revenue, apart from the falling gate receipts, was the social club.  Despite the expansion, the upstairs lounge proved to be a ’white elephant’ and was hired out as a roulette casino, but the gaming fees reduced the actual return. This coupled with changing tastes in entertainment for ‘downstairs’ led to less profits, even though it was subsidised from the Bar profits, to assist the Football Club side.  A dilemma. The matter came to a head when the Bluebirds team offered to play for nothing, they were prepared to waive their expenses if it would keep the Bluebirds in the Athenian League.  An Appeal was launched to try and raise the money to pay off the debts.   The Club could not see any way out of the problem with the difficult decision to make whether to withdraw from the Athenian League, cancel cup commitments and offer the ground to Youth teams.  The decision to do so was reported in the local newspaper, The Pictorial, on 24 July 1970. Most of the failure was put down to lack of support at matches.  ‘Over the past seven years home attendances have dropped from over 600 to less than 120 per match’.  People were following the ‘big teams’ and not their local side.  With more and more people owning a television, the way in which football was being watched had changed.

Although the Wilbury Youth side still played at the Club, the senior team never really recovered and was a shadow of its former self.   

Dad was Letchworth’s longest serving Chairman, having seen the glory years and the sad demise of the once successful and proud club.  Dad resigned as Chairman in 1974, having joined the Club as an official in 1963, and was made a Life Member.  He also became the club’s second Patron. 

Dad’s ‘retirement’ in 1965 did not last long – he went into partnership with another engineer shortly afterwards and founded Revolek in Hitchin. I remember accompanying him to work on a Saturday morning and meeting all the men in the factory, and the Secretary in the office.  During the school holidays I was usually asked to small jobs and came away with a ‘pay packet’ envelope at the end of the week. He finally retired in 1983 with just a quick speech to his employees to say ’I’m retiring on Friday’.

In retirement, the second time, he enjoyed watching football on TV, shouting at the Ref, and analysing the play.  I enjoy watching a good game of football with ‘no pussy-footing about’ as my Dad used to say.  My husband despairs of me when I yell when a team score a goal.  I wonder what Dad would have thought of the resurgence of ladies football?  

Sunday, 17 July 2022

32 Ancestors Challenge - Week 29 - Fun Facts

This prompt opened up a discussion between my husband and I.  What fun facts about our family members could we remember / come up with and could we prove them.

My husband’s father always said that he was the first British soldier to enter Trieste in Second World War.

He served with the Military Government, which became the Allied Military Government and the Allied Control Commission by the end of the War.  He served throughout the North African campaign, the Invasion of Sicily, up through Italy and over the River Po, to Trieste, then to Austria and finished the War in 1947 in Vienna.

A Sutch relative was in the Orchestra in Melbourne Opera House in Australia.

From a name in the 1851 census and then more research using ancestry.co.uk, we established that this relation was George Sutch, who has musical descendants in Australia to this day.

George Sutch was baptised in St George, Hanover Square on 16 February 1840 with his sister Ellen Eliza.  Their parents were John and Mary Sutch who lived in Thomas St.  John was a shoemaker.

The family were located in the 1841 census where they are still living in Thomas Street – John is a shoemaker, not born in London, whilst his wife Mary and the two children were born in London.  In 1851 it gets more interesting – George is a Lodger at 15 Grey St, Marylebone, a house of multiple occupation where my Gt Gt Grandparents were living with their 4 children, another brother and his wife and who were described as ‘Son’ of the Head of the household.  My Gt Gt Grandfather is a Bootmaker, whilst his brother William is a Musician, as is Lodger George.

George worked his way over to Australia as a musician and according to Australian sources1 from the internet, George was a Musician (The European Band), harpist, band leader, street musician and  itinerant musician.

‘It would appear that George Sutch senior arrived in Sydney in 1857 as a band musician on board the steamship European. From an address near Wynyard-square, in 1858 and 1859 he acted as agent for local offshoots of the ships' bands, the European Band proper, and a sub-group called the London Quadrille Band, which he appears to have run for a while with violinist George Arnold.

Probably in 1859, Jacob Clarke published what appears to be a local production, the ballad Norah McShane "arranged by W. D. Sutch" with an accompaniment equally suitable for pianoforte or harp. This was perhaps George's elder brother, William Sutch (c.1826-1887), a London musician, who may also have been in Australia, but if so only briefly, as he was in London for the 1861 and 1871 censuses.

In June 1862, Sutch was manager of the Prince of Wales Dancing Academy, with John Gibbs as leader of the band.

George senior, as a harpist, and George junior, as violinist, were active in New Zealand, 1868-70, in Tasmania in 1871-72, and later in Melbourne.

George junior was still active as leader of the orchestra at the King's Theatre, Melbourne, in April 1911, and, his son, W. G. Sutch, was a Melbourne violinist in 1915 and later.’2

Gt Grandfather Sutch claimed that Alfred and Henry Holmes, famous violinists, were his cousins.

The parents of the Holmes brothers were Thomas Holmes and Eliza Sutch who were married at St James, Piccadilly by Banns on 24 March 1823.  The witnesses were David Sutch and Ann Sutch, no doubt relations of the bride.  

