The connection between Hutton Rudby and the Bathursts began in the first half of the 17th century with the founder of the family fortunes, Dr John Bathurst.
Dr John Bathurst (d 1659)
from Hutton Rudby to Stokesley, Guisborough, Whitby ... and beyond the county ...
The connection between Hutton Rudby and the Bathursts began in the first half of the 17th century with the founder of the family fortunes, Dr John Bathurst.
Dr John Bathurst (d 1659)
I've only just caught up (two years late) with reading this excellent book on the sinking of HMS Aboukir, Hogue and Cressy on 22 September 1914 by a single German U-boat.
Not to be missed by anybody interested in the First World War.
Klaudie Bartelink's poignant film about the cruisers, with amazingly beautiful footage of the wrecks, can be seen at
https://www.dutchmaritimeproductions.com/portfolio-item/live-bait-squadron/
This is an article from my blog The Engineering Hopkinsons. It is set in Manchester and it's called
'Henry Burnett & Fanny Dickens at the Rusholme Road Chapel'
The unaccompanied hymns at the Chapel (see The Rusholme Road Chapel & the Rev James Griffin) had always been plain and hearty, led by a rudimentary choir. But at the beginning of the 1840s two musicians, fresh from London and the stage, had joined the congregation and, as their contribution to church life, formed a new and inspiring small choir to lead the singing.
They were Henry and Fanny Burnett, the two young people mentioned in the chapter 'Becoming a member of the Rusholme Road Chapel'. Theirs was a world beyond John Hopkinson's imaginings. He was 59 when he first went to the theatre in 1883 and seemed to his son and daughter-in-law to be fairly baffled by it, while his wife dared not tell his sister Elizabeth, "she would have been so shocked."
Henry and Fanny Burnett came to Manchester after the baptism of their second son in London in the middle of May 1841. Three or four weeks after settling in, they were walking along the Rusholme Road one Sunday evening when they saw the lights of the Chapel and the people going in. They followed and were shown to seats. Something – they could never say exactly what it was – impressed them deeply with the earnest wish to come again. At the end of the service, Fanny had turned to Henry and said, "Henry, do let us come here again: if you will come, I will always come with you." He was quite taken aback because she had never said anything like this before.
For him, a Nonconformist service was a coming home. He had been an acclaimed and successful operatic tenor, trained in music from an early age – at the age of ten he had stood on a table to sing a solo in the Brighton Pavilion to the Court and seen the old king George IV, gout-ridden and wrapped in bandages. But though his father had been persuaded by a friend that the boy's voice was too good to be wasted, that he could make an excellent living from it, it was reluctantly because theirs was a Nonconformist family. Henry had lived until the age of seven with a pious grandmother and aunt and their early teachings left a lasting impression on him. And so his success in the world of music had become less and less fulfilling. He was, as Mr Griffin wrote in his memoirs
gradually coming to feel the emptiness of worldly pleasure, and to yearn in his "secret heart" after more substantial satisfaction
In the end, he could no longer bear the contradiction between the life he was leading and what he felt to be right. He decided to leave the stage and make his living from teaching. He and his wife were advised that Manchester was the place to go, as music was highly appreciated there.
Fanny Burnett wrote to Mr Griffin in these early days that
I was brought up in the Established Church, but I regret to say, without any serious ideas of religion
but of that evening in the Rusholme Road Chapel, she said
More or less all through the service, I seemed in a state of mind altogether new to me; and during the sermon it was as if I were entering a new world.
Her old world had been very different. She was the elder sister of Charles Dickens. In the Rev James Griffin's description of her new life in the chapel we can see the distinctive world of John Hopkinson and his family.
![]() |
Fanny Dickens, 1836 |
Fanny (1810-48) and Charles (1812-70) were born in Portsmouth, the first of the large family of John Dickens, a pay-clerk in the Navy Pay Office, and his wife Elizabeth Barrow.
In 1822 John Dickens was posted to London where Fanny was one of the fortunate children to get a place at the newly established Royal Academy of Music at its opening in March 1823, where she studied piano and singing. The fees were 38 guineas a year, which wasn't cheap – as is recorded in A History of the Royal Academy of Music (1922), one of the committee members wrote to another, "we find that there are a great many schools where children do not pay so much".
At this point, her parents' Micawber-like attitude to money, their habit of living beyond their means, caught up with them. In September 1823, to save school fees and boost the family finances they sent their bright little 11 year old boy Charles to work in Warren's boot-blacking factory at Hungerford Stairs, an experience which Michael Allen has shown lasted for one year and which certainly marked him for life. (His argument is to be found in this article on the National Archives website).
Last year I began a new blog called 'The Engineering Hopkinsons'.
In 1848 she married John Hopkinson, millwright and engineer of Manchester, and they had a large family. Three of their four sons were engineers:
John Hopkinson FRS was a noted physicist, electrical engineer and professor who died untimely with three of his children in a climbing accident in the Alps.
Edward Hopkinson, engineer and MP, designed the first City & South London Railway's electric locomotives
Charles Hopkinson was a consulting engineer. With his nephew Bertram Hopkinson and Ernest Talbot, they worked on the electrification of the Newcastle upon Tyne and Leeds tramway systems
Sir Alfred Hopkinson, John and Alice's second son, was the only one to follow the arts rather than the sciences. He was a lawyer, academic and MP
Albert Hopkinson, the youngest son, was a general practitioner and influential teacher of anatomy.
