... from my working notes ... accuracy not guaranteed ... for explanatory note, see post of 14 Feb 2013
Kavenagh
The wages of Mr and Mrs Kavenagh are listed in Barlow’s Notebook
Kay
7 Apr 1806: Robert Balier of Rudby & East Rounton marr Elizabeth Passman of Rudby at East Rounton [witnesses Wm Wood, Matthew Appleton, Eliza Kay and Hary Passman] [PRs]
28 Feb 1796: bap of Ann Kay, daughter of Matthew & Hannah at HR
14 May 1810: house & garth and garth: Tipping & Wardell exors of Thos Wayne to Thomas Eland: house & garth 1a 2r 28p occupied by Eland, bounded by street to S, river Leven to N, Francis Tweddle & Francis Stainthorpe to E, and Christopher Sleigh to W; garth 1r 28p on north side of Hutton, formerly occ by Hannah Kay widow, now by Thomas Eland, bounded by B D Suggitt to S, Thomas Jackson to E, street to W and Isaac Whorlton to N
12 Jun 1807: Martha Kay, daughter of Elizabeth, baptised – her father was George Bewick, and her parents married four years later
12 Mar 1809: Matthew Kay, son of Elizabeth, baptised – this is presumably the boy later known as Matthew Bewick (qv)
11 Feb 1811: George Bewick married Elizabeth Kay [witnesses: John Brown, John Howe, Robert Codling, John Cook, Robt Cook, John Jackson]
23 Sep 1811: John Kay married Mary Quanbrough [niece of Arthur Douglas] [witnesses: Hannah Kay, Ann Kay, Wm Frankland, Geo Brigham]
21 Aug 1817: burial of Mary Kay
13 Aug 1818: John Bainbridge married Ann Kay [witnesses: John Kay, Susanna Bainbridge, Sarah Sigwick, Robt Hall]
7 Oct 1819: John Kay married Susannah Bainbridge [witnesses: John Armstrong, Ann Orton, Joseph Young, William Hebbron, Sarah Hebbron]
1823 Baines: Hutton: John Kay, wheelwright
GA 84: 3 Mar 1826: Will of Arthur Douglas of Skutterskelfe, gardener: his house, weavers shops & garth lying contiguous, now occ by George Wright and others, and his 2 cottages now occ by Hannah Kay & [ - ] Peacock: beneficiaries: Alvey Kay and Catherine Kay, children of testator’s late niece Mary Kay, and testator’s sisters Alice Scorer and Ann Hutton decd
FQ 249: 13 & 14 Mar 1829: exors of Wayne to Barker: the Carpenters Arms with the cartwrights shop and stable on the west end thereof, the garden and the privy on the south & backside of the premises, bounded by road to East Rounton to E, by Mrs Elizabeth Hildreth to W & S, by road to East Rounton, John Robinson and Mr Farnaby to N – occ by Edward Meynell; the garth occ by Edward Meynell, bounded by Elizabeth Hildreth to E, by John Burdon to W, by Thomas Passman, Elizabeth Hildreth, Mr Kendall & William Spence to N, by road to East Rounton to S; the site where buildings lately occupied by John & Hannah Kay & taken down by Mark Barker stood; the garth now used as garden ground to the E & backside of the sd site; the new houses built by Mark Barker on the site and part of the garth: some of the houses and the garden ground “at present unoccupied”, the others occupied by Robert Hall, William Souter, George Sanderson, John Kay, Mary Lamb, Jackson Richardson, John Wild and Thomas Shaw: bounded by house & lands bel to Rev Richard Shepherd to E & S, by Arthur Douglas and townstreet to N & W
John Kay and Hannah Kay occupied property before 1829 which was demolished by Mark Barker to build Barkers Row. He then lived in Barkers Row. Arthur Douglas left his estate to his niece Mary Kay on his death in Dec 1831, and John Kay is the owner and occupier in the Tithe Map
John Kay and John Colebeck sold a former coachhouse to Mark Barker in 1830
FT 30: 12 & 13 May 1830: East Side: John Kay of Hutton cartwright & others to Mark Barker & trustees: house heretofore used as a coachhouse & formerly occ by James Ingledew, Mary Collyerson & Diana Swales, then by Elizabeth Farnaby, then by Charles Hall, then by Hannah Best, & now by Matthew Garbutt: bounded by street to E, Mark Barker to W & S, Arthur Douglas to N
late July 1830: John Kaye, cartwright, “knew Wm Huntley. About the time he disappeared I was sat upon Edward Taylor’s step, near the prisoner’s house. I saw Dalkin go to his house and come back again. Prisoner followed Dalkin out; he stood against the door cheek and said to me – “That gentleman’s been at my house asking for Huntley. He’ll neither find him at my house, nor at Whitby, nor nowhere else.” [Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 1842]
11 Jun 1838: William Sherwood 35 butcher, son of John Sherwood, farmer, married Martha Kay 31, daughter of George Bewick, linen manufacturer [witnesses: Henry Bainbridge, Matthew Bewick]
1840 Whites: Hutton Rudby: wheelwrights &c: John Kay & Alvey Kay
1841 Census: John Kay 55 cartwright, Susanna 50, Alvey 25 journeyman cartwright, Catharine 25, with Reuben Bainbridge 85, Joseph Brittain 35 brickmaker, John Heath 20 brickmaker and Hannah Bainbridge 19 servant, East Side
1851 Census: North Side: Thomas Kay 23 plumber & glazier b Osmotherley and wife Martha 24 b Helmsley
1851 Census: Enterpen: Lucy Kay married 48 retired grocer b Helmsley
1872 Post Office Directory: Hutton Rudby: Alvey Kay, joiner & builder
from Hutton Rudby to Stokesley, Guisborough, Whitby ... and beyond the county ...
