Showing posts with label Chesterton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Chesterton. Show all posts

Friday, 4 December 2015

Images of England, Chesterton, Cambridgeshire - Contents

Well, my book arrived!  It looks like it's got a lot of great photos in it.  I'll go through and list them at some point.

This book, ISBN number 0752418610, is a paperback produced by the Chesterton Local History Group, specifically Anne Bromley, Alice Zeitlyn, Christine Gibson, Brian Woods, John Norman, Colin Moule and Derek Stubbings.  It costs just ~£12 to buy, so pennies per image!
Images of Chesterton, Cambridgeshire, ISBN 0752418610

First published in 2000 it was published by Tempus Publishing Ltd at Stroud.  Tempus also did the typesetting and origination.

The front cover shows an outing on the boat Otter on the River Cam.  Taken at Jesus Lock in ~1896, these men are on an outing of the Licensed Victuallers' Association.

The Foreword is by Mike Petty, researcher/writer/lecturer on Cambridgeshire and the Fens. There is a photo on that page of "Young members of the Chesterton Chapel string band c 1888)".

The Introduction explains the roots of Chesterton - this page has a photo of "Mr Fieldgate, landlord of the Maltsters Arms, with his young family, c 1904".

Acknowledgements go to Cambridgeshire Collection, Cambridge and County Folk Museum, Cambridge Evening News, Chesterton Challenge, Roy's Leisure, Two Tees Boatyard, Mrs P Marsh, Lesley and Derek Flory, Mrs B Hogg, Mrs S Hogg and FH Stanford.  It says that other photographs were supplied by members of the Local History Group.

The main index is broken down into:
Foreword by Mike Petty
Introduction
Acknowledgements
1. The River Cam
2. The High Street
3. Churches and Schools
4. Housing in the Village
5. Mitcham's Corner
6. Public Houses and Inns
7. Almshouses
8. Pye Radio
9. Village Life

Already there are some chapters that seem more enticing to me.  My ancestors lived on the High Street, Chesterton; my mother and ancestors attended the churches and schools and my mum worked at Pye Radio!  I've got a photo of their staff in my collection I'm digitising.

I'm off to pick through it now!  Scouring those old photos for images of where my ancestors lived, shopped, played and knew!

Click here to check out reviews of this book.

Thursday, 3 December 2015

Chesterton Cambs Images of England, by Chesterton Local History Society, ISBN 9780752418612

I'm all excited as I've just bought a book, called Chesterton (Cambs) Images of England, ISBN 9780752418612.   This book was compiled and written in 2000, so fairly new.  It is part of the Images of England series, which uses old photographs and archived images to show the history of various local areas in England, through their streets, shops, pubs, and people.

The book about Old Chesterton and New Chesterton contains over 200 old photographs of Chesterton Cambs spread over 128 pages.  I did double check as there are other villages called Chesterton in England, but it's definitely the right place, the Chesterton in Cambridgeshire.

I wonder if there'll be any of my ancestors in the photos that I'll never realise are them.  If your ancestor's a shopkeeper then you're quite likely to be able to find photos of them standing in their shop doorway.  If your ancestors were regular local dwellers, then they might just be passing, or in a crowd, and you'd just not know.

But, it'll be fascinating to see these photos of the places they'd have known, the streets as they'd seen them.

The book's available from a variety of sources, with the most obvious booksellers being ebay and Amazon - and at just a few pennies per photograph this should be invaluable for me to dip into as new information unfolds.  My ancestors were in Chesterton pre-1800, and some modern day descendants are still there!

I'll get round to writing an index to this book .... once it arrives and I set the time aside to go through the book to do that.

Book Information:

Author: Chesterton Local History Society.  Publisher: The History Press Ltd
Publication Date:  1 March 2000  Format:  Paperback
ISBN-10 0752418610
ISBN-13 9780752418612
Series Title Archive Photographs: Images of England
Weight 318 grams.  Width: 164 mm.  Height: 232 mm.  Spine: 13 mm.

