Wednesday, 21 February 2018

The Edwards Name


     Going back to my childhood, I was very aware of my mother's family. I had lots of aunties and uncles and even though most of them were now living in England, I still saw them regularly. Even if they weren't visiting, my mother often had letters and parcels from her sisters. My mother's brother, Uncle Burt was a different kettle of fish. Even though he only lived a few yards from my grandmother, I very rarely saw him. He had a wife called Gladys and a daughter called Elaine. I can't ever remember meeting her. When we visited Burt, she was always out, or sitting in a dark shadow of the room. I heard news of her back around 2015 that Elaine was still alive.

     My father's family were quite different. I knew my grandparents of course, and my father's brother, my Uncle Eufryn. Later in life, he changed his name to Ivor. I also knew one of my father's cousins....Barbara. Recently, I've become re-aquainted with her daughter Marylyn, now living in France.
     I can recall my father talking about his uncle Jim. I believe he bred cocker spaniels. I also know that his Aunty Lillwen lived with my parents for a while. I knew nothing else about that side of the family. Sometimes, I'd be walking home from school and a complete stranger would say to me, "Hello Philip. You know me don't you? I'm your uncle."  And the thing is.....it was my uncle.

My surname came through my father and my grandfather William Edwards.
William had  been a collier, working at Number 9 colliery in Tylorstown. 
This newspaper item shows his exam success when training to become a collier.


June 1907

I can only remember him as being retired. He was one of those men that found it hard to adapt to retirement. I remember my father saying that he left home and came home to wait to die. Most days, he'd sit quietly on a chair by the fireside, drinking tea and smoking his pipe. He used to smoke chewing tobacco, which meant that the air was filled with a thick blue smoke. If you wanted to get into the back kitchen, it felt as though you had to move some of the air to one side to get in. 
He wasn't always easy to get on with. My father told me that he'd been quite violent towards him as a child. He was always reluctant to leave his chair. My grandmother had family, (Uncle Jack and Aunty Mary Jarman) who lived in a charming little farm at a place called Llawr y Glyn, near Caersws, Llanidloes. William and Margaret would be invited there for a short holiday every Summer but William was always reluctant to go, refusing to make ready but submitting to my grandmother's will in the end.
Llawr-y-Glyn

I recently discovered a piece of video that featured my grandfather. This is a still from that video.



You can see the whole video here. It also shows his brother Maldwyn and his wife Cassie, clutching a cabbage. 


William and his wife, Margaret Ellen lived in a tiny cottage at Prospect Place, Tylorstown. Two bedrooms, a 'best' front room that was never used and a back kitchen where they spent their lives. At the bottom of the garden was an outside toilet. Hanging on the inside of the door you'd find a roll of  Izal toilet paper and squares of paper ripped from the newspaper.



Food was cooked on an open fire. Sometimes, items would be cooked on a methylated spirit Primus stove which was kept in the outside coal shed.
The front room was never used but was always spotless, smelling strongly of wax polish. A church harmonium filled one wall of the room. I never found out how it got there or even why it was there. I often tried to play it, probably my first experience of musical instruments.

William could be quite irritating at times. One day, my father managed to acquire a television for William and Margaret. This was their first television. Black and white with a dreadful picture. I can remember, shortly after it had been set up, sitting with my grandparents watching an early episode of Dr Who. William was puzzled by the title and mulled it over in his head whilst puffing on his pipe.

"Dr. Who?"
"Who?"
"Dr. Who."
This went on and on, throughout the whole episode.
"Dr. Who?"
"Who?"
"Dr. Who."

They had certain items of food that we never appeared to have in my own home. Ribena, beetroot, brawn, cheese. I still associate these items with my Edwards grandparents.

He once told me a very sad story. One day he was taking a walk around Darran Park lake. It was during Winter. There was a layer of ice covering the lake. He saw something in the ice. He took a closer look and realised that it was the body of a drowned woman, trapped under the ice.

William Edwards 1861 - 1923
From research, I've discovered that my grandfather's father was also called William. He was married to a woman called Barbara. It is strange how certain names keep appearing on the family tree. I knew another Barbara. She was my father's cousin. 






