ANCESTRY OF THE WIFE OF PHILIP NOTT - MARTHA JANE WRIGHT
(My grateful thanks to Mary Zerner for her invaluable contribution in finding information on this family of ours)
Martha Jane Nott nee Wright was the daughter of John Bee Wright and Martha Rowling of Norfolk, England. Martha was born 15 July 1849 in Norwich, Norfolk.
John Bee Wright
and Martha Rowling had four issue:
1. Martha Jane Wright b.1849 Norwich, Norfolk, UK -d.1911 Brisbane
Qld Australia, married Philip Nott in London 1870; emigrated to Brisbane Qld in
1873; issue 11- see Nott chapter 8
2. John William Wright b.1850 Norwich, Norfolk UK- d.1936 Buffalo, Erie County, New
York State, USA; married Hannah Lane in London Dec. 1871; emigrated to NY in
Jan 1872-
in the census records, he was a printer (see obituary and photos below)
Two issue- (a) William S.G. Wright 1874-1970 (married
Lottie S.- no issue), both buried with parents in Wright burial plot in
Prospect Cemetery
(b) Hannah May Wright b. May 1882, married John R
Neal (b.1883) before 1905. John Neal, a floor layer, and his wife lived in the
village of Kenmore (a few miles north of Buffalo) for all of their lives
(Census records). John died in 1953 and Hannah May died in 1977, both buried at
Forest Lawn Cemetery Buffalo (see below). They had three daughters, Margaret
E. Neal b. 1905 d.1991 (buried Forest Lawn cemetery with parents; married
__ Sherry); Dorothy M. Neal b.c.1907, married Robert Weisenberg; Elizabeth
M. Neal b.c.1916 married Charles Tiffany. (1920 US Federal Census records
and father's death notice- see below)
3. Plessie Wright b.1857 Navenby Lincolnshire UK- d.1923 Orchard Park, Erie Co.
NY, USA; married 1. Edward J. Carpp (d.1883) bef. 1880 Hamburg, Erie Co.NY,
married 2. Allen K. Hoag c.1911 (brother-in-law- d.1922); emigrated to NY with
mother 1871; no issue
4. Ellen/Nellie Elizabeth
Wright b.1859 Navenby Lincolnshire UK- d.1908 Orchard
Park, Erie Co. NY, USA; married Allen K. Hoag c.1878 ; emigrated to NY with
mother in 1871; one issue- Martha/Mattie L. Hoag b.1880 East Hamburg,
Erie Co. (living with parents in 1905 Census- a school teacher). On 9 July
1905, Mattie married Carlton E. Hambleton (1880-1937), son of Pember E.
Hambleton and Minerva Atterbury. Carlton died 8 September 1937. Mattie died in
1955 and they are buried together in Woodlawn Cemetery Orchard Park.
No issue of Carlton and Mattie Hambleton are recorded in any of the Census
records.
Source- his obituary
in the Genesee Conference Methodist Episcopal Church Annual Minutes. Ref: Official
Minutes and Journal of the … session of the Genesee Conference 1894”, page
148-149, New York Public Library:
“Rev. John Bee Wright was born Aldeby, Norfolk, England April 10, 1828 and entered eternal rest from Hamburgh New York on June 16, 1894.”
In the baptismal record in the Parish of Aldeby, County of Norfolk, John 'Bright' Wright, mother named as Eleanor Wright, no father named, was born 10 April and baptised 13 April 1828, abode given as Aldeby, Norfolk. John was therefore illegitimate.The middle name of "Boright" or "Bright" is written in the baptismal records. Boright is a surname that is found in Norfolk/Suffolk although very uncommon, however, Bright is more commonly found.
It was common for
illegitimate children to be given their sire’s name as their middle name, but,
as there was no named father on the record,
Eleanor may have chosen her mother’s maiden name which is unknown at this time.
Curiously, in a second
baptismal record, in the same cleric’s hand, a correction has been made to the
name ‘Boright’. It appears to obliterate the ‘o’, to spell ‘Bright’, or ‘B.right’:
The source of the name of 'Bright' remains a mystery.
According to his obituary (see last chapter for full transcript), John claimed, “In early life, he was without parental guidance from a young age”, yet, at the age of 13, in the 1841 Census he was living with his uncle William Wright in Heigham, Norwich, his mother Eleanor having married five years earlier, in 1836, to a man named Benjamin Sones (not his father).John spoke of the spiritual guidance of a Miss Becket, his “earliest friend who took him two miles to Sunday School with dinner in her basket for both. Under her influence he very early gave his heart to God".
John's obituary also stated that at the age of ten he began to speak and pray in public. This was two years after his mother’s marriage. It appears to indicate a Wesleyan influence which became his focus in life, so maybe he was living with his uncle in Norwich by the age of 10, as there were strong Wesleyan followings in the Heigham area of Norwich at that time, and his uncle William Wright was a Wesleyan as indicated by the baptisms of his children in the 1830’s.
It is not known if he even knew his father, however, the following records indicate his father, a man named John Bee, as named in his marriage record, lived in Aldeby until at least 1836. Aldeby was a very small village.
1821=
475- 68 houses
1841=
554 - 105 houses
JOHN BEE
John Bee Wright’s marriage record,
stating that his father was named John Bee, was correct.
DNA tests have shown a match between
this descendant of John Bee Wright’s daughter Martha Jane Nott nee Wright and
descendants of John Bee’s brother William Bee b.1805, and of John Bee’s father
James Bee’s siblings, (Mary) Ann Bee and Elizabeth Bee.
The death record of John Bee (see below) shows he died of consumption on 13 July 1839 at Blundeston, Suffolk, aged 36, viz. b.c.1803, a labourer. However, he was buried in Aldeby. Blunderston was a few kms east of Aldeby, across The Broads.
Author, Bruce Haley, wrote that, ‘about
a quarter of all deaths during this general period between 1838 and 1840, have
been attributed to tuberculosis or consumption.’ (The Healthy Body and
Victorian Culture, 1978)
John was the husband of Elizabeth Bee nee Marjoram of Aldeby.