Wednesday, 2 December 2015

Body Exhumed at Chesterton, Cambridge When Neighbours Started Rumours it was Murder!

I love reading old newspapers and finding strange events.  Just this week I found a body that'd been exhumed at Chesterton, Cambridge, in 1881.... so I had to read on and then do a little "outline research" to find out what happened!

The story begins before 1881, as Joseph and Harriet met and married in 1868, having four children, all born in Chesterton.  But this story of a part of Joseph's life hit the newspapers in late September 1881 when a body had been exhumed from St Andrew's churchyard in Old Chesterton, Cambridge.  What caught my eye was that I had a LOT of family living there at the time, so was intrigued to read on as my great-great grandmother/grandfather would've been of a similar age and so would've known this couple, who lived at High Street, Chesterton.

It was on 14 August 1881 that Joseph Doggett, husband of Harriet Doggett, died at home, aged just 38 years.  He was buried on 17 August 1881 in St Andrew's churchyard.  Harriet Doggett was about three years younger than Joseph and at the time of his death she had four children by him.

However, when Mrs Harriet Doggett attended church just a few weeks later with a 'new man' the tittle tattle and rumours started.  Such an explosive rumour was built up that one local resident even sent anonymous letters to the local Coroner suggesting to him that the late Joseph Doggett had been poisoned!  The rumour was that Harriet had put something in his tea - and one resident even telegraphed distant newspapers to inform them of a "supposed murder near Cambridge".

A Coroner has the power to order an exhumation only where he has received information that the death was not due to natural causes. A reasonable suspicion it wasn't natural causes could be sufficient.  Exhumations are not common, they are an exception.

So, up Joseph came, bless him.

The Coroner, Mr CW Palmer, held an inquest at the Union Workhouse, with a jury of local people from New Chesterton.  He started by telling them that it was important that they only listened to the evidence given in the inquest and to set any rumours aside.  The Coroner also told the people present that he'd received anonymous letters and he hoped they would not bother themselves, or the Coroner, again as any future letters would be ignored.

Giving evidence were Edward Reader, Sexton of St Andrew's Church - he had buried Joseph on 17 August and exhumed him on 17 September 1881. He confirmed that the body he exhumed was the same one he'd buried the previous month.

Dr Anningson of Grantchester and Mr GE Wherry carried out the post-mortem.  Dr Anningson gave his evidence of the examinations they performed and their conclusions.  An ulcer they found was sufficient to have been the cause of death. He said he'd discovered nothing to show that death had been from anything but natural causes. He also noted that Joseph had a weak heart.

Mr Wherry then stood and said he agreed with the findings of Dr Anningson and that a perforating ulcer in the stomach is a well recognised disease and that, from what he saw, Joseph Doggett must have had this problem for some time.

Harriet Doggett was asked for her evidence.  She said that Joseph was a brewer's labourer and had first fallen ill on the Friday before he died (Friday 12 August).  Harriet had been out at work and when she came home at about 7-8pm Joseph was in bed and told her he had diarrhoea.  Harriet sent somebody to Dr Waller's to get some medicine, which she gave to Joseph. Joseph said he'd been shaking, so Harriet made him some hot beer.   On the morning of Saturday 13 August Harriet went to work, leaving Joseph in bed; she was at work all day, returning again in the evening.  Joseph was up and sitting in a chair when she returned - and he said he had left the house in the afternoon. He had taken some of the diarrhoea medicine that morning.  On the Friday evening he said he was feeling better.   Harriet went to the Doctor for more medicine and the Doctor said he'd come to see him if he got much worse.

