A rich tapestry

April 19, 2013

My family history (1)

Since retirement I've had time to work on my family history project which has been made easier because my late mother kept a record on her side of the family, I have a line called 'a pedigree' on my father's side going back to the 16th and 17th centuries because of some well-documented ancestors and I'm in contact with cousins who are also family history research enthusiasts.

The items that I've inherited from both sides of the family make the documented research come to life. However, it's my father's side of the family that I'm going to write about in this post as I've been thinking about each member since going down to the southern counties at the weekend.

My father and his siblings were born in what used to be a small Thames Valley market town.  His father and the generations before that came from rural Hampshire and his mother's family came from an equally rural environment in West Berkshire and before that from the county of Wiltshire.

The 17th century ancestors were cloth merchants who gravitated to Richmond upon Thames and Twickenham, London were benefactors in education, notaries, scriveners and some were in the social circle of Samuel Pepys, the diarist and one was a witness when his will was written.  All very interesting, but naturally I feel more connected to the Victorian and Edwardian family having known members who lived through the drastic changes of the late 19th century and the early to mid 20th century.




Thomas and Mary, my great grandparents and my grandfather, Thomas Henry, with his oldest sister, Alice.
(Thomas Henry married my grandmother, Helen May, and had two girls before going off to the Front in WWI where he died from his wounds some days after my father, Thomas, was born, not knowing that my grandmother had delivered a son and is buried in a war cemetery in northern France).

Later, my grandmother, Helen May, married a widower and had two more children, but her husband, weakened by his war experiences, also died and my father and his two half siblings were sent to a Methodist boarding school in Hampshire.

Alice and Thomas Henry had other siblings, Louisa who died when she was 12 years old, and Emily and Edith - the great aunts that I wrote about who gave me the doll, Queenie.


Unlike Emily and Edith, Alice married, had one child, Edith Emily, and lived in the house where I grew up from the age of 10 years.  (Edith Emily lived with the two unmarried aunts (who moved to the family home when her parents died) and she also lived there with us when they died as she needed support due to health issues from birth).


                                                         Alice as a young woman.
                                     
     
                           


Here are some of the sewing and knitting items belonging to my great aunts, such as the tape measure holder in the shape of a butter churn, wooden needle case, bone crochet hooks and knitting needles and a sewing set in the shape of a velveteen shoe.

But one of the items I treasure most, as well as the photograph albums, the family prayer books and Bibles, is this faded sampler worked by Alice.




Some of these women family members were employed in the offices and in retail in a very genteel boot and shoe business, which was still very old-fashioned until near the end of the 20th century with cash containers that whizzed above the client's head on wires from the retail floor to the cashier's cubicle- like office.  The last of these family-run businesses in Reading has recently disappeared. It was a more personal and enjoyable way of shopping for a more leisurely way of life and very different to the busy, waterside, retail centre in the heart of town where we had a family celebratory birthday meal last weekend!

April 16, 2013

Down by the river


Whenever I go back to my home county I like to spend some time by the stretch of the Thames where I grew up and on Sunday we went to Caversham Court which is a public garden on the north bank of the river near the county town of Reading.  On the opposite bank are the boathouses for the local rowing club, the town promenade where my family used to come and picnic or sometimes take a trip on a pleasure boat run by a company that has been trading for many generations. The advertisement (below) was taken from one of my collection of old information books about Berkshire, published in 1901.


 


Going to feed the swans is a popular outing by the river and it has become a tradition when the Yorkshire cousins meet up with their Berkshire cousin (who took this photo).


                                                     We saw the black swan again...


                                                           and some fungi.



St. Peter's Church was built in the 12th century and the medieval community of Caversham developed around it.  The old rectory known as Caversham Court was originally a Tudor timber-framed building that was replaced in the mid 1800s by one designed by A.W. Pugin.
The gardens were laid out in the 17th century as a private retreat surrounding the house.  In the 1930s the grounds were first open to the public and in recent years some restoration work has taken place in different areas of the garden where the terraces and lawns go down to the river bank.


  There are many old trees in the gardens, including this mulberry.


The green clumps in the tree are clumps of mistletoe. It can be seen everywhere in the area.
                   

                                         Flint and brick are typical local building materials


There's a small cafe in a part of the stable block and the present rectory with the tall chimneys is on the other side of the screen wall.  There are many other old buildings and features in the grounds that we will, hopefully, return to see another time.



April 15, 2013

Monday miscellany

                                                        River Thames, Berkshire


It's good to see the Spring flowers appearing in our garden and when we went down to Berkshire for a weekend recently.

                                                    Our Spring flowers and Gino
 
                                      More spring flowers and Brian, our daughter's cat.