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SJB
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29 Mar 2011 22:53 |
Don't think its him, mgnv, in the 1851 he is living in Chelsea with his father, occupation civil engineer. I googled Edward Ingress Bell and one bio says he was apprenticed to his father.
I found the Gretna marriage records today on Ancestry and there is a Edwd Bell of Brampton, Cumberland England who married an Elizth Morrison of Hoddam, Dumfries Scotland in July 1824. This would be about right for Mary being born in 1825, and would also corroborate the story of running away with the gardener - if it is the right couple and the story was confused by a generation! sue x
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mgnv
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29 Mar 2011 12:07 |
Looks like Edward Jnr was at a boarding school in 1851:
1851 England Census Civil parish: Greenwich County/Island: Kent Country: England Street Address: Registration district: Greenwich Sub-registration district: Greenwich East ED, institution, or vessel: Greenwich Hospital Schools Household schedule number: 1
etc Edward Bell 13 Woolwich, Kent, England School Boy William Taylor 13 William Hoskins 12 Robt Dundass 13 William E McGrath 13 Robert Jackson 13 David Guy 14 John R Warren 12 Charles Corney 11 Source Citation: Class: HO107; Piece: 1587; Folio: 494; Page: 24; GSU roll: 174824.
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SJB
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29 Mar 2011 11:33 |
Thats a good theory Vera. I think the owner of Eggleston Hall at the time was a Hutchinson, but she could have been a poor relation with another name.. I googled the hall and find it is the one used a few years ago in the tv series Laddette to Lady. Almost wish I'd watched it! Apparently the gardens were famous... Sue x
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SJB
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29 Mar 2011 11:27 |
hi mgnv,
All I have on Mary's mum is the name Elizabeth. I don't know where she came from as the family seems to move about.and I have searched for a marriage so far in vain.
I know Mary herself was Catholic, as she was married in a Catholic church in Coventry. I wondered if she was educated at a convent school. Maybe Ann was in Chipping Campden in 1851 to take the younger daughter, Ellen to school? I haven't pursued this idea yet. I would guess the Grammar School so close to Church Street was for boys only.
Sue x
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Vera2010
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29 Mar 2011 01:25 |
How about Elizabeth came from the big house near Eggleston, Durham had a child by an Edward Bell, Gardener. bit of Lady Chatterley there! If your Mary b 1825 Eggleston is the correct one then the couple were definitely married. The parish record records Elizabeth as wife which it certainly would not if the child had been illegitimate. Presumably Elizabeth died then Edward married Ann.
Just noticed Helmsley. One of the children of Edward and Ann was born in Helmsley.
Regards
Vera
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SJB
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28 Mar 2011 22:49 |
Hi mgnv, All I've got for Mary's mother is the name Elizabeth and presume she died between 1825 and ?? The next child seems to be Edward Ingress Bell aged 4 in 1841. I haven't found his birth record so do not know if he was Elizabeth or Ann's child. The fact that he was doing quite well for himself in later years while Ann appears to be struggling suggests she was not his mother, though there do not seem to be any other children between 1825 and 1836. the ones I have found are Mary 1825, Edward Ingress 1836, Ellen1838, Emily 1845, Jane 1847, Florence 1856. I just found Ann's maiden name today, Monk, and haven't yet found her mariage record. Sue x
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SJB
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28 Mar 2011 22:29 |
I found Emily Bell this afternoon Vera, born 1846 in Gravesend, mother Anna father Edward. In 1861 aged 16 she was working as a governess at a farm in Rutlandshire. I looked up the farmer on Ancestry and found someone had a photo of him taken in the early 1860's! In 1851 she was a child living with her grandmother and aunt in Gravesend, Jane and Elizabeth Monk, both almswomen. Jane it says was a former butchers wife. Lots of unexpected info there) The fact that she was with relatives indicates to me that Ann's stay in Chipping Campden was temporary.
I've ceased to care that Ann and daughters were not actually ancestors...
I'm not sure how to proceed with Elizabeth. Maybe more records will turn up.
When I first looked at this family a year ago having heard the gardener tale from others, I was looking for a rich, maybe titled family. This was before I knew the name of Mary's father. Some of her children had 'catholic' names so I searched the census' for others of those names, hoping to find a father. There was an architect who worked on Egglestone Hall called Ignatious Bonomi. He had abrother Joseph who was associated with Ingress abbey and also somewhere in Helmsley, all places that Mary and Ann turned up. I'm still half convinced that they figure somewhere along the line.
As you say, endlessly fascinating.. Sue x
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mgnv
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28 Mar 2011 21:57 |
Since I presume you've seen Mary's baptism, just out of interest, who's Mary's mum? Ann 1851 seems a bit young, so I'm wondering if Mary's Ann's step-daur.
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Vera2010
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28 Mar 2011 15:33 |
SJB
It's great how ou have tracked this family. Ann, as you know has been in Kent, Yorkkshire, Gloucestershire and Lincolnshire. Edward was not always there at the time of the census but the family continued to grow.
It would be nice to find out a bit more about Elizabeth.. The gardener, builder, clerk of works, architect is a bit puzzling but that's what makes it interesting.
Regards
Vera
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SJB
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28 Mar 2011 12:07 |
And again - wow! I'm so grateful for all this help. I'm wondering now if the servant, sometimes actually called a gardener, story in fact referred to the mother not the daughter? Though would he have become a surveyor/architect from what seems a humble beginning? Or was he being modest? On Mary's marriage certificate of 1853 (apparently, I've not seen it) he is a builder.