Saturday, 13 April 2013
Tuesday, 9 April 2013
People of Hutton Rudby in the C18/19: Jackson to Jowsey
... from my working notes ... accuracy not guaranteed ... for explanatory note, see post of 14 Feb 2013
Jackson
John Jackson 1743-1808 was the master of Hutton Rudby School (see schoolmasters)
5 Jun 1790: Let the Ordinary be Cautious that no licence be granted to James Hird to teach a Petty School in the Parish of Hutton Rudby in the Diocese of York till John Jackson the licensed Schoolmaster to the Established School there be first called or William Ashwith Notary Public his Proctor who entered this Caveat the fifth day of June in the year of our Lord 1790 [Borthwick Faculties etc 1769-93]
7 Dec 1797: HR: William Surtees married Eden Dodds; witnesses: Thomas & Mary Jackson, Ann Brigham, John Eland, Thomas Hird and Elizabeth Catchaside
1799 Jno Jackson paid a salary of One Guinea “for playing on the Violin Cello in Church time”
Yorkshire Poll Book 1807: Hutton Rudby: Thomas Jackson tailor
15 Dec 1809: William Jackson born Hutton (godparents John Meynell, Sarah Bainbridge) baptised RC
14 May 1810: house & garth and garth: Tipping & Wardell exors of Thos Wayne to Thomas Eland: house & garth 1a 2r 28p occupied by Eland, bounded by street to S, river Leven to N, Francis Tweddle & Francis Stainthorpe to E, and Christopher Sleigh to W; garth 1r 28p on north side of Hutton, formerly occ by Hannah Kay widow, now by Thomas Eland, bounded by B D Suggitt to S, Thomas Jackson to E, street to W and Isaac Whorlton to N
4 Jan 1817: Oliver Jackson, son of Thomas & Elizabeth, weaver, Hutton, was baptised. This appears to be the Primitive Methodist minister mentioned in 1887
Oliver Jackson occupied the Whorltons’ house on North Side before it was occupied by Major Shout. Thomas Jackson owned property further east on North Side, owned and occupied by William Jackson in the Tithe Map.
EB 412: 21 & 22 Mar 1817: ppty on North Side: Thos & Jos Whorlton (1) Wm Whorlton (2), late in occ of Oliver Jackson
EH 212 & EG 295: relate to the same ppty: a house which had been divided into two tenements and in 1818 was “lately occupied in four different tenements or dwellinghouses”: tenants were previously Jane Whorlton & her tenants William Easby, Oliver Jackson & William Honeyman; tenants were in 1818 William Honeyman, Thomas Graham, Robert Walton and Robert Codling: bounded to E by Christopher Flintoff decd, to S & W by townstreet, to N by David Simpson decd
EO 107: 11 & 12 Aug 1820: land near Jakebarn, recently puchased by Thomas Jackson from Simon Kelsey: parties: Thomas Jackson of Hutton tailor, Robert Brigham of Rudby gent & William Wood of Hutton yeoman, John Jackson of City of Durham innkeeper, and William Jackson of Hutton tailor
EP 148: 3 Feb 1821: mortgage to Wm Whorlton by John Shout: house previously occupied by Oliver Jackson and now by Major Shout, land and weaver’s shop
ET 257: 2 & 3 Jan 1823: garth, orchard & houses, probably North End: Thomas Jackson was an occupier
ET 258: 7 & 8 Jan 1823: southern part of land occ by Mundell and bought by him from Simon Kelsey: parties: George Mundell of Hutton gardener, John Thompson of Faceby yeoman, William Jackson of Hutton tailor, Robert Brigham of Rudby gent and William Wood of Hutton gent: bounded by land bought by John & Thomas Sidgwick from Sir Wm Hy Pennyman to E, by Mr Sanders and Mr Wigham to W, by northern part of land bel to Thomas & William Jackson to N, by Simon Kelsey to S
ET 293: 21 Mar 1823: sale of ppty of Samuel Hebbron late of Hutton nr Rudby butcher dealer & chapman now or late a prisoner in the gaol of the Castle of York: being the Shoulder of Mutton public house [predecessor of King’s Head], occ by Samuel Hebbron, then by David Hebbron & now by Robert Moss: bounded by Thomas Whorlton and Thomas Jackson, Thomas Cust, B D Sugget and Thomas Wayne to W and N, by street to S, by Thomas Jackson to E; also the stable; a close of 5a 2p bounded by William Wood to N, by William Dawson to E, W & S, and occupied by William Dawson; also land in Potto
26 Dec 1823: burial of Thomas Jackson 69
1823 Baines: Hutton: Nathaniel Jackson, baker
1823 Baines: Hutton: William Jackson, tailor, draper & hatter
FQ 434: 14 & 15 Apr 1829: Thomas Jackson occupied land belonging to Elizabeth Sleigh
FT 294: 26 & 27 Dec 1830: Jakebarn: Michael Sidgwick of Hutton yeoman & John Sidgwick jnr of Hutton farmer to William Jackson of Hutton tailor: a fenced off close of 1a called Jakebarn: previously occ by Richard Shepherd & now by his widow Ann: bounded by Isaac, Joseph & William Whorlton’s land to E, by land recently bought by QAB from vendors to W & N, by road to S
Churchwardens’ accounts 1830/1: Mr Jackson’s bill 1s 1d
Jackson
John Jackson 1743-1808 was the master of Hutton Rudby School (see schoolmasters)
5 Jun 1790: Let the Ordinary be Cautious that no licence be granted to James Hird to teach a Petty School in the Parish of Hutton Rudby in the Diocese of York till John Jackson the licensed Schoolmaster to the Established School there be first called or William Ashwith Notary Public his Proctor who entered this Caveat the fifth day of June in the year of our Lord 1790 [Borthwick Faculties etc 1769-93]
7 Dec 1797: HR: William Surtees married Eden Dodds; witnesses: Thomas & Mary Jackson, Ann Brigham, John Eland, Thomas Hird and Elizabeth Catchaside
1799 Jno Jackson paid a salary of One Guinea “for playing on the Violin Cello in Church time”
Yorkshire Poll Book 1807: Hutton Rudby: Thomas Jackson tailor
15 Dec 1809: William Jackson born Hutton (godparents John Meynell, Sarah Bainbridge) baptised RC
14 May 1810: house & garth and garth: Tipping & Wardell exors of Thos Wayne to Thomas Eland: house & garth 1a 2r 28p occupied by Eland, bounded by street to S, river Leven to N, Francis Tweddle & Francis Stainthorpe to E, and Christopher Sleigh to W; garth 1r 28p on north side of Hutton, formerly occ by Hannah Kay widow, now by Thomas Eland, bounded by B D Suggitt to S, Thomas Jackson to E, street to W and Isaac Whorlton to N
4 Jan 1817: Oliver Jackson, son of Thomas & Elizabeth, weaver, Hutton, was baptised. This appears to be the Primitive Methodist minister mentioned in 1887
Oliver Jackson occupied the Whorltons’ house on North Side before it was occupied by Major Shout. Thomas Jackson owned property further east on North Side, owned and occupied by William Jackson in the Tithe Map.
