Sunday, 6 October 2019
Saturday, 5 October 2019
Margery Mary Morgan
Name: Margery Mary Morgan
Event Type: Birth Registration
Registration Quarter: Apr-May-Jun
Registration Year: 1889
Registration District: Cardiff
County: Glamorganshire
Event Place: Cardiff, Glamorganshire, Wales
Daughter of Richard Morgan and Annie Chamberlain
Event Type: Birth Registration
Registration Quarter: Apr-May-Jun
Registration Year: 1889
Registration District: Cardiff
County: Glamorganshire
Event Place: Cardiff, Glamorganshire, Wales
Daughter of Richard Morgan and Annie Chamberlain
Friday, 4 October 2019
LIFE IN THE "CITY OF GOLD." EXPERIENCES OF AN OLD CAER- PHILIAN
LIFE IN THE "CITY OF GOLD." EXPERIENCES OF AN OLD CAER- PHILIAN. A letter dated April 14, 1895, bearing the Johannesburg postmark, has been received by Mr. Lascelles Carr from Mr. William Edwards, formerly of Caerphilly, who some time ago sailed to the Cape with the object of making his fortune. After sending greet- ing, Mr. Edwards goes on to narrate how he was, enabled to obtain employment. His experiences mey prove interesting to intend- ing fortune-hunters at the Cape. He says: "I am pleased to state that the height of my ambition has been reached long before I had anticipated it would—that is, of getting suitable employment in the 'City of Gold,' and although it was a very expensive trip, I shall, hewever, soon right myself here. An advertisement appeared in the 'Cape Times' on Tuesday, the 25th ult. :XV,,nted, a smart man to travel Johannesburg (town only).—Apply, between ten and eleven a.m., at wine merchants, Cape Town.' I called, and found the passage and stair- case well lined with applicants of all ages, some unmistakably wearing the trade colour, waiting their turn to be interviewed by Mr. I could not afford time to wait my turn, so I asked them to allow me to go in, explaining my reasons, and remarkisg that my going in would not in any way- enhance my chance amongst so many, and that it would most likely end in a 'shake in the hat.' I saw him for a few minutes, and went away, finding applicants were still 0 coming. A day or two later I was sent for, being one out of three. I was engaged con- ditionally on my leaving on the following even- ing. I telephoned my employer from the spot. He consented. I agreed. Mr. advanced me £10 on account of my salary, without any security whatever. I left next evening, my Cardiff and Cape friends seeing me off with a true British 'three times three. Continuing, Mr. Edwards says:—"I am delighted with the place: the air is simply perfect, and in the suburbs it feels as bracing as if I were walking on top of Cefn On, one of the range of Caerphilly Mountains. The gardens are so home-like (flowers only; I have not seen a vegetable of any kind growing here yet), with their daiy and violet borders, pinks, carnations, verbenas, nasturtiums, splendid show of dahlias and chrysanthemums, honey- suckle, roses, &c. in fact, it does my heart good to have a look at them. Such a glorious change compared with Cape Town and its surroundings, where everything looks so parched! "My first evening here I was curious to find how many Welsh names I could find in the Directory. I commenced with the Joneses, and one of the first I saw was an Edward Jones, consulting engineer, 'a Caer- phillian,' who knows both myself and my wife from our childhood. He is a man of great influence here, and has been in Africa upwards of fifteen years. For years before that he was chief engineer to the De Beers Company, Kimberley, one of the best berths in the Colony. He is now managing-director to the Great Eastern Collieries at Springs, about twenty miles from this place, and which is turniiu- out a 'big thing.' He was the first to introduce deep levels into the gold mines here. He was living at. his old home in Caerphilly for a short time some fifteen years ago In cros ing Commissioner- street a few days ago someone shouted out, 'Hallo, Mr. William Edwards, Caerphilly, how are you ?' It was the son of Mr. Williams, who built Treharris. Brewery, and is now. I believe, a lime merchant at Penarth, living at Park-place, Cardiff. The same evening, in perusing one of the papers, I saw a report of a presentation of plate to a Mr. Begbie on the occasion of his marriage, coupled with the name of J. Monfries, of a certain engineering works, who made the presentation. I walked to the works before breakfast next morning, and found out that he was the J. Monfries who was working at Pwllypant Quarries under his uncle, the late Mr. Monfries, 27 years ago. He now holds a first-class position, being foreman of the smiths and boilermakers. I left his cousin, Mr. J. L. Monfries who used to be at the Cardiff Bute Docks Office, at Cape Town. He is engaged as clerk at a builder's office there." Mr Edwards concludes by saying that lie is certain there is a large fortune to be made by anyone enterprising enough to form a syndicate to start a steam laundry, as this business is practically unknown "and un- worked at Johannesburg. For washing one white shirt, five collars, two pairs of cuffs, and five white pocket handkerchiefs he was charged 4s. 9d.