Mary Bee, John’s first daughter by Elizabeth, was born in September 1835 at Aldeby, only a month after his marriage to Elizabeth Marjoram in Aldeby in August 1835 (notably, a year before Eleanor Wright was married). A second daughter named Esther after John’s mother, was born in June 1837 at Blundeston, but sadly died in November that year. Another daughter named Esther was born at Blundeston on 6 June 1839 just a month before John’s death in July. She was baptised a year later on 28 June 1840 at Blundeston. Sadly, she also died at the early age of just 15 years, in 1855 at Aldeby. By 1841, Elizabeth Bee was back living in Aldeby.
Another Esther Bee died in Aldeby in 1832 aged 58 and was John Bee’s mother, his daughter’s namesake.
The fact that John Bee married his wife only one month before the birth of their first daughter proves he has form, as he also impregnated Eleanor out of wedlock, Eleanor being just 19 years of age at the time, and John aged 25 years when John Bee Wright was born in 1828.
John Bee's death and burial records:
In the 1841 Census, Elizabeth Bee, widow, aged 30, was
living in Aldeby, described as an
agricultural labourer, with two infant children, Mary Bee, and Esther
Bee.
In the 1851 Census, Elizabeth Bee, 43, widow, charwoman, born Aldeby, Norfolk, was still living in Aldeby with her daughter Esther Bee, 11, scholar and pauper. Daughter Esther’s birthplace was listed as Blundeston in Suffolk, only a few miles east of Aldeby, across the Broads, which is where her father John Bee died. Daughter Mary Bee, age 15 (16) was working as a servant for a school mistress and her father at Burgh St Peter near Aldeby. In the 1871 Census, Mary Bee, 35, unmarried, born Aldeby, was the housekeeper of William Thorpe a retired farmer, living in Wenhaston Suffolk.
Notably, there seem to be numerous connections between these families living in Wenhaston in Suffolk, and Aldeby and Haddiscoe in southern Norfolk.
In 1861, Elizabeth Bee was
working for James Futter and family as a housekeeper. In 1871 she was
living alone, and died before the 1881 census.
John Bee was born and baptised at Haddiscoe in May 1803, son of James Bee and Esther Pulham. Haddiscoe was about 3-4 kms north of Aldeby.
James Bee married Esther/‘Easter’
Pulham in Haddiscoe on 25 March 1794. She
was ‘of this Parish’, but James was from another Parish, named Gelderston which
is about 5-6 kms west of Aldeby:
Esther Pulham was born at
Gillingham, Norfolk 17 April 1774 to William Pulham and Mary (Lilleston).
(Gillingham is adjacent to Gelderston).
A William ‘Pollum’ married Mary
Lilleston at Chedgrave, adjacent to Loddon, a few kms north of Aldeby in 1757-
they were illiterate which would explain the phonetic spelling of Pulham as
Pullom:
Other issue, all born at Gillingham: Elizabeth b.1768, Mary b.1768, Anne b.1769, Sarah b.1788.
Mary Pulham married John Fisk in 1787 at Burgh St Peter (next to Aldeby), witnessed by her sister Elizabeth Pulham.
Elizabeth Pulham had a "base born" daughter, Mary, in April 1790 at Aldeby.
Therefore, the Pulham family were all living in the vicinity of Aldeby when Esther married James Bee in 1794.
James Bee was recorded as a ‘labourer’ in the later baptisms.
James Bee died in 1836 at Blunderston, but buried at Aldeby, aged 71, which was the same place of death as his son John Bee in 1839. After his wife Esther’s death in 1832, he may have gone to live with his son John. The age at death appears to be incorrect, as James was baptised in South Elmham, Suffolk in 1779, but may have been born earlier.
Death/ burial record of Esther Bee nee Pulham in 1832, aged 58 (b.1774):
As mentioned, James Bee appears to have been born in 1769 at St Margaret South Elmham in Suffolk, a few kms SW of Gelderston where he was living at the time of his marriage to Esther Pulham in Haddiscoe (just north of Aldeby). Gelderston is adjacent to Gillingham which was the birthplace of his future wife Esther Pulham.
The baptism record of James Bee does
not give the date of birth which may have been earlier (as suggested by his death in 1836 at age 71, ie. b.c.1765.)
James Bee appears to be the son of
Richard Bee and Anne Bridgewell who were married at South Elmham in 1757.
There are DNA matches between the
descendant of John Bee, and two sisters of his father James Bee both naming
parents as Richard Bee and Anne Bridgewell.
Richard and Ann Bee had issue at
South Elmham:
Susanna Bee b.1757
James Bee b.1762 d.1764
Elizabeth Bee 1764-1863 (2x DNA matches)
Ann Bee 1766-1850 (DNA match)
James (William) Bee 1769-1836 (DNA
match)
John Bee b.1771
Charles Bee b.1771
Upphia Bee b.1777
According to Ancestry family trees, Richard Bee died at South Elmham in Dec.1810, and Ann Bee nee Bridgewell died at South Elmham in Feb 1806. (unverified).
Ann Bridgewell appears to have been
born at Newcastle-upon-Tyne in 1727 (according to Ancestry family trees):
Richard also appears to have been
born at Newcastle-upon Tyne in September 1723 (according to Ancestry family
trees)
However, the question that comes to
mind is why two people from Newcastle in Northumberland would move to the small
village of South Elmham in Suffolk which is not explained, so these records may be
incorrect.
If the record is correct, then Richard Bee’s father Richard Bee (Senior) was born 30 April 1699 St Andrews Newcastle-upon-Tyne, died/buried 6 Sept 1730 St Andrews, married Susannah Jobling 22 January 1720 at All Saints Newcastle-upon-Tyne (Susannah bap. 6 July 1702 All Saints to John Jobling).
Richard Senior
(b.1699) was born to Benjamin Bee (1672-1736) and Sarah Raw (d.1708) married 1
Sept 1695 at St Andrew, Newcastle.
Benjamin was baptized 24
June 1672 at Newcastle to Richard Bee and was buried 17 Feb 1736 at
Newcastle-upon-Tyne.
Therefore, without further proof, such as DNA, these records of
the Bee family at Newcastle-upon-Tyne remain speculative.