Alfred and Henry Holmes were baptised together at Salisbury Street Wesleyan Chapel, Westminster on 7th November 1841. Alfred Thomas3 was born on 19 November 1837 and Henry4 on 7 November 1839.  Both the boys were violinists and have an entry in Grove’s Dictionary of Music and Musicians and entries in Wikipedia, see below. 


(c) Wikipedia

The novelist Fay Weldon is a descendant of Henry Holmes.

 

My Such relations always said that Screaming Lord Sutch5 was a relative.

The well known ‘pop star’ and parliamentary candidate, founder of the Monster Raving Loony Party,  Screaming Lord Sutch was born David Edward Sutch in 19406, the son of William J. Sutch and Annie E. Smith.  His father died at the early age of 25 in 1941 and was a Police Constable according to the 1939 Register. He was fatally injured in a motorcycle crash riding to duty in the blackout7.   William J. Sutch was born in the Kensington registration district in 1916, with a mother’s name of Panton.  A William E. Sutch married an Elizabeth Panton in the December quarter of 1915 in Christchurch [2b 2009].  William E was the son of Edward Sutch, a domestic coachman, and Emily and had two sisters, Lucy and Mary, with Edward being the son of Thomas Sutch, a coachman, and his wife Sarah Ellen.  Thomas states he was born in Warwickshire, as dies Sarah Ellen, with their son being born in Paddington.

If he is related to my Sutch family, it is very distantly!  Perhaps a case of same name, we must be related.

My Dad, an engineer, worked on the first jet engine   

When he and his colleagues saw the blueprints they all thought – No……it’ll never work, but it did.  This would probably have been at the de Havilland factory in Hertfordshire or Power Jets Ltd in the 1940s. I’d love to find out if this claim is true.

Twins

We both have instances of multiple sets of twins in the family.  

My husband's maternal grandmother had three sets of twins in Port William, Wigtownshire in Scotland in the 1920s - 1930s. 

My 5 x Gt Grandmother Martha did too.  Two sets with her first husband, James Nichols, my ancestor, and another set with her second husband, John Mann, in Badingham, Suffolk UK.

Notes

1.     1.   Australharmony - Biographical register S (Sk-Sz) (sydney.edu.au) (last accessed 27/04/2021)

2.      2.  https://trove.nla.gov.au/search?l-publictag=George+Sutch+d1892

3.       3. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alfred_Holmes_(composer)#:~:text=Born%20in%20London%2C%20Holmes%20was,at%20the%20Spohr%27s%20Violin%20School.

4.      4.  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_Holmes_(composer)

5.      5.  https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Screaming_Lord_Sutch

6.       6. Births Dec 1940   -  Sutch   David E            Smith   Hampstead        1a          540

W7. William Joseph Sutch – Police Roll of Honour Trust (policememorial.org.uk)

32 Ancestors Challenge - Week 28 - Characters

In researching your family history and speaking to your relations there can be certain of your ancestors which are often brought up in the conversation, largely due to their character, whether bad or good, and for the memories and stories about them that your relations remember.  Thus, I have knowledge of my great grandparents who died many years before I was born.

I am many years younger than my paternal cousins so they remember my grandfather, warts, and all, but none of us could remember our paternal grandmothers, be it his first wife, from whom I am descended and who died in 1917, or the second who died in 1924.  They all remembered his third wife, ‘The Duchess’, a widow from down the street who he finally married in 1951. 

My maternal Aunts told me stories of my two maternal great grandmothers, Emma, and Kate. 

Emma, my granddad’s mother, was born on 10 July 1868 in Willian, Hertfordshire, the daughter of George and Emma Moules (née Rook).  She was baptised at Willian on 15 December 1868.  The Moules / Moles family were not very well off, and this meant that the family often moved about in search of seasonal work.

Emma is the second on the left in this picture with other of her siblings, nieces and nephews and her husband Harry, the chap with the pipe in the bottom centre.

Emma married Harry Morgan on 25 December 1888 at St Mary’s in Hitchin and the young couple then moved to Charlton, a hamlet near to Hitchin, where my grandfather was born in September 1889, and his younger brother in 1892.  Harry was a Labourer and Emma a Housewife in the 1891 Census of Charlton.  In the 1901 census they are still living in Charlton with Harry now being a Brewer’s Drayman, with Emma of no occupation with the boys aged 11 and 9.  By 1911 the family make-up is the same, parents and 2 boys, but Harry is now a Mineral Water Maker at a Hotel.  

The main story about Emma that has been passed down to me is that she was a marvellous cook and evidently worked as a Cook for the Delme-Radcliffe family at Hitchin Priory, within walking distance of her home in Charlton.    In the 1939 Register she is living with Harry at No 12 Grove Road, Hitchin.  Harry is a retired labourer OAP and Emma is ‘unpaid domestic duties’ the usual occupation for a housewife.  Emma, by now a Widow, died on 6 January 1946 at Chalkdell Hospital in Hitchin.  The house in Grove Road was to be sold and proceeds split between her surviving son, my grandfather, and my two eldest Aunts, Vi and Cissie – the disgruntlement about this bequest, by my Mum, and no doubt her other siblings, was still being voiced in the 1970s!  