Thursday, 3 October 2019
Charlotte Laura Monfries in 1891 and 1901
Charlotte Laura Monfries in 1891 and 1901
Charlotte Laura Monfries, the second daughter of Charlotte Monfries and James Laurie Monfries, was as we know born at her mother’s family home in Broadclyst in Devon in 1857, while her father was still probably working on Alderney. In 1880 she married the man we know as ‘Ernest Hall of Shimla’ in Calcutta. In the 1891 census she is on furlough from India, living in Cardiff with her mother and with a daughter, Charlotte H. Hall, born in 1888 in India. Like Francis and Clifford Peel, it was common for the wives of British India officials to come home for a birth; as we know, Francis returned to Bombay with his mother Frances Maude, and died there aged nine months in 1908; Clifford (Nicholas) remained in Exeter with his grandparents Charles James and Alice Edith Vlieland. The 1901 census tells us that Charlotte Laura had a second daughter, Margaret Laura, born in Cardiff in 1890 (presumably at Charlotte’s home), and a son, Ernest William, born in India in 1892, whose life at Exeter School and Exeter College Oxford, and death at Krithia in May 1915, we know about. Charlotte Laura is still alive in 1901, but the documentation of Ernest William’s death in 1915 mentions neither her nor her two daughters.
Thanks to Barbara for this update
Charlotte Laura Monfries, the second daughter of Charlotte Monfries and James Laurie Monfries, was as we know born at her mother’s family home in Broadclyst in Devon in 1857, while her father was still probably working on Alderney. In 1880 she married the man we know as ‘Ernest Hall of Shimla’ in Calcutta. In the 1891 census she is on furlough from India, living in Cardiff with her mother and with a daughter, Charlotte H. Hall, born in 1888 in India. Like Francis and Clifford Peel, it was common for the wives of British India officials to come home for a birth; as we know, Francis returned to Bombay with his mother Frances Maude, and died there aged nine months in 1908; Clifford (Nicholas) remained in Exeter with his grandparents Charles James and Alice Edith Vlieland. The 1901 census tells us that Charlotte Laura had a second daughter, Margaret Laura, born in Cardiff in 1890 (presumably at Charlotte’s home), and a son, Ernest William, born in India in 1892, whose life at Exeter School and Exeter College Oxford, and death at Krithia in May 1915, we know about. Charlotte Laura is still alive in 1901, but the documentation of Ernest William’s death in 1915 mentions neither her nor her two daughters.
Thanks to Barbara for this update
Wednesday, 2 October 2019
Charlotte Monfries in 1871
We now have the 1871 census, made just after Charlotte’s husband James Laurie Monfries, died, and this fills in many of the gaps in her life we wondered about, and also clears up some confusions!
We know that James Laurie’s obituary on the blog says that he left ‘a numerous family, some of whom are very young’ and the 1871 census shows how true this is. It gives Charlotte’s age as 47, but gets her birth year wrong: this was 1824 not 1822, confirmed by the fact that she died at 80 in 1904.