Harriet and Joseph went to bed about midnight and she was awoken in the night to find Joseph getting undressed - he said he'd been outside in the yard.  She got up and lit a fire to make a Linseed Poultice.  Joseph kept going downstairs another 2-3 times and Harriet found it hard to get him to stay in bed.  Joseph died in Harriet's arms, before she could get him to bed.  She said he'd been wandering and saying he wanted to do his work.  Harriet said she hadn't realised he was so ill and if she'd have known she'd have gone for the Doctor.

Joseph died at about 3am on the morning of Sunday 14 August.

No Doctor had seen Joseph for some time.  Dr Ransom hadn't seen him for 6-8 weeks, yet he issued the death certificate to Mrs Allman when she asked for it.  Mrs Allman helped Harriet to lay out the body.

There was some discussion over how the Death Certificate had been obtained and it appeared that the Doctor shouldn't have just written one out and handed it over.  But, the Coroner was happy that nobody was covering anything up and that the Doctors involved were honourable professionals, so he simply rebuked them over their slackness in writing out a death certificate so readily.

The Coroner didn't call any further witnesses and asked the Jury to consider just two points:

  1. What was the cause of the man’s death?
  2. Whether any person had done any act about which would render him or her responsible to the law 

He said he'd asked two Doctors to carry out the post-mortem since the Death Certificate had been written without Dr Ransom seeing the patient.  He also noted that it was a matter of extreme regret that Dr Ransom had written out the Death Certificate without seeing the patient before he died, which was unquestionably a want of judgement on his part, but the Coroner was sure it wouldn't happen again.  In the event, what Dr Ransom wrote on the certificate matched what the patient had presented with 6-8 weeks prior to his death.

They found that Joseph Doggett died of natural causes.

Poor Harriet, what a horrible last month she must've had.  So what happened next?

It seems that Harriet, widowed and with four children by Joseph, remarried in 1882, to John Norfield, a man about 13 years older than her.  They then had a couple of children together.  John died in 1911, aged 75, and Harriet died in 1919, aged 70.  Both are buried in St Andrew's Churchyard, Chesterton.

As I said earlier, my great-great-grandparents were also living in High Street, Chesterton, at the time of Joseph's death.  And, with the aid of the Census returns of 1881 I'm off now to find out how many doors away they were!  I wonder what my GG-grandparents made of it, which side of the fence they sat on.

Friday, 14 August 2015

Betsy Williams, Oldest Resident of Chesterton, -1910

My eye is always drawn to statements of "the oldest resident of" pieces in old newspapers, so Betsy Williams of Chesterton caught my eye this morning.

In 1910 Betsy Williams of Chesterton died and the newspapers announced her death, along with the fact that she was the oldest resident.  I love it when the newspapers give a long obituary/biography - so handy for today's family history researchers. So I had to look her up!

The Cambridge Independent Press reported the occasion as
Death.— The death occurred Tuesday morning of one the oldest inhabitants of Chesterton. Mrs Betsy Grove Williams, widow of the late Mr Benjamin Williams. The deceased lady, who was 90 years of age, was well known and much respected in Chesterton.
Her husband, who was formerly in the employ of Mr Philip Beale, Cambridge, died twenty two years ago, but there are nine children surviving. One served for twenty seven years in the Scotch Royal Rifles, going through the Zulu War. Another, who in twenty one years in the Army Service Corps, saw service in Zululand and in Egypt, and the husband of her eldest daughter served for twenty-two years in the Royal Navy. 
There are about sixty grand-children, while the great grand-children number even more. The funeral takes place to-day, Friday, Old Chesterton.  
Looking at FreeBMD, the death was registered with an age of 89 years.

Betsy was buried on 14 October at St Andrew's Church, Chesterton.  Benjamin Williams had died, aged 69, in 1888 and was buried 6 September at St Andrew's Church, Chesterton.

A quick look through the IGI showed that, from Censuses, Betsy had been born in Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk.  The 1881 Census had Betsy and husband Benjamin living at 10 Albert Street, Chesterton, with two of their children: Albert L Williams aged 19, born in Bury, Suffolk; and Mary L Williams aged 16, born in Cambridge.  Benjamin was listed as an ironmonger's porter and had been born in Lambeth, Surrey, so they were both "incomers" to the village.