EB 412: 21 & 22 Mar 1817: ppty on North Side: Thos & Jos Whorlton (1) Wm Whorlton (2), late in occ of Oliver Jackson
EH 212 & EG 295: relate to the same ppty: a house which had been divided into two tenements and in 1818 was “lately occupied in four different tenements or dwellinghouses”: tenants were previously Jane Whorlton & her tenants William Easby, Oliver Jackson & William Honeyman; tenants were in 1818 William Honeyman, Thomas Graham, Robert Walton and Robert Codling: bounded to E by Christopher Flintoff decd, to S & W by townstreet, to N by David Simpson decd
EO 107: 11 & 12 Aug 1820: land near Jakebarn, recently puchased by Thomas Jackson from Simon Kelsey: parties: Thomas Jackson of Hutton tailor, Robert Brigham of Rudby gent & William Wood of Hutton yeoman, John Jackson of City of Durham innkeeper, and William Jackson of Hutton tailor
EP 148: 3 Feb 1821: mortgage to Wm Whorlton by John Shout: house previously occupied by Oliver Jackson and now by Major Shout, land and weaver’s shop
ET 257: 2 & 3 Jan 1823: garth, orchard & houses, probably North End: Thomas Jackson was an occupier
ET 258: 7 & 8 Jan 1823: southern part of land occ by Mundell and bought by him from Simon Kelsey: parties: George Mundell of Hutton gardener, John Thompson of Faceby yeoman, William Jackson of Hutton tailor, Robert Brigham of Rudby gent and William Wood of Hutton gent: bounded by land bought by John & Thomas Sidgwick from Sir Wm Hy Pennyman to E, by Mr Sanders and Mr Wigham to W, by northern part of land bel to Thomas & William Jackson to N, by Simon Kelsey to S
ET 293: 21 Mar 1823: sale of ppty of Samuel Hebbron late of Hutton nr Rudby butcher dealer & chapman now or late a prisoner in the gaol of the Castle of York: being the Shoulder of Mutton public house [predecessor of King’s Head], occ by Samuel Hebbron, then by David Hebbron & now by Robert Moss: bounded by Thomas Whorlton and Thomas Jackson, Thomas Cust, B D Sugget and Thomas Wayne to W and N, by street to S, by Thomas Jackson to E; also the stable; a close of 5a 2p bounded by William Wood to N, by William Dawson to E, W & S, and occupied by William Dawson; also land in Potto
26 Dec 1823: burial of Thomas Jackson 69
1823 Baines: Hutton: Nathaniel Jackson, baker
1823 Baines: Hutton: William Jackson, tailor, draper & hatter
FQ 434: 14 & 15 Apr 1829: Thomas Jackson occupied land belonging to Elizabeth Sleigh
FT 294: 26 & 27 Dec 1830: Jakebarn: Michael Sidgwick of Hutton yeoman & John Sidgwick jnr of Hutton farmer to William Jackson of Hutton tailor: a fenced off close of 1a called Jakebarn: previously occ by Richard Shepherd & now by his widow Ann: bounded by Isaac, Joseph & William Whorlton’s land to E, by land recently bought by QAB from vendors to W & N, by road to S
Churchwardens’ accounts 1830/1: Mr Jackson’s bill 1s 1d
Sunday, 7 April 2013
People of Hutton Rudby in the C18/19: Illegitimacy to Ingledew
... from my working notes ... accuracy not guaranteed ... for explanatory note, see post of 14 Feb 2013
Illegitimacy
As can be seen from these notes, there was considerable illegitimacy. Alan Marchant calculated it at
1762-71 43 per 1,000 births
1782-91 65 per 1,000 births
1812-21 100 per 1,000 births (when Rudby overseers began to keep a detailed and separate Bastardy Account)
1862-71 88 per 1,000 births
Imeson
FO 157: 12 Jul 1828: Baillieur’s remtge: Robert Tweddale the occupant of his house in Hutton and Richard Imenson the occupant of his house & farmlands in Hutton
1823 Baines: Hutton: John Imeson, shoemaker
1840 Whites: Hutton Rudby: John Imes [sic], boot & shoe maker
6 Oct 1840: Jane [transcript – in fact, Ann] Bewick 28, daughter of George Bewick, linen manufacturer, married John Imeson 21 shoemaker, son of John Imeson, shoemaker [witnesses: William Douglass, Matthew Bewick]
1841 Census: North End: John Imeson 55 shoe maker, Elizabeth 50, Elizabeth 20 dressmaker, Mary 15, Nicholson 15 shoemaker
1841 Census: John Imison 20 shoe maker and Ann 25, North End
1851 Census: North End: John Imeson 65 shoemaker b Masham, Elizabeth 63 b Potto, unmarried children Mary 28 and Nicholson 26 journeyman shoemaker, with granddaughter Jane Ann Imeson 8, all b Hutton
1851 Census: North End: Ann Imison 39 shoemakers widow with children Elizabeth Ann 9 and Robert 8, and visiting niece Jane Sherwood 12; all b Hutton
1872 Post Office Directory: Hutton Rudby: Nicholas Imeson, boot & shoe maker
John Imison jnr died 1(4) Dec 1843 a24, grave401 – not in PRs
