Thursday, 4 December 2014

Strange bits and pieces

Strange bits and pieces


Pea-Bee has been having a bit of a sort out and has found a number of little mementos that are both interesting and puzzling:
This first is a medal with "Tonic Sol-Fa Association" on one side and "Crystal Palace Choir July 17th 1861" on the other.

According to The Standard of 18th July 1861: "The fifth annual juvenile choral meeting of the association took place yesterday at the Crystal Palace, when the choir consisted of 3500 children, with a thousand tenors and bases."

[Pea-Bee will add a full transcription of the article at a later date - it does on a bit]

The second is this enamelled badge - dating from the 1920s/30s. Does anyone know was P.O.O.H. & R.H.B.F. stand for?
The only clue Pea-Bee has is that the original owner worked as a postman (P.O.?) and kept bees

Sunday, 30 November 2014

Beehives in Bromley

Once again, PeaBee has done some research on a subject of only peripheral interest to his main line of enquiry, (appropriately enough on bees!) so, not wishing to waste it, he offers it to his various readers. In this case, the research has not been in great depth – although it ended up being wide ranging and Topsy-like. It was done to answer a couple of questions – which it did – and another question, which it didn’t. Never mind, perhaps someone else will find some of it useful.

Beekeepers’ Appliance Manufacturers in Bromley and Aylesbury
The Apriary, 24 Stanley Road, Mason’s Hill, Bromley, Kent
Chudleigh Villa, 22 Bierton Road, Ayelsbury, Bucks

These were small, related businesses but interesting nonetheless. The Bromley company appears to have been started by Stephen James Baldwin, a former Metropolitan Police Sergeant, in the 1870s. Baldwin may have employed a young carpenter, William Barwell, in addition to his adopted son, Robert Baldwin, to make the beehives. About 1900, these two younger men moved to Bierton Road, Aylesbury in Buckinghamshire and set up a beehive business there. Meanwhile, the Bromley business continued under Stephen Baldwin until his death in 1904 when it was taken over by his housekeeper Elizabeth Seadon, and then by her son Edwin Roger Seadon. In 1922, the business was incorporated into a London-based firm, although Edwin Seadon continued working for the new organisation as works manager. Later it appears the business, which always traded as S. J. Baldwin, regained its independence under Edwin Seadon although he also became a house decorator. William Barwell had returned to Bromley by 1911 and lived in 12 Stanley Road, working as a carpenter, although perhaps helping the Seadons in the beehive business.

Stephen James Baldwin (1833-1904) was the youngest of five children born in Kemsing, Kent, to Kipps Baldwin (1759-1836) and Joanna Downs (1801-1867) before Kipps died in 1836. Stephen was baptised on 14 April 1833.
[The name Kipps Baldwin appears in several generations of the family, both in Kent and in the USA]
Joanna (who was originally from County Kerry) later married William Hunt (b1802) from Galway on 22 October 1839 at Christ Church, Marylebone.
[The record has her name as Balding but as she could only make her mark, she may not have realised the name was misspelt, and the priest at Marylebone may not have understand her or her husband’s Irish accents]
Stephen lived with his mother and stepfather in Kemsing in 1851, where he was an agricultural labourer, and William an umbrella maker. Stephen married Ann Morris (1827-1889) in Lewisham in 1856. He had joined the Metropolitan Police and by 1861 had been promoted sergeant.
Joanna and William had two children, the youngest being Ann Phoebe Hunt (b1843).
Stephen Baldwin seems to have been close to his young half-sister, even after she married and emigrated to America. She was living with Stephen and family in Dulwich in 1861 (noted as step-sister) and gave her address as Upper Norwood when she married Alfred Smith Campbell (1839-1912) at Greenwich in 1863.
The Campbells had two children in England before emigrating to the USA in 1866. They lived in New Jersey and had several more children including Charlotte Campbell (b1875) and Isabel (or Isabella) Campbell (b1880) (In later life, Stephen would take an annual holiday at their home.)
Police Sergeant Stephen Baldwin and his wife Ann had moved to Gipsy Cottage, South Vale, Upper Norwood by 1871 and had a visitor, Ellen Mercer (b1844), and her 8-year-old son Robert Mercer, living with them. However, 10 years later, this young man was listed as Robert Baldwin (1862-1954), living with Stephen and Ann at 24 Stanley Road, Bromley. There was no sign of his mother.
[Ellen Mercer was born in Lymington, Hampshire in about 1840. She was a lodger in St Pancras in 1861 and was listed as the wife of a gentleman’s coachman, although her husband was absent; he was also absent in 1871 – Ellen said she was married, not widowed. Robert was born in Finsbury in 1862.]
The British Bee Journal, in it issue of 1 October 1874, opened its report on The Great Bee and Honey Show at the Crystal Palace: “This wonderful exhibition, which has formed the chief topic for discussion in the British Bee Journal during several past months, was duly-held on Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday, the 8th, 9th, and 10th of September last, and in its result was most eminently successful. No such exhibition has ever before been attempted in the United Kingdom, and its promoters have every reason to congratulate themselves on the apiarian wisdom which induced them to project so extraordinary an undertaking.”
The journal also reported: “Mr. S. J. Baldwin, a sergeant of Police at the Palace, exhibited a hive which, although unnoticed by the judges, attracted a great deal of attention; in its manufacture it embodied many of the principles enunciated in the British Bee Journal, and obtained a cheerful purchaser at three guineas.”
Stephen Baldwin was also mentioned in the list of prizewinners in the Cottagers Class, taking second place “for the largest and best exhibition of super honey in comb, gathered by one stock, or united swarms of bees, the property of the exhibitor” and third “for the best exhibition of honey in comb, produced in one apiary, without the destruction of the bees”.
He was to take many more prizes in shows across the country in the years to come – and sell many more hives.
Stephen Baldwin had left the police to devote more time to his bees and at the AGM of the British Bee-keeper’s Association held on 12 February 1879, “Mr. S. J. Baldwin was appointed as expert to conduct the manipulations and give lessons in bee-management” at various county shows in a specially-constructed Bee Tent. It was also announced that “Mr. S. J. Baldwin had been appointed agent for a prominent Italian apiarian, who had shown himself to be most anxious to become connected with the British Association”.
His address was still being given as Gipsy Cottage, South Vale, Upper Norwood as late as the autumn of 1880, but then the following letter appeared in The British Bee Journal:


