Exactly 450 years ago, the Rising of the North or Northern Rebellion of 1569 was reaching its crisis, as readers of Chris Lloyd's recent piece in the Northern Echo will know. Don't miss it! It tells the story of the siege of Barnard Castle and gives the numbers of County Durham men who were hanged after the Rising when Elizabeth I took her savage vengeance.
In Cleveland, Thomas Layton of Sexhow was a Queen's man and he played a part in the suppression of the Rising. For the full story, check out my account of his cousin Thomas Milner of Skutterskelfe: the life & times of a Tudor gentleman.
And when you travel along the road between Hutton Rudby and Stokesley, remember the man from the tiny hamlet of Braworth who was hanged there for his role in the Rebellion.
from Hutton Rudby to Stokesley, Guisborough, Whitby ... and beyond the county ...
Friday, 29 November 2019
Sunday, 3 November 2019
More on Joseph Honeyman (d 1848)
Dave Honneyman has just contacted me to say that the Joseph Honeyman of my last post (the seaman who died of cholera on board the brig Zephyr in the West Dock at Hartlepool at the end of October 1848) was, as I thought, the son of Thomas Honeyman and Ann Whorlton and it was Joseph who appeared in the Hutton Rudby census of 1841 as a cartwright's apprentice.
Dave tells me that Joseph's cousin Thomas joined the Navy in 1844 and he wonders if that was the reason that Joseph went to sea.
Thank you, Dave! So nice to hear from you. Anybody researching the Honeyman family should check out the information that Dave sent me in 2013, which can be found here: Honeymans and Whorltons.
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