ELEANOR WRIGHT, and SON JOHN WRIGHT'S EARLY YEARS
John Wright's father, John Bee died when John Wright was just ten years of age. Maybe that is the reason John stated that he was left ‘without parental guidance from a young age’. It may also refer to his mother, Eleanor, sending him to live with his uncle William Wright in Norwich shortly before or after her marriage to Benjamin Sones in 1836.
As the name ‘Eleanor Wright’ is a very common name in Norfolk, the process of proving her identity has been complicated, but there are two main sources used in identifying the correct Eleanor- one is the village of Wenhaston (and the adjacent village of Thorington) in Suffolk which turns out to be the birthplace of all of Eleanor’s siblings and her mother Elizabeth, providing an important link; and the other was a DNA match between descendants of Eleanor and her sister Maria Wright of Aldeby, and a second DNA match with a descendant of Eleanor’s paternal grandmother’s brother, providing irrefutable proof of a family link between these families.
Apart from John Bee Wright’s baptismal record naming his mother as Eleanor Wright, there are a few further records of Eleanor.
On 1 November 1836, eight years after the birth
of her son John Bee Wright, Eleanor married Benjamin Sones (also spelt Soanes),
an agricultural labourer living in Haddiscoe, just north of Aldeby. They
were married at Aldeby.
Eleanor’s identity is revealed in the 1851 Census
in which her birthplace is named as Weneston/Wenhaston, Suffolk, aged 42, ie. born 1809. She was named as Elenor Sones wife of Ben Sones, living 'by Blacksmiths':
There are also two children named in the 1851 Census, sons, James aged 10 and Benjamin aged 7.
In
the previous 1841 Census, a daughter Charlotte is also named with the Sones
family- in 1851 Charlotte aged 14, was working as a house servant for a builder
named King and his family at Beccles just over the border in Suffolk.
Baptismal records show that their children, Charlotte was baptized 1 October 1837, James was born 9 April 1840 and Benjamin was baptized 1 October 1843.
Eleanor Soanes nee Wright was buried 20 April 1852 aged 43 (b.1809) in St Mary Haddiscoe church cemetery.
Sadly, for Benjamin,
their daughter Charlotte died 22 July 1863 aged 25 and son Benjamin
(jnr) died 9 July 1864 aged 20, both buried in St Mary Haddiscoe churchyard, next to their mother Eleanor, all on the RHS of the church facing the tower.
Their son, James Soanes, would emigrate to Australia in 1870 with his wife, Mary Colgate (married Lambeth in 1863), and children, Alice aged 4 (born 1866 Loddon District) and twins James Benjamin and Eleanor Plessy, aged 1 (born early 1869 Greenwich). Tragically, both of the twins died on the voyage, Eleanor in September and James in November. (Seven other children, five infants below 1, died on the voyage, plus one adult).
Mary also gave birth
to a baby onboard named William Soanes, on 30 October.
They arrived in Rockhampton, Queensland, on the ‘Royal Dane’ on 19 November 1870 having sailed from London on 30 July, and settled in Mackay. It would also appear that they had had another daughter named Elizabeth Wright Soanes who was born and died in the December qtr 1867 in Loddon District (ie. at Haddiscoe), named in honor of Eleanor’s mother.
Their eldest daughter Alice
Soanes would marry Alfred Hucker in Mackay, both of whom share the family
grave.
James and Mary would
have further children in Mackay: Henry Soanes b.1873 (m. Mary Mitchell),
James Soanes b.1876 (m. Annie Sophia Thorpe), Mary Ellen Soanes
b.1878 (m. Frederick George Brownsey), Frederick Alfred Soanes b/d.1881,
George Soanes b/d. 1882, Florence Esther Soanes b.1883 (m. Peter
Roy), Arthur Edward Soanes b.1889 (m. Eliza Andrew Tait).
Mary Soanes (nee Colgate) died 22/9/1893 at Mackay, leaving her husband to raise several young children, and James Soanes died 15/12/1915 Mackay, both buried in Mackay City Cemetery.
Benjamin Sones/Soanes was born 7 June 1810 in
Toft Monks, just NW of Aldeby (between Aldeby and Haddiscoe), to William Soanes
and Susan Tye (married in Toft Monks in July 1803), other children named: William
Sones b. Sept
1803, Elizabeth b.1806, Stephen b.1809, Thomas b.1816 and James b.1819, all
born in Toft Monks.
Benjamin’s
elder brother William Sones (b.1803) married Eleanor’s sister Elizabeth
Wright (see
below) in 1826, but died in 1832.
In the 1861 Census- Haddiscoe: Benjamin Sones, 50, ag lab, born Aldeby, Charlotte Sones, 23, dau, James Sones, 21, son, Ag lab, Benjamin Sones, 17, son, blacksmith apprentice, all born Haddiscoe; and Harriet Sones 20 niece (dau. of Thomas)
·
NB.
neighbour in Haddiscoe is Eliza Weeds, head, widow, 43, school governess,
born Halvergate Norfolk, and her son Charles, 21, ag lab, Ann, dau, 17,
dressmaker, Caroline, dau., 13, scholar, all born Haddiscoe
In
(April-May-June qtr)
1869, Benjamin Sones married widow Eliza Weeds (nee Garwood).
Notably,
this was after the deaths of two of his children, and his remaining son James
having left for London to emigrate to Australia.
1871 Census- Haddiscoe, Loddon District: Benjamin Soanes 61, Eliza Soanes 52 wife (born Halvergate); Ann Youngs 28 (her) daughter (m. widower Aaron Youngs in 1870); Mary Youngs 10 (step) granddaughter, Aaron Youngs 5 (step) grandson.
1881 Census-Thurlton, Loddon; Benjamin Soanes, 70, ag lab, born Toft Monks, and Eliza, wife, 63, born Halvergate, and Selena Middleton granddau 7.
Benjamin Soanes died at Thurlton, adjacent to Haddiscoe (see map), in 1888 aged 78.
The following record in the 1864 White’s History, Gazetteer and Directory for Haddiscoe records Eliza Weeds (nee Garwood) as a schoolmistress in Haddiscoe.
HADDISCOE-1864:
(NB.
the James Bee, wheelwright and post office, would appear to be the elder
brother of John Bee, or could be a nephew).
