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KingCaptain William DungeySubmitted by dplindegaard on 2 December, 2011 - 18:31
I am looking for the birth and death of Captain William Dungey, supposed born circa 1754 who died prior to 1841. Can anyone help? An obituary appears in the Bristol Mercury of 7 Dec. 1844 as follows: At Merchants Almshouse, much regretted, Elizabeth, widow of Captain William Dungey, late of this port, aged 72. Elizabeth died on 1 December and according to her death certificate she was 68. (Which shows we always have to be wary of the age given at death or on gravestones, for this was supplied by other people!) There was an inquest and the City Coroner, J.B. Grindon, decided there were no suspicious circumstances and brought in a verdict of “Visitation of God”. The Merchants Venturers Almshouse in King Street was built as a home for old sailors and their dependents and I passed it every day during the short time I worked next door in the 1950s at the now defunct “Northern Assurance”. On the wall is a plaque with the following lines: "Freed from all storms the tempest and the rage “Elizabeth Dungee” aged 66, born in the county of Gloucestershire, was among the inmates of the Almshouse in 1841 from which it is evident that she was widowed by this time. Records show that William Dungey married Elizabeth Eadye at St Augustine’s, Bristol in 1800, and as according to family lore, William was born in 1754, he would have been 46 at the time from which it is supposed that this may have been his second marriage. The marriage was by banns and both signed the register. The couple lived at various addresses in Pipe Lane between 1814 and 1829 according to Rates’ Books and Matthews’ Bristol Directory. From 1830 the rates at 10 Pipe Lane were paid by their son in law, James Fedden. For many years William was Captain of the Viscount Palmerston a packet ship which left Bristol for Cork every Thursday and Saturday. When steam replaced sail about 1823, it appears that William retired. I have been unable to find any burial or obituary for him though his death is assumed to have been between 1830 and before 1841. (The William Dungey buried at Temple aged 62 in 1836, is another man of the same name, a glass blower by trade.) William & Elizabeth’s children were Mary, perhaps baptised St Mary Redcliffe, 1801. A notice of her marriage appears in Bristol Mercury on 7 Feb. 1820: “February 3rd, at Westbury on Trym, Mr. James M. Fedden to Mary, eldest daughter of Captain William Dungey of the Government Packet Establishment of this City & Cork.” (The fact that she was “the eldest daughter” implies that there were at least two more!) In 1841, the Feddens were at Lewis Buildings, Orchard Lane, Temple: James Fedden, accountant, 40, Mary Fedden, 35, with children Charlotte, 15, George, 14, Charles 12 and Alfred, one month. All were said to have been born in Gloucestershire. The deaths of a James Fedden and a Mary Fedden were registered in Bristol in 1846. A James Fedden appears in a list of insolvent debtors, 22.7.1837 and may be “our” James, whilst two other entries re T. Edgar who was charged with the theft of a cloak from Mr James Fedden of Brandon Street, 12.11.1836 and James Fedden, landlord of a pub the Duke of York in Brandon Street, 1839 appear to refer to a different man. William, who married Ann Caroline Lovell at Westbury on Trym in 1825. He was a carpenter and left Bristol for London. and possibly John, whose marriage was announced 14.1.1837 in Bristol Mercury: “Dec. 28th at Trinity Church, Captain John Dungey to Mary Ann daughter of Mr Francis Vincent of Stapleton Road.” This couple were living at Tubal Place, St Mary Redcliffe in 1861, when he was aged 62, born Bodmin, Cornwall, and Mary Ann, 52, born Isle of Wight. His death is announced in 1871: Nov. 20, Mr John Dungey, late Captain of this Port, aged 76.” (Bs Merc. 2.12.71) Captain Bligh – the Bitton connectionSubmitted by dplindegaard on 23 October, 2011 - 17:28
Sometime ago I was sent the following information about a family called Blatchley who with various friends had strong Bitton connections. I had not come across them before and therefore they do not appear in my KINGSWOOD INDEX. I was reminded of them following my recent posting concerning the Box Tunnel. This is the letter I received from Mr Guy Hirst: “BLATCHLEY “The Blatchleys came to the area in the 1820s from the Longleat Estate. William the father (1771-1854) was an Innkeeper and may have been the 'William Blatcham' who appears as landlord of the Tennis Court Inn at Deanery Road, Warmley in Pigot's Directory of Gloucestershire, 1830. He had retired back to Longleat to a rent free cottage by 1839. Charles Blatchley, (elder son), (1796-1879), Half Pay Lieutenant RN - paid off from the navy in 1825, began a new career as a railway civil engineer possibly at first with the local Bristol & Gloucestershire Railway from Coalpit Heath. His first child was born at Mangotsfield in 1828. Charles went back to sea 1830-4 and then returned to Kingswood, where his second son was born in 1836.That year Charles found a job with Brunel on the Box Tunnel and left to live at Box. Charles’ lifetime friend and colleague William Glennie was living at Bitton in the 1830s and also moved from the Royal Navy to Brunel. Glennie's wife was the daughter of the great art publicist Henry Aston Barker* (inventor of the panorama and son in law of Captain Bligh of the Bounty) who retired from London to Bitton at this period. John Blatchley, (younger son), (1803-1862), was a butcher. He married Ruth Fudge in 1828 and had 3 children at Kingswood Hill. Ruth died in 1834. By 1836 the family had moved to Newport, Monmouthshire. When his second wife died in 1847, John and the children struck hard times and ended up in 1851 in the Keynsham Workhouse as John seems to have had a 'settlement' at Oldland. After another spell in Newport he died back in the Keynsham Union House in 1862. Clara, John's eldest child born 1829 at Warmley remained in the area and appears not to have gone to Newport. In 1851 she was servant to the Moravian Minister Peter Cornelius West at Siston. She married in 1858 at Bitton and left for Liverpool in the 1860s. John's second wife was Mary Ann James (1809-1847) daughter of George James (b Mangotsfield c1779) and Hannah Ponting (b. Stapleton 1778) George James was a pork butcher and moved to Newport in the 1830s probably from Bristol where he had lived since his marriage in 1802. Finally Sophia Grace nee Blatchley (1794-1880) sister of John and Charles, lived from about 1821 to 1835 at Warmley, Bitton, Kingswood with her Exciseman husband William. “Kind Regards Guy Hirst.” I was intrigued by the connection with Bligh of the “Bounty” and decided to check out the information provided. WILLIAM BLATCHLEY (1771-1854) William Blatcham is listed as the Landlord of the Tennis Court in 1830. see warmley history. It seems clear from the note concerning John Blatchley (below) that he is indeed the same as William Blatchley. William Blatchley married Joyce Scriffen Crokett at Longbridge Deverill, Wilts, 4.12.1792. In 1841 William Blatchley and his wife Joyce aged “69 & 67” respectively are living at Horningsham, Wiltshire. William is said to be of independent means. In 1851 they are at Cock Road, Horningsham, as follows: William Blatchley, 80, occupation “Old Huntsman” born Bath, and Joyce, otherwise Joycey, his wife aged 71. The death of William Blatchley was registered at Warminster, Wilts in 1854 and that of Joycey at Kensington in 1859.