Mary Imeson’s burial is jotted in Barlow’s Notebook as 28 Oct 1852, in the burials register as 28 Sep 1852, and on the death certificate her death is recorded as 4 Oct 1852. She was 30 years old, a labourer, daughter of John Imeson of Hutton who was present at her death of “hydrothorax certified”; deputy registrar Edwin James Wilson
Oddfellows Board: Bro: John Imison, Hutton, 14 Dec 1843, a24
Ingledew
DY 88 & ET 601: Sarah Ingledew was a tenant of Philip Gowland in the Bay Horse area pre-1816
14 Apr 1828: Margaret Cook married John Ingledew [witnesses: Robt Whorlton, Saml Hebbron]
FT 30: 12 & 13 May 1830: East Side: John Kay of Hutton cartwright & others to Mark Barker & trustees: house heretofore used as a coachhouse & formerly occ by James Ingledew, Mary Collyerson & Diana Swales, then by Elizabeth Farnaby, then by Charles Hall, then by Hannah Best, & now by Matthew Garbutt: bounded by street to E, Mark Barker to W & S, Arthur Douglas to N
15 & 16 Feb 1830: John Ingledew had occupied a house (or the north end of a house) which had lately been taken down and rebuilt by Edmund Taylor [East Side deeds]
James Ingledew was a former occupant of property, once used as a coachhouse, sold by Kay and Colebeck to Mark Barker in 1830
1841 Census: James Ingledew 80 ag lab and Easter 70, Enterpen
1841 Census: South Side: Mary Cook 59 linen weaver, Margaret Brusby 32 linen weaver, Robert Ingledew 12 and Joseph Ingledew 5
Ann Ingledew died 13 Mar 1843 a24 grave216 – not in PRs
Illegitimacy
As can be seen from these notes, there was considerable illegitimacy. Alan Marchant calculated it at
1762-71 43 per 1,000 births
1782-91 65 per 1,000 births
1812-21 100 per 1,000 births (when Rudby overseers began to keep a detailed and separate Bastardy Account)
1862-71 88 per 1,000 births
Imeson
FO 157: 12 Jul 1828: Baillieur’s remtge: Robert Tweddale the occupant of his house in Hutton and Richard Imenson the occupant of his house & farmlands in Hutton
1823 Baines: Hutton: John Imeson, shoemaker
1840 Whites: Hutton Rudby: John Imes [sic], boot & shoe maker
6 Oct 1840: Jane [transcript – in fact, Ann] Bewick 28, daughter of George Bewick, linen manufacturer, married John Imeson 21 shoemaker, son of John Imeson, shoemaker [witnesses: William Douglass, Matthew Bewick]
1841 Census: North End: John Imeson 55 shoe maker, Elizabeth 50, Elizabeth 20 dressmaker, Mary 15, Nicholson 15 shoemaker
1841 Census: John Imison 20 shoe maker and Ann 25, North End
1851 Census: North End: John Imeson 65 shoemaker b Masham, Elizabeth 63 b Potto, unmarried children Mary 28 and Nicholson 26 journeyman shoemaker, with granddaughter Jane Ann Imeson 8, all b Hutton
1851 Census: North End: Ann Imison 39 shoemakers widow with children Elizabeth Ann 9 and Robert 8, and visiting niece Jane Sherwood 12; all b Hutton
1872 Post Office Directory: Hutton Rudby: Nicholas Imeson, boot & shoe maker
John Imison jnr died 1(4) Dec 1843 a24, grave401 – not in PRs
Mary Imeson’s burial is jotted in Barlow’s Notebook as 28 Oct 1852, in the burials register as 28 Sep 1852, and on the death certificate her death is recorded as 4 Oct 1852. She was 30 years old, a labourer, daughter of John Imeson of Hutton who was present at her death of “hydrothorax certified”; deputy registrar Edwin James Wilson
Oddfellows Board: Bro: John Imison, Hutton, 14 Dec 1843, a24
Ingledew
DY 88 & ET 601: Sarah Ingledew was a tenant of Philip Gowland in the Bay Horse area pre-1816
14 Apr 1828: Margaret Cook married John Ingledew [witnesses: Robt Whorlton, Saml Hebbron]
FT 30: 12 & 13 May 1830: East Side: John Kay of Hutton cartwright & others to Mark Barker & trustees: house heretofore used as a coachhouse & formerly occ by James Ingledew, Mary Collyerson & Diana Swales, then by Elizabeth Farnaby, then by Charles Hall, then by Hannah Best, & now by Matthew Garbutt: bounded by street to E, Mark Barker to W & S, Arthur Douglas to N
15 & 16 Feb 1830: John Ingledew had occupied a house (or the north end of a house) which had lately been taken down and rebuilt by Edmund Taylor [East Side deeds]
James Ingledew was a former occupant of property, once used as a coachhouse, sold by Kay and Colebeck to Mark Barker in 1830
1841 Census: James Ingledew 80 ag lab and Easter 70, Enterpen
1841 Census: South Side: Mary Cook 59 linen weaver, Margaret Brusby 32 linen weaver, Robert Ingledew 12 and Joseph Ingledew 5
Ann Ingledew died 13 Mar 1843 a24 grave216 – not in PRs
Friday, 5 April 2013
An unusual Mortgage Deed
1876 Mortgage Deed |
This is a Mortgage Deed made on 25 October 1876 between Messrs Sharvell & Imeson and Albert James Smith, Esq., of a piece or parcel of ground situate near the Park, Middlesbrough, in the County of York.