The
directory also gave a description of Haddiscoe in 1864, and in particular, the
church of St Mary:
FAMILY TREE OF JOHN BEE WRIGHT
The following
family tree of John Bee Wright, son of Eleanor Wright, has been constructed
using all of the evidence available (Census, BDM/parish records, DNA), which
will be explored in detail below:
ie. John Weeds and Maria Wright
(m.1838); parents of William Weeds married 1870 Charlotte Long; parents
of Alice Weeds who married William Deeth; parents of Ethel Laura,
etc.
Ancestry.com has estimated a relationship of 4th-5th cousins.
Chr |
Start Location |
End Location |
Centimorgans (cM) |
SNPs |
3 |
61,427,186 |
65,254,630 |
6.9 |
880 |
15 |
74,265,117 |
90,901,413 |
23.3 |
2,622 |
A further DNA match with a descendant of William Wright’s mother Mary Goddard’s brother will be explained later in the section on the Goddard family.
And, as previously discussed, I have a DNA match with a descendant of John Bee's brother William Bee (sharing 11cM= 5th cousin), and John Bee's father James Bee's sister Elizabeth (sharing 11cM= 6th cousin), and further matches with two descendants of James's sister (Mary) Ann (sharing 13cM and 9cM= 6th cousins).
THE EVIDENCE LINKING THE WRIGHT FAMILY OF
ALDEBY
The marriage of John Weeds and Maria Wright in 1838 Aldeby, witnessed by John’s brother Charles Weeds, (the husband of Eliza Weeds nee Garwood who remarried to Benjamin Sones):
In the 1841 Census, John and Maria Weeds (nee Wright), 25, are living with her parents William Wright, 65, Ag Lab, and his
wife Elizabeth, 65 at Aldeby, plus their children Marion
2, and Sarah 8mths.
Their neighbours, Richard and
Elizabeth Clemments and two children Louisa Sones and Maria Sones, are
identified as Maria’s sister Elizabeth Wright (see below) and her children by
her first husband, William Sones (brother of Benjamin Sones).
Notably, the family living between the Weeds (no.12) and William and Elizabeth Wright (no. 10) is Richard Clemments (53) and Elizabeth (46) and her daughter Louisa Sones (23) and Louisa's son John Sones (2), living at No 11 Burroughs Green. Significantly, the birthplace of Elizabeth Clemments is Wenhaston, Suffolk. On further research, Elizabeth is established as another daughter of William and Elizabeth Wright (see below for details).
The Clemments were also living next door in the 1841 Census, in which Elizabeth had a second child named Maria Sones, 10, b.1831 (see above) living with them.
There is a burial record for John Weeds at Aldeby, 17 April, 1860 aged 48.
The Clemments, Richard and Elizabeth, and grandson John Sones, were still living in Burroughs Green (at No.2) in 1861.
Her parents, William and Elizabeth Wright, had died in 1861 and 1862 respectively- see death records below.
Maria
Weeds nee Wright died before the 1881 Census.
ELIZABETH CLEMMENTS, nee SONES, nee WRIGHT
Further information on the Wright's daughter Elizabeth who married (1.) William Sones in 1826, and married (2.) Richard Clemments in 1835; and her issue by William Sones- Louisa and Maria Sones.
In the 1841 Census, Richard and Elizabeth Clemments were living with her children Louisa and Maria Sones, next to the Weeds and their parents, William and Elizabeth Wright
Next
door at No. 11 Burroughs Green, Richard Clemments, 53, and his
wife Elizabeth, 44 (b.1807), born Weneston/Wenhaston Suffolk, her eldest daughter Lousia Sones, Unmarried,
aged 23 b.c.1828 Aldeby and Louisa’s son John Sones aged 2 (illeg.).
At
No.12 Burroughs Green, John Weeds and wife Maria Wright
and 5 children.
The
fact that Elizabeth Clemments nee Wright was born at Weneston/Wenhaston
Suffolk, as was her neighbour Elizabeth Wright, indicates they were mother and
daughter.
In 1851 Maria Soanes, 19, born Aldeby, was a general servant living in Great Yarmouth, at The Quay, working for Margaret Davies, 24, gentlewoman, and two other residents: William Denny unmarried 21 (no relationship to Margaret Davies given in the record), a Chemist’s assistant; and Livinia Carter servant, 13.
In 1861, Maria Sones, 30, born Aldeby, was living in Hall House (probably at Hall Quay on the River Yare) in Great Yarmouth, with her cousin Sarah Weeds, 20, born Aldeby, both employed as domestic servants by William J. Foreman 36, shipowner and merchant and his wife, and daughter 12.
Maria Sones (“daughter of William Sones, labourer”) married in April 1866 to Thomas Etheridge, widow (with an 11 mth old son, James, by first wife Caroline Walker), in Great Yarmouth;- one issue: daughter Caroline E. Etheridge b.1874 at Buckenham, Parish of Blofield, died 1947 Cambridge (m.1897 Jonathan Ellis Goodrum).
Thomas and Maria Etheridge were still
alive in the 1901 census, but no death records found.
In the 1861 Census, Richard Clemments, 65, ag lab, and wife Elizabeth, 56, born Wenhaston Suffolk, and grandson John Sones were living at No 2 Burroughs Green, while widow Maria Weeds and her parents, the William and Elizabeth Wright, had moved to Yarmouth Rd Aldeby which is closer to Tofts Monk and on the main road to Yarmouth.
1871 Census:
However, the only baptism record found
for a Rosetta Sones is a Rosetta baptised in Aldeby 29 April 1855,
daughter of Maria Sones ‘widow’, no father named. This would appear to
be Louisa’s younger sister Maria, who was aged 24 in 1855.
The record information on this Rosey
(Rosetta) Sones is rather confusing. When Rosey Sones married 13 October 1872
to John Frederick Long (a widower), her father was named as 'William Sones',
shepherd, the same name as her grandfather.
The marriage record, also claimed she
was living 'With Aunt Mrs Wiseman’ (viz. Louisa Wiseman- yet, in the 1871 census
record, Rosey had been described as William Wiseman’s ‘stepdaughter’).
