Friday, October 26, 2012

Navarro and Frude family Plymouth UK


As with all family history research, please treat this as a work-in-progress. The information here has only been gleaned from online sources, and has not been cross-checked with birth/marriage/death certificates or other paper verification. Please remember this when reading the following !

The information on the Navarro family has been fully researched by another curious descendant, William Carkett, and is available to view online. Here is the link to Samuel Frude's record.

John Pitts was born in 1743 in Plymouth, and married Grace Adams (1771-1850) on 8th July 1797. Their daughter Mary was bron in 1795 and went on to marry Mr Drake. Mr Drake seems to have died suddenly, leaving Mary free to marry fisherman James Frude (1794-1842) on 18th June 1815. One of their children was Samuel Frude (1826) (see below). Mary lived to the ripe old age of 85, dying on 24th November 1880.

Joseph Navarro (1796-1859) was a waterman in Plymouth. He married Sarah Ellacot (1807-1886) on 18th October 1825. Their daughter Elizabeth was born in the April of 1826.

Elizabeth Navarro went on to marry Samuel Frude who had been born Roborough,  near Plymouth in 1826. One of  Elizabeth and Samuel's sons was Samuel John Navarro Frude who was born on 4th March 1847, later becoming a fisherman.

 


Samuel married Emma Jane Carkett in 1869, dauther of Joseph Carkett (1801) and Mary Carkett (1804) nee Friend, both from Plympton, Devon. Sadly Emma died in 1903. He went on to marry again, finding happiness with Mary Margaret Wilton Kent five years later. She had been born in 1875, so she was 33 at the time of the marriage, while he was considerably older at 61.

One of Samuel's children from his first marriage was Joseph Samuel King Frude, born 14th April 1869 in Barbican, Plymouth. His occupation is listed as 'fish porter'. He married Florence Blanch Hill who had been born in 1876, a daughter to Henry Hill and ELizabeth L. W. Hill who had been married in 1881.  One of Joseph and Florence's five daughters was Beatrice Alexandra V.M. Frude (1901). They also had one son, named Joseph after his father.

  
 Market porters hat and a fish porter in Billingsgate, a similar market.


Beatrice Alexandra  Frude married James Joseph Rosevear McGowan , who lived in Newport Street Cottages and worked for the Plymouth Brewery. Their wedding was on 1st  June 1921.

Joseph John McGowan was born to the couple in 1926 in East Stonehouse and worked as a drayman and in the Cattedown B power station in Plymouth. His siblings were James Joseph J.H., Gordon Albert, Alfred J, Thomas Albert, Beatrice M B, Dorothy J., Patrick Alfred, Shirley I.M., Iris J., Michael Albert, Jean V., and Victor.

Joseph John, left, with his sister Shirley and her husband Edward.



Are you part of this family? Do get in touch !


Rosevear family history - Plymouth, Devon, UK


This research has been carried out online and has not been verified by birth/marriage/death certificates. Please treat this inofrmation with suspicion !

There is a large Rosevear family in Cornwall, and I believe our family originally came from there, but the ones I wish to concentrate on lived in Plymouth, Devon.

William Rosevear (1812) married Matilda Alger (daughter of Grace Alger 1781-1863) in 1838 and they lived in Devonport, Plymouth, Devon.  Their son John, born in 1842 went on to become a cabinet maker. In 1871 John married Mary, who had been born in Holsworthy, Devon and was six years younger than he was, being 23 at the time of the marriage.

John and Mary names one of their daughters Matilda, after John's mother. Matilda Jane Rosevear was born in 1872 in Tavistock, Devon.

Matilda Jane Rosevear  married Henry Hobart McGowan, who had been born in Adelaide Cottages, East Stonehouse, Plymouth in 1872. They had six children who survived to adulthood: Rosina Matilda (1895), Henry Hobart (1898), James Joseph Rosevear (1903) and John William Henry (1896),  Mary Ann Rosevear (1907), Lilian Josephine (1909). Two of their children (possibly Frederick Albert G 1895 and Alfred JAmes 1902 died in infancy).

