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Eliza(beth) TAYLOR
Name ~ Elizabeth
Date and place of birth ~ 3 Feb 1851 Ashton Keynes, Wiltshire Names of parents ~ Robert TAYLOR & Elizabeth BOULTON Date and place of baptism ~ n.k. Details of each of his or her marriages ~ 20 Mar 1884 Cookham R.O., Berkshire (aged 26!) to William Charles LANCASTER (aged 20) Occupation(s) - servant / cook / caretaker Military service - n/a Addresses where they lived ~ Ashton Keynes [1851], Derry Fields, A.K. [1861], house of Wm Wheatley, Landowner, Turnpike Rd, A.K. [1871], house of James E.G. Bradford, 8 High St, Swindon, Wilts [1881], 7 Porchester Sq, London [1891], 70 Prospect La, Swindon, Wilts [1901], 5 Newport St, Swindon [1911] Date, place and cause of death ~ 24 Nov 1940 Marlboro' area Date and place of burial / cremation. ~ date n.k., Ashton Keynes Details of will / administration of their estate - n.k. Memorial inscription - n.k. |
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Wow, I wonder whether William ever found out her real age!
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KiteRunner Family History News updated 21st May Lancashire Non-conformist records new on Ancestry |
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We.e.e.e.l.l.l.
In 1901, William was living with a colleague in Paddington, while Eliza and the younger two children were in Swindon. Nothing unreasonable about that. The census is only a snapshot. William worked for GWR, and Swindon is on the main Paddington-Bristol-Exeter line. BUT In 1911, William was a boarder at 85 Marine St, Queens Park, Harrow, while Eliza was in Swindon, as listed above, with her middle child - their son, Charles, aged 21. Her youngest, their daughter, Violet (b 1892), was married 21 Jun 1916 in Swindon Parish Church: father given as "William Charles LANCASTER (dec'd), Station Master". William didn't die until sixteen months after that date: 11 Oct 1917, age 54, at Middx Hosp (perf duodenal ulcer) address: 85 Marine St, Paddington; occupation: asst cashier, tube railway (He'd been dismissed by GWR, but the entry was undated - but after Oct 1897). The death was registered 12 Oct 1917 by his sister. I haven't found the grave, but my mother said her mother was buried at "Swindon" (my uncle has a photo of the grave at Ashton Keynes - not that far from Swindon), and her father at "Maidenhead" (which is the area where his sister was living, and where he grew up). This suggests that the family was split up by at least 1911, if not before. There are all sorts of possible reasons, but one suspects that the previously disguised age-gap may have contributed. Eliza may also have been a difficult woman: there was a split between her and Violet, later on, and a family story says she returned her grandchildren's Christmas presents unopened, my uncle tells me. Hard to imagine how anyone would do that. Christine Last edited by Christine in Herts; 31-05-10 at 22:17. |
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