Here is a tale that shows how
confusing genetics could be, based solely on a surname. There are four people
involved in this mid-19th century crisscross of marriage and “housekeeping”
which was played out in the village of Aldbourne in Wiltshire and produced 13
children of various parentage. It was dubbed at the time by one local newspaper
as “a sad case of morality”.
While most of
the action was in the parish of Aldbourne, which is on the east side of the
county, between Marlborough and the Berkshire border, neighbouring parishes,
such as Ogbourne St George, Ramsbury also feature.
First, an introduction to the
players:
·
Joseph John Davis.
He was the son of a brickmaker called John Davis and his wife Martha Davis, of
Brick Kiln House, Ogbourne St George. Joseph was baptised on 24 August 1834.
·
Eliza Whiting. She
was baptised at Ramsbury on 13 May 1832, the daughter of a labourer William
Whiting and his wife Sarah Whiting.
·
Elizabeth Smart.
Born in the hamlet of Fyfield, she was baptised in the neighbouring parish of
Preshute on 16 April 1837. She was the daughter of another labourer, Joseph
Smart and his wife Jane.
·
Finally there was Henry
Tucker, the son of another labourer James Tucker and his wife Maria, who
was baptised at Aldbourne on 20 April 1830.
Their
relationships started with the marriage of one couple when in their early
twenties: Joseph Davis and Eliza Whiting. The marriage was celebrated on the 13
November 1853 at the Church of the Holy Cross in Ramsbury and eighteen months
later, on 5 May 1855, Harriet Ann Davis was baptised at the same church.
As far as can
be determined from the records, Harriet was the only child the couple had
together: both Joseph and Eliza had more children – but not with each other!
By 1861, a new
woman had entered Joseph’s life: Elizabeth Smart had become his “housekeeper” at
his home in Woodsend, Aldbourne, while Eliza had moved out and was acting as
“housekeeper” to Henry Tucker, a willow cutter of Castle Street, Aldbourne.
Who gave up on
the marriage first is not clear, but much later, Joseph said the change in
relationships occurring in 1857 – the date he gave in 1911 for his “marriage”
to Elizabeth Smart.
In the Davis
household in 1861 were Joseph and his daughter Harriet, and Elizabeth Smart with
two sons of her own: Henry Joseph Smart and Joseph John Smart.
Both boys had
been born in Marlborough – Henry on 19 February 1859 and Joseph towards the end
of 1860 – and both were officially registered with the name Smart. However, while
there is no record of Joseph being baptised, Henry was on 21 February 1859 at
St Mary the Virgin, Marlborough, as Henry Joseph Davis, with Joseph and Elizabeth
as his parents.
Meanwhile in
Aldbourne on 5 December 1858, two sons of Eliza Davis were baptised: William
Henry Davis and Thomas Jesse Davis. William had been born in Aldbourne in the
spring of 1857 and Thomas at the end of 1858 and at the time of the 1861 census
both were living with their mother in Henry Tucker’s house.
It is possible
that they were Joseph’s children – both of them gave him as their father when
they got married in the 1870s – but …
Joseph and
Elizabeth had another four children in the 1860s – all four registered with the
surname Smart:
1.
Emma Jane Smart, baptised in
the parish church at Ogbourne St George on 24 May 1863, with just her mother
given as her parent in the register
2.
George Smart, baptised in
the Market Lavington Primitive Methodist Circuit as George Davis on 20 October
1864, with Joseph and Elizabeth Davis of Ogbourne St George given as his
parents
3.
Sarah Ann D Smart, baptised
in the Market Lavington Primitive Methodist Circuit as Sarah Ann Davis on 20
June 1867, again with Joseph and Elizabeth given as parents
4.
Frederick William Smart,
baptised at Ogbourne St George on 30 April 1871, with just Elizabeth Smart,
single woman, of Aldbourne as his mother.
It should be
noted that Market Lavington was some 30 miles from Aldbourne but the Circuit
had links in Marlborough.
In the 1871
census, Elizabeth is referred to as Joseph’s wife and she and all the children are
given his surname, but in 1881, Elizabeth and the children revert to the Smart
surname.
Also by the
time of the 1871 census, Harriet had moved from her father’s house to that of
Henry Tucker where she was with her two brothers, William and Thomas. On census
night their mother was away at the house of another couple in Aldbourne, Thomas
and Honor Orchard, who had a 9-day-old son, for whom Eliza was described as nurse.
During the 1870s,
another four children were born to Joseph and Elizabeth:
5.
Elizabeth Rose Smart, born
19 June 1873 and baptised 5 October 1873 at Aldbourne with just her mother
mentioned
6.
Martha Kate Smart, born 17
February 1875 in Woodsend, Aldbourne
7.
David Davis Smart, born in
the summer of 1878 in Woodsend, Aldbourne but died of convulsions on 7 November
that year, and buried at Ogbourne St George four days later
8.
Albert J Smart, born in
about 1880 in Woodsend, Aldbourne.
The couple appear not to have
bothered with having the last three children baptised – perhaps their living
arrangements were causing problems in finding a minister prepared to perform
such rites. It was the death of David that focused the spotlight on the four
adults, judging by the following article in the North Wilts Herald on
Saturday 16 November 1878:
ALDBOURNE
Morals at Aldbourne – An inquest was
taken before Mr Coroner Whitmarsh last Monday, at Woodsend in this parish, on
the body of David Davis, son of Elizabeth Smart, single woman, five months old.