CHARLES BLATCHLEY (1796-1879) C.B. promoted Lieutenant, RN, 2.4.1824, “Morning Post”. Charles Blatchley & Charlotte Gale married Kingswood, Bristol 18.12.1827. (Yet to be checked: Blatchley baptisms at Mangotsfield.) In 1841 living at Box, Wilts: Charles Blatchley, 41, Navy Half Pay, born Wilts Charlotte, 38, not born in Wilts, with Frederick, 5 & Alfred, 4, plus a maidservant. In 1851, Charlotte, aged 50, born Southleigh, Oxon., is living at Ivy Cottage, Victory Parade, Dawlish with Alfred, her son aged 13, born Box whilst Charles, 55, born Longbridge Deverill, now a Civil Engineer and Charles, his son, 22, also a Civil Engineer are living at Chipping Campden, Glos. I can find no trace of any of them in 1861. Charlotte, wife of Commander Blatchley, RN, died on 31.12.1864 at Saltash (obit 6.1.65, Royal Cornwall Gazette) and in 1871, Charles, a widower, aged 75, Greenwich Pensioner, Commander retired, was living at St Germans. His death at Saltash, Cornwall, December 3, 1879, “Commander, RN, aged 84” is recorded in the R. Cornwall Gazette 5.12.1879. Frederick Blatchley esq, of Port View Saltash, s.o. the late Cdr Blatchley married Mary Kate eldest d.o. Rev Edward Polwhele, Rector of Pillaton. (Morning Post 13.7.1882) JOHN BLATCHLEY (1802-1862) “the son of the Landlord of the Tennis Court Inn” gave evidence at the Inquest on Isaac Gorden who was murdered after leaving the pub. (see Morning Chronicle, 6.12.1824) James Caines Bush and Mark Whiting of Kingswood were later hanged for the crime. John Blatchley makes no further appearance in newspaper articles. I have yet to check his marriage to Ruth Fudge or the baptisms of his children. In 1841, described “brewer” (not butcher) he is living at Charles Street, St Woolos, Newport, aged 38, with his wife Mary, 32, and children William, 4, Mary 16 months, and Emma, aged 10, who must be the child of his first marriage. In 1851, he is not in Keynsham Workhouse but in premises belonging to William Williams, a shipping labourer, and is described as a “painter, journeyman”, born Crockerton, Wiltshire. With him is his son William aged 14, “painter’s boy”, born Newport. However, in the Keynsham Workhouse are Mary A. Blatchley, 11 and Charles Blatchley, 5, “pauper scholars”, birthplace unknown. In 1861 John is not in the list for Keynsham Workhouse, but William, now 26, seems to have gone to Droylsden, Manchester, where he says he was “born Gloucestershire” and is living at 9 Durham Street, with his wife Jane aged 25. In 1871, William is still living in Lancashire, now aged 35, a shopman, and says he was born “Monmouthshire”. He has a different wife, Eliza, and five children. Things are looking up for they have a servant, Eleanor Ascroft, aged 15. It is intriguing to notice the contrast in fortune in the lives of the brothers Charles and John Blatchley. CLARA BLATCHLEY, (ca1829-1903) the daughter of John Blatchley was a maidservant at the home of the Moravian Minister, Peter Cornelius West at Potters Wood, Kingswood in 1851. She married Robert Stone, junior, a paper maker, and in 1861 they were living at Oldland Common with their baby son, Frederick, aged one. By 1871 they had moved to Everton, Liverpool where Robert was now working at an india-rubber factory and the family had grown to six children. In 1881 he was an outdoor officer for the Local Marine Board, and in 1891, a Restaurant Manager! A Jack of All-Trades! Robert died aged 56 in 1892 and in 1901, the widowed Clara was staying with her son William, his wife Ethel and their large family at Lambeth. She died in 1903, aged 73, back home in Liverpool. SOPHIA GRACE, nee Blatchley (1794-1880) sister of William & Charles Blatchley, married William Grace and in 1841 was at Husbandman’s End, Shipton on Stour, Worcs. William aged 50, (born ca 1791) not born Worcs, Sophia aged 45 (bca 1796) not born Worcs, and their ten children! In 1851 they were at 12 Caroline Place, Marylebone: William Grace, 63 (b.1788), retired Inland Revenue Officer, born Enford, Wilts Sophia, 57 (1794) born Longbridge Deverill Eliza, daughter, 15, born Cirencester, plus a visitor, nine year old William Hurford, born Brighton. In 1861, they are still at the same address: William, now 73, “Officer Inland Revenue” though the family business seems to be taking in washing: Sophia, now 66, Louisa, 35 (b.Bitton), Caroline, 28, (b. Kingswood Hill) and Eliza, 25, (b. Cirencester) are all described “laundress”, whilst so Thomas, 25, “assists at home.” The only exception to the enterprise is Maria, 26, (b. Kingswood Hill) a governess. Sophia Grace, 85, died in London in 1880. WILLIAM GLENNIE
On Nov. 26 at Bitton, Lt. William Glennie RN to Elizabeth Catherine eldest daughter of Henry Aston Barker, esquire of Willsbridge. (Marriage announcement Bristol Mercury 12.12.1833) 1841 census at Box, Wiltshire: William Glennie 40 Lieut RN & Civil Engineer, Not born Wilts Elizabeth Catherine, 30, Not born Wilts & 4 children, Walter, 6, Harriet, 5, William, 3 & Catherine Sophia, 1, & 2 servants 1851 census at 23 Devonshire Terrace, St Andrew, Plymouth William Glennie, 53, (1798) Lieut RN, Half Pay, b. Camberwell Catherine Glennie, 45 (1806) b. St Geo. Southwark William, 13, scholar, b. Bitton, Catherine, scholar, 11, b. Bitton, Isabella, 9, b. Sampford Arundel, Som, Alexander W. 7 b. Sampford Arundel, Mary E. 5, b. Dawlish, Margaret G. b. Plymouth. Marriage announcement: INGLES/GLENNIE. On 8th inst at Stoke Church, Devonport, Lieut John Ingles RN & Catherine Sophia, 2nd daughter of the late Lieut William Glennie RN of Nelson Villas, Stoke, Devonshire. (Hampshire Chronicle 20.1.1866) HENRY ASTON BARKER Henry As(h)ton Barker & Harriet Maria Bligh married 1802. (Harriet Maria, daughter of William & Bligh and Elizabeth Betham was baptised at Douglas, Isle of Man 14 November 1782. Henry Aston Barker Gazetted 2nd Lieutenant, Southward Volunteers, 26.8.1807 (announcement, Morning Post) The following comes from Wikipedia: Henry Aston Barker (1774 - 19 July 1856) was a Scottish landscape and panorama painter and exhibitor, the son of Robert Barker whose business he continued.[1]Life and worksBarker was born in Glasgow, the younger son of Robert Barker, the famous panoramic painter, whom he assisted as a boy. When only 12 years old he was set to work making outlines of the city of Edinburgh from the top of the Calton Hill Observatory, and a few years later made the drawings for the view of London from Albion Mills. These drawings he afterwards etched.[1] In 1788 he came with his father to London, and soon afterwards became a pupil at the Royal Academy. Barker continued to be his father's chief assistant in the panoramas till the latter's death in 1806, when, as executor, he took over the business, and for 20 years carried on the exhibitions with great success.[1] He frequently travelled in the course of his work, and in August 1799 left England for Turkey, to make drawings for a panorama of Constantinople. When he arrived at Palermo, he called on Sir William Hamilton, the English ambassador at the court of Naples, and was introduced by him to Lord Nelson, of whom, he wrote, "took me by the hand and said he was indebted to me for keeping up the fame of his victory in the Battle of the Nile for a year longer than it would have lasted in the public estimation" (Barker's memoranda). The panorama of Constantinople was exhibited in 1802, and the drawings were engraved and published in four plates.[1] In 1801, Barker went to Copenhagen to make drawings for a picture of the battle, and while there he was again received by Lord Nelson. In May 1802, during the Peace of Amiens, he went to Paris and made drawings for a panorama of the city. After this many other panoramas were exhibited, the later ones being chiefly from drawings by John Burford, who shared with Barker the property in a panorama in the Strand, purchased in 1816 from Mr. Reinagle. Barker, however, still travelled from time to time, and visited, among other places, Malta, where he made drawings of the port, exhibited in 1810 and 1812; Venice, of which a panorama was exhibited in 1819; and Elba, where he made the acquaintance of Napoleon.[1] After the battle of Waterloo, Barker visited the field, and went to Paris, where he obtained from the officers at headquarters all necessary information on the subject of the battle. A series of eight etchings by Mr. J. Burnett from Barker's original sketches of the field of battle were printed and published, as were also his drawings of Gibraltar. His last grand panorama was the coronation procession of George IV, exhibited in 1822. Of all the panoramas exhibited, that of the battle of Waterloo was the most successful and lucrative. By the exhibition of this picture Barker realised no less than £10,000.