Cousin Barbara Front row, extreme left.

I know very little about this William Edwards.


I have found this newspaper clipping from August 15th 1908. William Snr would have been 47 at the time.

I also know that he could read and write. Back in those days, many people couldn't read or write. Many of my other great and great great grandparents signed forms with their mark. Here is his signature.


I also know that :-
  • He was born in 1861.
  • His mother's name was Gwenllian.
  • In 1871 he was living with his mother. He was 10. She was 31. There were two younger sisters and a younger brother living with him.
  • At the time, his mother worked as a baker.
  • At the age of 10, William was already working in the colliery.
  • They lived in Maxwell Street, Ferndale.
At the time, Ferndale was just a collection of wooden huts. There was a railway line taking coal from the colliery but it didn't carry passengers. To get to Ferndale you had to walk from Porth or Aberdare. (About 5 miles).

John Edwards


It took some time to find out any information on William's father, but then I found this on another person's Ancestry family tree.

May 5th 1861. Gwenllian married John Edwards. At the time, their families lived in Aberdare. Notice, John signs his name. Gwenllian made a mark.

The 1861 census happened in April. John and Gwenllian didn't show together in 1871. By the time of the next census John had disappeared. Gwenllian was listed as a widow holding the occupation of baker. I asked advice from the Glamorgan Family History  Society. I was advised that there was a John Edwards killed in the Ferndale Colliery Disaster in 1869.


Here is the family's entry from the 1871 census.


I knew nothing about this event. It certainly was never mentioned by my father or grandfather as I grew up.
It is so hard trying to put together a picture of John Edwards. Trying to track down vague shadows of the past is just so hard. However, sadly, as a result of him dying in such a major event I have managed to gather a few facts.
John was born in 1838. His father owned a small farm (30 acres). The family lived near a place called Llanfair Nant Gwyn in Pembrokeshire.  This tiny place at a latter date would become linked with the composer John Hughes (Calon Lân)
Here is the family entry from the 1851 census.

John wasn't living with the rest of the family during the 1861 census. However, I have found a John Edwards listed living not to far away, listed as being a ploughboy. He would have been 23 years old in 1861.
John could read and write. This would have been most unusual at that time. One thing that I noted from his marriage certificate was that his brother, Caleb, couldn't read or write.

John died in the second colliery disaster at Ferndale in 1869.

This happened on June 10th 1869. 53 men and boys were killed. Apparently John died of suffocation. After an explosion, there is a lack of oxygen in the pit. Also, it fills with fumes caused by the explosion. Colliers called these fumes "After Damp".  The court of enquiry found it hard to come to a conclusion as to the cause of the explosion however, the general conclusion was that there had been a roof fall which had released a considerable quantity of gas. It was felt that the safety lamps used at the time couldn't handle such a quantity of gas and that the flame from the lamp had jumped past the gauze inside the lamp thus causing an explosion.


We can but wonder what life was like for a widow left with four children to raise. I haven't been able to find much related to Gwenllian after the explosion, but this much I do know.
There had been another explosion at Ferndale in the year 1867. At the time, there had been an outpouring of sympathy for the families left without a bread winner. As a result, a charity fund had been established to support the families. This was such a large fund that there was more than enough to support the wives and children of those lost in 1869.
Also, the mine owner, Mr. David Davies possessed one attribute that was so sadly missing amongst the other mine owners at the time. Mr. Davies was a very kind man. He visited every family that had been affected by the explosion and made sure that they were all well cared for. 

Gwenllian re-married. Her new husband was called William George. He was born in Llanidloes.
Together, they had two more children, Edward and Gwenllian.


Benjamin Edwards

I can trace this family line just one step further. Benjamin Edwards. He was my great great great grandfather. He was born in 1813 in Bridel, Pembrokeshire.
In 1851 he farmed 30 acres near a place called Llanfair Nant Gwyn in Pembrokeshire.
Notice, the census return mentions Caleb Edwards. This was John Edwards' brother who probably acted as John's Best Man at his wedding to Gwenllian.