HONEY SALESMAN.
Will you kindly allow me through your Journal to inform the members of the British Bee-keepers’ Association, and also the members of the affiliated County Associations, that I, as the authorised officer or agent, have, with the concurrence of the Honey Sales Committee, made arrangements with some of the oldest and most respectable houses in London who are willing to take any reasonable quantity of good honey put up in a neat and saleable form 1 Comb-honey in sections or boxes of 1 lb. and 2 lb. each glazed, will command the best price and quickest sale. Any member wishing to sell his honey has only to communicate with me, and send a sample, carriage paid, in the form in which it is to be offered, stating the lowest price he will take, and the quantity he has to dispose of. As soon after the sale has been effected as possible, I will remit, by post-office order or otherwise, the amount realised less the very small commission of five per cent. 
— S. J. Baldwin, Expert of the British Bee-keepers' Association. 
The Apiary, Stanley Road, Bromley, Kent, 
1st. January, 1881.

According to the census, he had become an “Apiarian Appliance Maker” by 1881, and Robert was listed as an “Apiarian Worker”, an arrangement that was continued in 1891 after the death of Ann Baldwin in 1889.
Robert Baldwin married Annie Elizabeth Penfold (1869-1941) from Farnborough on 16 October 1893.
Annie was the daughter of the landlord of the Coach & Horses Inn, Farnborough, Henry Nathaniel Penfold (1844-1906) and his wife Anne Matilda (nee Mitchell) (1840-1907).
In 1901, Robert was with his parents-in-law and was listed as a bee-keeper while his wife was in Aylesbury in a house called Chudleigh Villa, Bierton Road, a property shared with William Barwell and his family. William Barwell was described as an Apiarian Appliance Manufacturer. In 1911 Robert was in Aylesbury with Annie at 22 Bierton Road, and was described as a bee expert. Robert ceased to be listed in local business directories after 1911 and the couple later moved to 2 St Mary’s Square, Aylesbury. Annie died in 1941 and Robert remarried in 1943, Grace Edith Taylor (1896-1963). He died in 1954 and Grace in 1863.
William Barwell (1868-) had been born in Swanley, Kent. In 1891, he was living with his parents in Aylesbury Road, Bromley, and was described as a beehive maker. He married Minnie Smitherton (b1875) in Bromley in 1898. The couple had two children, the first born in Bromley in 1900 and the second in Chatham in 1904: it would appear that the Barwells were not long in Aylesbury – perhaps only visiting on census night, perhaps just helping Robert Baldwin set up his business. Certainly, by 1911, the Barwells were back in Bromley, significantly at 12 Stanley Road, and William was described as a carpenter and joiner.
Robert Edward Seadon (1842-1899) from Suffolk married Elizabeth Mitchell (1850-1915) from Hayes in Kent in Bromley on 17 April 1876.
[If there is any relationship between Elizabeth Mitchell and Anne Matilda Mitchell, it could not have been close. Both had fathers called John born about the same time, one in Chelsfield and the other in Farnborough]
Robert was a gardener and Elizabeth had been a servant in Bromley College, a charity providing housing for the widows of clergymen. In 1881, the Seadon family – Robert, Elizabeth, Edwin and William (1879-1883) – lived at 21 Stanley Road. Ten years later, they were at 19 Stanley Road. Robert was still a gardener but 15-year-old Edwin had become errand boy. Soon after the 1891 census was taken, Robert and Elizabeth had a daughter, Annie Louise M Seadon (b1891).
In 1898, Edwin Robert Seadon (1876-1950) married Ada Maria Bagshaw (1870-1910) and the following year their first daughter, Annie Elizabeth A Seadon (1899-1906), was born.
In Bromley in 1901, Stanley Baldwin was still at 24 Stanley Road as a beehive manufacturer. The recently widowed Elizabeth Seadon was his housekeeper, and lived at No 24 with her daughter Annie, not quite 10. Next door at No 23 was Edwin Seadon, Ada and their daughter.
There were other people staying at 23 and 24 Stanley Road: the Campbell family (Stephen Baldwin’s half-sister and family) visited England from New Jersey, arriving 22 March 1901 in time for the census – the parents, Ann and Alfred Campbell, stayed at 23 Stanley Road (home of Edwin Seadon) while two daughters, Charlotte and Isabel, were at 24 Stanley Road. Also in the Baldwin household was another of Stephen’s “nieces”, Florence Baldwin (b1855), in fact the granddaughter of Stephen’s eldest brother, John.
On 8 October 1904, Stephen Baldwin sailed from Liverpool in order to visit the Campbells at their home in New Jersey, as he had on several occasions before. He landed in New York on 15 October.
Stephen died on 30 December 1904 while still in New Jersey; he was 71. His apiarian appliance business was then taken over by his former housekeeper, Elizabeth Seadon, to whom he left it in his will.
There was a brief announcement of his death in The British Bee Journal on 12 January 1905:

Mr J S Baldwin (sic)
We deeply regret to announce the death, on December 30, of the above highly-esteemed bee-appliance manufacturer of Bromley, Kent. The sad news reached us from the family – soon after its receipt by cablegram – too late for insertion last week, and pending further particulars, which are to follow, we defer a more lengthy notice of our friend, the late well-known bee expert. It may be remembered that we inserted in our issue of September 15 last, a brief notice of Mr Baldwin’s departure for America on a visit to his sister, and we learn that he had already booked his passage home on steamer leaving New York on 7th inst. His demise was therefore probably sudden and quite unexpected.
We are requested to say that the business will be carried on as usual at the old – and only – addresss, The Apiary, Bromley, Kent.