[1] About 1802 he married the eldest of the six daughters of Rear-admiral William Bligh, who commanded the Bounty at the time of the celebrated mutiny. By her Barker left two sons and two daughters. In 1826 he transferred the management of both the panoramas to John and Robert Burford, and went to live first at Cheam, in Surrey, and then in the neighbourhood of Bristol.[1] Barker died on 19 July 1856 at Bitton near Bristol. A list of most of the panoramas painted and exhibited by Henry and Robert Barker were published in The Art Journal (1857, p. 47).[2][1]. His brother, Thomas Edward Barker, though not an artist, also ran the family business, but later set up a rival panorama exhibition with artist Ramsay Richard Reinagle at 168/9 The Strand, London.[3] Panorama of Constantinople (1813, aquatint) The Morning Post of 1.1.1823 contains the following: “Mr Henry Aston Barker has completed his magnificent panorama of the coronation of the present king. It is one of the most happy as well as undoubtedly the most splendid of his performances and (establishes) him as the first artist of the day in this line, The picture is exhibited in the Great Circle at Leicester Square occupying 10,000 feet of canvas and between 30 & 40 thousand figures.” 1841 census: at Golden Valley Bitton Catherine Barker 90 (1751) b.Ireland Henry Ashton (sic) Barker, 66 (1775) b. Scotland Harriet Barker, 58 (1783 b. Scotland* (*presumably there was no column for the IOM) Mary Barker, 25 (1816) b. Glos. Catherine Barker, Henry’s mother, and the widow of Robert Barker, died at Bitton in 1842. On July 29 at Bitton, North Prichard esquire, of Norwood Surrey to Mary, youngest daughter of Henry Aston Barker, of Bitton. (Marriage announcement, Worcester Journal. 5.8.1847) In 1851, Henry, & Harriet were still living at Golden Valley. Harriet Maria Barker died at Bitton in the spring of 1856 and Henry survived her by only a few months. His obituary appears in “the Standard” of 24.7.1856 ”the 19th inst at Bitton, Henry Aston Barker, in the 83rd year of his age.” Some Bristol & District Seamen who served in the Napoleonic Wars.Submitted by dplindegaard on 13 September, 2011 - 20:26
CONNERY, JOHN At Dieppe, in consequence of wounds received on board the John Bull, in an engagement with a French privateer, Mr John Connery, formerly of the City of Bristol. FFBJ 18.11.1809. HANCOCK, Isaac On 29th inst by falling over the side of the French schooner La Muche of which he was prize master, Mr Isaac Hancock, midshipman of the Statira frigate, and son of Mr I. Hancock of this City, a promising young officer, greatly respected by his Captain and crew. FFBJ 1.7.1809. MALBON, Micajah. At Stapleton, after a few days illness, Micajah Malbon, esq., Captain, Royal Navy, leaving behind an amiable widow, 4 children and many friends to deplore his loss. He had devoted 34 years of his life to His Majesty's service and distinguished himself in many engagements. FFBJ 19.6.1813
MANSEL Mr Mansel, aged 19, at Gilbraltar, eldest son of the Bishop of Bristol. He was taken prisoner aged 13 with the unfortunate Captain Wright of the Vincego and escaped from the French after 5 years captivity. But the sufferings which he endured from his long and retracted concealment in wet ditches, marshes, etc for upwards of three months visibly affected his constitution. His friends were anxious for a change of profession but his attachment to the sea was unalterable. After staying with them only a few weeks he sailed as midshipman aboard the Circe frigate, Captain Woolcombe, who has now announced his dissolution. FFBJ 1.12.1810. Bristol and other local men at Men at Trafalgar, 1805. Royal Navy (of Bristol unless otherwise stated) John Alden, Landsman William Alden, AB John Allen, Landsman, Bath H.J. Anderden, Midshipman George Anderson, Ord Seaman John Andrews, Quartermaster John Armstrong, Quartermaster Charles Arthur, Ord Seaman William Atkins, AB Charles Baber, Landsman, Bedminster George Baker, Carpenter's Crew, Keynsham, Somerset John Baker, Ord Seaman Francis Barnes, AB. (see letter above) James Barnes, Landsman Peter Barrett, AB Samuel Bateman, Boy, 2nd Class, Bath Joseph Batson, Ord Seaman, Trent (?) Som, (TR "Bellerophon") Christopher Beaty, Quarter gunner. George Beck, clerk George Bedford, AB John Bell, Landsman, Bath Abraham Bennett, Boy 2nd Class John Bennett, AB William Berry AB Bath 'Thomas Blake, Ord Seaman William Blake, Landsman, Marshfield, Glos Walter Bond, Quarter gunner Richard Bowden, AB Robert Boyde, AB, Downing (sic) Glos Thomas Braine, Ord Seaman Joseph Briton (sic) Landsman Philip Britton, Landsman, Bath William Broad, Ord Seaman William Broad, Carpenter's crew John Brock, AB William Brook, AB, St Garges, (sic) Glos Joseph Brooks, Landsman John Brown, AB (? TR "Neptune" and Guadaloupe clasp) John Brown, AB William Brown, Ord Seaman William Buck, Quartermaster William Buckley, Yeoman of the Sheets Samuel Burgess, Landsman James Burton, master's mate, Ratcliffe (sic) Peter Bush, Boy 2nd Class, Kingswood, Glos Joseph Buxton, AB, Hanham, Glos George Cannon, Landsman, Bath John Campbell, Quarter gunner William Cantell, Landsman, Whitechurch (sic) Somerset Jacob Cappell, Pte. Queen Charlton, Somerset, (TR "Victory") Hugh Carney, Pte, St Michael, Bristol, (TR "Britannia") Robert Carr, Midshipman Comm. John. Carslake. Born Colyton, Devon, 1785. Entered R.N. 1799. Midshipman on "Victory" 1805. Promoted after the battle to Lieut. Retired Commander, 1852, N.G.S. Medal, two clasps. Died Clifton 1865. (TR) Charles Cawly, Landsman John Chambers, Landsman (as Ord. Seaman ?TR "Dreadnought". Martinique clasp) James Cheek, Landsman James Cherry, Landsman Daniel Chilcott, Quarter gunner Henry Child, AB, Bath James Chivers, Ord Seaman William Clements, Landsman, Bath Thomas Cobley, Ord Seaman Isaac Cole, Ord Seaman, Hanham, Glos Samuel Cole, Ord Seaman, Downing, (sic) Glos John Coleman, Carpenter's Crew, Bath Michael Collins, Ord Seaman, Bath Thomas Condon, Ord Seaman John Cook, Ord Seaman John Cooper, Landsman, Cyson (sic) (Siston) Glos John Cope, AB. On "Victory" at Trafalgar, aged 24, seriously wounded. Utrecht 11 May 1803, "Ocean" 15 January 1806. Samuel Cowles, AB, Downing (sic) Downend Charles Cox, Landsman, Stapleton, Glos John Cramer, Landsman William Crisp. Landsman, Whitchurch, Som Robert Cuddiford, Carpenter's crew. (TR "Naiad.) Benjamin Dagger, Carpenter's crew, Bath William Davis, Ord Seaman William Dawes, AB Bartholomew George Smith Day, Midshipman (TR "Revenge". "Superiere" 10 Feb 1809) Thomas Day, AB James Dowling, Boy, 2nd Class Thomas Downey, Boy 2nd Class, Bath John Downs, Quarter Gunner Jeremiah Dunn, AB James Earle, Midshipman Francis Eaves, Yeoman of the Sheets. Aged 29, on "Victory" at Trafalgar. 4 May 1804 "Swift", 15 January 1806, "Ocean". James Edwards AB Samuel Edwards, Landsman William Edwards, Landsman William Ellis, Ord Seaman George Emblin, Coxswain Henry Evans, Ord Seaman Matthew Evans, Landsman Thomas Evans, Ord Seaman Thomas Evans, Yeoman of the Sheets William Fields, Ord Seaman Nicholas Fitzgerald, Carpenter's Crew Charles Fletcher, AB Thomas Fletcher, Ord Seaman John Flooke, Boy, 1st class George Floyd, Ord Seaman William Forrest, AB, Keynsham James Fowler, Ord Seaman Thomas Francis, Landsman John French, AB (?TR "Euralyus") Edward Fry, Landsman (TR "Spartiate") John Fry, Landsman Isaac Fudge, Ord Seaman James Fuller, Ord Seaman John Gardner, Landsman John/James Gardner, Landsman William Gardner, Ord Seaman Thomas Gascoyne, Ord Seaman James Gerrard, AB George Gibbons, AB Thomas Gibson, AB (?TR "Euralyus") William Giles, AB Nicholas Gooding, AB William Goodman, Ord Seaman John Gordon, AB, Bath John Graham, Boy, 3rd Class George Grant, AB William Graves, Ord Seaman Thomas Griffiths, Ord Seaman William Griffiths, Landsman Charles Grimes, Ord Seaman Joseph Gullick, Landsman James Hale, Ord Seaman Thomas Hall, Landsman, Bitton, Glos Samuel Hammans, Ord Seaman, Somerset Thomas Handley, AB (TR "Bellerophon" John Hannam, Carpenter's Crew (TR as Hannan "Ajax") Joseph Hannam, Boy, 2nd Class John Harding, Ord Seaman Thomas Harding, Ord Seaman Samuel Harris, AB John Hartland, Ord Seaman James Harvey, Ord Seaman Samuel Hawkins, AB George Hayes, AB John Hazle, AB James Helliar, Ord Seaman William Hemmings, Landsman William Henderson, Trumpeter Edward Henley, Armourer's Mate Job Henley, Landsman William Herbert, Ord Seaman Augustus Thomas Hickes, Volunteer 1st Class, Berkeley (TR as Hicks "Defiance", died 1857) John Hilliar, Ord Seaman John Hinds, Quartermaster's Mate 'Thomas Christopher Holland, Midshipman, Bath Charles Hopkins, Ord Seaman David Howell, Trumpeter, Bath Henry Howell, Ord Seaman John Howell, Ord Seaman William Howell, Landsman, Manilsfield sic - (Mangotsfield), Glos William Hubber, Ord Seaman (TR "Polythemus") Aaron Hubert, Boy, 2nd Class, Cosham sic - (Cotham?), Bristol. aged 16. On "Victory" at Trafalgar. 