I've found a couple of mentions of Benjamin Edwards. In August 1856, he signed a petition.

WE the undersigned Inhabitants of the Town and Ne'gbourhood of. NARBERTII, in the County of Pembroke, do hereby certify that we have known the Rev. LEVI THOMAS for many years, and that his con- duct both as a man and a Christian, has during that time ALWAYS been most exemplary and irreproachable, and are fully convinced that he was innocent of the charge made against him by Elizabeth Watkins, for an .Assault, on the 5th of July last, based as it was entirely upon the testimony of the complainant alone:-

Also, in October 1847 he made a court appearance apparently defending a neighbour who was in dispute with his landlord regarding some repairs that he'd made to a property.










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Thursday, 25 January 2018

Thomas Smith.

Thomas Smith.


Thomas Smith (1825-1904) was the son of Alexander Smith and his wife Jane. They lived in Nolton in West Wales. Alexander was a collier.



 If you visit Nolton  beach today you wouldn't believe  the fact that this little cove was once a port exporting coal from the nearby coal  pits dating from 1439 around Nolton and Newgale. Quite large sailing vessels beached here to load cargoes of coal  for distribution around St Brides Bay and even further afield. The cargoes were brought down to the shore by carts and wagons drawn by teams of horses and, during the late 19th and early 20th century, by traction engines towing pairs of eight-ton trailers the six miles from Haverfordwest Quay for export by sea.
The coal from Haverfordwest was the local anthracite shipped up by lighters from Hook colliery. Trefrane Cliff colliery, half a mile north near Newgale, was the biggest pit in the vicinity, and its ruined buildings and tall brick stack are prominent features beside the National Park Coastal Footpath to this day. This mine was worked from 1850 to 1905 with a 300-foot deep shaft slanting under the sea, and a steep tramway up which the coal was winched to the top of the cliff near the coast road.
Mining ended in the area before World War One because of the hazards of working under the sea, where the weight of water at high tide often broke through into the sloping shafts. It is amazing to think that there is a reserve estimated at 230 million tons of coal still unworked under St Brides Bay.

In 1841, Thomas was fifteen years old, living with his mother, father and six other brothers and sisters.
He married Mary Davies on the twenty eighth of June, 1845.



By 1851, with his first wife Mary he now had two children, John and Elizabeth. In the census, he is listed as an agricultural labourer. He was now 25 years old.

Mary died on the fifteenth of December, 1863. She was 35. She had six children. Sarah, Elizabeth, Ann, Edwin, Alexander and William. William was my great grandfather; father of my grandmother Ann Davies nee Smith.
Mary died in child birth.



Mary Smith
beloved wife of Thomas Smith of Penllwyn in the parish of  Hawhaden 
who died on 15th of December 1863 aged 35 years old.

On the twentieth of September 1864, Thomas was involved in a road accident. The news report describes him as a game-keeper. Strangely, towards the end of my mother's life I became aware of the fact that she appeared to know a lot about game keepers. Strange as she was brought up in the Rhondda Valley where there was no game or game keepers.

He married Jane Roberts on August 21st 1866. The newspaper reports him as being a gamekeeper.

The 1871 census shows Thomas as being a farmer of 30 acres of land. He is now 44 years old. His son Edwin appears to be still living with him. He has had three children with his second wife Jane. Interestingly, they call one of their daughters Mary. By now, my great grandfather William was 15. He had left home to become a servant.
In 1881, Thomas is 56. With his second wife Jane (age 45) they have six children from Thomas' second marriage. The youngest, Esther is just a few months old.He is listed as a farmer.
By 1891, Thomas and Jane are living at a place called Rainbolts Hill. There is a farmhouse on the site at present. I wonder whether this was Thomas and Jane's home.
1911 census shows them still at Rainbolts Hill.
Thomas died in 1904. His grave lies near to the grave of his first wife, Mary. He was 79 years old.
He had ten children. John, Elizabeth, Edwin, William, Mary, another John, Martha, Thomas, Jane, Hester.
Jane continued to farm at Rainbolts Hill. The 1911 census shows her listed as a farmer. She is living with two of her daughters, Jane and Hester and a servant.