A fortnight later, BBJ published the following obituary:

DEATH OF MR. S. J. BALDWIN.
Following the brief notice, on page 19 of our issue for January 12, notifying the death of Mr. S. J. Baldwin, we have now received further particulars, which will no doubt be read with sympathetic interest by many.
It was known to Mr. Baldwin's family and his more intimate friends that he never quite recovered from the shock received some years ago while attending a show in the country. A sudden terrific thunderstorm broke over the place, and Mr. Baldwin, who had taken momentary refuge under a tree, was struck down by lightning. He soon recovered, however, and was able to attend to business as usual, though the effects never entirely left him.
After establishing himself at Bromley, Kent, his business grew and prospered, and — as will be seen in the illustration — he established a good-sized apiary, where hives of all types could be seen at work, and where the business will still continue to be carried on in his name as usual.
The late Mr. Baldwin occupied a prominent position in the bee-world for between twenty-five and thirty years, and was the first bee expert and lecturer engaged by the British Bee-keepers' Association to give demonstrations in the bee-tent with live bees at shows and elsewhere. His services in this connection extending over a number of years — indeed, long after he became a manufacturer of bee appliances — and those who have seen him in the bee-tent will remember his many gifts as a fluent and interesting lecturer, one whose audiences never wearied of his cheery and ready-witted addresses on the hive-bee and its work.
The business at Bromley was not confined to the home trade, for he sent bees and bee goods to all parts of the world, including America, Australia, Canada, the West Indies, and New Zealand. To the last-named place we remember him sending also a large consignment of humble bees in 1884 for the purpose of fertilising the seed of red clover in that country.

Though advancing years had begun to tell on him, he was able to attend to business up to the last, the only rest he took being a two or three months' holiday at intervals of a few years, which he always spent with his sister, Mrs. Campbell, who with her husband emigrated to the U.S.A. some years ago, and the latter has now established a very large photographic business at New Jersey. He always returned home reinvigorated by his American trip, the last outing being notified in our pages a few months ago.
The latest communication received at Bromley from Mrs. Campbell mentioned his having paid a visit to Philadelphia, and the weather turning cold very suddenly, he caught a chill, which caused him to return to New Jersey at once, where he was confined to his room for some days. The last letter he ever wrote was penned from this room on Boxing Day, and in it he mentions “having to keep his room through a bad cold, but hoped to be well enough to start for home on January 7, for which date his passage had been already booked.”
He died on December 30, and was interred at Elizabeth, New Jersey, U.S.A. It will, we think, surprise many besides ourselves to find that our late friend would have completed his seventy-third year on March 20 next had he lived. The portrait on page 34 is from the latest photograph of him, taken in America at Mr. Campbell's studio.

Mr. Baldwin has willed the business to Mrs. Elizabeth Seadon, who was his devoted housekeeper during the whole time he was a widower, Mrs. Baldwin having died in 1889. He never had any family, but of late years Mr. Edwin R. Seadon (who is seen in the apiary along with Mr. Baldwin), son of Mrs. Seadon, has been intended to carry on the business for his mother, and was very carefully trained with that object by Mr. Baldwin himself. Indeed, Mr. Seadon for some years has, we learn, done all the expert work connected with the apiary, and is fully acquainted with all the necessary details of the business in all its branches, so that it will continue, as heretofore, at the old place under the old name.

[In a rather spooky aside here, just a few days before finding this obituary, PeaBee heard a piece on BBC Radio 4 which mentioned that a conservationist group were trying to re-establish a species of bumble bee that had gone extinct in the UK. The group had discovered that someone in the 19th century had shipped this particular species to New Zealand to pollinate the red clover that had been introduced as cattle feed, and the bees were thriving there. However, the New Zealand bees had mutated into a slightly different race and so the recolonization of Kent was being done with Swedish bees!]

Kelly’s Directory of Kent for 1913 has under category heading “Beehive & Beekeepers’ Appliance Manufacturer” the entry: Seadon Mrs Elizabeth, 24 Stanley rd, Mason’s hill, Bromley. The 1911 census shows Elizabeth Seadon and her daughter Annie at 24 Stanley Road. Elizabeth is referred to as a beekeepers’ appliance manufacturer while Annie is involved in “home work” – it is not made clear if this means she ran the home or worked at home (possibly in the bee appliance business).
Edwin Seadon’s wife Ada died early in 1910 and at the time of the 1911 census, Edwin was listed at 23 Stanley Road, with two young daughters: Ethel Winifred Grace Seadon (b1902) and Gertrude Maggie Morris Seadon (1907-1934). He was described as a “Bee Appliance Maker and Bee Expert”.
Elizabeth was proud of her granddaughter Ethel and, in the 1909 equivalent of Facebook, “posted” the following letter (and a photograph) in The British Bee Journal:

OUR YOUNGEST LADY BEE-KEEPER.
I have pleasure in sending you a photograph of one of the youngest bee-keepers in the world, my grandchild, Ethel Grace Seadon, who is in her eighth year. She goes into the bee-tent with her father and drives the bees while he gives his lecture, and is quite as skilful as a grown-up person in managing her little pets. She is to assist her father at the Beckenham Flower Show this summer, and her presence in the bee-tent, fearlessly handling the “dangerous insects” (as some people think them), is quite an object-lesson to spectators as showing how harmless bees are when properly managed.
— Mrs. Seadon, Bromley, Kent.

 Edwin was to remarry, in the summer of 1911. His new bride was Maud Tisdell (1883-1969) and she presented him with a son, on 23 August 1914, also called Edwin Robert Seadon (1914-1985).
After the death of his mother in 1915, Edwin Seadon took over the beehive business and moved his family into 24 Stanley Road: directories of 1918 and 1922 give him as a beehive and beekeepers’ appliance manufacturer at that address.
In both 1921 and 1922 the Kent and the Surrey Bee-keepers’ Associations held a joint honey show at the Crystal Palace and in 1923 they decided to broaden its basis to a National Show. The originally suggested title of “Home Counties Honey Show” was abandoned in favour of “The National Show of Bees & Honey”. Edwin Seadon was one of the organising committee members representing the Kent association. The show continued at Crystal Palace until the fire.
The juveniles in the family continued their precocious interest in bees. Several local newspapers across the country carried a syndicated report on 8 September 1927:
BOY BEEKEEPER
TOOK FIRST SWARM AT THE AGE OF TWO
A 13-year-old boy, with a handful of live bees, was one of the sights at the National Show of Bees and Honey, which opened at the Crystal Palace today.
He is Edwin Seadon, son of a Bromley (Kent) beekeeper, and has helped his father with the bees for 11 years. “I took my first swarm when I was two years old,” he said. “I held the skep while father shook the bough. I missed the queen, though. I can do better now. Yes, I am interested in beekeeping, and want to take it up as a trade. I am not at all afraid of the bees. I am used to them.”