James went on to marry Beatrice Elexandra V.M. Frude (1901). James died in 1966 and Beatrice died in 1985. Over the course of the marriage they had thirteen children and 44  grandchildren.

Webb family history - Suffolk UK



This information has been culled from internet sources, and so should been treated with suspicion. It has not been checked against paper sources.

The story starts with Charles Reynolds (1760) from Rumburgh, who married Elizabeth Hadnum (1746) who had been born in Huntingdon. When they married in October 1782, Charles was just 22, but Elizabeth was 36. This might mean that this is the wrong Elizabeth, or that the birthdate is wrong. They went on to have ten children.

Their daughter Sarah, born in 1789 married Robert Edments from Thorington when she was just 17. the couple had five children, Robert, James, Sarah, Samuel and Elizabeth.

Their son Robert  Edments (born in May 1810) married Anna Eliza (1818) from Mendlesham in Suffolk in Spetember 1841. He worked as an agricultural labourer at the end of his life, although he is registred as a Police Constable in 1851.They had four daughters and four sons. Their street address in 1861 is given as Black Heath in Wenhaston. Their daughter Elizabeth Edments was born in 1847 in Burgh Castle, Suffolk.

Elizabeth married Samuel Barnes (1838), son of James (1811, an agricultural labourer) and Elizabeth (1816) Barnes who had both been born in Cookley, Suffolk. Samuel was ten years her junior. The couple had six children, five girls and one boy. They were called, Selina, Emma, Samuel, Polly, Hannah and Ellen. By the time of the 1881, when the youngest child Ellen was still only 2years old  Elizabeth was a widow. Selina's birthplace in 1864  is recorded  variously as 'Halesworth, Suffolk' and 'Wissett'. She left home to become a general servant before her marriage.

Selina married Robert Edward Webb, who was a shoemaker and had been born in 1862 in Ipswich, Suffolk, the son of Mary Ann (Carr?) and David Webb. They married in 1884. At the time, Robert's mother was a widow and had been since Robert was a young boy. They lived at 63 Tower Terrace, Ipswich. Mary Ann was a dressmaker.

Selina and Robert's first child, William Henry Webb was born in 1886, and he was followed by Stanley (1887), Ruby (originally called Florence) ( 1889), Albert (1892), Maud (1894), Arthur (1896) and Francis Henry (1899).  The 1901 census shows the family as living at 8 Perth Street, on the corner of Stirling Street, in Ipswich. Selina  and Robert both died in 1906.

At age 11 , in 1911, Francis appears on the census as a lodger with Mr Fred Bashford at his farm in Chartway Street, East Sutton, Maidstone, Kent. This seems odd at first, until you realsise that Mr Bashford was a blacksmith, an occupation that Francis later followed him in to.

Frank served during World War I in the Bedford Regiment, working with the Horse Transport division of RASC. His home address at t his time is given as Mount Pleasant, Brock Hill, Bracknell, Berks. Francis died in 1970.


A very young Frank Webb, who signed up when he was just 17.

Francis married Ethel Ellen Gale in September 1926, in Bradfield, Berkshire, close to where she lived.


The couple married in September 1926 and had three daughters, Peggy (Margaret?), Audrey and Monica Jean (1929)

Peggy and Monica with an unknown child.

Peggy married Harold Spicer and Monica Jean (known as Bob) Webb married Joseph John McGowan (see above) in December 1950. They went on to have three children, Elizabeth (1951), Wendy (1954) (who sadly only survived one day) and Colin (1957).

Colin and Elizabeth (Liz) in the early 1960s.

McGowan Family History - Plymouth, Devon


UPDATED September 2012

This information has been gleaned from internet sources, and is not necessarily 100% accurate. Please remember this when reading it.

Mary McGowan was married to James McGowan, a jeweller, and gave birth to her son Charles Henry, who went by 'Henry',  in 1833 in Newtown (?), Ireland.