The solicitor who drew up the Deed was Gilbert B Jackson of Middlesbro' and Lofthouse.
As you can see from the photograph, it looks strangely crisp.
It seems to have been damaged in a fire, which has shrunk it to a fraction of its former size so that it now measures only about 10cm by 9.5cm (about 4 inches by 3 ½ inches).
This is evidently what happens to parchment when cooked!
reverse of 1876 Mortgage Deed |
Tuesday, 2 April 2013
Honeymans and Whorltons
This information is from Dave Honneyman, for the benefit of people researching their Honeyman or Whorlton family history.
Dave tells me that they find themselves confronted by a particular problem dating from the early 19th century.
On 1 March 1818, Ann Whorlton’s baby boy George was baptised in Hutton Rudby. No father’s name was recorded, and he was baptised as George Whorlton.
On 17 August 1819, Ann Whorlton married Thomas Honeyman (George’s father?), and George grew up in their household.
Thereafter, young George’s surname seems to have alternated between Whorlton and Honeyman. He was George Whorlton on his marriage to Hannah Simpson, but George Honeyman for all the censuses. When his daughter Sarah married Andrew Dodsworth in 1877, freebmd.org records her surname as Whorlton (I don’t know whether researchers have obtained this marriage certificate), while an entry on familysearch (source not recorded) gives her surname as Honeyman. This has naturally led to confusion!
Dave concludes,
Dave tells me that they find themselves confronted by a particular problem dating from the early 19th century.
On 1 March 1818, Ann Whorlton’s baby boy George was baptised in Hutton Rudby. No father’s name was recorded, and he was baptised as George Whorlton.
On 17 August 1819, Ann Whorlton married Thomas Honeyman (George’s father?), and George grew up in their household.
Thereafter, young George’s surname seems to have alternated between Whorlton and Honeyman. He was George Whorlton on his marriage to Hannah Simpson, but George Honeyman for all the censuses. When his daughter Sarah married Andrew Dodsworth in 1877, freebmd.org records her surname as Whorlton (I don’t know whether researchers have obtained this marriage certificate), while an entry on familysearch (source not recorded) gives her surname as Honeyman. This has naturally led to confusion!
Dave concludes,
“So anyone who has an interest in further study of his family tree needs to be aware that if they can't find a particular record as a "Honeyman", then they should look for a "Whorlton" record instead and more than likely find it.”
People of Hutton Rudby in the C18/19: Hibberd to Hutton Rudby Association for the Prosecution of Felons
... from my working notes ... accuracy not guaranteed ... for explanatory note, see post of 14 Feb 2013
Hibberd
1840 Whites: Skutterskelfe: Philip Hibberd, gamekeeper
Hildreth
FQ 249: 13 & 14 Mar 1829: exors of Wayne to Barker: the Carpenters Arms with the cartwrights shop and stable on the west end thereof, the garden and the privy on the south & backside of the premises, bounded by road to East Rounton to E, by Mrs Elizabeth Hildreth to W & S, by road to East Rounton, John Robinson and Mr Farnaby to N – occ by Edward Meynell; the garth occ by Edward Meynell, bounded by Elizabeth Hildreth to E, by John Burdon to W, by Thomas Passman, Elizabeth Hildreth, Mr Kendall & William Spence to N, by road to East Rounton to S; the site where buildings lately occupied by John & Hannah Kay & taken down by Mark Barker stood; the garth now used as garden ground to the E & backside of the sd site; the new houses built by Mark Barker on the site and part of the garth: some of the houses and the garden ground “at present unoccupied”, the others occupied by Robert Hall, William Souter, George Sanderson, John Kay, Mary Lamb, Jackson Richardson, John Wild and Thomas Shaw: bounded by house & lands bel to Rev Richard Shepherd to E & S, by Arthur Douglas and townstreet to N & W
FU 487: 16 May 1832: South Side, tithe map 194-6: John Passman of Hutton yeoman (1) James Robinson of Whorlton yeoman (2) Robert Pulman of Stockton gent [solicitor] (3): building with cowhouse & premises adjoining, and garth of 2r adjoining to the N: bounded by Jane Farnaby to E, by Mrs Hildreth to W, by street to N, by Mark Barker to S: occ by John Passman & James Harrison & Mary Kingston; and the house with garden adjoining, bounded by street to E & N, and by above prems to W & S
Hibberd
1840 Whites: Skutterskelfe: Philip Hibberd, gamekeeper
Hildreth
FQ 249: 13 & 14 Mar 1829: exors of Wayne to Barker: the Carpenters Arms with the cartwrights shop and stable on the west end thereof, the garden and the privy on the south & backside of the premises, bounded by road to East Rounton to E, by Mrs Elizabeth Hildreth to W & S, by road to East Rounton, John Robinson and Mr Farnaby to N – occ by Edward Meynell; the garth occ by Edward Meynell, bounded by Elizabeth Hildreth to E, by John Burdon to W, by Thomas Passman, Elizabeth Hildreth, Mr Kendall & William Spence to N, by road to East Rounton to S; the site where buildings lately occupied by John & Hannah Kay & taken down by Mark Barker stood; the garth now used as garden ground to the E & backside of the sd site; the new houses built by Mark Barker on the site and part of the garth: some of the houses and the garden ground “at present unoccupied”, the others occupied by Robert Hall, William Souter, George Sanderson, John Kay, Mary Lamb, Jackson Richardson, John Wild and Thomas Shaw: bounded by house & lands bel to Rev Richard Shepherd to E & S, by Arthur Douglas and townstreet to N & W