Marriage 13 October 1872 of Rosetta Sones:
It would therefore appear that Louisa raised
her sister Maria’s daughter Rosetta along with her own son John Sones. As Maria
was working as a general servant in Yarmouth in 1851 and 1861, she would not
have been allowed to keep a child at her employer’s residence. Although Maria married
in 1866, her daughter Rosey continued to live with her aunt Louisa, as shown in
the 1871 Census, and in her marriage record in 1872.
In the 1881 census, William Wiseman, 52, carman/rail, and Louisa Wiseman, 52, born Aldeby, were living in Great Yarmouth with her mother (his "mother-in-law") named as Elizabeth Sones (not Clemments?), aged 77 (born 1804), widow. The place of birth is difficult to read and looks like ‘Swainston’ Suffolk, a mistake:
In the 1901 census, Louisa
was a widow working as a laundress at her home in Norman Lane.
William Wiseman died aged 71 at Great Yarmouth in November 1899;
Louisa Wiseman, died aged 82 in March 1909 at Great Yarmouth Workhouse; both buried in Yarmouth Cemetery (Louisa in an 'unconsecrated grave').
Louisa’s son, John Soanes, aged 28, (b.c.1849) married Maria Tripp in Great Yarmouth 12 May 1877. No baptism record found (possibly John Soans, June qtr 1850, reg. District Loddon, v.13 p.205).
Louisa Sones was baptised 16 Nov 1828, at Alburgh parish (near Aldeby and Topcroft, but in Census records, Louisa always named birthplace as Aldeby), father William Sones and mother Elizabeth Wright. Maria Sones was baptised 9 Oct 1831 in Aldeby, father William Sones and mother Elizabeth Wright.
In
September 1826, Elizabeth Wright had married William Sones, the father of her
two children (Louisa and Maria) and brother of Benajmin Sones (husband of
Eleanor Wright), at Aldeby:
Witnesses
named as Elizabeth Sones (sister of William and Benjamin Sones) and Charles ?
(illegible).
William Sones died just six years later in 1832, aged 29 (b.1803).
William’s
baptism record at Toft Monks in 1803, shows the same parents as for Benjamin
Sones/Soanes, husband of Eleanor Wright (ie. William Soanes and Susan Tye):
Richard Clemments married Elizabeth Sones, spinster
(?), in the Parish of Aldeby, 8 June 1835, witness Maria
Wright.
Richard Clemments died and was buried at Aldeby 28 March 1862 aged 68 (born c.1794.)
There is no
record of Elizabeth’s whereabouts in the 1871 Census, only in the 1881 Census
when she was living with daughter Louisa Wiseman.
As Elizabeth was not living with the Wisemans in the 1891 Census, nor is she listed elsewhere, presumably she had died between 1881 and 1891.
There is a
record of a death of Elizabeth Soanes (the
name she used in the 1881 Census) in Yarmouth, on 1st August
1887 aged 89 (V.4b p15), at the Yarmouth
Workhouse, described as the "widow of William Soanes, a general
labourer of Yarmouth"; buried in Yarmouth New Cemetery on 4th
August; and although the name is correct (albeit her name by her first
marriage, the name she used in the 1881 census), the stated age of 89 is
incorrect by about 6 years (viz. should be 83), but it is possible that the
Workhouse records had recorded her age incorrectly.
The question is, why would she have been in the
Workhouse and not living with her daughter Louisa and her husband? Was it
because of the state of her health, or their financial position, that they were
unable to look after her? Or is this record not relevant?
Conclusion:
Eleanor Sones nee Wright was born 1809, Wenhaston, Suffolk, and died 1852 Haddiscoe, Norfolk.
Maria Weeds nee Wright
was born 1813, Thorington near Wenhaston, Suffolk.
Elizabeth Clements,
nee Sones/Soanes, nee Wright was born 1804, Wenhaston, Suffolk, and died (?) 1887, Great Yarmouth, Norfolk.
Their parents were named as William Wright born c.1776, Topcroft, Norfolk, died 1861, Aldeby, Norfolk, and wife Elizabeth born c.1776, Wenhaston, Suffolk, died 1862, Aldeby, Norfolk.
WILLIAM AND ELIZABETH WRIGHT
St. Peter’s Church Wenhaston
(The walls of the church are covered in early 15th century paintings depicting the Day of Judgement)
William and Elizabeth Wright each reached a grand old age, with William dying in November 1861 and Elizabeth the following September 1862, both buried in Aldeby:
Eleanor, Maria and Elizabeth's father, William Wright states he was born at Topcroft, Norfolk, c.1776 in the Census records.
Topcroft is a few kms west of Aldeby.
There are no further records of issue of Jonathan and Mary Wright in Topcroft, but they may have moved elsewhere (possibly Wenhaston, but no records available there).
The marriage of Jonathan Wright and wife Mary Goddard took place at Topcroft in the same year as the birth of William less than 3 months later, on 17 January 1776, after Banns on 17th, 24th and 31st December 1775:The record reveals that Jonathan was from the Parish of Moulton near Yarmouth, which would appear to be Moulton St Mary, about 10 kms west of Great Yarmouth on the other side of The Broads (below Acle on the map), and wife Mary Goddard was from Topcroft. She was baptised at Topcroft 14 Nov 1756 to James and Mary Goddard.
They had issue, all born at Topcroft:
James Goddard bap. 25 Sept 1754
Mary Goddard bap.14 Nov 1756
Elisabeth Goddard bap. 16 April 1759
William Goddard bap. 10 July 1763, m.1. in 1783 Ann Spalding (d.1785); m.2. Ann Atkins at Aldeby (issue 3 daughters and 4 sons born between 1789 and 1807 in Aldeby, including a son named John Goddard b.1807 Aldeby, whose descendant is a DNA match with the author, a descendant of Eleanor Wright- see below).
James Goddard died/buried 5 January 1808 at Topcroft, aged 77 (born c.1731).
Marriage 1754
Death 1808
Once again, a DNA match has been found between a descendant of William Wright (via daughter Eleanor Wright and her son John Bee Wright) son of Jonathan Wright and Mary Goddard, and a descendant of Mary Goddard's brother William Goddard. They are estimated to be 4th-6th cousins by Ancestry.com.