I've found this newspaper clipping about Jane and a run in with the law. Another family road incident. 
August 24th 1910.
At the time, she would have been 73 years old.



 Unlike many of my family from the time, she appears to have been able to read and write. Here is her signature on the 1911 census.

Jane died in March 1922. She was 85.

I've found one newspaper item relating to Hester Smith. If this is our Hester Smith then it appears that she ran away with the gypsies. She was my second great aunt.






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Tuesday, 16 January 2018

Smith / Dennis connections.

Curious Relationships.

I've recently become aware of a really strange piece of family history. This 
relates to my grandmother Ann Davies nee Smith. She was the one that lived in 
the tiny hamlet of Blaenllechau, high in the Rhondda Valley. This story 
happened at the start of the twentieth century, around the year 1900. 
It is quite complicated to understand so I'll try to build up a time line to explain.

It concerns my grandmother Ann and her two sisters, Elizabeth and Mary.
It also concerns two young colliers called Gomer and William Dennis.
Around this time, Gomer and William were living in rented rooms with 
their father John. They lived in Taff Street, Ferndale.
The Smith sisters lived in Duffryn Street, Ferndale; about half a mile away.

April 1900
Elizabeth Smith marries Gomer Dennis. They move to a house in Brown Street, Ferndale. 
Elizabeth was 19 at the time. Gomer was 27.

July 1900
Ann Smith marries William Dennis.
26th February 1901
William Dennis dies of scarlet fever.

August 1901
Elizabeth gives birth to a baby boy but I've a feeling that she dies in childbirth. 
The baby is named William John. He dies soon after.

Sometime after August 1901
Gomer Dennis marries the third Smith sister, Mary. 
I actually can't find a record of their marriage. 



In the 1911 census they are listed as married, living in Abercrave near 
Ystradgynlais. 
I can remember my mother telling me of trips to Abercrave to visit her and 
and uncle. 
They had four children. One was called Reggie....and I did once meet him.


Index






Wednesday, 6 September 2017

Harry Davies

Harry Davies was my grandfather; my mother's father. 
George Henry Davies was born in October 1884 in Crickhowell, Breconshire, his father, Henry, was 39 and his mother, Mary, was 39. He married Annie Smith in 1905. They had seven children in 15 years. He had three brothers and two sisters.

Harry died in 1958. I would have been four years old at the time. I've searched my memory but sadly I can't remember him at all. However, I have managed to gather together some interesting facts.



L to R. Cousin Sandra, My uncle Charles Heighes, mother May, brother Barrie, grandmother Ann, grandfather Harry, cousin Chris.

A few years ago, my cousin Chris showed me a small item that he owned that Harry had made. It was a small brass matchbox case detailing his First World War service.
Note:- the date 29/9/18 was the day that Bulgaria surrendered.




For many years I thought of this artefact as a simple matchbox case. However, you should realise that during the First World War, servicemen were not issued with dog tags. Many soldiers created items such as this so that their bodies could be identified.


It was seeing this one item that made me want to know more about my grandfather. There were so many clues on this simple matchbox case but for many years, I couldn't make any progress at all. 
I then discovered my grandmother's death certificate. On it, her husband's name was listed as George Henry Davies. I'd been looking for a Harold. Once I realised this, I discovered Harry's World War 1 records.
Harry signed up for service at Brecon Barracks on the ninth of December 1915. Note, that at the time he stated that he was single. Rather strange as at the time he'd been married for about twelve years.
 This made no sense. Listing himself as single meant that he'd be on reduced pay. The only reason why he listed himself as single could possibly be down to his enthusiasm for going to war. Apparently at the time the South Wales Borderers would be sending two drafts of soldiers to the front in France. The first draft was made up of soldiers who were single. Married men would go in the later draft.

There are other documents showing that he was in the army in September 1914, so one of the first to enlist.