FU 487: 16 May 1832: South Side, tithe map 194-6: John Passman of Hutton yeoman (1) James Robinson of Whorlton yeoman (2) Robert Pulman of Stockton gent [solicitor] (3): building with cowhouse & premises adjoining, and garth of 2r adjoining to the N: bounded by Jane Farnaby to E, by Mrs Hildreth to W, by street to N, by Mark Barker to S: occ by John Passman & James Harrison & Mary Kingston; and the house with garden adjoining, bounded by street to E & N, and by above prems to W & S
Saturday, 30 March 2013
People of Hutton Rudby in the C18/19: Hackforth to Hewison
... from my working notes ... accuracy not guaranteed ... for explanatory note, see post of 14 Feb 2013
Hackforth
ET 257: 2 & 3 Jan 1823: garth, orchard & houses, probably North End: John Hackforth was a previous occupier
Hall
1832: Thomas Hall was buried on Fri 12 Oct a73; Benjamin Hall on Fri 12 Oct a25; Jane Hall on 12 Nov a30 [PRs] – Jane Hall’s age is given as 75 in the list “Sepultorum nomina”, but as Jacob Honeyman’s name is altogether omitted, this is probably an error in Mr Barlow’s reading of a list
1 Dec 1775: Thomas Hall married Sarah Monroe [witnesses: Jon Eland, William Smith]
22 Dec 1775: Thomas Hall, papermaker, buried
13 Jan 1794: bap of Charles, son of Thomas Hall at Whorlton [IGI]
27 Mar 1806: bap of Benjamin David, son of Thomas Hall at Whorlton [IGI]
Thomas Hall married Ann Shields 23 Nov 1809 [witnesses: John Cliborn, Anne Richardson and Michael Gill]
30 Nov 1817: Charles Hall of Whorlton married Mary Taylor otp. Their children’s baptisms: Jane 1818, Elizabeth 1819, Charles 1821, John 1823, Benjamin 1827, Robinson 1829, Marianne 1831, Isabella 1837. Charles is described as farmer 1818-9, and labourer thereafter. Their son Benjamin married in 1851 and remarried in 1861. Charles died in 1854 a60. His family’s gravestone [MI 396] is near the cholera mound, and records Charles, Elizabeth his daughter who d1844 a22, and Mary his wife
Robert Hall is a tenant of Barkers Row in 1829
FQ 249: 13 & 14 Mar 1829: exors of Wayne to Barker: the Carpenters Arms with the cartwrights shop and stable on the west end thereof, the garden and the privy on the south & backside of the premises, bounded by road to East Rounton to E, by Mrs Elizabeth Hildreth to W & S, by road to East Rounton, John Robinson and Mr Farnaby to N – occ by Edward Meynell; the garth occ by Edward Meynell, bounded by Elizabeth Hildreth to E, by John Burdon to W, by Thomas Passman, Elizabeth Hildreth, Mr Kendall & William Spence to N, by road to East Rounton to S; the site where buildings lately occupied by John & Hannah Kay & taken down by Mark Barker stood; the garth now used as garden ground to the E & backside of the sd site; the new houses built by Mark Barker on the site and part of the garth: some of the houses and the garden ground “at present unoccupied”, the others occupied by Robert Hall, William Souter, George Sanderson, John Kay, Mary Lamb, Jackson Richardson, John Wild and Thomas Shaw: bounded by house & lands bel to Rev Richard Shepherd to E & S, by Arthur Douglas and townstreet to N & W
FP 310: 12 & 13 Feb 1830: James Catchasides jnr “late of Hutton shopkeeper and now of the township of Stockton miller” sold the ppties to Thomas Hall of Ormsby yeoman
Charles Hall was a former occupant of property, once used as a coachhouse, sold by Kay and Colebeck to Mark Barker in 1830
FT 30: 12 & 13 May 1830: East Side: John Kay of Hutton cartwright & others to Mark Barker & trustees: house heretofore used as a coachhouse & formerly occ by James Ingledew, Mary Collyerson & Diana Swales, then by Elizabeth Farnaby, then by Charles Hall, then by Hannah Best, & now by Matthew Garbutt: bounded by street to E, Mark Barker to W & S, Arthur Douglas to N
late July 1830: James Maw went with George Bewick “to Robert Hall’s butcher’s shop; we afterwards went to the prisoner’s house” [Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 1842]
Thomas Hall of Ormesby bought James Catchasides jnr’s premises near the Bay Horse in 1830. The Hall family kept the property for many years
FU 99: Will of Thomas Hall late of Ormesby gent dated 18 Oct 1830 & codicil dated 10 Dec 1830: his brothers Jonathan Hall saddler of Whitby and John Hall grocer of Castleton were his executors
G Hall is in A List of Boys – Middleton Book
“Apprenticeship Indre: Stephen Hall aged 12 years apprenticed to John Cook of Hutton near Rudby, weaver, to age 21 – April 1823: made between William Sayer (churchwarden) and Thomas Tweddle and William Sayer (overseers of poor of township of Middleton) and Stephen Hall ‘a poor child belonging to said township of Middleton’” [NYCRO Mic 1204]
Tithe Map: Charles Hall had a garden no 208 at the corner of South Side
1841 Census: Charles Hall 45 ag lab and 7 children, South Side
1841 Census: Stephen Hall 30 linen weaver and family, Castle Yard
1841 Census: George Hall/Wall 23 servant, at Rudby Mill
1841 Census: Charles Hall 18 servant at Windy Hill (Brigham)
Mar 1842: Robert Hall gave evidence at the trial of Robert Goldsbrough [Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 1842]. He does not appear in the 1841 Census for Hutton Rudby, and no connection with the other Hall family has been established.