A male descendant of William Goddard, named M. Goddard,
shares the following DNA with the author of this blog:
Shared DNA: 40 cM across 2
segments
Unweighted shared DNA: 45 cM
Longest segment: 34 cM
M. Goddard, of Australia, descends from William Edward Lucien Goddard b.1865 France, d.1931 Sydney; son of Captain William Goddard born 1835 Beccles Suffolk, who got his Masters certificate in the Merchant Service in 1861, travelled regularly between London and Sydney Australia, married Susan Alice D’Arcy 1864 in Sydney, and died 1898 in Sydney; son of John Goddard b.1808 Aldeby Norfolk, married Susan Warnes 3 April 1826 in St James Pockthorpe Norwich, but living in Kirby Cane in 1851/61/71 Census’; son of William Goddard (brother of Mary Goddard) b.1763 Topcroft married Ann Atkins in June 1788 at Aldeby; son of James Goddard and Mary Symonds of Topcroft.
Proof of descent
Captain William
Goddard (born 1835 Beccles)
and his wife Susan (D’Arcy, born NSW) and family were living at Poplar in
London, England in the 1871 census, which shows where the various children of
Captain William and wife Susan were born, including son William E[dward] in
France, and daughter Alice born in New South Wales (as was her mother), and two
born in Poplar, London, and the youngest at sea. It also shows that William
Goddard, Master Mariner was born at Beccles Suffolk.
William’s sister
Elizabeth A(nn) Goddard, 44, was living with them. She was born 15
May 1826, bap 21 May 1826 at Saint John Sepulchre church Norwich, parents
named as ‘John Goddard, servant, and Susanne’, one month after their marriage.
Curiously, she was re baptised Elizabeth Ann Mary Goddard in Aldeby on 10
April 1832 (or 1830?) but born on the same date, 15 May 1826 (as in
Norwich), daughter of ‘John Goddard, labourer, and Susan Warnes’.
2nd baptism
at Aldeby, 1832 (or 1830?):
William Goddard’s baptism at Lowestoft, Suffolk, 7
December 1835, born 26 January at Beccles- notably a Non-conformist/Wesleyan
baptism, by John Willis Minister:
William’s Master Mariner certificate, states his place of birth as Beccles, but his address as ‘Kirby Cane near Beccles’. Kirby Cane links him with his father John Goddard who lived in Kirby Cane by 1851. Kirby Cane is a few miles west of Aldeby, in Norfolk, but on the same road as Beccles just over the border in Suffolk (see map above).
Another sister, Maria
Goddard was born 13 February and baptised 17 Feb 1833 to ‘John Goddard and
Susan Warnes’ at Aldeby, and was living with her parents at Kirby Cane in the
1851/61 Census records, when she married John Cox, a miller, in 1867 at Kirby
Cane. By then, her father is described as a labourer on her marriage record.
There is also a baptism 18 May 1837, for Ruth Goddard, parents named as John and Susan Goddard, a Non-Conformist baptism at Lowestoft Wesleyan church, by Minister John Willis, the same minister as in William’s baptism, a third sister.
As Elizabeth was
baptised in 1826 and Maria in 1833 both in the Anglican faith, and William in
the Wesleyan faith in 1835 as was his sister Ruth in 1837, that would indicate
that they adopted the Wesleyan faith around that time. Rev. John Willis
(commenced Wesleyan ministry 1807, died 1860), a minister in the Wesleyan
Methodist church was stationed at Lowestoft in the late 1830’s.
There is no record of John Goddard in the 1841 census, however, Susan Goddard 35, children, Maria 9, William 7 and Ruth 5, were listed as paupers at the Shipmeadow Workhouse in Suffolk, and the ages would appear to indicate this is the family. In the same census list for Shipmeadow, their eldest daughter Elizabeth Goddard aged 15, was working as a servant for a 75 year old farmer at Shipmeadow, named Thomas Spalding and his daughter. John Goddard is not listed at the workhouse, but as he was a ‘seaman’ in the 1851 census, he may have been at sea. The workhouse, about 3 kms west of Beccles, was built in 1764 for the ‘Relief and Employment of the Poor in the Hundred of Wangford’ comprising 27 parishes including Beccles, and Ellough where Susan Goddard nee Warnes was born. The Wangford Poor Law Union formally came into being on 25 June 1835 and took over the workhouse. This may be where Susan was educated and trained as a ‘school mistress’ and daughter Maria as a ‘teacher’, their occupations in 1851. In a later interview (below), William would say that he became a seaman at the age of 13, ie. 1848, probably following his father John’s occupation.
In the 1851 Census, John Goddard, wife Susan and daughter Maria were living in Kirby Cane. John is described as a ‘seaman’, while his wife Susan was a schoolmistress and daughter Maria a teacher. John Goddard’s place of birth was Aldeby, as was his daughter Maria. His wife Susan was born at Ellough in Suffolk, a couple of kms south of Beccles. John was 43, (ie. born c.1808) at Aldeby:
Similarly in the 1861 Census, living at Kirby Cane, although John, 53 is now described as an Ag. Labourer, his wife is still a school mistress:
John
Goddard died and was buried at Kirby Cane Parish May 29, 1876.
John’s father William Goddard died at Aldeby, 2 June 1841, abode ‘Heckingham Union House’ aged ‘80’.
By 1835
the Heckingham workhouse had gained a reputation as being the most disorderly,
inefficient and corrupt of the Norfolk Hundred workhouses, in a highly critical
report by the Assistant Poor Law Commissioner. “Four hundred and fifty paupers
were congregated in this house; the aged and infirm and able-bodied men, women
and children, having common yards and day-rooms. Some pretence of employment
existed in a sacking manufactory, and in labour farm, of ten acres, hired by
the incorporation; but the paupers were seldom kept in work. In 1842, the
workhouse master was dismissed after being discovered replacing cheese in the
inmates’ diet by cheap broth, and selling off for his own gain honey and plants
produced at the workhouse.”
John’s mother Ann Atkins, had died in April 1832 aged 67, at Aldeby. Ann was William Goddard’s second wife, his first wife Ann Spalding whom he married in 1783 in Aldeby, having died in 1785. William Goddard married Ann Atkins in June 1788, and they had seven children in Aldeby (viz. Maria 1789, William 1791, Rachel 1793, George 1797, Eleanor 1802, Martin 1804, John 1807).