I love thinking about the fact that my great-grandmother might have known of Betsy - although she had been living in the St Luke's area of Chesterton, which is about a mile from Old Chesterton where my great-grandmother was bringing up her own family.  She'll have heard the news of Betsy's death and, who knows, maybe watched the funeral from the cemetery wall.  The news will certainly have been the talk of the week.

The social history surrounding ancestors really helps to build up a good local picture of what life was like, people they might've known, events they might've attended - and more!  After a while you even begin to feel you "know" these people!

Sources: FindMyPast, FreeBMD, FamilySearch

Image: FreeBMD

Sunday, 9 August 2015

Violet Speed, Chesterton; Violet Culley, Nottinghamshire. 1872-1918

This is one of my "random finds" posts.  I have an interest in the Chesterton, Cambridgeshire area and noticed an ex resident being returned to be buried in 1918, so I figured that was worth noting.  When you're researching family history, anybody that wanders away from home is called a stray - many family history sites keep lists of strays to help people track down where people have ended up, but it's an ad hoc thing and there's no central database.
St Andrew's Church,
Chesterton, Cambridgeshire

So here it is, along with a little more research/background information:
Funeral.—

The funeral took place at St. Andrew's. Old Chesterton, July 18th, of Mrs. Violet Culley, who died at her home at Nottingham at the age of 46.  Mrs. Culley was the fourth daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Charles Speed, of 19, Waterside, Old Chesterton. She leaves a husband and six children to mourn their loss. Two of the sons serving their country, one in Egypt and one in France.
1872 
Violet Speed was baptised in Chesterton, Cambridgeshire, on 22 September 1872, daughter of Charles Speed from Barton and Emma Speed from Stow cum Quy. 1
1881Census. Waterside, Chesterton, daughter, aged 8. With parents/siblings: Charles/Emma and George, Elizabeth Emily, Lilly, Adelaide, James Harry.  1
1891Census. Chesterton, daughter, aged 18 1
1895 Marries William Culley, from Old Basford, Nottinghamshire, at Chesterton, Cambridgeshire (FreeBMD). CAMDEX Ref 331/RO/CHEST/09/141. 
1895Possible William C Culley born, Cambridge. Camdex. FreeBMD has it listed as William Charles S Culley. 4th qtr
1897Possible Ivy E Culley born, Cambridge. Camdex. FreeBMD has it listed as Iva Emma EH, 2nd qtr
1899Possible Bertram T Culley born, Cambridge. Camdex. FreeBMD has it listed as Bertram Tom. 2nd qtr.
1901 Census, St Andrew the Less, Cambridge. With husband and three children: Wm Chas S, Ivy EEH, Bertram T
1911 Census,  With husband and children: William Charles, Ivy, Tom. Will be others, need to see original census as children born in different places 1
1915Archibald CM Culley born, Nottingham (FreeBMD)
1918Dies in Nottingham, buried in Chesterton, 18 July. St Andrew's Church, Chesterton.

At the time of her burial, her father was already deceased - he, too, was buried in St Andrew's Chesterton, in 1908.

Violet was living at 27a Kirke White Street, Nottingham when she died, aged 46.2

Violet Culley was buried in St Andrews, Chesterton, on 18 July 1918.

Sources:
1 Familysearch.org
2 Burials list for church


Image: Robert Edwards

Tuesday, 28 July 2015

Bride Drowns on Day Before Wedding in Fen Ditton Ferry Tragedy

You'll find yourself being intrigued by many stories you stumble across - nothing to do with your family, but they intrigue you.  The online newspapers are the most common way to discover these old events.  One of my areas of research is Chesterton, Cambridge and, as it's alongside the river, drownings and bodies found in the river are a regular occurrence.
Grave of Violet Maude Handscomb.
Victim of ferry tragedy, 1905.