Elizabeth Hall died 26 Dec 1844 a22, grave396 – not in PRs
1851 Census: South Side: Charles 57 b Potto ag lab, Mary 51 b Crathorne, children John 28 hand loom weaver linen, Benjamin 23 ag lab, Mary Ann 19, and Edward 9, and grandson Thomas Hall 11, all b Hutton
Stephen Hall and his family may be the Halls who moved to Barnsley in the 1840s, according to Primitive Methodist records. [Hastings: Ind Vill]
Benjamin Hall 23, labourer, son of Charles, labourer, married Hannah Braithwaite 21, daughter of Robert, tailor, on 3 May 1851 [witnesses: Robert Oates, Wm Hebbron]
19 Feb 1861: Will of Robert Braithwaite snr: retired tailor & draper. Pbte 11 Aug 1862. Wife Margaret: sons Robert jnr & John of Sedgefield: daughters Mary Ann wife of John Kendrew tailor, & Hannah decd wife of Benjamin Hall: nephew John Oates grocer. [East Side deeds]
Benjamin Hall 32 widower, groom, married Jane Wilkinson of Skutterskelf, servant, daughter of Lawrence, farmer, on 6 Apr 1861 [witnesses: John Goldsbrough, Jane Fletcher]
1861 Census: Mary Hall widow, with son 19, next door to
1861 Census: Benjamin Hall, his 2nd wife and 3 children
Martha Hall is given 3s 6d on 20 Mar 1869, in Barlow’s Notebook
1871 Census: Benjamin’s family absent. Matthew Hall 40 master tailor b Crathorne and his family live in West End
1872 Post Office Directory: Hutton Rudby: Matthew Hall, tailor
24 Feb 1879: Matthew Hall general dealer bought property on East Side from Allan Bowes Wilson [East Side deeds]
Oddfellows Board: Bro: Benjamin Hall, Middlesbrough, 14 Mar 1879, a53
1881 Census: 108 High Wilson Street, Middlesbrough: Benjamin Hall’s widow Jane 49, her stepdaughter Mary A. domestic servant 23, Laurence 18 labourer b Hutton Rudby, Benjamin 16 labourer b Marton, Joseph 14 errand boy b Marton, Elizabeth 12 b Middlesbrough and George 9 b Marton
Oddfellows Board: Bro: John Hall, Hutton, 31 Mar 1884, a62
1884: John died a62. His gravestone [MI 315] records his daughter Lizzie d1893 a19, and Martha his widow d1915 a83
1887: active members of the Primitive Methodist chapel at the time of building included William Graham Hall, Robert Maughan, Edward Bainbridge, Thomas Sage and Kilvington Rickatson of Trenholme Bar [G Milburn’s notes]
1887: memorial stones at the new Primitive Methodist chapel were laid by K Rickatson, W Seymour (Spout Bank), Mrs Honeyman, Mrs Eden, Mrs Hall and Mr E Bainbridge; and on behalf of Viscount Falkland, G Y Blair, and Rev Oliver Jackson, a Primitive Methodist minister born in Hutton Rudby [G Milburn’s notes]
Hackforth
ET 257: 2 & 3 Jan 1823: garth, orchard & houses, probably North End: John Hackforth was a previous occupier
Hall
1832: Thomas Hall was buried on Fri 12 Oct a73; Benjamin Hall on Fri 12 Oct a25; Jane Hall on 12 Nov a30 [PRs] – Jane Hall’s age is given as 75 in the list “Sepultorum nomina”, but as Jacob Honeyman’s name is altogether omitted, this is probably an error in Mr Barlow’s reading of a list
1 Dec 1775: Thomas Hall married Sarah Monroe [witnesses: Jon Eland, William Smith]
22 Dec 1775: Thomas Hall, papermaker, buried
13 Jan 1794: bap of Charles, son of Thomas Hall at Whorlton [IGI]
27 Mar 1806: bap of Benjamin David, son of Thomas Hall at Whorlton [IGI]
Thomas Hall married Ann Shields 23 Nov 1809 [witnesses: John Cliborn, Anne Richardson and Michael Gill]
30 Nov 1817: Charles Hall of Whorlton married Mary Taylor otp. Their children’s baptisms: Jane 1818, Elizabeth 1819, Charles 1821, John 1823, Benjamin 1827, Robinson 1829, Marianne 1831, Isabella 1837. Charles is described as farmer 1818-9, and labourer thereafter. Their son Benjamin married in 1851 and remarried in 1861. Charles died in 1854 a60. His family’s gravestone [MI 396] is near the cholera mound, and records Charles, Elizabeth his daughter who d1844 a22, and Mary his wife
Robert Hall is a tenant of Barkers Row in 1829
FQ 249: 13 & 14 Mar 1829: exors of Wayne to Barker: the Carpenters Arms with the cartwrights shop and stable on the west end thereof, the garden and the privy on the south & backside of the premises, bounded by road to East Rounton to E, by Mrs Elizabeth Hildreth to W & S, by road to East Rounton, John Robinson and Mr Farnaby to N – occ by Edward Meynell; the garth occ by Edward Meynell, bounded by Elizabeth Hildreth to E, by John Burdon to W, by Thomas Passman, Elizabeth Hildreth, Mr Kendall & William Spence to N, by road to East Rounton to S; the site where buildings lately occupied by John & Hannah Kay & taken down by Mark Barker stood; the garth now used as garden ground to the E & backside of the sd site; the new houses built by Mark Barker on the site and part of the garth: some of the houses and the garden ground “at present unoccupied”, the others occupied by Robert Hall, William Souter, George Sanderson, John Kay, Mary Lamb, Jackson Richardson, John Wild and Thomas Shaw: bounded by house & lands bel to Rev Richard Shepherd to E & S, by Arthur Douglas and townstreet to N & W