On 8 June 1922, The British Bee Journal carried the following announcement as part of an advertisement for Dickinson & Owen Ltd (“The only Bee and Hive store in London”):

TO MY PATRONS —
I wish to announce that the Bee Hive and Appliance business which I have been carrying on under the original title of S. J. Baldwin for eighteen years, with which I have been connected for the past 30 years, and which is the oldest Bee Hive business in the United Kingdom, has been amalgamated with that of the “Langstroth” Specialists, Messrs. Dickinson & Owen, Ltd., of 25, Bartlett's Buildings, Holborn Circus, E.C.4, who will continue the business as before, utilising the plant and machinery, wax foundation mills, etc., for the production of “Langstroth” Hives and equipment.
I have much pleasure in stating that I shall be joining Messrs. Dickinson & Owen, Ltd., as Works Manager, and continuing at the old address, Stanley Road, Bromley, where a full range of samples and stock will be kept. For those who find it necessary to continue use of British Standard sizes, a stock will be kept on hand.
Not being a victim of prejudice, I have become a convert to the “Langstroth” Hives, which I consider suitable in every way for use in this country, and I am quite convinced that they will soon be the Standard Hives in the United Kingdom as in most countries.
Their great simplicity is the compelling feature, and should appeal to all.
Trusting that your greatly esteemed patronage of the past will be continued to the new firm, and proffering my best thanks for favours received.
Yours faithfully,
(Signed) E. R. SEADON.

Dickinson & Owen’s take on the merger was:

The letter on the opposite column speaks for itself, so we need not repeat the announcement; but in confirming it we would like to say that the combination of the oldest Bee Hive business in the country with one of the youngest, combining the ripe experience of many years with the vigour, enterprise, and initiative of youth, should surely make for success, bringing us many new friends and, we trust, no enemies.

However, the “vigour of youth” lacked staying power and this union did not last long – Dickinson & Owen seems to have disappeared in short order and Edwin Seadon was back running the business still under its long-time trading name of S J Baldwin. The last mention so far found is in Kelly’s 1938 Directory. However the family had also taken a new line of work in the 1930s: E. R. Seadon & Son, decorators.
Edwin snr died in 1950 and left an estate valued at £310 0s 9d. The family continued to live at 24 Stanley Road – in Edwin jnr’s case until about 1966.



Thursday, 24 April 2014

Crystal Palace District Gas Company 1854-1904


The Gas Men Cometh
 
Personalities at the Crystal Palace District Gas Company 1854-1904
 
During the 50-year life of the Crystal Palace District Gas Company, the executive officers were drawn from just five families, all with links to the gas industry elsewhere in Britain and overseas.
 
The five family names were Ohren, Cathels, Watson, Gandon and Shoubridge.
 
Below is a brief outline of these families’ connection with the Crystal Palace District Gas Company, and the sequence of their involvement, followed by a more detailed biography of each of the major players.
 
Magnus Ohren was engineer/manager of the Crystal Palace District Gas Co from a year after the company’s formation and also became secretary a little later. He gave up the role of manager in 1865 when, owing to the rapid growth of the undertaking, the combined job became too much for one person. He remained secretary until the autumn of 1893 when, aged 71, his health started to fail. He died in 1907.
 
He was succeeded as secretary by his son Charles Magnus Ohren who retained the position until the company was absorbed by the South Suburban Gas Co.
 
When Magnus Ohren gave up the role of manager, this post was taken by Scotsman Edmund Cathels, but he and many of his family emigrated to North America in 1872 and another Scotsman, James Watson, was appointed manager. Although Watson later moved on to the Herne Bay Gas Co, his daughter Elizabeth married Charles Ohren and his son, James Clarke Watson, continued to work for the Crystal Palace company as foreman of the works.
 
The next manager – for 20 years, from 1877 to 1897 – was Charles Gandon, and he was followed by Sydney Yarrell Shoubridge, who remained in post until the 1904 take-over by South Suburban.
 
Magnus Ohren
 
Magnus Ohren was born in Rotherhithe on 8 December 1821, the son of Charles Ohren, a wharfinger of Swedish descent. His connection with the gas industry began with his apprenticeship in 1837 to Geddie Pearse, the engineer-in-chief of the British Gas Co, whose London works were in School House Lane, Ratcliff.
 
Ohren remained with the company until 1846, when he went to Hamburg to assist in lighting the city with gas, but on his return to England in 1850, he was re-engaged by Pearse at the British Gas Co. However, the works of the company were too small to meet the growing requirements of the district, and they were acquired by the Commercial Gas Co. Ohren transferred to the new company, and was appointed superintendent of his old district as well as of Millwall. In this capacity, he laid a 10-inch main in East India Road, to afford a better supply of gas to Millwall from Stepney; thereby obviating the large capital outlay required for the erection of an additional works nearer Millwall, which had been in contemplation.
 
Ohren joined the Crystal Palace District Gas Co in 1855 and during his time with the company, was granted two patents, one for “an improvement in the manufacture of gas, and the apparatus connected therewith” and the other for “improvements in the construction of gasholders, and in the mode of rendering gasholders self-acting”.  
 
Ohren was well known in gas-engineering circles, both for his technical and for his financial connection with the industry, acting as auditor to several gas companies. He was one of the founders of the Society of Engineers, was a Fellow of the Chemical Society and the Royal Sanitary Institute, acted as president of the British Association of Gas Managers (1870), and subsequently joined the Gas Institute and the Institution of Gas Engineers. He was elected an Associate of The Institution of Civil Engineers in 1859.
 