17 April 1803 "Resistance", 15 January 1806, "Ocean". Abraham Hughes, Ord Seaman William Humphries, Qtr. Gunner, Bath (TR "Mars") William Hutchinson, Ord Seaman Thomas Hyde, Landsman (TR "Conqueror") James Jackson, AB Richard Jackson, Landsman James James, Landsman John James, Ord Seaman Stephen Watts Jeffries, Ord Seaman, Mangotsfield, Glos James Jenkins, Ord Seaman John Jenkins, AB John Jennings, Ord Seaman John Johnson, Landsman John Johnston, Ord Seaman Francis Jones, Landsman, Bath George Jones, Landsman Isaac Jones, Ord Seaman Richard Jones, Ord Seaman William Jones, AB Thomas King, Ord Seaman William King, Ord Seaman Edward Kingston, Ord Seaman (TR "Dreadnought") George Lacey, AB Samuel Lacey, Ord Seaman Solomon Leonard, Ord Seaman John Lisle, Ord Seaman William Lloyd, Ord Seaman George Long, Landsman William Long, Ord Seaman William Loveless, Landsman, Winterbourne, Glos Robert Luton, Ord Seaman William Maggs, Landsman, Bath George Manning, AB, Bath (?TR as Ord. Seaman "Victory", and Basque Roads) Thomas Mansfield, yeoman of the Powder Room John Marks, Ord Seaman, Bath James Marshall, AB James Marshall, Landsman William Marshall, Ord Seaman John Martin, AB William Matthews, Ship's Corporal, Bath Thomas Mason, AB George May, Boy, 2nd Class, Bath Mark McMullen, Landsman, Camerton William Mearn, Ord Seaman Henry Merchant, Ord Seaman Thomas Merchant, Ord Seaman, Bath John Miller, Ord Seaman Charles Mills, AB Simeon Moon, AB, aged 25. On "Victory". Wounded at Trafalgar. 14 June 1803, Clyde, 2 January 1806, Sussex, HS John Mooney, Boy 3rd Class Joseph Henry Moore, Boy 2nd Class, Bath Thomas Moore, Landsman, Bath James Morris, Ord Seaman William Mountain, Landsman Samuel Moxom, Landsman Thomas Murphy, Quarter Gunner Richard Musto, Bosun's mate George Nash, Quartergunner Thomas Nash, Quartergunner Thomas Neal, Ord Seaman Thomas Neal, AB (TR "Prince") Richard Newman, Ord Seaman Thomas Norman, Ord Seaman John Norton, Ord Seaman, Bath John Oliver, Landsman Thomas Ovens, Landsman, Bath William Owen, AB John Palmer, Armourer Charles Parker, Landsman, Bath Giles Parker, Boy, 3rd class, Wootton under Edge Joseph Parker, Ord Seaman Job Parsons, Landsman Thomas Partridge, AB, Bath John Patterson, AB Coulson Pearce, Ord Seaman George Pearson, Volunteer 1st Class, Som *John Peart - see letters, a Portsmouth Man, at Trafalgar Erasmus Peeps, Midshipman, Pill, Somerset William Peirce, Ord Seaman Anthony Perks, Ord Seaman William Perry, Landsman Comm. John Phepoe. Born Dublin, 1776, entered RN, 1801. Midshipman "Ajax" at 'Trafalgar. Ret'd Commander, 1848, N.G.S. medal with clasp. Died Clifton 1862, buried Clifton St Andrews. (TR) James Phillips: according to his obituary in Felix Farley's Bristol Journal of 14 March 1818, he was Lord Nelson's boatswain on board the "Victory" at the Battle of Trafalgar, "having proved his attachment to his brave Admiral by numerous wounds, viz. four large sabre wounds on his head, many gun shot wounds on his body and three balls in his right thigh and leg, his knee being then shattered. He obtained an honourable discharge and a liberal pension from his King and Country. He was boarded however by the grim tyrant of death in North Street, Bedminster on Monday last, having just attained his 47th year, the age of his beloved Commander and he will be lowered to his last berth in Redcliff Church tomorrow at o'clock." His name does not appear on the Age of Nelson website. Another report in the Bristol Observer of 25 March 1994, says his name was "Slasher" Brown! HE IS NOW BELIEVED TO BE AN IMPOSTOR! William Phillips, AB John Phipps, AB William Phipps, Landsman George (or David) Pitt, Ord Seaman, 19, On "Victory". Wounded at Trafalgar. 11 May 1803, "Puissant", 15 January 1806, "Ocean" (TR "Victory") George Pontin, Ord Seaman, Robert Pordie, Yeoman, Bosun's Store room John Powell, Boy, 2nd class John Powell, Ord Seaman, Bath (?TR as "AB" "Conqueror") William Powers, AB Charles Price, Frampton, Glos, Ord Seaman James Price, Landsman (TR "Tennant") Thomas Prior, Ord Seaman Francis Pritchard, Landsman Thomas Pullen, gunsmith, Downing Samuel Randall, AB, Bath William Read, Yeoman of the Sheets Thomas Rees, AB William Reeves, AB James Reynolds, Boy, 3rd Class John Reynolds, Ord Seaman, Bath Francis Rice, Landsman John Rice, Landsman Daniel Rich, Landsman Joseph Richardson, AB, Bath Arthur Roberts, Ord Seaman William Roberts, Landsman William Roberts, AB Daniel Rogers, Ord Seaman, Bedminster, Bristol Richard Rogers, AB, John Rudge, Landsman (TR "Spartiate") Thomas Rumney, AB, Pill James Sanders, AB, Bath John Saunders, Ord Seaman Richard Searle, AB, Bath Samuel Sensbury, Gunner's mate (possibly "Sainsbury") Comm. Joseph Seymour. Master RN, 1796, Master of "Conqueror" at Trafalgar. Ret'd Commander 1846. NGS Medal with two clasps. Died Bristol 1862, buried Arnos Vale. (TR) Elias Shaddock, Quarter Gunner Benjamin Shepherd, Ord Seaman John Shepherd, Ord Seaman James Sherborne, Landsman William Simmonds, AB Benjamin Simmons, Carpenter's Crew (TR "Thunderer") William Simmons, Ord Seaman, Bath (TR "Thunderer") William Smart, AB, Bath Joseph Smith, Landsman Loinel Smith, Armourer's mate, Bathford, Som Thomas Smith, Landsman Thomas Smith, AB, Bath William Smith, Landsman William Smith, Ord Seaman Christopher Spring, Ord Seaman John Steager, Landsman, Keynsham, Somerset Joseph Stokes, Ord Seaman James Stone, Midshipman, Bath Thomas Stone, Landsman William Stone, AB Charles Stowe, Landsman William Strong, Ord Seaman William Symonds, Landsman Francis Taylor, Boy, 3rd class Hugh Taylor, AB William Taylor, Armourer's Mate John Thomas, Ord Seaman (TR "Tennant") Joseph Thompson, Landsman William Thompson, Ord Seaman (TR "Victory") Joseph Thorn, AB, Ratclift (sic) Nathaniel Thorn, Landsman Bowhem Tomkyns, Volunteer, 1st Class, Bath Henry Tripp, Ord Seaman Thomas Tripp, Ord Seaman James Tucker, Carpenter's Crew, Bath John Tucker, AB John Tucker, Ord Seaman William Turner, Landsman Jeremiah Vincent, Landsman, Bath * John Viner, Landsman. See letters. George Warren, AB, Bath John Webb, Quartermaster's mate, Alveston, Glos William Webb, AB George White AB John White AB, Bitton, Glos Thomas White, Master at Arms, Som Thomas White, AB, Som James Whiting, Ord Seaman, Bath James Whittington, AB Richard Whittington, Landsman, Kingswood, (nr Wootton-under-Edge) (TR "Leviathan") Richard Wildgoose, AB George Wilkins, Ord Seaman, 25. On "Victory" at Trafalgar. 11 May 1803, Utrecht, 15 January 1806, "Ocean" Henry Wilkins, Ord Seaman John Wilkins, Ord Seaman John Wilkins, AB, Churchill, Somerset Thomas Wilkins, AB, Keynsham, Somerset John Williams, Landsman John Williams, Ord Seaman (?TR "Defiance" or "Britannia") John Williams, AB John Williams, Landsman Stephen Williams AB, (TR Revenge") Thomas Williams, AB Francis Willis, AB George Wilson, Boy, 2nd Class. Aged 17, on "Victory". Killed at Trafalgar. Joined 27 April 1803. Buried at Sea, 21 October 1805 Samuel Wilson, Ord Seaman, Bath Thomas Wiltshire, Armourer's Mate, Cainsan (sic) (Keynsham) (TR "Agamemnon", and St Domingo, Malaga.) Andrew Winter, Landsman James Wolfe, Ord Seaman John Wood, AB John Woodman, Landsman Jacob Wookey, Ord Seaman, Somerset John Wright, Armourer's mate William Wyatt, AB Thomas York, Landsman John Young, Midshipman Royal Marines: William Abbot, Pte, Marshfield, Glos. (TR "Leviathan") John Adams, Pte. William Adams, Pte, St George's, Bristol Matthew Amos, Pte, "Rackley" sic. (Redcliffe?) Nr Bristol James Applegate, Pte, Berkeley, Glos, (TR "Naiad") William Bailey, Pte, Winford, Som John Ball, Pte, Marshfield, Glos William Bartlett, Pte, Walcot, Bath John Brookes, Pte. On "Victory" at Trafalgar. Aged 30, 14 April 1803, Zealand, 15 January 1806 at Chatham HQ. On TR. John Buckley, Pte, St James, Bristol John Cantle, Pte, Bedminster Jacob Capell, Pte, Queen Charlton, Som (TR "Victory") Hugh Carney, Pte, St Michael, Bristol (TR "Britannia") Isaac Chandler, Pte, Melksham, Wilts. Charles Chappell, Pte, Thornbury Richard Chinnock, Pte, Lye (sic) on Mendip (TR "Britannia") F. Charles Clear, Boy, RM Jeremiah Coke, Clutton, Bath Thomas Coles, Pte, St Philips, Glos John Cook, Sergeant, from St Mary Redcliffe William Cook, Pte, Hawkesbury, Glos Captain James Cottell, 2nd Lieut, RM, 1798, 1st Lieut, 1804. Served in "Tonnant" at Trafalgar. Retired Half pay, 1835, died Bedminster 1842. Moses Dagger, Pte, St Philip & St Jacob, Glos James Davis, Boy, Ratcliffe (sic) Bristol William Day, Pte David Drew, Pte, Croomdell (sic) (Cromhall?) Glos Samuel Eyles, Pte, Stapleton, Glos James Fisher, Pte, Marshfield, Glos William Ford, Pte, C58, St Stephen's, Bristol, aged 24. On "Victory" at Trafalgar. 