One such event occurred on Saturday 10 June 1905.  My great-grandparents were living in Chesterton in 1905, my grandmother had just been born in May 1905, so they will have known about this tragedy - they might even have been at the riverside when it occurred, although a mile or two downstream!  Below is a transcription, from PapersPast, although there are several reports of the tragedy available on FindMyPast:
DROWNED ON HER WEDDING EVE.

There was a melancholy ending to the May boat races at Cambridge. A ferry overturned and three lives were lost.
The accident happened at Ditton Plough, where the ferry consists of a flat-bottomed pontoon, which is drawn across the river by a chain. The last racing boat had passed, there was a rush to cross to the Chesterton side, and the ferry was filled. When nearing midstream the ferry turned over and sank, about twenty persons being thrown into deep water. Several young men pluckily dived in and rescued all they could see.
One young woman, who belongs to Bishop's Stortford*, and who was witnessing the races with her fiance was brought ashore exhausted and insensible. She was revived by means of artificial respiration, and was subsequently removed from the Plough Inn to a house in Fenn Ditton, but died at midnight.
In two other cases efforts to restore consciousness proved unsuccessful, the victims being Mrs. Thompson, of Malta Road, Cambridge,  who was only recently married, and Miss Murkin, of Selwyn Terrace, Newnham, who was to have been married the following day to Mr. Ebenezer George Reece, of Swansea, who was on the bank at the time of the accident.
There was a similar accident with this ferry about twenty years ago, but only one life was lost on that occasion.
You then find yourself finding out more about these people, abandoning your own family research to chase the interesting story you found!  It's good to have a break though.  I used the Camdex online BMD system and FreeBMD to try to find more details:
  • FreeBMD has the death of a Minnie Murkin, aged 26, registered in the second quarter of 1905 at Chesterton. The Camdex reference for Minnie's death registration in 1905 was 331/FUL/29/351. 
  • FreeBMD has the death of a Annie Maria Thompson, aged 20, registered in the second quarter of 1905 at Chesterton. The Camdex reference for Annie's death registration in 1905 was 331/FUL/29/352.  The GRO Index gives her age as 20. 
You'll notice the two deaths were registered one after the other as the entry numbers were 351 and 352. 

I then tried to find the marriage of Annie Maria Thompson.  My first port of call to look up Cambridgeshire marriages is the online Camdex system as this pairs up the married couple, so can be easier to use than FreeBMD.  This gave me one potential candidate:
  • Annie M Sheehan who married John W Thompson in 1904. Camdex ref number 331/CE042/01/22, which was at Cambridge St Philip.  I've built up a list of Camdex codes for the parishes, over time, so that information is from my own research.  
Next I checked FreeBMD and that gave me the same result:
  • John William Thompson married Annie Maria Sheehan in the 3rd quarter of 1904.
So between Camdex and FreeBMD it looks like this is the lady who drowned on the ferry in May 1905.

*The third victim of this ferry accident, whose name wasn't listed in the newspapers was Violet Maude Handscomb, aged 22.  Looking for records of Violet, I found the following on FreeBMD and Camdex:
  • FreeBMD had the death registered as Violet M Handscomb, aged 22, registered in Chesterton district.  Camdex has the same information recorded, with a reference number of 331/FUL/29/350 - again, you'll see that the reference number of 350 shows that all three victims of the Plough Ferry disaster were registered at the same time.
Violet Handscomb was buried at Bishops Stortford New Cemetery, Hertfordshire, England.
Violet Maud Handscombe, 1883-1905.

Violet was the only daughter of Albert Handscombe, a builder of Church Street, Chelmsford. Violet was a dressmaker and was due to be married in November and was on a day trip to visit her fiance.  Albert Handscombe had already previously lost his only son in an accident.

John Thompson had been on board the ferry and had tried to rescue his wife, but failed to do so.