Magnus Ohren married Cecilia Emma Graydon on 7 April 1845 in Bromley-by-Bow and the couple had six children – Augusta Clara Ohren (1848), who was born when the family were in Hamburg, Geddie Edward Ohren (1851) and Charles Magnus Ohren (1853), who were both born in Poplar, when their father was back in the UK, and Rosa Cecilia Ohren (1858), Aubrey Magnus Ohren (1860) and Catherine Ohren (1862), all born in Sydenham.
 
Cecilia died on 1 August 1901, aged 75, and Magnus on 21 March 1907, aged 85.
 
Several of their children either worked in the gas industry or married someone who did.
 
Augusta Ohren married Alfred Plane Holt, who at one time was chief cashier at the Crystal Palace District Gas Co.
 
Geddie Ohren, named after his father’s mentor in Stepney, was at one time also a gas engineer, working at first at the Crystal Palace District Gas Co and then in Shrewsbury. He later left the industry, his wife and children, and his unusual first name – he went to live in Loughborough with another woman and became a photographer and hairdresser.
 
Aubrey Ohren was a collector for the Crystal Palace District Gas Co and then for the South Suburban Gas Co.
 
Charles Magnus Ohren
 
Charles Magnus Ohren was the second son of Magnus and Cecilia Ohren, born on 15 May 1853 in Poplar. He became an accountant at the Crystal Palace District Gas Co and later took over from his father as secretary of the company, a role he continued to perform for the South Suburban Gas Co after the merger in 1904 until about 1912.
 
In 1875, Charles married Elizabeth Watson (1855-1926), the daughter of the then manager of the Crystal Palace District Gas Co, James Watson. The couple had one child, a daughter, Winifred, born 1879, who died unmarried in 1967.
 
Charles Magnus Ohren died on 12 May 1920.
 
 
Edmund Small Cathels
 
Edmund Small Cathels was born in Scotland in 1823 and was married to Eliza, who was born in 1829, also in Scotland.
 
In the mid 1850s, he worked in Northfleet, Kent, probably at the County & General Gas Consumers’ Co. Here his two eldest children were born – William McNicol Cathels and Donald Louis Cathels.
 
Towards the end of the decade, Edmund Cathels was in Dover, presumably working for the Dover Gas & Water Works. While in Dover, he was joint-patentee with Samuel Splatt of an invention which improved gas meters. Also while working there, his third son, Edmund Cathels, was born.
 
By 1861, the family were in Shrewsbury, where Cathels was manager of the Shrewsbury Gas Works. Three more children were born – the twins Alfred and Catherine Cathels, and John  Holyoake Cathels. Alfred died within his first year.
 
Also while at Shrewsbury, Edmund Cathels was granted two more patents for “improvements in compensating gas-meters” and “improvements in apparatus used in the manufacture of gas”.
 
In 1865, the family moved to Sydenham and Edmund Cathels became manager of the Crystal Palace District Gas Co. Again Cathels was granted more patents while with this company – for “improvements in apparatus for conveying and regulating the supply of gas” and, with David Terrace, for “improvements in apparatus used in the manufacture of gas, part of which apparatus is also applicable for ventilating mines, for promoting combustion, and for pumping, measuring, and forcing fluids”.
 
Two more children were born in Sydenham – Blinshall Cathels and Colin Cathels.
 
Edmund Small Cathels was connected with at least one other gas company – the Barnet Gas Light & Coke Company – while he was manager at the Crystal Palace company. At the end of 1870, it was announced that a Bill was to be presented to Parliament creating a new company, Barnet Gas Company, which would acquire land and presmises owned by the Barnet Gas Light & Coke Co and Edmund Small Cathels.
 
In 1872, several members of the Cathels family emigrated, first to Canada and then some moved on to the USA, all working in the gas industry. Edmund Small Cathels was in Montreal in 1876 when he was granted yet another patent for “improvements in apparatus used in the purification of gas”.
 
 
James Watson
 
James Watson (1832-1881) was born in Dundee and his wife Catherine (1830-1893) in Berwick. By 1855, James was working in Northumberland as the manager and engineer for the Hexham Gas Works, based at Old Burn Lane.
 
While the family was living in Hexham, James and Catherine had three children:  Elizabeth (1855-1926), George (1858) and James (1859-1936).
 
In 1861/2 the family came south to Kingston on Thames, when James was appointed manager of Kingston Gas Works in Lower Ham Road. While in Kingston four more children where born – William (1862), Ellen (1864), Charles (1865) and Alexander (1870).
 
Where James was in 1871 is not known: the 1871 census has James’s brother – William Clarke Watson – who was also a gas engineer, living in the house next to the gas works in Lower Ham Road, together with his own family, including his wife Jane (nee Rankin), whom William had married in Hexham in 1861.
 
The three eldest sons of James and Catherine (George, James and William) were at boarding school in Kingston in 1871 but there is no record of James, Catherine or the younger children.
 
In 1872, James took the position of manager of the Crystal Palace District Gas Co. Three years later, James’s daughter Elizabeth Watson married Charles Magnus Ohren, the son of the secretary of the company.
 
By 1878, James Watson had left the Crystal Palace District Gas Co and in 1881, James and Catherine Watson were in Herne Bay, Kent, with James senior was described as a Civil Engineer and son William as a collector for a gas company. Meanwhile, two other sons – James Clarke Watson and Charles A Watson – were working as clerks in the Crystal Palace company and living in the same house as Charles and Elizabeth Ohrens.
 
James died in Herne Bay in May 1881 and left an estate of £1,468 7s 8d.
 
By 1891, James Clarke Watson was foreman of the Crystal Palace District Gas Co’s works in South End Lane, Sydenham, a position he continued to hold until at least 1897. It is not clear if he was working for the company in 1901, but by 1911, he was living in Forest Hill and described as a gas engineer.
 
 
Charles Gandon
 
Charles Gandon was born in Whitechapel, in 1837, the son of a cooper, Jonas Gandon.
 
Charles Gandon began his career by assisting in construction of gas works in Germany.
 
In 1861, he was described as a civil engineer and married Emma Knight, the daughter of a printer.
 