18 April 1803, Winchelsea, 15 January 1806, Chatham HQ John Grimes, Pte, St Michael's Bristol John Harding. Ord Seaman Thomas Harding, Ord Seaman Samuel Harris, Pte, Winterbourne, Glos John Hayward, Boy, RM, Milksham (sic) Wilts Francis Hicks, Pte, St Bitten, (sic: Bitton) Glos John Hicks, Pte, Bath George Hodges, Pte, C40, St Georges, (sic) Bristol. Age 26. On "Victory" at Trafalgar". 17 April 1803 and 15 January 1806, at Chatham HQ. Edward Hore, Pte, Chew Magney (sic) Robert House, Pte, Camerton, Som James Hughes, Pte. St Philips, Bristol Thomas Hurle, Pte. Berkeley, Glos George Jeffries, Pte, Siston, Glos James Jones, Pte, Milksham (sic) Wilts, (TR "Tonnant") Thomas Lansdown, Pte, Olveston, Glos Moses Llewellyn, Pte, Mangotsfield, Glos Isaac May, Pte, Avening, Glos George Moseley, Pte, Frampton Cotterell Cornelius Organ, Pte. North Nibley John Parfitt, Pte, Strait, Somerset Charles Parsons, Pte, Yeaton (sic) Somerset John Phillips, Pte, Temple, Bristol Charles Pinker, Pte, Temple, Som (Temple Cloud rather than Temple Bristol?) Amos Poulson, Pte, Melksham Benjamin Powell, Pte, Timsbury David Powell, Pte Henry Powell, Pte, P18, aged 22, On "Victory" at Trafalgar. 21 May 1803, Zealand, 15 January 1806, Chatham HQ John Skinner, Pte John Skinner, Pte, Bath George Skidmore, Pte, Iron Acton, Glos *? Isaac Smith, Pte, Trowbridge. (see letters) *John Summers, Pte (see letters) John Thorn, Pte, Barclay, Som, (sic) Daniel Webb, Boy, RM, Melksham, Wilts *? Joseph Webb, Pte, Melksham, Wilts (see letters) Joseph White, Pte, Mangotsfield, Glos John Whiting, Pte, Shepton Mallet (TR) Mark Williams, Pte, Westbury, Glos Bibliography Trafalgar Roll "Men who served with Nelson" BAFHS Journal, No. 71, March 1993 Age of Nelson website & "A British Tar. Examination before a Court Martial of Serving officers of His Majesty's late Ship Java, Jones Humble, boatswain, deposed 'About an hour after the action commenced, I was wounded; I went down and stopped near an hour; and when I got my arm put a little to rights by a tourniquet put on it, nothing else, (my hand was carried away, my arm wounded about the elbow) I put my arm into the bosom of my shirt and went up again and when I saw the enemy ahead of us repairing his damages, I had my orders from Lieutenant Chads before the action began to cheer up the boarders with my pipe that they might make a clean spring of the boarding.' This is a fine and truly characteristic specimen of the British seaman." (FFBJ 5.6.1813) A sailor at Trafalgar aboard "Britannia" had his leg shot off a little below the knee and said to the officer ordering him to be conveyed to the cockpit "That's but a shilling touch, Your Honour, an inch higher and I should have had my eighteenpence." (ie. pension according to severity.) The same fellow said to one of his friends, "I say Bob, take a look for my leg, and give me the silver buckle out of my shoe. I'll do as much for you another time." (anecdotes reported FFBJ 16.11.1822) The dig at Woodside Road.Submitted by dplindegaard on 10 July, 2011 - 19:02
See blog 24th June 2010. I was asked to find out as much as I could about the site and belatedly, for what it is worth, this is the result. I understand the deeds of the property show that it was sold by James Sinnott, Edward Stockley Sinnott & George Stanley Sinnott to St Anne’s Board Mill Company in 1923 and the Company sold it to private occupiers in 1982. The Sinnott family, James, his wife Mary Ann and their sons were living on a farm at Higham Hill, Walthamstow in 1851. Between 1851 and 1861, George, the eldest son, aged 29, arrived at Langton Court in Brislington where he was joined by his parents and three younger brothers, Henry, James and Edward The marriage of James, third son of James and Mary Ann to Emily, 2nd daughter of Mr William Vowles of Totterdown was announced on June 9, 1866 in the Bristol Mercury. He was a solicitor and appears to be the same person who, with his two sons sold the Woodside Road property in 1923. By 1871, George Sinnott, now 38, a bachelor and still residing at Langton Court had acquired a considerable estate of 300 acres. The older Sinnotts still lived with him, as did brother Edward, along with a number of live in servants and others who had cottages on the estate. Edward Sinnott advertised a thoroughbred gelding for sale on July 18, 1874. In 1881, George Sinnott, aged 48, was at “the Farm House, Langton Court”, still single, he had retained the 300 acres and employed 20 labourers. The rest of the family were no longer there. Until 1883, it appears that James Sinnott had leased the Langton Court property from Mr Gore-Langton, the Lord of the Manor, but it seems from newspaper reports (see Bristol Mercury 30.6.1888 & 18.6.1890) that he had subsequently purchased the property. This is confirmed by a letter of May 14, 1883 in Bristol Mercury from “Civis” who deplores “the closing of St Anne’s Wood, Brislington” which was then to be sold at auction and stating that “all pleasure seekers like myself can do is lament.” The property included St Anne’s Woods, (and therefore the Chapel ruins) as indicated in a Court case which took place between James Sinnott and the Bristol Footpaths Society in 1890. (For details of this matter see Bristol Record Office Pamphlet 4728 : St Anne’s Chapel, St Anne’s Ferry & paths through St Anne’s Woods” and similarly BRO P StLB/PM/1 – 1891 “Account of Footpath Dispute”. ) It is interesting to see the array of witnesses called to court (Bristol Mercury 25.6.1890), among them Alfred Henry Brown of Brislington’s famous Brown family who was visiting from Australia. (So beloved was our parish to these emigrants that they named their property in Australia, “Brislington”). Anne Williams, aged 85, of Unity Street, Bristol, a Roman Catholic, first knew of St Anne’s when she was 18, and recalled a pilgrimage to the Chapel ruins when she was 25. A Mr Joseph Cool, “a decrepit old man, aged 98 or 99” recalled using the Ferry in old times. On September 8, 1886, George Sinnott married Catherine Septima Roberts, the daughter Joseph Roberts of the Shrubbery, Paxford, Worcestershire (announced in Worcester Journal 18.9.86) On February 20, 1888, a letter in Bristol Mercury refers to land near Netham Lock. In 1891 the couple are living at Langton Court Farm House, Wick Lane, aged 59 and 46, respectively. George Sinnott died aged 61 in the September Quarter of 1892. No doubt his will would give further information. It does seems from the above that at the time of the arrival of the Sinnott family, the site was part of the Langton Court Estate. However, in 1657, (ref DD\BR\tb/1 – Somerset R.O.) a house called St Anne’s House, formerly St Anne’s Chapel was conveyed by Rowland Lacy to George White, draper and John Willoughby, merchant, both of Bristol. I am intrigued by the turning up of the name John Willoughby as the Willoughby family of Brislington were Roman Catholics. In the early 19th century they sold land in Brislington to Dr Edward Fox of lunatic asylum fame. It seems likely to me that John Willoughby is a possible link and should be investigated further. The Lacys were Lords of the Manor prior to the Langtons at the time of the Reformation when they would have come by the Chapel lands. Prior to this I believe it was la Warre property, particularly as the la Warres fought on the Lancastrian side in the Wars of the Roses and apparently invited their Lord and King Henry VII to come to their local shrine. The object of the dig was to try to find objects which might prove that the St Anne’s Shrine was nearby what is now Woodside Road. Unfortunately no such artefacts were recovered. Was your Ancestor in the Bristol Riots?Submitted by dplindegaard on 2 April, 2011 - 19:03
There have been a number of Bristol Riots, the most recent being in 1980, but the most notorious took place between 26 & 31 October 1831, ostensibly in favour of “Reform” – to extend the right to vote. The skies of Bristol glowed blood red from the fires lit by the mob, the Bridewell and Gaol were torched and the prisoners freed. There were 250 casualties, killed and wounded. Five men were executed, Christopher DAVIS, John KEYES, Richard VINES, Thomas GREGORY and William CLARKE. The following is a list of the more fortunate smaller fry with, where possible, the punishments they received. It will be seen that a number of them have “death recorded” against their names. In these cases the sentences were commuted to transportation for life. It is stated that when these individuals “were given to believe that their lives would spared, a few seemed to care little, being heard to say, “Thank you, My Lord.” Patrick Kearney was more voluble, and cried “Thank Ye, My Lord. My life’s spared till Ireland’s free. Sweet Ireland For Ever!” It seems to me that a disproportionate number, from their surnames, were “Bristol Irish.”