– It appears the mother had been living with a married man of the name of
Davis, by whom she has had other children, whilst his wife is cohabiting with
another man in the same parish – a sad case of morality. – The mother stated
that on the previous Wednesday evening, as she was downstairs, between seven
and eight o’clock, with the child in her arms, a fit came on, as it had before,
and continued until the child died, about three o’clock next morning. – Mr
Whitmore said three weeks ago he vaccinated the child, which did not seem
strong and healthy. It was not thoroughly nourished, but had not been
neglected. He was of opinion the child died of convulsions, arising from
natural causes. – Verdict accordingly.
The fact that
these living arrangements had been in place for more than 20 years by then was
clearly missed by the reporter, but doubtless there was some gossip in the
village.
Eliza and her family
During the 1870s, all three of
Eliza’s children got married.
First on 1
April 1875, William Davis (19) married Mary Deacon (18) at Aldbourne with
George Jerram and Harriet Davis as witnesses. William stated that he was the
son of Joseph Davis, while Mary was the daughter of Henry Deacon.
The next entry
in the Aldbourne marriage register was for 29 April 1875 when George Jerram, son
of George Jerram, married Harriet Ann Davis, daughter of Joseph Davis.
Then, on 29
September 1878, Thomas Davis (20) married 18-year-old Martha Mary Coxhead,
daughter of George Coxhead, at St Michael’s, Aldbourne. Like his elder brother,
Thomas gave his father as Joseph Davis.
Sadly,
William’s marriage did not last long. He died after just four years as a husband
and was buried in Aldbourne on 18 April 1879. He had, however, managed to
father three children: Rose Ellen Davis was born just over a year after the
marriage (18 April 1876) and was baptised on 6 June; William Thomas Davis was born in the summer of
1878 but not baptised until 6 July 1879 – after his father’s death; and Mary
Louise Davis was born eight months after her father died and baptised on 2
November 1879, but she died when she was just 18 months old, and was buried on
9 April 1881.
By 1881, Eliza
was back with Henry Tucker – but without any of the children – and then two
years later, Henry died, aged 52. He was buried at Aldbourne on 15 December
1883.
Eliza kept up
her role as a child nurse and was described in the 1881 census as a midwife and
housekeeper, and in 1901, when she was living with her son Thomas and his
family in Swindon, she was described as a monthly nurse. But in 1891 she was
working in a Childrens’ Home in Parrock Hall, Gravesend, Kent, as a laundress.
Eliza died in
Swindon in 1910. Of her two children who survived her, Harriet Ann, who had
married George Jerram and had seven children, died in 1933 while Thomas, who
had married Martha Coxhead and had 10 children, five of whom died in infancy, lived
until 1937.
Joseph Davis
The father of many of the
children had a rather varied working life. All the early records refer to him
as an agricultural labourer but from the late 1860s onwards, his trade changed.
First, he was a brickmaker, like his father had been. Then in 1881 he was
referred to as a farmer of six acres, employing one man (as well as his older
sons). The 1891 census described him as a maltster, a term also used on a marriage
certificate in 1878 by one of the children. He had reverted to being a small
farmer by 1901 and was described as an old age pensioner in 1911 census when he
was 77.
His
relationship with Elizabeth Smart was never formalised but in both the 1901 and
1911 censuses, she is referred to as his wife and given the surname Davis, and
that was the name used when her death was registered in 1916.
Elizabeth Smart’s children by
Joseph Davis
All the children had adopted the
surname Davis by the time they reached adulthood and used it when getting
married.
Henry, the
eldest of Elizabeth’s children, worked as a plough boy in 1871 and moved on to
be a shepherd by the time of the 1881 census. He died, unmarried, at the age of
25 and was buried as Henry Davis at Ogbourne St Andrew on 14 January 1885.
The second
son, Joseph, was also a plough boy in 1871, although he was only 10 years old.
Like his elder brother, Joseph then became a shepherd and had moved away from
Wiltshire. He was working in Staines in Middlesex when he married Mary Jane
Spicer from Marlborough on 29 April 1882. Later the coupler moved into
Hampshire and the Isle of Wight. By 1911, the couple had had 11 children, two
of whom had died in infancy. Joseph himself died in 1930 in Portsmouth.
Another son,
George, married Hannah May on 19 May 1888 in Swindon and have five children,
one of whom died in infancy. George was a coal merchant in Swindon but soon
after Hannah died in 1912, he emigrated to Canada and further records have been
difficult to find.
George was
flanked by two sisters – Emma Jane and Sarah Ann – but no records of their
lives after 1881 have been found. In that year Emma Jane was working as a housemaid
at Marlborough College, while Sarah Ann was just 13 and living at home.
Frederick
William Davis, a general labourer, married Kate May, sister of George’s wife Hannah,
in 1896, but he died, childless, in 1900.
Elizabeth Rose
Davis married William James Pinnegar, a cowman, in Swindon in 1893 and had 10
children, of whom one died in infancy. Elizabeth Rose herself died in 1966.
Matilda Kate Davis
worked as a domestic servant in Marlborough in 1901 and the following year
married John Ernest Dudman, who was a blacksmith in the Swindon railway works.
The couple had five children and Matilda lived until 1960.
The story of the
baby David has already been told, but little is known about the youngest of Elizabeth’s
children, Albert, beyond the fact that in 1901, when he was 21, he was working
as a gardener in Swindon and living in the house of his sister-in-law, Frederick’s
widow, Kate.
In 1911,
Joseph the father stated he had had 11 children of whom five had died. Assuming
that he meant the ten children we know Elizabeth had plus Harriet, the child he
had with Eliza, then there are three we know had definitely died by 1911 –
Henry, David and Frederick – and three that could have died Emma Jane, Sarah
Ann, and Albert by then.
Perhaps one
day we shall discover what happened to these three people.