Update 4 July 2014: for information on Jacques-Emile Blanche, see Artist in Focus (July 2014) on the Public Catalogue Foundation website
from Hutton Rudby to Stokesley, Guisborough, Whitby ... and beyond the county ...
Friday, 4 July 2014
Jacques-Emile Blanche
I've just added this update to the post on The 'Skirt Dance' of the two Savile Clarke girls:
Tuesday, 1 July 2014
Letters Patent of James VI & I
This is a Licence to Alienate. These Letters Patent of King James VI & I gave Ralph Stowpe permission in 1616 to sell to Robert Layton a cottage, toft & croft, 2 oxgangs & 19 ½ acres of land in the area of Marske, Upleatham and Redcar.
The Great Seal is a little battered. This is the reverse of the deed and the seal:
At some point this deed came into the hands of Middlesbrough solicitor Thomas Duncan Henlock Stubbs. He took it to the noted scholar and antiquarian Thomas McAll Fallow at Coatham House.
Mr Fallow was born in 1847 and educated at Brighton College and St John's, Cambridge. He originally intended to take Holy Orders but instead divided his time between parish work and scholarship. He acted as layhelper to his cousin the Rev R B Kirby at Chapel Allerton, Leeds between 1872 and 1885, and then moved to Coatham where again he was active in the parish but primarily devoted his time to archaeology. He was editor of The Reliquary and The Antiquary, and died in 1910. Here is his letter to Stubbs:
And this is his transcription of the Letters Patent:
Friday, 27 June 2014
Tuesday, 24 June 2014
Thomas Graham of Ayton Hall & his family
More notes on Thomas Graham.
For this information I am very grateful to Trevor Littleton of the Cumbria FHS:-
The parents of Monkhouse & Thomas Graham were Thomas Graham and Ann Bell. She was the sister of William Bell of Tarraby Farm.
Margaret Graham, sister of Monkhouse & Thomas, married James Maguire, a cattle dealer from Co Antrim. In 1841 their daughter Mary Ann married James Forster, who farmed at Tarraby.
When Mary Ann Forster's mother Margaret Maguire died aged 70 in 1850 ("deeply regretted, and most deservedly respected. She was an affectionate parent and a sincere friend to the poor" according to the notice in the Carlisle Journal) she was living at The Beeches, Tarraby. When Mary Ann Forster writes to her uncle Thomas Graham of repairs to the house, it appears that she is referring to work being done to The Beeches. The builders were apparently still at work when the house was put up for let:
For this information I am very grateful to Trevor Littleton of the Cumbria FHS:-
The parents of Monkhouse & Thomas Graham were Thomas Graham and Ann Bell. She was the sister of William Bell of Tarraby Farm.
Margaret Graham, sister of Monkhouse & Thomas, married James Maguire, a cattle dealer from Co Antrim. In 1841 their daughter Mary Ann married James Forster, who farmed at Tarraby.
When Mary Ann Forster's mother Margaret Maguire died aged 70 in 1850 ("deeply regretted, and most deservedly respected. She was an affectionate parent and a sincere friend to the poor" according to the notice in the Carlisle Journal) she was living at The Beeches, Tarraby. When Mary Ann Forster writes to her uncle Thomas Graham of repairs to the house, it appears that she is referring to work being done to The Beeches. The builders were apparently still at work when the house was put up for let:
Carlisle Journal, Friday 8th November 1850Mary Ann died only a few years after she wrote to her uncle:
To be LET, and Entered upon immediately , an excellent DWELLING HOUSE &c, situate at TARRABY, the residence of the late Mrs. MAGUIRE; consisting of Parlour, Kitchens, Pantry, and other conveniences with Four good Lodging Rooms, Orchard, and Kitchen Garden – For particulars, apply to Mr. JAS. FOSTER, Tarraby; or Mr. CHAS. ARMSTRONG, Builder, Carlisle.
Rent Moderate.
Tarraby, Nov. 7th 1850.
Carlisle Journal, Friday 17th February 1854
At Tarraby, on the 7th inst., Mary Ann wife of Mr James Foster, aged 43, and the last of the family of the late Mr. James Maguire.I don't know whether Thomas Graham is remembered in any monument or tomb at Great Ayton, but he is certainly commemorated in his native Cumbria. There is a monumental inscription to Thomas Graham of Ayton Hall inside Stanwix church.
2 March 2021: I've just realised that I should have added this information quite some time ago
For more on the Graham family of Knockupworth, see Knockupworth: The story of a family by John Bainbridge (details here)
Monday, 23 June 2014
Thomas Graham of Ayton Hall
Some decades later, the occupants were Thomas Graham and his family. He was living in Great Ayton by 1811 and was at the Hall for the censuses of 1840, 1850 and 1860.
Thomas was born in Cumberland in about 1777. He was the son of Thomas and Ann Graham of Knockupworth House near Carlisle (which I assume is the building now called Knockupworth Hall)
In 1805, Thomas's elder brother Monkhouse Graham died, some weeks after making his Will. He was probably in his late thirties and left neither wife nor child. His beneficiaries were his mother Ann and his siblings Thomas, Letitia, Mary and Margaret. They shared the money he had made as a merchant in Liverpool and the property he had bought in Tarraby in the parish of Stanwix, just north of Carlisle.
First page of copy Will of Monkhouse Graham |
Last page of copy Will of Monkhouse Graham |
Thursday, 19 June 2014
The Nunthorpe W.I. Drama Group in action
Here they are performing Paolo & Francesca in 1939:
I wonder if they were performing the 1902 play by Stephen Phillips.
I wonder if they were performing the 1902 play by Stephen Phillips.
Saturday, 14 June 2014
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