· In my booklet “Brislington Bulletins, no. 7, 1825-40” I stated that no Brislington parishioner was involved, then lo and behold along came John Jellamy who, in 1827, lodged with my distant kinfolk William and Harriet PILLINGER. · This article was prompted by an email from Peter & Roslyn Dunning from Australia peteandros@westnet.com.au who are descendants of the cheeky chappie Aaron Martin. It is great to know that he survived down under. If anybody knows his parentage – he lived at Lewin’s Mead and his father was a farmer, please contact Peter and Ros. · The above information with much more detail can be found in Bristol Mercury 3 January & 17 January, 1832. It is interesting to note that this newspaper was against capital punishment and argued forcibly, sadly without success, for the reprieve of the five men who were hanged and made much of the discrepancies of the sentences between them and a number of the others. A future article will list the casualties. Golden Wedding Anniversary at Mangotsfield.Submitted by dplindegaard on 12 June, 2010 - 13:40The following touching report appears in the Bristol Mercury of 6th May 1837: “On Monday, May 1st, Stephen Cave, esquire and his lady of Cleve Wood celebrated the 50th anniversary of their marriage by inviting all the old couples of Mangotsfield who had been married fifty years and upwards to their mansion to partake of a comfortable repast. Five couples attended and after dinner were presented with a liberal donation of £5 each. The good old gentleman was highly affected at meeting on such an occasion his aged neighbours and gave them some excellent advice which greatly affected all present concluding that the only way that he and they could hope to meet in heaven to celebrate the grand jubilee there would be by repenting their sins and throwing themselves wholly on the merits of their Redeemer. “The party including Mr & Mrs Cave consisted of seven couples, their combined ages reaching 1,036 years. “On the same day, 180 children of the school established by Mr Cave twenty five years ago assembled on the lawn for plum cake and cider after which he presented each with a shilling. The appearance of the children was neat and clean and they conducted themselves with credit to the pleasure of their patron. They sang “God Save the King” and were joined by Mr Cave and his family for whom they gave three hearty cheers. “This excellent philanthropist also gave a handsome present to every one under his employ and his benevolent lady gave articles of clothing to some of the girls and to poor widows. In compliment of the occasion the bells of the village rang a merry peal.” According to my “Kingswood Index”, Stephen Cave and Ann Daniel were married at St Augustine’s Bristol on 1st May 1789, and if the entry is correct (I have been known to err!) the above Golden Wedding anniversary celebrations appear to have been a little premature. I am sorry to say that I rather maligned Stephen Cave in one of my early efforts, “The Budgetts of Kingswood Hill” noting that in 1816, he chaired a meeting devoted to the suppression of the “Cock Road Gang”. These people, largely consisting of the Caines family and their relatives and friends became notorious in the first quarter of the 19th century: several ended their miserable lives on the gallows and others were transported to Australia. I compared Stephen, a Tory paternalist, somewhat unfavourably with the self made Kingswood grocer and philanthropist Henry Hill Budgett. In hindsight, I realise that the men had more in common than I thought, each believing that education would improve matters among the ignorant poor of the neighbourhood and both founded schools. Stephen Cave died on February 18th 1838 at Cleve Wood, aged 75. He was described in his obituary, (Bristol Mercury 24.2.1838) as “a most worthy and honourable man in all relations of social life and one of the best of our citizens.” Stephen’s widow Ann went to live with her daughter Harriet and son in law John New at Craddock House, Ulfculme, Devon and it was there that she died on January 5th, 1851 aged 86, described as the relict of Stephen Cave, esq., and sister of (Alderman) Thomas Daniel of Bristol. (obit. Bristol Mercury 11.1.1851). Being interested in family trees, I was pleased to find that the surname Cave was long commemorated in Thomas Daniel’s family. His descendant, living 1952, was called Henry Cave Daniel. (For additional information on the Cave family see “Mangotsfield” by Andrew Plaster, BAFHS Journal 125, September 2006) Mary Dafter and her Great TroubleSubmitted by dplindegaard on 5 March, 2010 - 15:08
Mary Dafter was employed by the Newtons of Barrs Court (who were rarely at home) as their steward – remarkable in itself for the time – and wrote to her master or mistress on a weekly basis for ten years between 1713 and 1723 with the nitty gritty business details of the workings of a large estate. Mary’s letters are preserved at the Gloucester Record Office and a transcription came into my possession following the untimely death of Mollie Ashley of the Kingswood Local History Society. This correspondence is a story in itself, but during a period when Mary was at her wit’s end, she unburdened herself to her employers with the personal details of her life. What they thought is not preserved. The family background is as follows:
Thomas Dafter, a yeoman of "Wollen" (i.e. Oldland in the parish of Bitton) in Gloucestershire, took out a marriage licence on 8th November 1684 to marry Mary Pollen, of St Augustine’s, Bristol. (The groom's parish is given as "Woolastone?, Glos" in the published version of Bristol Marriage Licence Bonds, which is incorrect.) The marriage was to be in the bride's parish church. Their sons John, William and Thomas were born during the next few years and Mary Pollen must have died sometime in 1690 or early 1691 for Thomas senior obtained a licence on 30th May 1691 to take a second wife, Mary Davis, again of St Augustine's parish. Mary Davis would become the Mary Dafter of the letters. The bondsman to the licence was Richard Davies, of Bitton, clothier, who made his mark on the document. This Richard Davies or Davis was the father of the bride. Thomas and Mary II had two children, Mary, baptised on 17th April 1692 who grew up to marry Joseph Long, Richard, born ca 1701 and Sarah. Thomas Dafter of Barr’s Court made his will in 1713 leaving his “dear wife” his goods and estate with instructions to bring up their daughter Sarah until she was 21 or married whichever was first and after his wife’s decease the estate was to go to his son Richard. His daughter Mary Long was to receive £50, as was Sarah when she became 21. The bequests to the elder sons were £20 to John, a token sum of twenty shillings to William (he was to be let off his debt of £25 which he had borrowed from his father the year before ) and £20 to Thomas. Thomas Dafter senior duly died and Mary took over his business as steward at Barr’s Court. HER GREAT TROUBLE began on 17th December 1720, when she wrote: "It is a very sickly time here. I thank God that I and my family is all pretty well at present. Mr Liddiart is dead this week; he was sick about a fortnight and some days was taken with shivering fits and vomiting." On 19th April 1721, she apologised for not writing sooner, as "my father have been very ill and I was in great fear I should have lost him, but now I thank God he is able to ride out again." Richard Davis, though now a very old man, (he had been born about the year 1638) was obviously a great support to Mary. On 10th June she reported the death of a Mrs Warner (or Wornell), and said three heriots were due, but she had so far failed to collect them……and then the bombshell drops: "I should have gone before this, but she is next neighbour to Mrs Liddiart and she and I are now at a great dispute for my son courts her, or else she courts him. I have got very good gentlemen to try and break it, but I find it has gone too far before I knowed of it. My greatest reason that I upgate (sic) against it is the disagreeable (sic) of age for she is now 43 years and he is going in 21 years. I thank God he have a very good character and be need not to (have) wanted a wife according to his age but what God have ordered it shall be whether for a cross or comfort. She is counted a very sharp, sensible woman, but I think comes short in this." On 26th July, Mary had been busy with the hay harvest, made more difficult owing to "my son being from me about this intended disagreeable matter." The happy couple had apparently asked her to baby-sit whilst they got married, for she notes crossly "Liddiard's son have had the small pox so that I could not suffer him to come to me in the house on my account and some of the servants, but now the child is well." Richard Dafter, described "yeoman of Bitton", duly took out a licence in Bristol, to marry Martha Lydiard, of St Philip & St Jacob, Bristol, with his half brother John, a cooper of St Peter's, as bondsman, (and more of him later). The happy couple were married at St Augustine’s which seems to have been the family’s favourite church on 12th September 1721. October 14th, and Richard Davis was ill again: "I must beg your pardon for not writing sooner but my father have been very ill this 6 weeks but I thank God he is got up again, though very weak, but I am glad to keep him (even) if it is in his chair." On December 2nd, she appended a postscript, (with which most of us who have children can readily identify): "I beg the favour to let one of your servants write a line to Frances Lewton which is Madam Archer's under cook’s-maid, and to tell her that her mother takes it very undutiful that she have never sent to her since she have been gone." I hope the wretched Frances responded and put her mother’s mind at rest. Mary makes no mention of the fact that Richard and Mrs Lydiard were now married though she refers to her son riding out on her behalf, so she had decided to grin and bear it. In April 1722, Richard engages with Squire Trye, the local Justice of the Peace, to prosecute a gang of robbers who among other depredations in the district had stripped the lead from the roof at Barr's Court, and stolen several horses from Mary herself. She names three men, King, Kanton & Harvor and says briskly that they were hanged but another called, Fortis and