Wednesday, 29 April 2015

This is an obituary of my grandmother, Violet Florence Smale (nee Gasper), who died way back in 1987, found in a box of memorabilia of my father's.

It's nice to see what was written, although there are a few inaccuracies, and it's also interesting to see those who attended her funeral, many of whom I knew.

A few corrections:
  • Although some people called her 'Mum', she was know as Bunty by most people.
  • My father, Jack and his wife Dorothy joined Bunty at The Sportsman's Arms in 1956, following the death of Bunty's husband John, paying off the debts and enabling the business to continue.
  • From then onwards it was my parents who had then had the tenancy of The Copley Arms, Hessenford, although Bunty was a great help in making the business such a success.
  • My parents bought the private house (formerly a boys' school) in Dobwalls, getting the licence and turning it into the pub called 'The Highway' as it was on a main road.  The idea of the pub name came from Esme Couch, one-time Mayor of Looe.  Subsequently someone must have decided that Highwayman was a better name, especially for the tourists.
  • Most people thought that my grandmother was the licensee and that Jack and Dorothy just helped her.  As my mother usually worked out in the kitchen (she was a trained chef), some people even thought that Jack and Bunty were husband and wife!  My mother wasn't too struck on that idea.  I wonder who they thought Dorothy was!
Without Bunty's help and business drive Jack and Dorothy wouldn't have had such successful businesses:  Dorothy had the catering knowledge and Jack had the business experience and the knowledge of the technicalities.

Bunty had the experience of running pubs, and the time to talk to customers.  Not only did she and her husband run the Edgecombe Arms, Cremyll, they also ran the Fountain Hotel in Liskeard (then very upmarket and now sadly closed).  
Image result for Marquess of Granby, New Cross Road, London.
And the experience which Bunty gained during World War 1 working in a large pub in London must have been a vital part of her ability to be so successful in the licensed trade.  I assume the pub she worked in was the Marquess of Granby, New Cross Road, London (see pic, taken about 1910, not long before my granma worked there).  The reason for this assumption is that her marriage certificate states the Marquess of Granby as her residence.


Thursday, 2 April 2015

Rare colour footage of London in 1927:

http://www.wimp.com/rarelondon/

Saturday, 21 March 2015

List of 'don'ts' for women on bicycles in 1895 ....



The women’s rights advocate Susan B. Anthony may have said that the bicycle did “more to emancipate women than anything else in the world”, but the road along which it travelled was a bumpy one.

On 21st June 1895, the Newark Sunday Advocate ran the following article:

The Unique Cycling club of Chicago is all that its name implies. One of its laws is that on all runs bloomers and knickerbockers shall be worn, and two members who disobeyed this rule recently met with a punishment that they will not forget soon. Union park was the rendezvous for the last run, and 50 members turned out. The president, Miss Bunker, observed two women wearing short skirts over their bloomers.
“Take the skirts off,” ordered Captain Bunker.
“Indeed we won’t,” was the reply.

A crowd of 200 had collected to see the start. The president and the captain held a consultation, and then, taking several strong armed members with them, fell on the skirt wearers and stripped them down to their bloomers.

“It was done in all seriousness,” said Mrs. Langdon. “The club’s rules are made to be kept and not to be broken. Why did we take off the skirts in public? For no other reason but to make examples of the offenders. They publicly defied our rules and were published accordingly.”

http://www.vintag.es/2015/02/a-list-of-donts-for-women-on-bicycles.html

Federation of Family History Societies

Image result for www.ffhs.org.uk images

The FFHS website

The Federation of Family History Societies (FFHS) is an educational charity. They support, inform and advise their membership, which consists of family history societies and similar bodies across the world.
To achieve their mission, the:
  • co-ordinate and assist the work of organisations interested in family history, genealogy and heraldry
  • foster co-operation and projects that help researchers
  • represent the interests of family historians, especially in the preservation and availability of archives
You can read more about their activities on our "What We Do" page.

http://www.ffhs.org.uk/

Poem from Pauline Walters

Saturday, 6 December 2014

How to date women's dresses ... by shape





https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=376158469227241&set=p.376158469227241&type=1

Friday, 28 November 2014

I'm looking for relations of Alice, who was a very good friend of my grandmother, they were so close that they were almost like sisters. As you can see, Alice died in 1929 when she was 36, presumably never having been married or had children.  For this reason I'd like to locate any relatives as I have their family Bible and would love to return it to the family.

This is what I've been able to work out so far:


Alice Melina Cary
Born: 10/10/1892 46 Queen Street, Scarborough
Parents: George Cary and Elizabeth Thompson
1901 Census: Scarborough: George WT, 46; Elizabeth J, 47; Alice M 18 (!), scholar.
1911 Census: with parents in Scarborough.
George William Thompson Cary, 56; Elizabeth Jane, 57; Alice Melina, 18. (perhaps Alice's older brother had left home by then).
Died: 1929, aged 36.

Father:
George William Thompson Cary
Born: 13/12/1854 London;
Parents William Frederick Cary (d 1900) and Melina Fall (d 1885)
Siblings: Matilda b 1858; Frederick b 1860.
Married Aysgarth in1887 to Elizabeth Jane Thompson
Children:
Boy, presumably older than Alice (can't find any boy born in North Riding in that time period).
Alice, born 1892
Died: Scarborough in 1943, aged 88.

Mother:
Elizabeth Jane Thompson
Born Carperby in 1855;
Parents:
Died Scarborough 1938, aged 84.

Also see: http://www.geni.com/people/Alice-Cary/6000000004405203442