 Harry was sent to France on 25th September 1915. He might have seen action at the Battle of Loos, on September 25th 1915. This was the first time that the British Army used poison gas. This turned out to be a bit of a disaster for the British when the gas drifted back over British lines.
Harry didn't stay long in France. On the 31st of October 1915 he was transferred to Salonika on Greece.

Some pictures.
Rhondda Valley camp at Salonika.
Artillery Ammunition Limber
18 pounder field gun
Gardening
South Wales Borderers
South Wales Borderers Pack Mule Transport



Most people these days don't even realise that there was any fighting going on in Greece. This must have been quite a strange existence for Harry. He was part of a multi-national defence force made up of French, Italian, Russian, and Serbian forces. The Serbian army had almost been wiped out by the Bulgarians and had suffered and starved on a long retreat to Greece. The Greek government were trying to stay neutral but had to put up with this multi-national force that was trying to stop the Bulgarians advancing. From what I've discovered, not much actual fighting took place over the years that harry spent there. Apparently many soldiers spent (wasted) their time racing tortoises. I've also read that horse shows were organised there. Maybe Harry was involved somehow. However, disease amongst the men was rife, with many, including Harry catching malaria.



Harry's medical record.



A letter from Private Ieuan Hughes. Probably on the same ship as Harry.

Harry's medical record shows that he spent some time at Karaissi hospital. 
Here is a picture of the nursing staff.


Recently I've come across some film from the Salonika campaign. Who knows; Harry might be in there somewhere. Two of the movies feature images of the British Army at Salonika. One shows the town of Salonika. I love this one. It gives me the impression that Salonika was quite a modern, forward-thinking town. Occasionally you get glimpses of some quite big department stores. The fourth film tells the story of The Great Fire of Salonika. This happened in 1917. Harry was definitely there at the time.





















Eventually he was evacuated to Alexandria on the 14th of September 1917. He sailed on the ship
S.S. Manitou, arriving in Alexandria on the nineteenth of September.




Harry was home on leave in March 1918. This snippet comes from the Aberdare Leader, 2nd of March 1918.

His service records show that he re-joined active service in August 1918. His matchbox case suggests that he went to France on the third of September 1918.

It was quite hard for the soldiers of Salonica upon their return home. The other soldiers who had served in France thought that the Salonica men had quite a cushy number. After all, the Salonika front only saw one serious battle in three years. They Western Front men even had a name for the Salonika men....The Gardeners of Salonica. However, the dangers of Salonica were of a different nature with so many servicemen falling ill to malaria, typhoid, scarlet fever etc.  A large percentage of the Salonika servicemen fell ill in this way.

Harry spent the rest of his life as a colliery farrier. The family lived in Aberdare for a while but then moved to New Street in Ferndale. In 1913 my great grandfather William Smith was killed in a colliery accident. Maybe they went back to live with my great grandmother Martha? Eventually they would move to Blaenllechau. Harry and his wife Ann had seven children, six girls and a boy.
People have told me that he never forgot Salonika. Maybe I should go there one day to find whether he left anything behind.
People have told me that he was quite a gruff character, but he had a soft side. I'm told that he had a real soft spot for my brother Barrie. My aunty Doreen told me that he once returned home for work and sat down for his dinner, as he always did. When my grandmother placed his food in front of him, he pushed it away and burst into tears. That was the day when his favourite pit pony had died.
He was a keen gardener. Apparently his garden was a living picture. He'd only grow flowers though.  This skill appeared to have been passed down to my uncle Burt who was also a keen gardener. (Roses). Maybe it is a skill that has been passed down to me. In my latter years I've become interested in gardening although I wouldn't call myself successful.
 I'm told that he tried breeding terriers once, but this wasn't much of a success. 


16 Club Row, Blaenllechau


If you'd like to learn more about the Salonica campaign, read The Gardeners of Salonica by Alan Palmer.

As far as I know, this is the only song written about Salonica. It's an Irish folk song.....or is it a protest song.

Salonika by the folk band Lankum.

Oh my husband's in Salonika.
I wonder if he's dead?
I wonder if he knows he has a kid with a foxy head?
So write away.
So write away.
So write away Salonika, write away me soldier boy.


George Henry "Harry" Davies.
1884-1958.