Charles and Emma Gandon travelled extensively as Charles’s work took him round the world. Their journey can be followed through the births of their children: their eldest, John Gandon, was born in Peterborough in 1862; Emma Gandon (1865) and Herbert Gandon (1867) in Smyrna, Turkey; Florence (1869) Hackney; Maud (1872) in Bombay, India; Harold Gandon (1873) in Islington; and then Reginald Gandon (1877) and Philip Gandon (1879) in Sydenham.
 
In Smyrna, Charles Gandon was engineer and manager of the Ottoman Gas Company. After a period as engineer and manager of gasworks in Bombay, Gandon returned to England as engineer and manager of the Crystal Palace District Gas Co. He was president of The Gas Institute in 1888.
 
The link with Smyrna was continued when Charles Gandon’s eldest son. John Gandon. worked developing a gas supply system there in the 1890s and later his son Kenneth Gandon, who was born there, continued the work in the 1920s.
 
Charles Gandon was manager of the Crystal Palace District Gas Co for 20 years from 1877 to 1897. He died in 1902.
 
Sydney Yarrell Shoubridge
 
Sydney Yarrell Shoubridge was born on 9 February 1852 in Clapham, the son of an artist and architect, William Shoubridge.
 
In 1871 Sydney Shoubridge was a mechanical engineer working in Middlesborough, but by 1876 he was superintendent of the gas works in Duddeston Mill Road, Satley, Warwickshire.
 
In 1883, while he was in Warwickshire, he married Mary Matilda White and the couple’s first child, Mary Gladys Shoubridge, was born there in 1885.
 
By 1888, Sydney Shoubridge had become engineer and manager of Salford Co-operative Gas Co, a position he still held in 1895, when the family lived at Inglewood, Minton Road, Eccles.
 
Two more children were born while the couple were in Eccles – Sydney Cyril Shoubridge (1888) who died in infancy, and Lucy Dora Shoubridge (1891).
 
In 1897, Sydney Shoubridge was appointed manager of the Crystal Palace District Gas Co and he retained that position after the merger with South Suburban Gas Co until at least 1919.
 
He died in Eastbourne in 1926, leaving an estate of over £17,500.
 
The Share Scheme
 
In 1894, the year after Charles Ohren took over from his father as secretary of the Crystal Palace District Gas Co, the company introduced an employee bonus share scheme, but it did not encourage any improvement in productivity and the scheme was revised in 1897.

Monday, 21 April 2014

Redhill Admissions - extra info

Would you believe it? Hardly had Pea-Bee posted all the listings of the Redhill Farm School Admissions 1856-1865, with details of emigrations, that another source adds a bit more http://trove.nla.gov.au/newspaper/  Rather than try to fit all the additional information into the original blogs, here it all is - boy by boy - with the additional material in red

And yet more! This time the additional stuff is in green and an additional source is http://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/


1856
SHC Reference 2271/10/11

50. 7.3.1856 Greaves Samuel 1842 Emigrated to New Zealand per “Oliver Lang”, age given as 14. Convicted at Westminster 21.1.1856 of Simple larceny. Original sentence: 6 months’ imprisonment “Oliver Lang” sailed 18.6.1858 from London, arrived 18.9.1858 at Wellington

60. 5.5.1856 Smith alias Palmer James 14.2.1841 Emigrated to New Zealand per “Oliver Lang” “Oliver Lang” sailed 18.6.1858 from London, arrived 18.9.1858 at Wellington

67. 5.5.1856 Jones Chas 1.5.1841 Emigrated to Adelaide per “Lady Ann”. Convicted at Clerkenwell 18.2.1856 of Larceny after previous conviction. Original sentence: 12 months’ imprisonment. “Lady Anne” sailed from London 19.6.1858, arrived Adelaide 20.9.1858

99. 31.7.1856 Pope Fusedale Bloor 1842 Emigrated to Canterbury (New Zealand) by “Gananogue”, birth given as June. Convicted at Old Bailey 7.4.1856 of Larceny by a servant. Original sentence: 6 years’ penal servitude. Fusedale Bloor Pope, stealing 1 cash box, and 13 bills of Exchange, for the payment of divers sums of money, amounting to £6,208. 15s. 10d., and two orders for the payment of £20.; the property of Paris Simonides, his master: to which he pleaded guilty. Aged 13.— Six Years Penal Servitude. (There was another indictment against the prisoner, for feloniously setting fire to the premises of his master, no evidence offered.) “Gananoque” sailed from Gravesend and was at The Downs 14.2.1860, arrived Lyttelton 2.5.1860
105. 5.9.1856 Haley John 1840 Emigrated to Adelaide per “Lady Ann”, age given as 16. Convicted at Clerkenwell 28.4.1856 of Simple larceny. Original sentence: 8 months’ imprisonment. “Lady Anne” sailed from London 19.6.1858, arrived Adelaide 20.9.1858
125. 19.9.1856 Connor/Connell David 1843 Emigrated to Adelaide per “Wildflower”, age given as 13. Convicted at Westminster 7.8.1856 of Larceny from the person. Original sentence: 2 years’ imprisonment. Sailed from London 26.12.1860, arrived [as David Connor] 6.4.1861 at Adelaide
134. 15.11.1856 Mitchell George 28.2.1844 Emigrated to Adelaide. Convicted at Clerkenwell 6.10.1856 of Larceny by a servant and receiving. Sentence: 6 weeks’ imprisonment & 3 years at Philanthropic Reformatory. Sailed from London 17.11.1859 aboard “Indus”, arrived 17.3.1860 at Adelaide
141. 22.11.1856 Norwood Jeremiah 1841 Emigrated to Adelaide, age given as 15. Convicted at Westminster 13.10.1856 of Attempt to commit felony. Sentence: 6 weeks’ imprisonment & 3 years at a Reformatory. Sailed from London 17.11.1859 aboard “Indus”, arrived [as Jeremiah Norman] 17.3.1860 at Adelaide
 1857
169. 14.1.1857 Judd John 15.6.1843 Emigrated to Adelaide per “Wildflower”. Convicted at Clerkenwell 1.1.1857 of Simple larceny. Sentence: 14 days’ imprisonment & 4 years at Redhill Reformatory Sailed from London 26.12.1860, arrived [as John Jude] 6.4.1861 at Adelaide
182. 2.2.1857 Foster John 1.1.1844 Emigrated to Adelaide by “Anglo-Indian”. Sailed from London 9.2.1861, arrived 28.5.1861 at Adelaide
226. 5.5.1857 Rogers Luke Charles 31.3.1844 Emigrated to Adelaide per “Victory” Sailed from London 18.4.1861, arrived 25.7.1861 at Adelaide
248. 15.6.1857 Norgrove William 13.8.1843 Emigrated to Adelaide per “Livingstone”. Convicted at Westminster 15.2.1857 of Larceny after previous conviction. Sentence: 4 months’ imprisonment & 4 years at Redhill Reformatory Sailed from London 16.5.1861, arrived 30.8.1861 at Adelaide
250. 23.6.1857 Bonham John 1844 Emigrated to Adelaide per “Victory”, age given as 13-14. Sailed from London 18.4.1861, arrived [as John Boonham] 25.7.1861 at Adelaide
 1860
SHC Reference 2271/10/12
198. 4.8.1860 Hayward Sidney born 1847 Emigrated to Adelaide, age given as 13 Convicted at Bath 6.7.1860 of Embezzlement & Larceny by servant. Sentence: 1 months’ imprisonment & 3years at Redhill Reformatory. Sailed from London 23.4.1863 aboard “Starbeam”, arrived 7.8.1863 at Adelaide
 1861  
283. 16.5.1861 Hoare Henry born 31.10.1847 Emigrated to Adelaide. ? Sailed from London 29.5.1864 or Plymouth 2.6.1864 aboard “Orient”, arrived 22.8.1864 at Adelaide
 