Minnie Murkin was a nurse - she was identified by her sister-in-law, Annie Murkin.

I find it fascinating researching the stories that got into the newspapers as they are events I know my ancestors will have been aware of and had conversations about with family, friends and neighbours!

The location of this tragedy is The Plough, at Fen Ditton - nowadays still a great riverside pub.  The ferry operated until 1961, when it finally sank.

Image (CC BY-SA 2.0) by Geograph

Tuesday, 7 July 2015

Lydia Richardson Chesterton Cambridge

For the last few days I've been looking again at a brickwall I have in the family tree, which stops at Lydia Richardson, who married William Mansfield in St Andrews, Chesterton, Cambridge on 13 October 1776.  There was no father's name, always annoying.  It declared Lydia was "of this parish", but that doesn't necessarily mean that she was born there, just that she lived there and had been living there for awhile.  It could even have been an assumption, or a misunderstanding of the question being asked. Witnesses were a Robert Johnson and Mary Johnson.  I was hoping this might lead to a hook up/link at some point (clutching straws is my middle name these days!).  Robert and Mary had married four years earlier; she'd been from Chesterton and he was from Burwell- I wonder how they knew them! Was Lydia local and had Mary been her friend from childhood, or did Robert work with William?

This record can be found on FreeREG easily enough and, to that point, I know my 'facts' are correct.  Lydia is correctly in the tree, in the right position, but where did she come from?  For months I've had no clue.  It was a dead end.  But then I got a "sniff of a clue".  Now, a sniff of a clue is a clue, so I pursued it.  Having discovered (but not seen) a random tree on Ancestry that indicated she might have a birthdate of 1752 I followed that line of enquiry.  I figured if I could discover Lydia Richardson's baptism then I'd have more clues available to me.  It didn't take me long to track down a random Lydia Richardson - but it didn't "feel right".  Often you have a nose for these things, whether something feels like you might be on the right track, or not.

But, with no other clues presently available (without spending money on multiple parish register transcriptions), I figured I'd follow that sniff and see where it ended up.

What I found, on FreeREG, was a Lydia Richardson baptised in Stanground, Huntingdonshire (this is now part of Cambridgeshire).  What that entry told me was that Lydia was baptised on 30 November 1752, to parents John and Lydia.  Looking at more records showed that they'd already had/lost a previous Lydia (1750-1752).  Next stop, burials - and I couldn't find any concrete evidence of this Lydia having been buried or married within the parish of Stanground.

I then spent way too many hours plotting out this rather large family to see if anything lead me in the direction of Chesterton.  It wasn't easy going - and is now another incomplete project.  It seems that John Richardson always had 1-3 sons called John Richardson, who often died early ... and after a few generations you had many Johns kicking about and the burial registers just saying John had died, but not specifying which one.  There were even two families of John/Elizabeth kicking about at the same time, with all kids being registered to parents John/Elizabeth, so, again, you'd not know which pair!

So, nothing gave me confidence that this Lydia Richardson is the right one.  But, once you've discovered a "possible", you can never tell when another clue will either make it all stack up or not.  Unless I can find a legitimate link/reason for her to up sticks and move it doesn't grab me as a possible.

I am not convinced it's the right Lydia at all - and I've even seen evidence of a Richardson family living in Chesterton at the time, but not being good enough to baptise their children at the church where parish registers have been transcribed!

I doubt I'll get answers this side of a few years at this rate.  Lydia .... you're out there somewhere!

In the meantime, for anybody who is looking for the Richardson family at Stanground, Huntingdonshire, below is what I made of them at my first attempt..... needs more work/research to verify any of this is correct.  Of the 10 children they produced, they seem to have only managed to retain three long enough to get them married off.  They had three Johns before one survived and two Lydias.  The twins are a tiny bit intriguing though as there are twins in other parts of my tree, but maybe I'm clutching at straws and I bet many people have twins with a tree large enough!