Luckily there seem to have been few Edward Bells in the early census' so I traced him in the 1841 to Swanscombe in Kent where he is living with Ann, son Edward and daughter Ellen. I'm assuming it is the same Edward since Mary was in 1851 living with Ann and the daughter. Of course, it could be the wrong Mary Bell on the birth record, but she seems to be the only one at Eggleston around the right time with a father callled Edward. I got this from records recently published on Find my Past.
I'm happy to find out that Mary in 1851 was living in Chipping Campden, I had traced Church st Shipston on S to a modern day industrial estate! It prompted me to search for other Bells in CC. there is only one,a John Bell of Scotland, lodger. Fellow lodgers were a draper (seems to be one of only two in the town, Mary at the time was a drapers assistant) and the house was owned by a family called Hands. She married a William Beesley of Coventry in 1853 who lived next door to a family of that name. Indeed, years later Mary's son marrried Charlotte Hands from next door whom she had taught to play the piano!
Coincidence, maybe, but might explain how on earth she managed to meet William who presumably worked from home.
Sue x
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Vera2010
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28 Mar 2011 01:56 |
SJB
On Durham Records Online the father of Mary Bell born 18 December 1825 at Eggleston.is said to be a gardener. Is this the same Edward who was later married to Ann?
Vera
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KathleenBell
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28 Mar 2011 00:22 |
If you go on Google maps and use Street View you can see the houses in Church Street.
On the census the Bell's lived in the sixth household after the Eight Bells Inn. This Inn and the houses in Church Street look as though they have been there for a long time so could be the same ones where she lived.
Kath. x
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SJB
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27 Mar 2011 23:06 |
Wow - thanks mgnv! I will check if the road still exists - i would love to know what sort of house she was living at..
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mgnv
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27 Mar 2011 21:52 |
Mary's not really living at Shipston on Stour - the 1851 addy is Church St, Chipping Campden (which happens to lie in Shipston on Stour Rego District). It's abt 12km W of Shipston on Stour.
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SJB
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27 Mar 2011 16:59 |
Thank you again everyone - lots of things to think about there. Didn'r know about Ingress Abbey being rebuilt, and the info on civil engineering I would never have found out for myself . It is all really interesting stuff. I have a feeling Ann was seperated from Edward as I have traced her through the census' and she seems to become poorer as the years go by. The one I am actually researching is the Mary Bell living at Shipston on Stour , maybe Ancestry has it down as Chipping Camden? I know her whereabouts from 1851 - she married a Coventry watchmaker called William Beesley - but no one seems to have details on her antecedants except what we have found of Edward Senior, her father who at the time of her marriage in 1853 was iving at Melvin Street Bradford (which doesn't seem to exist), and from her birth record Dec 1825 at Egglestone Durham, mother was named Elizabeth. I guess the family did not live in Durham as Mary did not know the correct spelling of Egglestone until a later census. Family gossip states that she was well born and educated but disinherited for possibly running away with a servant.. Others of her descendants were told that her story was the inspiration for Lady Chatterley... Hmm, juries out on that one! But I would love to find her mother and fathers families and also where she was herself in the 1841 census - trouble is there were so many Mary Bells! Anyway thank you all for your help, best wishes, Sue
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patchem
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27 Mar 2011 12:17 |
Thanks for census info, Vera. If you look at how the enumerator has written Scholar, the S there is very pointed at the top. For the word in question, it is almost nearer to a T, but probably must be Sub
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Vera2010
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27 Mar 2011 09:58 |
For reference. Looks like sub architect#s wife.
1851 England Census about Ann Bell Name: Ann Bell Age: 37 Estimated Birth Year: abt 1814 Relation: Wife Gender: F (Female) Where born: Gravsenend, Kent, England Civil parish: Chipping Campden County/Island: Gloucestershire Country: England Street Address:
Occupation:
Condition as to marriage:
Disability: View image Registration district: Shipston On Stour Sub-registration district: Campden ED, institution, or vessel: 9b and 10b Neighbors: View others on page Household schedule number: 42 Household Members: Name Age Ann Bell 37 Mary Bell 25 Eller Bell 12 Jane Bell 4
View original image View
Vera
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Vera2010
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27 Mar 2011 09:51 |
Same here Patchem. I think the pop-up box on Ancestry said Worcestershire. Not in Chelsea with husband.
Vera
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patchem
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27 Mar 2011 08:37 |
Tried to find your reference to read the census, but did not show up on ancestry. Was she born or living in Shipston on Stour, and is that Warwickshire? Sorry to be a nuisance.
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mgnv
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27 Mar 2011 06:53 |
I think it would refer to an Architect's Asst.
Much earlier in the 18th cent, the Inst of Civil Engineers was founded. Its first president was Thomas Telford, who trained as an architect, but was most widely known as a civil engineer, building the Menai Straits Suspension Bridge, the Caledonian Canal, St Katherines Docks (now yacht basin) by Tower Bridge, and improving the A5 - a typical range of civil engineering projects - in the US the Army Corps of Engineers is responsible for dams and dredging inland waterways. Telford did do classical architectural work, too. He produced a master plan that was used to provide "parlamentary" churches to abt 40 churchless parishes.
The Civil Eng Dept labs (at Brunel U) are named the Joseph Bazalgette Laboratories (or JBL) in honour of one the outstanding civil engineers of the Victorian Period. Sir Joseph Bazalgette’s is most noted for constructing London's Sewerage System.
These are just a couple of examples illustrating the use of Civil Engineer by 1820 and later (thru today).
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