Sunday, 20 April 2014

Redhill Admissions 1865


Redhill Admissions 1865


This is the final instalment of the listings of Redhill Farm School admission for the 10 years from 1856. Pea-Bee would be delighted to hear of any further details ofthese boys.


Surrey History Centre Reference 2271/10/13


263. 4.1.1865 Ridley Henry 31.5.1849 Discharged to friends on a/c of disease
264. 4.1.1865 Ware John 1851 Emigrated to Canada, age given as 14
265. 11.1.1865 Staples Edward 9.5.1850 Emigrated to Canada. Convicted at Old Bailey of Larceny. Sentence: 1 month hard labour & 3 years at a Reformatory. Edward Staples (14), and Edward Kent (14) pleaded guilty to Stealing a pair of breeches, the property of Richard Townsend. Both prisoners were stated to have been several times in custody. Sailed 25.7.1867 aboard “Nestorian”
266. 11.1.1865 Kent Edward 24.12.1852 Discharged to friends. Convicted at Old Bailey 12.12.1864 of Larceny. Sentence: 1 month hard labour & 3 years at a Reformatory. Edward Staples (14), and Edward Kent (14) pleaded guilty to Stealing a pair of breeches, the property of Richard Townsend. Both prisoners were stated to have been several times in custody.
267. 18.1.1865 Jeanes (real name James) Joseph (real name John) 19.10.1851 Emigrated to Canada. Convicted at Wells 16.10.1864 of Housebreaking. Sentence: 3 months’ imprisonment & 4 years at Redhill Reformatory
268. 18.1.1865 Fisher Noah 1851 On licence to sea, birth given as April. Convicted at Wells 16.10.1864 of Housebreaking. Sentence: 3 months’ imprisonment & 4 years at Redhill Reformatory
269. 19.1.1865 Foreman William 1852 Emigrated to Canada, birth given as December. Sailed 18.6.1868 aboard “Nestorian”
270. 1.2.1865 Hart James 1851 Emigrated to Canada, birth given as January. Sailed aboard 25.7.1867 “Nestorian”
271. 2.2.1865 Meakin William 1848 Emigrated to Canada, birth given as June. Convicted at Nottingham of 2.1.1865 of Housebreaking. Sentence: 1 month’s imprisonment & 5 years in a Reformatory. Sailed 21.5.1868 aboard “Austrian”
272. 6.2.1865 Naylor Samuel (Smith) 10.2.1853 On licence to enlist
273. 9.3.1865 French Edward 1851 Emigrated to Canada, age given as 14
274. 13.3.1865 Greenfield John 1.11.1849 Discharged to friends
275. 20.3.1865 Ball Alfred John 1854 On licence to employment, age given as 11
276. 27.3.1865 Handley Samuel 1851 Discharged to friends, age given as 14. Convicted at Nottingham 9.3.1865 of Larceny. Sentence: 14 days’ imprisonment & 4 years at a Reformatory
277. 27.3.1865 Spencer William (Henry) 5.1.1851 Emigrated to Canada. Convicted at Nottingham 9.3.1865 of Arson. Sentence: 14 days’ imprisonment & 4 years at a Reformatory. Sailed 21.5.1868 aboard “Austrian”
278. 28.3.1865 Corner Henry 3.8.1849 Emigrated to Canada
279. 30.3.1865 Bignall Edward 13.3.1853 On licence to employment
280. 1.4.1865 Down Thomas 24.8.1849 Emigrated to Canada. Convicted at Maidstone 2.3.1865 of Embezzlement. Sentence: 1 month’s imprisonment & 4 years at Redhill Reformatory. Sailed 21.5.1868 aboard “Austrian”
281. 4.4.1865 King Edward 1851 Emigrated to Canada, age given as 14. Convicted at Maidstone 5.1.1865 of Housebreaking. Sentence: 3 months’ imprisonment & 4 years at a Reformatory
282. 29.4.1865 Hensley Henry 13.6.1849 Emigrated to Canada. Convicted at Clerkenwell 20.3.1865 of Larceny by a servant. Sentence: 6 weeks’  imprisonment & 3 years at a Reformatory
283. 29.4.1865 Davies Thomas 1851 Emigrated to Canada, age given as 14
284. 1.5.1865 Slater William 1849 Emigrated to Canada, age given as 16 (previously admitted in 1861 see Folio 1)
285. 2.5.1865 Trusty Edward 1854 On licence to sister, age given as 11
286. 8.5.1865 Bishop William Henry 24.8.1851 Emigrated to Canada, newspaper cutting. Convicted at Dover 10.4.1865 of Larceny – before convicted of a felony. Sentence: 1 month’s imprisonment and 3 years at a Reformatory. Sailed 22.8.1867 aboard “Moravian”
287. 13.5.1865 Davis David 9.11.1850 Emigrated to Canada
288. 31.5.1865 Polly (Polley) Alfred 1851 On licence, age given as 14
289. 6.6.1865 McGrath George 1.7.1851 Discharged to friends. Convicted at Maidstone 5.1.1865 of Housebreaking. Sentence: 2 months’ imprisonment, once privately whipped with a birch rod receiving 12 strokes & 4 years at a Reformatory
290. 8.6.1865 Whatler Frederick Charles 2.1.1850 Absconded
291. 8.6.1865 Whatler Charles 3.4.1852 Emigrated to Canada
292. 8.6.1865 Wood Thomas 9.11.1850 Emigrated to Canada
293. 9.6.1865 Smith John 15.2.1851 Discharged
294. 12.6.1865 Macklan William 1850 Emigrated to Canada, birth given as April. Sailed 14.5.1868 aboard “Nova Scotian”
295. 24.6.1865 Osborne Charles 1852 Emigrated to Canada, age given as 13
296. 26.6.1865 Rosencranz Thomas (Fredk) 1.1.1854 Emigrated to Canada. Sailed 24.4.1869 aboard “Germany”
297. 13.7.1865 Smith Charles 1851 Emigrated to Canada, age given as 14½
298. 13.7.1865 Hollyman Arthur Henry 11.10.1850 Emigrated to Canada. Convicted at Maidstone 29.9.1865 of Obtaining goods by false pretences. Sentence: 14 days’ imprisonment & 5 years at a Reformatory. Sailed 30.4.1869 aboard “Austrian”
299. 19.7.1865 Standon James 17.6.1850 Emigrated to Canada
 