two women were transported. Although Fortis was condemned with the rest, she says he, "met a great friend in Squire Trye and in my son", and they spoke up for him. "His mother was a cook to my old master many years and is now very sensible among her neighbours when they be sick and no-one can accuse her of anything of these crimes, so her son have friends for her sake." In this month too, Mary gets handed a parish orphan, one of a family of four, "from poor honest parents. The grandmother was my lady's washerwoman….I desire to know whether I shall take to him. It is a sprake (sprack) boy, but he is but small. Mr Merredith have gave him some clothes once, but that is gone and he is all in lice and rags." By January 15th 1723, Mary wanted to discuss personal business with Sir John Newton, even suggesting a visit to London, but he vetoed the idea. She wrote "As for my coming up to London, I should have been very glad if you would have admitted me to come; the reason is my son was of age the 12th February last and he was left joint executor with me and is willing to have something from me and would willingly come to Barr's Court to take to the business if your Honor please, which I am very willing and nothing shall be wanting in me to assist him, provided we can agree on terms and we have a discharge from him, which I have no friend but your Honor to advise me, because I am not willing anyone should know my circumstances." These were not in a very good state, for she goes on, "My son do not know how things lie and I am not willing his wife shall know nothing of it. I have praised my stock and do find myself near the same as when my husband died. It would have been better but everything runs very low with renters. This five or six years have had bad crops and this year have lost by sheep near £40 by a bane which was general with us." February 17th 1723 "….as for my son coming to Barr's Court to assist me, he is very compliable to do what your Honor and I shall desire. I do want him very much, my father being ancient and cannot ride out as he did, and though he (the son) is young he understands the business very well and he never was undutiful till this unfortunate match." November 11th 1723 "I am still in a great deal of trouble. My son have been very ill and he and I have not put things right between us relating to his father's will. We had deferred ourselves to Squire Trye to end all disputes between but he is much biased by a wife and she have had an own councillor and I feel she will not let him agree to it. I fear that my family and myself will be ruined……there are a great many loopholes for trouble…I must rely on your Honor to advise me. I have no other friend in the world…". January 8th 1724 "My father is taken very ill that I have been up with him all night and day. My daughter have lay in and been very bad. I feared I should have lost them both but thank God both is better but very weak still." February 26th 1724 "I am ill with a swelling in my face occasioned by a cold, unable to hold up to do business." April 19th 1724 "Very ill again this month, and more like an ague and fever, but now this week, I thank God, much better." July 25th 1724 "My son and I not agreed as yet. Once more proposed to put it into Squire Trye's hands. It is agreed to be done soon after the fair if his wife do not alter her mind." October 7th 1724 "My son & I have not agreed and I am afraid never shall, for through a wicked instrument he proposeth unreasonable." November 4th 1724 "My son is very bad and like to die and my friend Squire Trye is once more a trying to make up our business which is the greatest trouble I ever knew and I think my son have laid to heart what he have done, but still being biased by a wife he do not consent yet to reasonable terms." November 18th 1724 "My dear son is dead the 12th of this instant and I cannot express my trouble, but I desire I must go to him, for he cannot return to me. As soon as I compose myself, I shall go on with my accounts. I cannot tell you how his wife will deal with me which is a trouble because we had not agreed before his death." (Richard Dafter was buried at Bitton, November 15th 1724.) November 30th 1724 "Squire Edwards & Mr Offield both in London and I am waiting to have them advise me on my husband's will to know what was my son's right and where there is not the survivorship belonging to me by reason there has been no contract between us since he was of age. My son have made a will and made his wife executrix so she is very urgent to know his right so she is best to administer for she have been and is still to get what she could from me." And now, there was even more trouble for Mary's stepson was in prison for debt. "John Dafter my son in law, severely used by his creditors and no-one can say but that he is an honest man, and have a good trade as a cooper, free of Bristol, but having the misfortune that belongs to our family. Not having a good wife to manage what he gets to the right use occasions this confinement. The debt is but £10 but they have proceeded in law in his absence at sea, and it is amounted to £25. I have employed Mr Edward his clerk to see if he can bring it to some compassion." December 16th 1724 Opinions of legal men were sought about Mary's dispute with her daughter in law, but Mary thinks "…the case is back on my side. I do know he have had from me more than his right but I have nought to show for all he have had…. my son's widow is not respected by poor nor rich for her ruining such a boy and she have brought the debts that was with Will Liddiard's (her previous husband) that she created to be my son's now, so I fear it will be very hard on us, but I shall trust in God in the midst of my trouble will remember poor Mary and deliver me out of the Lion's Mouth". December 19th 1724 "As to my son in law John Dafter, he is still soliciting me to work for his redemption. I have employed Mr Edward, his clerk and he have brought the whole debt and law suit that amounted to £28 and his creditor now being in want and is in confinement in the goal (sic) with him (!) Now he will take £14 and £4 is due for his fees and debts in the prison, so £18 the whole to clear him out. I have been helpful to my husband's former children according to my ability and to do more is to give that as is not mine. Their father was a good husband to me and I cannot say that his former children was but very respectful to me, so was I of ability, I would soon have him out, but my troubles is now so great." January 20th 1725 As relating to my son-in-law in prison, I have offered two months ago £10 to release him, but they will not take under £14, besides his (keep?) in the prison. I am informed there is an Act of Grace that will come out for debtors in a little time, but that was in Midsummer last. The keeper have offered to take his note for his debtor which makes it. I desire your Honor's advice in this. " (Nothing further is heard about John Dafter. I am somehow doubtful that Sir John put his hand in his pocket.) March 13th 1725 I am to wait on Squire Edward on Monday next about the Bond of Ward between my son's widow and me and I hope he will end it." April 14th 1725 But the meeting was postponed … (as legal proceedings always are)… "Squire Edward have sent for me this day and I am now going to wait on him to see to the bond that is between my son's widdow and me to be ended by the 1st day of May next. Her lawyer have been out of town and would do nothing on it." April 24th 1725. Squire Edward tells Mary her troublesome business is not ended, "they brought it to the threshold of the door and then stumbled". (again, Plus ca change) May 26th 1725 "Squire Edward have not ended my troublesome business as yet." June 23rd 1725 "My dear father I have lost this last Sunday which was aged 87 years, had but 3 days sickness, the tenderest father that ever child had, and as good a Christian, in that I do comfort myself that he have reaped what he have sowed from his youth." August 16th 1725 "Squire Edward is very sensible on the account he have to make up with my son's widow, that he have hurted me very much and this last 3 years have been so dry that it have pulled me back. I have a good stock of old wheat which will now bear 5s 6d - 6s a bushel which I will make out and other money I expect to raise and as fast as possible will pay it in. I have always ate the bread of carefulness." September 13th 1725 "….I am mighty busy it being a catchly time and likewise with my son's widow, she now threatens me that she will come to your Honor to inform you of all the affairs and then she will prefer her bill and swear herself not to be worth £5, and to have her law for nothing, suing under the King. I hope God will in his good time deliver me out of her hands, is my daily prayers." October 20th 1725 "I have been very ill with a pain in my side. My adversary threatens me with a bill in Chancery. I sent to Squire Edward and told him my circumstances that I had no money and he professed himself extremely kind. He said that it had not cost me much and it should not, for he will take care of it to my satisfaction." December 1st 1725 "I have paid in to Squire Edward the 30th November £50, and I hope to pay in next week £100 more, for I am making out of old wheat and other stock to raise money. I am to wait on Squire Edward on Saturday to give him the best account I can relative to my encumbrances which it would not have been so with me had I not had three bad years together and likewise an undutiful child in my son being biast by a wife which hath hurted me very much." April 9th 1726 "My daughter is a widow and liveth with me and is my right hand to assist me, which was the same when her father was living, being brought up to keep the markets, which I hope your Honor will not dislike of, for she is a careful industrious woman which is a great comfort to me being left a widow so young." (Mary Long had four children, a daughter of 11, and sons of 9, 6 and 2. The nine-year-old had been taken "at reasonable rates by the week to give him learning" by a Minister in Bristol, and he came home every Saturday. The baby had been ill, with what was thought to be small pox, but turned out to be measles. On April 23rd, he was still "very weakly, and I question his life for a fever attend him every day".) Things went