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19 March 2012

Justice Welch

The best description of the "March to Finchley" was written by Justice Welch. It is far too long to quote, and some of its paragraphs could not be transferred to these polite columns. Justice Welch was perfectly qualified to recognise and appreciate the details of the scene depicted by his friend. Originally a grocer in Museum Street (then Queen Street), he had risen to be High Constable of Westminster, in which character he was known to all London as the guardian of the malefactors who were carted to Tyburn for execution. Long after Tyburn ceased to be the gallows spot, men remembered him riding sternly behind the fatal cart, on a white horse, dressed in black, with a nine-storey George the Second wig, highly powdered, and carrying in his hand a black baton tipped with silver. This office was not Welch's zenith, for on the departure of Henry Fielding to Lisbon he succeeded him as the chief magistrate for Westminster.

(Newspaper cutting of c. 1900)

18 March 2012

Report of death of Mr John Welch

MANUFACTURER DEAD.

Mr John Welch, head of John Welch and Co, Whitehall Bleachworks, Chinley, died last night at his Llandudno residence, aged 62.
     He built the big works at Chinley several years ago, and thus was the industrial pioneer of this growing district. Recently he purchased Whitehall and adjoining estates. He employed several hundred workpeople. He was a prominent Conservative and a charitable man. Councillor Tom Welch and Lieutenant Harry Welch are sons.

(Newspaper cutting of c. 1900)

23 January 2012

PAST AND PRESENT - SOME FAMILY LINKS - VI (continued)

The Thomas Paget, of Forton Lodge, who died in 1843, had also three daughters, all of whom are now dead. The first of the three to pass away was the youngest, Letitia Paget, at the age of forty-two. Like her young nephew Thomas, of Lancaster, she met with a tragic death. On September 24th, 1857, she started out from Forton Lodge, accompanied by a Lancaster relative, on a journey to London. From Manchester they travelled by a Great Northern express train. A little south of Tuxford station the train ran off the rails on the viaduct which crosses the Newark and Tuxford road, and the carriages were completely wrecked. Five of the passengers were killed, among them Miss Paget and her companion, Mrs Mary Heaton, of 18, Queen-square, Lancaster.Mrs Heaton was Miss L. Paget's cousin, and a widow. Her husband, John Heaton, died at his residence in Queen-square, about the end of 1828; he was a member of the firm of Heaton and Whewell, ironmongers, Market-street, and served as a member of the Town Council. His partner was a kinsman of the famous Dr. William Whewell. Thomas Paget's second daughter, Mary, was the wife of John Herdman Sherson. She was married at Cockerham Church on June 1st, 1847. Her husband was elected Mayor of Lancaster in 1851, being the aforenamed John Hall's immediate predecessor in that office. John Herdman Sherson died at Greenfield on February 29th, 1864, aged sixty-two, and was interred in Lancaster cemetery. The remains of his parents rest in the St. Nicholas-street burial ground. He was a descendant of an old Ellel family. One of his ancestors, Thomas Sherson, a barrister, who resided at Ellel Crag, and died in 1725, was thrice Mayor of Lancaster, and Thomas' son, Alexander, was a solicitor and Town Clerk. Either Thomas or Alexander Sherson held the office of Constable of the Castle. Thomas Sherson's father, Richard, died at Barrow about 1680, and his great-grandfather, John, a yeoman, died at Ellel about 1621. Of the marriage of John Herdman Sherson and Mary Paget there was issue two daughters, the Misses Sherson, one of whom once reminded me that she had been greatly interested in a "mothers' meeting" of which my own mother "was for many years the senior, and very much respected, member." Leaving Greenfield, these estimable ladies lived for a while at Morecambe Lodge, Yealand Conyers, and from there they removed to the Lake District. Thomas Paget's eldest daughter, Elizabeth, left Forton Lodge after the sad death of her sister Letitia, and settled in Lancaster - at Greenfield - and here she died in 1893, aged ninety. She was buried at Shireshead Church, by the side of her sister she had mourned so long.

01 January 2012

PAST AND PRESENT - SOME FAMILY LINKS - VI (continued)

Edward Edmondson, of Middleton, had a son Henry - born on the Trumley homestead, and baptised at Overton Church on January 5th, 1788 - who settled at Rossall. He was skilled in agricultural pursuits, and his services as an adjudicator were requisitioned at various shows. On several occasions he acted as a judge of horses, &c., at the annual shows of the Lancaster Agricultural Society. His sister Jenny, or Jane, who was baptised at Overton Church on March 31st, 1782, married a Mr. Davis, of Cockerham, and they had a daughter who married a Mr. Banks, solicitor, of Preston. Another sister, Isabel, baptised at Overton on March 9th, 1794, married Edward Atkinson, who went to reside at Morecambe. The other children of Edward Edmondson have already been referred to.

There is a genealogical link between the Pagets and a brilliant "old boy" of Lancaster Grammar School - Dr. John Edward Marr, University Lecturer in Geology at Cambridge, who was born three months before the railway disaster in which Miss Letitia Paget lost her life. The learned professor's ancestors were settled at Oversands, in the parishes of Cartmel, Aldingham and Ulverston, several centuries ago. There are testamentary records of some who would be living at Scales, in the parish of Aldingham, at the beginning of Queen Elizabeth's reign. Captain Robert Marr, son of John and Elizabeth Marr, was born at Aldingham in 1756, and settled in Lancaster residing on Castle-hill. In 1800 I find him described as a merchant here. In 1791 he married Elizabeth, the third child of Peter Paget, father of the aforementioned Thomas Paget, of Forton. Peter Paget had an older daughter, Mary, born on November 19th, 1762, who was the wife of W. Hardyman, but of this marriage there was no issue. Of the marriage of Robert Marr and Elizabeth Paget there was born Mary - on of the victims of the Great Northern Railway disaster in 1857 - who married John Heaton, of this town; Thomas and Elizabeth, who died unmarried; and John Marr, born at Lancaster in 1800, who in 1837 married Mary, daughter of Francis and Elizabeth Simpson, of Lancaster. The Cambridge professor, Dr. J. E. Marr, is the son of John and Mary Marr. In  February, 1829, John Marr was elected a member of Lancaster Town Council in the room of his brother-in-law, John Heaton, then recently deceased. After his marriage, John Marr lived successively at Wray (where he took a prominent part in the founding of Holy Trinity Church, of which he was an original trustee), at Poulton-le-Sands, and at Carnarvon. He died at Carnarvon in February, 1875, and was buried in Lancaster cemetery. Dr. Marr's maternal grandfather, Francis Simpson, gentleman, died on December 10th, 1816, aged 57, and his wife on May 15th, 1828. There is a tablet to their memory in High-street chapel, of which chapel Francis Simpson was appointed a trustee in August, 1814. In passing, it may be noted that Dr. Marr, the author of several important works, has contributed a valuable geological chapter - described by one of the leading reviewers as "very thorough" - to the Rev. Joseph Whiteside's newly-issued book on "Shappe in By-gone Days."