We do not know why  Henry moved to Plymouth. It may be that he travelled on an assisted passage to avoid the famine in Ireland, and that he came with his whole family. There were certainly a number of McGowans in Plymouth at the same time.

At about the same time, on 10th Jan 1834,  Mary  and William Lang from St Sidwells in Exeter,welcomed their sixth child, a daughter called Mary Ann into the family. William was a coachman, and they lived at James (?) Court in St Sidwell Street.Mary Ann went on to become a house servant, and shows up on the 1851 census living at 255 High Street, Exeter, as house servant to Samuel Glenn, a widower living with his sister, his son and his daughter-in-law.

Henry McGowan married Mary Ann Lang  on 3rd December 1859 in Plymouth, Devon. She is shown on the marriage certificate as living a 8 Ebrington Street, Plymouth, but we do not as yet know how or why she travelled to Plymouth. Her father, William Lang, is shown as being a cab driver, but was sadly deceased at the time of her marriage. It is interesting to note that there was plague in Exeter about 1833, so the whole family may have moved out of the town to avoid being infected. One of the witnesses at the wedding was a Henry Lang, possibly Mary's brother. At the time of the marriage, Henry was living in the Mill Bay Barracks, as he was a private in the Royal Marines, a rank he never seems to improve.

The couple's first child was William Henry James McGowan, born in 1861 in East Stonehouse, where the couple lived. The 1861 census shows the small family Wm H J, Maryann and Charles Henry living  at 24 George's Street. Henry's occupation is still listed as Royal Marine. There are eight other families living at the same address, totally 31 people in all.


A picture of some Royal Marines from about the right era.

Margaret M McGowan was Henry's second child,  born in  1863 in Mylor,Cornwall, a village just outside Falmouth, where Henry might have been posted. As a Roman Catholic couple, they would have had to cross the water to St Mawes for the child's christening.  The third child, Elizabeth A McGowan was born in 1965 in Llandreath, Pembrokeshire, Wales, and is noted on the census return as being an imbecile.  Llandreath  is very near the Pembroke Dock, where Royal Marines were stationed at about that time.

Three boys completed the family:  James Nevins McGowan born in 1869 , Henry Hubert McGowan born in 1871 and Albert J. McGowan born in 1877 All the boys were born in East Stonehouse in Devon, possibly in Adelaide Cottages, East Stonehouse, an area off Union Street, now no longer there.

In the 1871 census, Henry and Mary are shown as living in Quarry Street in a very poor part of Plymouth. They and four children lived in a house with four other families. Henry is shown as being a Private in the Royal Marines, on HMS Cambridge. The Cambridge was a training ship/camp at Plymouth. Mary's birthplace is shown as Exeter.

By the time of the 1881 census, Henry has died, and Mary A 'Melton' is the head of the household. Henry didn't live to see his 50th birthday. Margaret and William have left home, and the four younger ones still live together. Elizabeth would normally have left home at 15, but due to her condition stayed with the family. She helped Mary, who was a washerwoman. James, too, had left education and was employed as an errand boy. The address is given as 6 Adelaide Mews, Plymouth, and they seem to have the house to themselves. Interestingly, Mary has put her marital status as 'married' and not 'widow', although she is the head of the household.

By 1891 the family has moved to 5 Adelaide Cottages. Elizabeth is now 25, and is 'not employed'. James has left home, Henry is a labourer and Albert, at 13 years old is a carpenter's apprentice. Mary is 56, and is now listed as a widow. However, the children's names are listed as Elizabeth Milton, Henry Milton and Albert Milton (see below). Mary supports herself and Elizabeth by being a laundress. I wandered round the Adelaide Street area last summer, and couldn't find a row of cottages called Adelaide Cottages. This doesn't mean they aren't there somewhere still, but they may well have been pulled down by now.

Mary died in 1899 and Elizabeth went to live in the East Stonehouse workshouse. Sadly, the records were destroyed in the war along with the building so no information can be traced apart from that given in the 1901 census, where she is merely listed as 'inmate'. I believe she died in 1910.