from bad to worse. Mary was on the verge of a breakdown. On August 13th 1726, she wrote a begging letter to Sir John: "Hon'd Sir I waited on Squire Edward yesterday when he gave me an account of your Honor's orders which is such a trouble to me. I humbly beg of your Honor that you would not expose my trouble to the world and that you would be pleased with the bowels of compassion to look on the widows and fatherless children and you let me continue to be your steward, if not to be a tenant which have been always just and will to the end. I always depended that your Honor would let me continue in it in my lifetime and at my death which cannot be too long in this trouble, my daughter shall be bound to see to everything……and I shall make her sensible of all your business that you may not lose none of your of your rights, for she is an honest careful woman and no-one will say other, but my adversary which have been my great ruin. If your Honor is not pleased that she shall stay with me, she will go back into Bristol or some other place as soon as she can get a convenient place which I thought should not have parted from me but death. I always comforted myself in all my troubles of your kind letter at my husband's death. I cannot tell what to say more, but that my husband often said in a bad year that he had a good master and when you went from Barr's Court that you left a charge to him to be just and his answer was that he would be as true as your own heart to you, and that he did believe that your Honor would never let him want, nor his, which I have and shall be the same, if may be permitted, and if I perish it shall be at your Honor's feet, is all from your almost broken hearted and dutiful servant to death, Mary Dafter. " On the same date , Mary wrote to Lady Newton, begging her to intercede, to let her and her daughter try for one more year: "parting from my daughter is tearing one limb from the other…..I am almost at my wits end." In the event she was relieved of her post, but seems to have been compensated in some way, for she writes thanking Sir John for his goodness, and "that I shall always walk worthy of so great a favour. I agree with your Honor that it is not proper for me to continue on the farm, being but a woman and I had never attempted so great affairs had it not been for your goodness to entrust me with your stock, and was persuaded to it for the good of my son, which now he and his wife have been my ruin. I shall conform to your Honor's command and what Squire Edward would have me do in everything and shall always be ready to serve your Honor's interest what lieth in me even if it was to lay down my life." And then as usual, she goes back to business, She has sent a box to London, carriage paid to be picked up in Piccadilly. Good news that the level where Mr Good and Squire Player have been prospecting for coal is blown up (!) and that the tenant Nicholls, is coming in the middle of the month to have his lease made. At which she finishes as always, "with my hearty prayers for your Honor's health and my good Lady's, I am your dutiful servant to command, Mary Dafter. The family gravestone in Bitton churchyard reads: Thomas, son of Joseph & Mary Long, and grandson of Thomas & Mary Dafter, died 7.2.1761 aged 41, Mary Bartlett, daughter of Joseph & Mary Long, died 15.10.1760 aged 46, Richard Davis of Oldland, died 29.6.1725 aged 85, Sarah, wife of Richard, died 6.6.1671, Eleanor wife of said Richard Davis, d. 12.5.1696. Mary’s younger daughter Sarah evidently did not live to be twenty one. If there were memorial stones to Richard and Martha Dafter, Joseph and Mary Long, to Thomas Dafter and either of his two Marys, they did not survive. Mary Dafter of Barr’s Court made her will on the 5th April 1730 leaving her granddaughter Mary Long (Mary Bartlett, above) a “silver caudle cupp which cup holds about three pints and is markt with three letters, T. D. & C. also the silver cover thereto belonging” and several pieces of land in Bitton when she reached the age of twenty one. All the rest and residue of real and personal estate was left to her daughter, Mary Long, widow and relict of Joseph Long, of Bristol, mariner and also to be executrix. Mary Dafter died in 1734 and Mary Long proved the will on 15th July that year. The will may be found at Gloucester Record Office under reference D2957/47/5. Of Mary’s bitter adversity, her son’s widow, Martha Dafter, I have no further information. The Mansion at Barr’s Court was burnt down in a later era and all that remains is the moat. http://moat1.homestead.com/homepage.html A Miner’s candlestickSubmitted by dplindegaard on 20 February, 2010 - 17:45In 1978, shortly after I began researching my family history I was contacted by a gentleman called Bert Gay in response to a newspaper advertisement. Mr Gay lived at Alma Road, Kingswood, which runs into Holly Hill Road Having discovered that many of my paternal ancestors had earned their living toiling underground in the former mines of the Kingswood district, I was anxious to talk to anyone with first hand experience. Bert Gay had not worked in the mines himself but his grandfather, Robert King had told him many times of how at the age of seven he had gone down the mine “sitting in a bucket, on a miner’s lap, carrying a candle.” Bert went to the workshop at the back of the house and returned with a t-shaped iron candlestick that had once belonged to his grandfather. Bert placed this precious artefact in my hands. The Kingswood mines were not considered fiery and the men worked by the light of candles held in these candlesticks either in their hat bands or with the pointed end stuck in the wall of the shaft. The stub of candle was added by me, though now it is also more than 30 years old. I used to give talks with the assistance of my son Kevin, then about eight, dressed as a child miner for many young boys of six and above worked in the mines. When I “lit him up”, the candle stuck in his round hat, an audible gasp would go round the room. But that’s another story. Robert King worked at Parkfield Colliery, Coalpit Heath and made the daily journey on foot from Holly Hill Road, along the Dram Road which ran from the Chequer’s Inn on Hanham River to Britton, Warmley, Mangotsfield, Shortwood and Coalpit Heath – a distance of some six miles. The coals were taken by horses from the pits to the river, via the Dram Road where they were loaded on to barges. Robert King was a very strong man, said Bert and he recalled him “tossing around two hundredweight sacks of barley mow as if they were nothing.” In 1841 Robert King then aged four lived with his father and mother, Samuel and Hester and various siblings in Warmley. His father was, of course, a coalminer. I was able to track Robert’s life through various censuses and addresses in the Kingswood area and his work as a miner, until 1891 by which time he had retired. He married Mary Ann Britton from the numerous local family of that name in 1862. Mary Ann died at the early age of 40 in 1879 leaving him a widower with five daughters and two sons between 17 and six years old. The youngest, Florence would stay with him and when she married Alfred Gay in 1906, Robert lived with them at Holly Hill Road. In the house in 1911 were Florence and Alfred, and Robert aged 73. You can imagine my joy, for also there, aged 3, was my friend Bert Gay! A visit to Crail, June 2009 - Part 2 (With some home thoughts from abroad.)Submitted by dplindegaard on 28 July, 2009 - 16:36Flying saucers have landed..........?
He lives in a niche in Crail churchyard. Did he come from outer space? What do you think?
This is the Dead House at Crail: the caption reads "Erected for securing the dead MDCCCXVI" i.e.1816. It was used to keep bodies safe from professional "Resurrectionists" who supplied the brisk demand for corpses for dissection by medical men, no questions asked. Some years later, not far away in Edinburgh, Burke and Hare could not keep up the supply and "cut out the middle man", turning to murder. "Resurrectionists” generally, but not always, low life, worked under cover of darkness digging up freshly buried bodies. It seems to have been a widespread activity and struck horror into most people at the time. The corpses of executed felons were often handed over to anatomists as in the case of Bristol's John Horwood in 1821. Young John, only 18, was not only hanged but also anatomised and his skin used to bind a book which was displayed at Ship and White's (booksellers and newsagents) in Kingswood in 1951 as part of a local "Festival of Britain" exhibition. At the age of 14, being of a rather macabre bent, I spent much time gazing at this grisly relic through the shop window. My friend, Eddie White, the son of the business, then half my age, but now almost catching me up, denies all knowledge of the thing. (The book is now held at Bristol Record Office, and have I indented for it? No thanks!) As to Brislington, St Luke's never aspired to a dead house, but we do boast graves with iron railings to keep out potential robbers and where it would be possible for the bereaved to picnic within the enclosure, as at Crail. On February 1828, two grave robbers were caught in our churchyard and taken in charge before the magistrate. They were revealed as Dr Wallis, founder of a Bristol school of anatomy and Dr Riley, another noted anatomist. They got off lightly: fined six pounds, perhaps because they were "posh". It was reported: “The parties then bowed very respectfully to the worthy magistrate and, wishing his worship a good day, left the house.” Back to Crail. Having married into the Danelaw, so to speak, I soak up all things Viking. The Danes' Dyke, a bank or wall, about 4 foot high, made of uncemented flat stones, popularly built by Danish invaders, stretches from our holiday cottage at Little Craighead down to the foreshore. At one time it terminated at a rock in the north face of Constantine's Cave.
A little farther along where the golf course meets the sea, a widowed French princess, Mary of Guise landed in 1538 - by accident - en route to meet her bridegroom, James V of Scotland. After losing two baby boys in infancy, in December 1542 Mary gave birth to a daughter and in the same week King James died. The baby, six days old, ascended the throne. She was Mary, Queen of Scots. |
International Genealogy |