John’s father William Goddard was born to James Goddard and Mary Symons in Topcroft, baptised 10 July 1763, and was brother to Mary Goddard who was baptised 14/11/1756 Topcroft and married Jonathan Wright, parents of William Wright. The DNA link between William and Mary’s descendants prove this is the correct William Goddard.
Captain William Goddard
Captain William Goddard, son of John Goddard and
Susan Warnes, died 3 December 1898 at Ashfield Sydney and was
buried at Rookwood Cemetery, Sydney, parents named as John and Susan (Goddard):
Name: |
William
Goddard |
Death Date: |
1898 |
Death Place: |
New South
Wales |
Father's Name: |
John |
Mother's Name: |
Susan |
Registration Year: |
1898 |
Registration Place: |
Ashfield,
New South Wales |
Registration Number: |
12847 |
William married Susan D’Arcy in 1864 in Sydney (985/1864). She was born in NSW in 1837.
William
continued to sail international waters as captain, mainly between London and
Sydney, and it would appear, he was sometimes accompanied by his wife and
family, as shown in the 1871 London Census, which revealed the different birth
places of his children, including the youngest ‘at sea’ and William in France.
While he was working, their main residence was London, but he retired to live
in Sydney with his family.
Several glowing obituaries appeared in the Sydney newspapers, as well as a couple of interviews:
Clarence River Advocate, Tuesday 6 December 1898, p3:
Daily Telegraph Sydney, 3 December 1898, p9
The following article in the Sydney Morning Herald.
Thurs 21 January 1897 p3, was an interview on his retirement, the year before
his death:
Captain William
Goddard’s son, William Edward Lucien D’Arcy Goddard, born 1 Oct 1865 at
Fontainebleau, France, died 12 Feb 1931 North Sydney, and buried in Macquarie
Park Cemetery and Crematorium,
Father:
William Goddard, Mother: Susan Alice Goddard.
Known as ‘D’Arcy
Goddard’. (see Find-a-Grave entry)
The DNA match to Eleanor’s descendant, M. Goddard is a
descendant of William Edward Lucien D’Arcy Goddard.
JONATHAN WRIGHT, HUSBAND OF MARY GODDARD
There are a couple of other
records for Wrights at Moulton St Mary in the early to mid 1700’s, who may be
related. As the name William features in Jonathan’s descendants, the following
may (or may not) be relevant:
Issue of John Wright
and ? Green:
1. William Wright born 9 July, bap 10 July 1737
2. Christian Wright (dau) bap 22 March 1729
As there is a big gap
between William and Christian’s baptisms, one would expect there were further
children, possibly baptised elsewhere, although there are no appropriate
baptismal records for a Jonathan Wright in any parish in Norfolk.
There are several further records of baptisms of the issue of a John Wright and Elizabeth Taylor in the 1780’s onwards, who may be related to the above family of Wrights.
As we have already discussed, shortly after Eleanor Wright’s marriage to Benjamin Soanes in Haddiscoe in 1836, we find her son John living with his uncle William Wright in Heigham in Norwich in the 1841 Census. Whether this was because Benjamin Soanes did not want his wife’s base-born son living with them, or because John was about to be apprenticed as a shoemaker to his uncle William, is not known. Unfortunately, the 1841 Census is short on detail.
The following 1892 map of Heigham shows the area of Crooks Place, with Mill Street (marked in RED) between Essex and Chapel Streets. It crosses with Vauxhall Street. The red asterix marks Portland Place where John would be living in 1851, so only a short distance from his uncle's house. (ref: Geo Plunkett maps)
There is a large gap between John's age of 13 and the other two children aged 7 and 5, indicating that John is not their child. This is confirmed by William and wife Ann's marriage record in 1830 (see below).
1841 Census- Mill Street, Heigham, Norwich
1851 Census- Heigham, Norwich
In the 1861 Census, it would appear that William's eldest son, William Wright b.1833, was living with his wife Harriet in Great Yarmouth, working as a shoemaker. William Wright married Harriet Whitlock late 1855 in Norwich. At the time of the census, they had no children.
William's wife Ann would appear to be Ann Vervil who was born at Thurton/Chedgrave which is near Lodden, about half way between Aldeby and Norwich, daughter of Joshua Vervil (variously spelt Varville, Virvel), labourer, and Mary Ecclestone (they had numerous children baptised in Chedgrave in June 1811, and one in 1813).
The following marriage record is for William Wright and Ann Vervil/Virvel at Lakenham, Norwich (bordering Heigham):
Several of the Vervil children were baptised at Chedgrave in 1811 (Ann, Mary, Philip, Robert, William and Richard Varville), and Phillis in 1806 (father Joshua, mother named as Mary Ecclestone), Lydia in 1809 (Joshua and Mary Ann Varville) and Sarah in 1813 (Joshua and Mary Ecclestone, father a labourer), while the 1851 Census states that Ann was born at Thurton in 1803, which is very close to Chedgrave, and both near to Loddon.
The census records prove that William
Wright, born Wenhaston c.1803, living in Heigham was the brother of Eleanor
Wright, and Maria Wright, and Elizabeth Wright, all children of William
and Elizabeth Wright, and that Eleanor’s brother William took over responsibility
for her son John and taught him his trade of shoemaking.
JOHN BEE WRIGHT'S MARRIAGE TO MARTHA ROWLING
THE ROWLING FAMILY OF NORWICH
Martha Rowling was baptised 18 April 1819 at Saint George Colegate Church, Norwich and born 20 March 1819 (records below), the date of which is confirmed in her obituary (Source: .Genesee Conference Methodist Episcopal Church Annual Minutes. Ref : Official Minutes and Journal of the … session of the Genesee Conference , 1903- p.151-152)
Therefore, William and Mary must have been born pre 1790.
William Rowling b.c.1816 (no baptism record found)- see records below
Martha Rowling b. 20 March 1819, bap 11 April 1819; married 12 April 1848 John Bee Wright- as above
Notably Martha would name one of her daughters Plessy.
Amelia Rowling (Rolling) born 14 April 1826, bap. 21 May 1826 by Rev. William Gilpin, Wesleyan Minister at Calvert Street Chapel, Colegate, to parents William Rolling and wife Mary of Crooks Place Parish of St Stephens. No further records found.