No 12 Grove Road, Hitchin - the house in the centre


Emma is remembered fondly as a loving woman who endured the loss of her younger son in the First World War, and who was a great cook.  She is buried with Harry in Hitchin Cemetery in Grave W ex C.A., the funeral taking place on 11 January 1946.

My other maternal great grandmother, Kate, was very much involved with her Morgan grandchildren.  We have many photographs of her with them in the family collection.  My cousins all remembered her with affection and with the memory of her rather fruity ‘sayings’ which were also passed down to me by my Mum.  Kate and her husband Arthur lived in the same row of houses in Hitchin as her daughter Sarah (Sally), my grandmother, and her husband and family of 6 children. 


4 Generations - L - R - My cousin Alan, my Aunt Babs (Alan's mother), Arthur, Kate and Sally (my grandmother) taken in the back garden at Hitchin Hill Path in the 1940s.

Kate was born on 30 May 1865 in Hitchin, Hertfordshire, the daughter of George and Sarah Cotton (née Muncey).  She married Arthur Taylor in 1892 in Hitchin.  In the 1901 Census Arthur is a Wood Sawyer, with Kate being a Laundress ‘on her own account’.  With the family are the children, my grandmother Sarah, known as Sally, and her brother Arthur Christopher, and ‘Auntie Daisy’, who was actually Arthur snr’s niece, who the couple brought up after her parents died.

In the 1911 census Kate an Arthur and family were living at No 4 Hitchin Hill Path. Kate is still a Laundress, but daughter Sarah and niece Daisy are described as ‘Assistant Laundress’ and employed by Kate.  Arthur is a carpenter on the railway. 

This was an abiding memory for my Mum of helping her grandmother with the washing – not only their own, but for others in the town too in her small hand laundry.  Monday was always ‘wash day’, with ironing to follow.  My mum always ironed everything.  I love ironing, but I draw the line at underwear and socks!  We have it much easier today.  Gt Grandmother Kate had a huge copper, dolly1 and mangle with the hand irons having to be warmed up near the fire.   No electricity!

In the 1939 Register, Kate and Arthur are still living at Hitchin Hill Path, now it seems at No 8, with daughter Sarah and her family living at No 5, a house I remember well from when my granddad lived there.  Arthur is a retired carpenter with Kate the usual ‘unpaid domestic duties’


The back garden of No 5 today.

The area around Hitchin Hill Path is now a conservation area2.

Kate died on 17 May 1952 in Hitchin and was buried on 21 May 1952 at Hitchin Cemetery, Grave No NW ex 241, where she would be joined by Arthur in 1962.

Now, for the ‘fruity’ sayings of my characterful Gt Grandmother Kate, a flavour of Hertfordshire of times gone by.

‘Don’t throw your bonnet over the windmill’ – don’t act in a deranged, reckless, or unconventional manner.

‘A whinwan for a duck’s bridle’ – a whinwan is an old Hertfordshire word for something indescribable or for which the name is unknown

‘In and out, like a f*rt in a cullendar’ – same meaning as ‘In and out, like a dog at a fair’ - not doing anything useful.

And the best one, which always makes me chuckle, ‘I’ve ‘eard a goose f*rt afore’ – meaning you don't believe someone. 

Hertfordshire folk always drop the H – so my family come from ‘Itchin in ‘Artfordhsire.

I do wish I had known these gt-grannies of mine – each full of character and Hertfordshire born and bred.  They both had two children, which was unusual for the late 1880s -1890s, both worked to supplement the household income, and left their descendants with memories which have been passed down.  



The only phot we have with both Gt-Grannies - my Aunt Cis's marriage to Bernard Spicer.  L-R  Emma, Bernard's Dad, Bernard's Mum, Bernard, Arthur, Cis, Harry, Sally, Will and Kate.

Notes

1.      1. Dolly – a wooden stirrer for the wash in the copper

2.      2.    https://www.north- herts.gov.uk/sites/default/files/hitchin_hill_path_conservation_area_character_statement-2.pdf


Sunday, 10 July 2022

32 Ancestors Challenge - Week 27 - Extended Family

 

When I started my family history journey in the 1970s I concentrated on my main line ancestors, but with the datasets and digital images available online by such providers as ancestry.co.uk and findmypast.co.uk I have recently started to research what happened to the siblings, and their descendants, of my great grandparents.  Some from Dorset, Hertfordshire and Suffolk went to London UK in search of work, especially from the mid 1850s with the advent of the railways which made travelling quicker, and easier, if not less expensive.

Some of the Dorset family went to Newfoundland and Canada; some Hertfordshire families joined the Navy or the Army, whilst one of the London family went to Australia, by choice, not as a convict! 

However, what I have decided to share this time is some research I did on a relation called Lily Ingle, who visited my Mum’s family in Hitchin, Hertfordshire the 1920s.  My Mum and Aunties could not quite remember where she fitted in the family.  This research led to finding out about the Keighley1 Connection which was published in Hertfordshire People in 2018.













Notes

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keighley