FP 310: 12 & 13 Feb 1830: James Catchasides jnr “late of Hutton shopkeeper and now of the township of Stockton miller” sold the ppties to Thomas Hall of Ormsby yeoman
Charles Hall was a former occupant of property, once used as a coachhouse, sold by Kay and Colebeck to Mark Barker in 1830
FT 30: 12 & 13 May 1830: East Side: John Kay of Hutton cartwright & others to Mark Barker & trustees: house heretofore used as a coachhouse & formerly occ by James Ingledew, Mary Collyerson & Diana Swales, then by Elizabeth Farnaby, then by Charles Hall, then by Hannah Best, & now by Matthew Garbutt: bounded by street to E, Mark Barker to W & S, Arthur Douglas to N
late July 1830: James Maw went with George Bewick “to Robert Hall’s butcher’s shop; we afterwards went to the prisoner’s house” [Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 1842]
Thomas Hall of Ormesby bought James Catchasides jnr’s premises near the Bay Horse in 1830. The Hall family kept the property for many years
FU 99: Will of Thomas Hall late of Ormesby gent dated 18 Oct 1830 & codicil dated 10 Dec 1830: his brothers Jonathan Hall saddler of Whitby and John Hall grocer of Castleton were his executors
G Hall is in A List of Boys – Middleton Book
“Apprenticeship Indre: Stephen Hall aged 12 years apprenticed to John Cook of Hutton near Rudby, weaver, to age 21 – April 1823: made between William Sayer (churchwarden) and Thomas Tweddle and William Sayer (overseers of poor of township of Middleton) and Stephen Hall ‘a poor child belonging to said township of Middleton’” [NYCRO Mic 1204]
Tithe Map: Charles Hall had a garden no 208 at the corner of South Side
1841 Census: Charles Hall 45 ag lab and 7 children, South Side
1841 Census: Stephen Hall 30 linen weaver and family, Castle Yard
1841 Census: George Hall/Wall 23 servant, at Rudby Mill
1841 Census: Charles Hall 18 servant at Windy Hill (Brigham)
Mar 1842: Robert Hall gave evidence at the trial of Robert Goldsbrough [Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 1842]. He does not appear in the 1841 Census for Hutton Rudby, and no connection with the other Hall family has been established.
Elizabeth Hall died 26 Dec 1844 a22, grave396 – not in PRs
1851 Census: South Side: Charles 57 b Potto ag lab, Mary 51 b Crathorne, children John 28 hand loom weaver linen, Benjamin 23 ag lab, Mary Ann 19, and Edward 9, and grandson Thomas Hall 11, all b Hutton
Stephen Hall and his family may be the Halls who moved to Barnsley in the 1840s, according to Primitive Methodist records. [Hastings: Ind Vill]
Benjamin Hall 23, labourer, son of Charles, labourer, married Hannah Braithwaite 21, daughter of Robert, tailor, on 3 May 1851 [witnesses: Robert Oates, Wm Hebbron]
19 Feb 1861: Will of Robert Braithwaite snr: retired tailor & draper. Pbte 11 Aug 1862. Wife Margaret: sons Robert jnr & John of Sedgefield: daughters Mary Ann wife of John Kendrew tailor, & Hannah decd wife of Benjamin Hall: nephew John Oates grocer. [East Side deeds]
Benjamin Hall 32 widower, groom, married Jane Wilkinson of Skutterskelf, servant, daughter of Lawrence, farmer, on 6 Apr 1861 [witnesses: John Goldsbrough, Jane Fletcher]
1861 Census: Mary Hall widow, with son 19, next door to
1861 Census: Benjamin Hall, his 2nd wife and 3 children
Martha Hall is given 3s 6d on 20 Mar 1869, in Barlow’s Notebook
1871 Census: Benjamin’s family absent. Matthew Hall 40 master tailor b Crathorne and his family live in West End
1872 Post Office Directory: Hutton Rudby: Matthew Hall, tailor
24 Feb 1879: Matthew Hall general dealer bought property on East Side from Allan Bowes Wilson [East Side deeds]
Oddfellows Board: Bro: Benjamin Hall, Middlesbrough, 14 Mar 1879, a53
1881 Census: 108 High Wilson Street, Middlesbrough: Benjamin Hall’s widow Jane 49, her stepdaughter Mary A. domestic servant 23, Laurence 18 labourer b Hutton Rudby, Benjamin 16 labourer b Marton, Joseph 14 errand boy b Marton, Elizabeth 12 b Middlesbrough and George 9 b Marton
Oddfellows Board: Bro: John Hall, Hutton, 31 Mar 1884, a62
1884: John died a62. His gravestone [MI 315] records his daughter Lizzie d1893 a19, and Martha his widow d1915 a83
1887: active members of the Primitive Methodist chapel at the time of building included William Graham Hall, Robert Maughan, Edward Bainbridge, Thomas Sage and Kilvington Rickatson of Trenholme Bar [G Milburn’s notes]
1887: memorial stones at the new Primitive Methodist chapel were laid by K Rickatson, W Seymour (Spout Bank), Mrs Honeyman, Mrs Eden, Mrs Hall and Mr E Bainbridge; and on behalf of Viscount Falkland, G Y Blair, and Rev Oliver Jackson, a Primitive Methodist minister born in Hutton Rudby [G Milburn’s notes]
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