No baptismal record found, but William's marriage certificate confirms he was son of William Rowling, carpenter, and was living at the family residence at Crook's Place:
William Junior's first marriage, to Mary Ann Pocock took place at St Peter's Wesleyan Chapel in Lady Lane (between Bethel and Theatre Streets) in 1839. This church was opened in 1824 by Rev. Wm Gilpin.
There is a record of burials in the churchyard of St Bartholomew's Church, parish of Heigham for:
James Riches, died February 18th 1851,aged 76 years (b.1775), and Martha, wife of James Riches, died October 26th, 1823, aged 49 years (b.1774), Also Martha Riches Syder, their granddaughter, died November 19th, 1845, aged 15 years.
This could be the source of the name of William and Mary's daughter Martha.
If these were Mary Riches' parents, they would have married at a young age (in their teens), and Mary would have been very young when she married William Rowling, possibly 14 or 15 years of age in 1809, which seems unlikely, but possible.
There are other BDM records of James Riches that could be relevant, or not:
A James Riches married 1 Nov 1725 to Elizabeth Baldwin at St James with Pockthorpe Church, the same church in which Mary and William were married.
A James Riches married 19 August 1773 to Elizabeth Craske at Heigham (the parish they lived in).
A James Riches bap 7 April 1754 at All Saints son of Edmund and Mary Riches. (There are two floor memorials in St Stephens for Edmund Riches' who died in the 1700's- Edmond in August 1740, and, Edmund died later but illegible)
A James Riches bap 17 July 1757 St Augustine, son of Solomon Riches and Elizabeth ( St Augustine, east of St James with Pockthorpe).
A James Riches buried St Stephens 17 January 1828 aged 71, b.c.1757
A Solomon Riches buried St Stephens 10 Sept 1820 aged 85 b.c.1735
The earliest Rowling baptismal record in Norwich is for the baptism of John son of William Rowling and wife Alice Jane on 6 January 1648/49:
There is also a record in the 1841 Census of a Pleasance Rowling (transcribed as 'Hoasance' in Ancestry.com) aged 20, occupation a “Clear Starcher”, a patient in the Norwich Hospital Parish of St Stephen. But notably, Sarah Rowling is also listed as a “Clear Starcher” in the 1851 Census. A Clear Starcher is described as: a laundry worker stiffening shirts and other garments with hot starch in a tumbling machine- called a starcher or clear starcher.
Presumably 'Pleasance' is Plessy, as Plessy is not recorded in the 1841 census, but when she married in 1845, her residence was described as the 'New City, St Stephens Parish', another term for Crook's Place.
1841 Census- Martha Rowling at The Lodge, St Martin at Palace Plains, Norwich-
Jane Rowling died in 1874 (June Qtr- Vol 4b p92) aged 83.
An 1815 Map of this area shows it was mainly farmland:
He was living with his wife Martha 32, born Norwich, dau Martha Jane, 1 yr, born Norwich, and son John William Wright 4 mths, b. Norwich.
There was an entry in the newspaper which gave a Court report in which a shoemaker in Norwich was charged with stealing a silver watch belonging to a John Wright shoemaker.
He was living with his wife Martha, 52, son John William, 20, printer and compositor, dau. Plesy, 14, scholar, and Ellen Elizabeth, 12, scholar.
By this time the Rev. John Bee Wright was a very self righteous preacher. Having decided to enforce the ancient law prohibiting work on the Sabbath, he issued summons on several people including an unfortunate crossing sweeper and a poor woman selling oranges who ended up in Newgate. However, his success in the Courts led him to prosecute bigger game, and he soon earned the ire of those in the tobacco and liquor trades resulting in threats to his life. He gained a notorious reputation in the London newspapers, which will be explored in the next chapter. To say the least, life became so uncomfortable it was soon time to 'move on' to a safer haven, the USA.
Link back to Introduction page
http://nott-wrightfamilyhistory.blogspot.com.au/2013/04/ch1-introduction.html
Links to all other chapters on this blog:
Philip Nott and wife Martha Jane Wright- life and marriage in England
http://nott-wrightfamilyhistory.blogspot.com.au/2013/04/ch2-philip-nott-and-martha-jane-wright.html
Emigration to Australia in 1872
http://nott-wrightfamilyhistory.blogspot.com.au/2013/04/ch-3-emigration-to-australia.html
The Nott family settles in Brisbane, Queensland
http://nott-wrightfamilyhistory.blogspot.com.au/2013/04/ch4-settling-in-brisbane.html
Philip Nott- master builder in Brisbane
http://nott-wrightfamilyhistory.blogspot.com.au/2013/04/ch5-master-builder-in-brisbane.html
Philip Nott's community involvement
http://nott-wrightfamilyhistory.blogspot.com.au/2013/04/ch6-philip-nott-community-involvement_24.html
Philip Nott's political life as a Council alderman
http://nott-wrightfamilyhistory.blogspot.com.au/2013/04/ch7-philip-notts-political-life_24.html
Children of Philip Nott and Martha Jane Wright
http://nott-wrightfamilyhistory.blogspot.com.au/2013/04/ch8-issue-of-philip-and-martha-jane-nott_24.html
Philip Nott- family deaths and burials
http://nott-wrightfamilyhistory.blogspot.com.au/2013/04/ch9-philip-nott-family-deaths_25.html
Nott family ancestry in Cornwall England
http://nott-wrightfamilyhistory.blogspot.com.au/2013/04/ch10-nott-ancestry-cornwall_25.html
Martha Jane Wright's parents- Rev. John Bee Wright and Martha Rowling of Norfolk, and their ancestry
http://nott-wrightfamilyhistory.blogspot.com.au/2013/04/ch11-rev-john-bee-wright_25.html
Newspaper accounts of Rev. John Bee Wright, and emigration to New York State in 1871
http://nott-wrightfamilyhistory.blogspot.com.au/2013/04/ch12-rev-john-bee-wright-newspaper_25.html
Deaths, burials, and obituaries of Rev. John Bee Wright and Martha Wright
http://nott-wrightfamilyhistory.blogspot.com.au/2013/04/ch13-wright-and-rowling-ancestry.html