Sergeant, South Wales Borderers and Royal Field Artillery.
Colliery Farrier.
Husband, Father and Grandfather.


A couple of years ago, my daughter Elinor gave me a lifebelt. It had been left over from one of her circus performances. I decided to paint it and decorate it. It now hangs in my garden, near my pond, just in case.









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Links
Keeston, Camrose.
William Dennis
The Smith Family
Bill Edwards
May Edwards
The Edwards Family
The Edwards Name
Thomas Smith
Smith / Dennis connections

Wednesday, 26 April 2017

Keeston, Camrose.

Looking down my mother's line of the family tree, I discovered a branch of the family with the surname Deveraux.  The only picture that I have of a Deveraux is this one.

Martha Smith nee Deveraux.

She was born on Christmas Day 1853.
Her father was named Thomas Deveraux. He couldn't read or write. He signed Martha's birth certificate with a mark.


Martha's mother was also called Martha. Her maiden name had been Davied.
They lived in a tiny hamlet called Keeston, which is near the village of Camrose, near Haverfordwest.
Thomas Deveraux was a farm labourer.


There were actually a few  ladies called Martha Deveraux. My great grandmother, shown in the picture. Her mother was also Martha Deveraux. She died of cholera in1866. She was 53 at the time so was probably born in 1813.



Notice from the 1881 census report that Thomas Devereux was living with the Smiths. He was my great-great grandfather. There was also a niece living with them , also called Martha Devereux.


At the time, Keeston held a fair twice a year, in the Spring and in the Autumn. These were probably Hiring Fairs.
I've only managed to find one newspaper item relating to Keeston.


So, there were a few ladies called Martha Deveraux.
One was born around 1815. She married Thomas Deveraux, a farm labourer.
She died in 1866 of cholera. Strangely, around the same time there was much celebration in the area as a railway line had pushed through the area.
Thomas and Martha had a number of children. One of them was named Martha and would be my great grandmother. In the 1911 census she is living in New Street, Ferndale with her husband William and also a sister, Eliza. I'm not sure when she died although there is a death listed in 1927.
I'm not sure what became of Martha Deveraux the niece although I did find a newspaper report that told of a Martha Devereux that was named as a receptionist for a spiritualist medium.

Another Martha Devereux was born in the area in 1816.



I've also found evidence of the death of a one year old child called Martha Devereux (1824)



Thomas Devereux lived until 1890. I can't be sure of this, but I think after 1881 he moved to Pontypridd. A Thomas Devereaux is listed as working in the Penrhiw Colliery. At one time, a Thomas Devereux appeared in court accused of helping to organise a strike. These were the days before organised unions. The newspaper refers to the action as a holiday.

If this is my great great grandfather then he was still working at the age of 74.
The only other newspaper article that I have relating to a Thomas Deveraux records an appearance in court.

He was fined one shilling and three pence. He would have been 36 at the time. I wonder what he did?

Update.
I now have Thomas Deveraux's death certificate. He died on the Fourth of November 1890.
At the time, he was living in Lake Street, Ferndale. I think I remember this as being the posh part of Ferndale. One of my doctors lived there. His son was also called Thomas Deveraux and he was with his father when he died. The son's name was also Thomas Deveraux. Again, he signed his name with a mark. Thomas Deveraux junior lived in Beech Street, again, one of the nicer parts of Ferndale.




From the Land Tax sheets I learned that Rees Devereux was farming at Kethingston in 1786....presumably Keeston .....where Stephen Devereux was farming in 1830.

In 1786 Gabriel Devereux and James Devereux farmed in Camrose as well, but I have not endeavoured to track inbetweentimes until we learn more from you.


More on Thomas Devereux.



Strange when you think about it. My great grandmother's father-in-law was sent to prison for poaching. Her husband, William Smith's father was a game keeper.

Stephen Devereux

Stephen Devereux was Thomas' father, so that would make him my great great great grandfather. So far I've discovered that his wife was called Emma. I have also discovered this newspaper advert.



I suppose this might give me a clue as to why I'm not a landowner in Pembrokeshire.



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