Reference 2271/10/14
 

1. 22.7.1865 Couchman Alfred 31.7.1853 Discharged to friends
2. 31.7.1865 Davis Frederick James 8.11.1853 Emigrated to Canada. Convicted at Newington 1.5.1865 of Larceny to the value of £5 in a dwelling house. Sentence: 3 months hard labour & 5 years in a Reformatory
3. 12.8.1865 Atkins Henry 1.4.1853 Absconded very early, readmitted
4. 14.8.1865 Sealey Thomas 13.6.1850 On licence to employment
5. 16.8.1865 Hope Charles 23.6.1851 On licence to employment
6. 18.8.1865 Jackson Henry (William) 1851 Emigrated to Canada, age given as 14. Sailed 14.5.1868 aboard “Nova Scotian”
7. 23.8.1865 Paine William 1849 Emigrated to Canada, age given as 16. Convicted at Maidstone 24.7.1865 of Larceny from the person. Sentence: 1 month’s imprisonment & 5 years in a Reformatory. Sailed 30.7.1868 aboard “Nestorian”
8. 23.8.1865 Welch William 1.4.1851 Emigrated to Canada. Convicted at Maidstone 24.7.1865 of Church breaking and larceny. Sentence: 1 month’s imprisonment & 5 years in a Reformatory. Sailed 24.4.1869 aboard “Germany”
9. 26.8.1865 McGuinniss/Megonis (alias Jackson) George Alfred (alias William) 27.2.1851 On licence to sea
10. 31.8.1865 Martin George 1851 On licence to employment, age given as 14
11. 4.9.1865 Smith Henry (Walter) 11.6.1852 Emigrated to Canada. Sailed 30.7.1868 aboard “Nestorian”
12. 12.9.1865 Winter James 1852 Discharged to employment, birth given as August
13. 23.9.1865 Knight Thomas 3.10.1849 Emigrated to Canada. Convicted at Maidstone 24.7.1865 of Larceny and former conviction of felony. Sentence: 2 months’ imprisonment & 5 years in a Reformatory
14. 25.9.1865 Archer William (Richard) 7.9.1850 Discharged to friends
15. 27.9.1865 Hill Thomas 1854 Emigrated to Canada, birth given as July
16. 27.9.1865 Greed John 1852 On licence to employment, birth given as January
17. 9.10.1865 O’Brien/O’Brian Robert 6.12.1852 On licence
18. 9.10.1865 Gibbs Henry 1852 Emigrated to Canada, age given as 13. Sailed 22.8.1867 aboard “Moravian”
19. 3.11.1865 Ackrill William 27.10.1852 Discharged to friends
20. 9.11.1865 Wallin Edward Hezekiah 1856 Emigrated to Canada, age given as 9½
21. 9.11.1865 Hall George 1856 Emigrated to Canada, age given as 9½
22. 11.11.1865 Lumbert Henry 1854 Discharged to friends, age given as 11
23. 23.11.1865 Elmer/Elmar Daniel 1852 Discharged to friends, birth given as July
24. 23.11.1865 Neal/Neale (alias Cray) James (alias John or James) 1850 Emigrated to Canada, age given as 15. Convicted at Kirton & Louth 24.10.1865 of Housebreaking. Sentence: 1 month’s imprisonment & 4 years in a Reformatory
25. 25.11.1865 Clark Albert 11.5.1853 Discharged to friends. Convicted at Brighton 25.10.1865 of Larceny after previous conviction for felony. Sentence: 1 month’s imprisonment & 2 years at a Reformatory - Father to pay 2/- per week
26. 28.11.1865 Pearce Robert 1850 Emigrated to Canada. Sailed 23.4.1868 aboard “Moravian”
27. 4.12.1865 Craig George (Samuel) 6.11.1851 Emigrated to Canada. Sailed 23.4.1868 aboard “Moravian”
28. 6.12.1865 Blann Percy 1853 On licence to employment, birth given as July
29. 18.12.1865 Sansome William 1852 On licence to employment, age given as 13
30. 28.12.1865 Merrick William 1853 Emigrated to Canada, birth given as August
31. 30.12.1865 Trigwell Daniel 1855 Emigrated to Canada, birth given as May. Sailed 25.6.1868 aboard “Nova Scotian”