Showing posts with label Favourites. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Favourites. Show all posts

Wednesday, 13 May 2020

#52Ancestors, Where There's a Will


I might have mentioned that I have been transcribing a number of wills written in flowery Old English script recently. I came across the will of my two of my 5xgreat grandfathers. Two families that lived in the same parish and through the ensuing years have added multiple connections to the genealogy of their descendants.

John Yeandle and Grace Tarr were contemporaries of Thomas Davys and Jane Hellings. Thomas I have written about before; he had part of the lease of Hagley Farm settled on him by his father when he married Jane. He went on to buy the Manor at Raddington and call himself Lord…and then die intestate and with loads of debt for his sons to manage and repay.

How much of the land in the 1841 tithe apportionment map of last week’s blog was part of the manor, I’m not quite sure yet. Anyway, this generation is where the entanglement of the two families begins. It could be earlier – but this is the most documented so far.

John & Grace had nine children. Most likely all born at Upcott Farm. Thomas and Jane had eight children, possibly born at Moorhouse which was an earlier name for Washer’s Farm, or perhaps at Kingston.

Ready to get confused ?

John Yeandle (the younger) married Janny (Jennie/Jane) Davys
Mary Yeandle married James Davys
These are my 5x great grandparents.
Grace Yeandle married George Davys
Betty Yeandle married James Brewer and secondly John Potter.
Jane Yeandle married John Totterdell
Ann Yeandle married Thomas Palmer
Patience Yeandle married John Palmer
Sarah Yeandle married John Stone
Thomas Yeandle married Mary Brewer

And yes, both the Palmer spouses were brothers and the two Brewer spouses were siblings ! To add to the mix, another of Thomas and Jane’s sons, John Davys, also married into the same Brewer family.

Anyway, back to wills. I have “read” the wills for both John Yeandle (the younger) and James Davys. Each of them naming some of their children and grandchildren amongst the beneficiaries. A site I have been aware of for a number of years which documents some of the Yeandle genealogy mentioned other wills which had been in the possession of a William Davys of Hagley Bridge. Hopefully they are now safely in the custody of repositories such as National Archives if not a local Archive.

I have been looking for the wills of James’ brothers George and Benjamin, to try to ascertain how the land and Manor was redistributed after their father and elder brother’s deaths. It was on National Archives UK where I found another recently, available to download free during the COVID-19 lockdown. This time for Grace Davys (nee Yeandle).

Grace and George had no children, and he predeceased her. His will (one of those I am looking for) must have bequeathed all of his land, tenement and messuages to his surviving brother or brothers as none of those type of assets are mentioned by Grace in her will.

She instead, was a benevolent aunt, dividing her money and belongings between her many nieces and nephews, some of her siblings and two or three great nieces. A couple of hitherto unknown names were able to be added to the tree thanks to these four pages of flowery writing. It would have been wonderful if she had been a little more consistent with her directions though; some were described simply as the sons and daughters of my brother/sister <insert name here> but others were named and described as my niece (or great niece) <insert name> daughter of my sister <insert name>, or simple as <insert name> the daughter of my niece <insert name>.

Her sister Patience benefitted most, with £400 compared to £20 or so that other siblings were bequeathed. Patience’s daughters, Patience and Sarah inherited half of her clothes each with Patience (the daughter) also inheriting some furniture. The other children of Patience (the sister) were also given £10 more than their cousins.

I wonder if she was always their favourite aunt. Not a maiden aunt, but one who cared for her nieces and nephews in lieu of her own children. How interesting too that in some cases she singled out the daughters of her nieces, or specifically her nieces rather than nephews.

One day I will get it completely transcribed.


Saturday, 22 February 2020

#52Ancestors, Favourite Photo


When this topic has come up in the past I have chosen a family group photo to discuss.  

This time though I have chosen a landscape - actually three. 
I have hundreds, thousands of photos; landscapes, sunsets, flowers, trees, people, buildings, holiday memories, instagram gold.



I love these though because they are timeless. 

It is the view I savoured (and photographed) just six years ago. It is exactly the same view that my great great grandparents and their children saw, and will have remembered, every day in the years leading up to their departure from England for their fresh start in New Zealand. Although there were probably more apple trees planted in the orchard in the foreground then.

It is the same view that the original inhabitants of the house and farm would have seen hundreds of years before them.



And this, from the gate at the top of Churchill looking down to St Michael's Raddington. 
Unchanged. 

The Manor House, Kingston, at the foot of the hill where my great great grandfather lived with his elder brother, their mother, stepfather and half siblings. Where their father and grandfather had likely lived before them. St Michael's where his grandfather's brother had been the minister until 1783 and his grandmother's great grandfather or his brother was church warden in 1675.

It is where I feel at home, although I never lived there. Being there feels grounding, walking in the footprints of my ancestors. It’s in my DNA.

Saturday, 2 September 2017

#52Stories, Week 31, How many different states and countries have you visited throughout your life ? Which were your favourites ?

Let me see then - there aren’t that many,

Australia:
          New South Wales
          Victoria
          South Australia
          Queensland
          Australian Capital Territory

Fiji

England
Scotland
Wales

Germany

US of A:
          California
          Arizona
          Utah
          Nevada

Which one was my favourite ? I don’t know if I can choose. They all had their own unique appeal. They are all places I have either returned to many times, or plan to.

This almost leads into another topic ‘Have you ever travelled to a place that you could imagine yourself moving to permanently ? What did you love about it ? What does it offer that can’t be found at home ?;

The answer to this question – almost everywhere ! The challenge of starting again, of finding your way, of fitting in. There are just two places which spring to mind that I wouldn’t want to move to. Sorry if they are your fave places – Wolverhampton and San Francisco.

Wolverhampton just seemed to be run down and with no heart or vibrancy when we were there. Maybe we were just in the wrong places, or there at the wrong time. Maybe it was just that they put GOLDEN SYRUP on my hotcakes at McDonalds instead of maple syrup…


San Francisco – I had such high hopes. Maybe it was because I had a cold and wasn’t feeling 100%. It just didn’t live up to my expectations.