Introduction
On Monday 7 February 1848, four days before his 24th birthday, a young engineer called John Hopkinson wrote his first and only letter of proposal of marriage
My dear Miss Dewhirst,
I wish to ask you one question, one which I have never proposed to any other, soliciting for it a patient consideration, because your answer may possibly affect your own happiness, and is to me an object of deepest concern. Most respectfully yet most anxiously I ask, Will you be mine?
He had come to know Alice Dewhurst – in his anxiety, he misspells her surname in his carefully written letter – when she came to Manchester on visits to her married sister Ellen. From the start he had been attracted by her "intelligence, unaffected piety, and genuine worth." Admiration and esteem had become love, "deep and fervent." He had never spoken to her about it because, as an apprentice and then an employee of Messrs Wren & Bennett, Millwrights & Engineers, he wasn't in a position to look after a wife. Now he was a partner in the firm. Casting aside formality, he wrote
I do love you. I am yours devotedly. Dearest let me call you my Alice and the future shall bear witness to the fervency of my gratitude.
His proposal wasn't made lightly – deep feelings, long thought and prayer lay behind it. His closing words were
In tendering to you my warmest affections and in soliciting a return I have taken council of my own heart, but not less have I sought direction from God. To His guidance I commend you, confident that in His hands the result will be right even though it should blast my most fondly cherished hopes – for He is wiser than men.
Ever am IYours very sincerelyJohn Hopkinson
That Friday, on his birthday, he visited her at her parents' home in Skipton and they were engaged. They were married seven months later in the Zion Chapel in Skipton. They remained a devoted, loving couple until John's death in 1902.
Goathland. Parish and village of N.R. Yorkshire, England. It is 8 m. S.W. of Whitby, on the N.E. Rly. Here is a cottage colony for disabled officers. Goathland Moor lies 2 m. S. of the village, and is noted for its cataracts. Pop. 519.
In the second half of the 19th century when Middlesbrough – Gladstone's "Infant Hercules" – boomed from a farmhouse to an important industrial town in the space of decades, solicitors played a significant part in the business and private life of the borough.
Among the solicitors of Middlesbrough, Stockton and Darlington were firms that, in 1990, amalgamated to make the present firm of Messrs Jacksons. Their history up to the Second World War is set out below.
Their history up to 1990, together with deeds and documents relating to the constituent firms of Messrs Meek, Stubbs & Barnley and the Meek family, have been deposited at Teesside Archives.
The dates in brackets after the names of practitioners are the dates of admission as a solicitor. I have set out some brief biographical details at the end of each section in which a solicitor first appears. They come from a variety of backgrounds and from across the country.
JACKSONS, MONK & ROWE
1876 Gilbert Benjamin Jackson (1876) first practising as Solicitor and Attorney at 42 Albert Road, Middlesbrough
1878 Gilbert Benjamin Jackson and his brother Francis Henry Jackson (1872) practising as Jackson & Jackson in Middlesbrough, Loftus and Saltburn
1892 Jackson & Jackson practising also at 61 Lincoln's Inn, London
1896 Gilbert Benjamin Jackson and Francis Henry Jackson with James Bell Stothart practising as Jackson, Jackson & Stothart at 23 Coleman Street, London and at Middlesbrough
1899 Philip Henry Monk (1898) with Jackson & Jackson in Middlesbrough and subsequently in London.
1901 Loftus practice sold to Henry Hoggart
1904 London office sold to Elwell & Binford Hole
1906 Philip Henry Monk a partner in Jackson & Jackson
1907 Gilbert Benjamin Jackson, Francis Henry Jackson, Francis's son Basil Jackson (1905) and Philip Henry Monk practising as Jackson & Jackson in Middlesbrough
Name of firm changed to Jackson & Monk
1920 Death of Basil Jackson from war wounds
1930 Death of Francis Jackson
1931 Retirement of Gilbert Jackson
1933 Herbert Edward Rowe (1928) partner in Jackson & Monk with Philip Henry Monk
1938 Firm became Jacksons, Monk & Rowe
Anyone researching the life of a commercial traveller in the early 19th century may be interested in letters now deposited at North Yorkshire County Record Office.
Among the papers of John Leslie ("Jack") Mackinlay of Pinchinthorpe Hall near Guisborough and Simonstone Hall near Hawes were letters written by his great-great-grandfather John William Nicholson Storr.
John William Nicholson Storr was born in 1781 and he married Elizabeth ("Betsey") Maine on 30 December 1816 at St Mary Magdalene's, Bermondsey. The first of the letters was written the following August, when Betsey was staying in Margate, and the last of them dates from January 1842, with John describing a North Sea passage. These are loving letters home, often written over several days, from a travelling salesman, recounting his news, his journeys, accounts of Betsey's family, and instructions for the home.
The list below gives the date on which John Storr began his letter, the address to which he sent it, and a little excerpt from the letter:
"My love My dear Betsey. I have just returned from walking on the Walls of this City, it being here a very fine day, I have only known the want of the Company of my Wife to have participated in my observations of this Curious Ancient City, and to have enjoyed the pleasure of Her expressing the delights I know she would have felt beholding the distant View of the Welch Mountains … My dear this City contains the Antientest [ancientest] looking Houses I ever saw and is all together the strangest place I ever saw … I am sorry to hear that you was so very unwell on your passage … pray Betsey do not bathe if you find yourself inclined at all to be unwell, as it will do you great injury ..."