Speculation as to Mary 'Milton''s name and marital state may be due to communication difficulties between her and the census taker. Having seen the original document, it doesn't look like a transcription error, but if she had a strong local accent, that could have made McGowan sound like Milton.

Henry Hubert McGowan went on the marry Matilda Jane Rosevear, and in 1901 they were living at 6 Princess Street, Plymouth. They had three children, and were joined by Henry's brother James, whose occupation was listed as 'labourer'. At this time, Henry was a groom in a stable. They occupied two rooms in a house that held five other families.

Henry and Matilda moved to 4 Navy Cottages, where they were living at the time of the 1911 census. Their eldest daughter, Rosina, had left home, John was an errand boy, and Henry, James and Mary went to school. Lilian was only 2 and stayed at home. The two adults and five children live in three rooms. Henry is listed as being an invalid, but there is no information at to the reason. He died three years later in 1914 from 'sudden death', following at least 12 months of asthma and bronchitis. He was 42.

Young Henry received his papers in in 1916, calling him up to the army. He gave his address as 33 Newport Street, East Stonehouse, Plymouth, Devon. It seeems that he didn't join fully until 1918, when he joined the Devonshire Regiment. I do not have the full details.

James, who worked for The Plymouth Brewery,  went on to marry Beatrice A.V.M. Frude in June 1921. He died in 1966 aged 62. James and Beatrice had thirteen children between 1922 and 1946. Beatrice died in 1985.

Joseph John McGowan was born to the couple in 1926 in East Stonehouse and worked as a drayman and in the Cattedown B power station in Plymouth. His siblings were James Joseph J.H., Gordon Albert, Alfred J, Thomas Albert, Beatrice M B, Dorothy J., Patrick Alfred, Shirley I.M., Iris J., Michael Albert, Jean V., and Victor.

Joseph married Monica Jean Webb and the couple had three children, Elizabeth (1951), Wendy (1954) (who sadly only survived one day) and Colin (1957). Joe's last marriage was to Phyllis Patricia in 1986, but just one year later he passed away in 1987 at the house where his mother Beatrice had lived, aged 61.

A young Elizabeth McGowan..


Gale family history - Berkshire, UK


This information has been culled from the internet and has not been checked with paper sources. Treat it with suspicion !

Thomas Gale married Elizabeth (born 1766) in Basildon, Berkshire, England. They moved only a few miles in their lifetime, living in Pangbourne, Berkshire. This is where their son James was born in 1807. James went on to become an agricultural labourer.

James married Mary in 1869. Mary was born in 1807, and so was the same age as John. She had previously lived in Upton, Berkshire.

The couple went on to have five children, John (1849), Jabez (1845), George (1835), William (1837), and James (1838 or 1841).  William went on to become the publican at The Beehive pub, while James, George and William were labourers. James and George worked on the farm of Henry Hewett in Pangbourne.

James the younger married Sarah Ann, who had been born in Warborough, Oxfordshire in 1848, making her somwhat younger than he was.  They had three children, Frederick Gale (1868), Ellen (1870) and Arthur (1877).  Frederick became an agricultural labourer at the age of 12, and later became a cowman. The family lived in Pangbourne, with the street address in 1891 being given as New Town (no number).

The 1881 census shows a Henry Green staying overnight, with the annotation of 'brother'. As James has no brothers called Henry, and no sisters who could have married a Henry, this must be Sarah's brother. If so, her parents were Richard Green and Mary Ann Hitchcock, who married in St Helen's Church in Abingdon, Oxfordshire in 1844, and lived in Sunninwell, Berks. Apart from Henry, Sarah had six other brothers, James, Charles, Langford, Albert, Herbert and Shadrack. She was either a very spoilt or a very tortured little girl !

Frederick married Sarah Ann Middleton (1869) who had been born in Wargrave, Berkshire. The couple married in 1900 in Wokingham and continued to live in Pangbourne. They had two daughters, Ethel Ellen (1901) and Doris Marjorie (1907).

Ethel  Gale married Frank Webb. Here she is with her mother Sarah Gale nee Middleton.
Ethel Gale when she went into service.