What we did not know was that her nine surviving children (Merival is still to be found, but we now have Jessie’s place in the family) ranged in age from 18 (John McConnochie, b. 1853) to Elizabeth 3 (b. 1868). In between are Jessie Thomson 17 (b. 1854), Charlotte Laura 14 (called Laura Charlotte on the census, b. 1857), James Alexander 13 (b. 1858, d. 1875), Marion 11 (b. 1860), William Jeffrey 10 (b. 1861), Ann 8 (b. 1863) and Margaret 6 (b. 1865). John and Jessie were born on Alderney, Marion and Margaret on Guernsey; James Alexander as we know was born in Cherbourg in France, but Charlotte Laura was born in Broadclyst in Devon, presumably at Charlotte’s own parents’ home, and Elizabeth in Cardiff. Why this is so is not quite clear, unless she and/or James Laurie had a home there: certainly it was in Cardiff that she set up her millinery and dressmaking business after James Laurie died. William and Ann are missing from the census, presumably because they were away from home when it was taken: we know that Ann lived on to marry Richard Morgan. If William died in the meantime, we have no record of a grave – James Laurie, James Alexander and Charlotte are all buried in the same grave in Capel Martin (now St Martin’s Church) in Caerphilly. Charlotte must have married James in 1852 at the latest, probably on Alderney and certainly not in Calcutta, a confusion that arose because that is where her daughter, Charlotte Laura, married Ernest Hall in 1880; some records further confuse this marriage with an earlier one for Charlotte herself, but she was ‘Charlotte Chamberlain’ and unmarried when, aged 26, she married James Laurie Monfries.
We know that James Laurie’s obituary on the blog says that he left ‘a numerous family, some of whom are very young’ and the 1871 census shows how true this is. It gives Charlotte’s age as 47, but gets her birth year wrong: this was 1824 not 1822, confirmed by the fact that she died at 80 in 1904.
What we did not know was that her nine surviving children (Merival is still to be found, but we now have Jessie’s place in the family) ranged in age from 18 (John McConnochie, b. 1853) to Elizabeth 3 (b. 1868). In between are Jessie Thomson 17 (b. 1854), Charlotte Laura 14 (called Laura Charlotte on the census, b. 1857), James Alexander 13 (b. 1858, d. 1875), Marion 11 (b. 1860), William Jeffrey 10 (b. 1861), Ann 8 (b. 1863) and Margaret 6 (b. 1865). John and Jessie were born on Alderney, Marion and Margaret on Guernsey; James Alexander as we know was born in Cherbourg in France, but Charlotte Laura was born in Broadclyst in Devon, presumably at Charlotte’s own parents’ home, and Elizabeth in Cardiff. Why this is so is not quite clear, unless she and/or James Laurie had a home there: certainly it was in Cardiff that she set up her millinery and dressmaking business after James Laurie died. William and Ann are missing from the census, presumably because they were away from home when it was taken: we know that Ann lived on to marry Richard Morgan. If William died in the meantime, we have no record of a grave – James Laurie, James Alexander and Charlotte are all buried in the same grave in Capel Martin (now St Martin’s Church) in Caerphilly. Charlotte must have married James in 1852 at the latest, probably on Alderney and certainly not in Calcutta, a confusion that arose because that is where her daughter, Charlotte Laura, married Ernest Hall in 1880; some records further confuse this marriage with an earlier one for Charlotte herself, but she was ‘Charlotte Chamberlain’ and unmarried when, aged 26, she married James Laurie Monfries.
Thanks to Barbara for this update
Tuesday, 1 October 2019
ECCLESIASTICAL. PREFERMENTS AND APPOINTMENTS.
ECCLESIASTICAL. PREFERMENTS AND APPOINTMENTS. The Rev J. F. J. Hcrchell; Chaplain of the Union, Clan, Herefordshire. Rev F. C. Hingeston, M A; Perpetual Curate of Hamp- ton, Oxoii. Patron, C. Venables, Esq. The Rev J. Lindsay; Curate of West Horslcy, Surrey. The Rev R. Turnbiil, B A; Vicar of Wybunbery, Cheshire. The Rev J. N. Vlieland; Vicar of Stalisfield, Kent. Patron, Archbishop of Canterbury. We are informed on good authority that the Iley Charles Collins, formerly of this city, who seceded to the Church of lmnc, has, from sober conviction, re-em- braced the Protestant faith.—Exeter Gazette,
Monday, 30 September 2019
CAERPHILLY. PWLL-Y PANT QUARRIES.
Sunday, 29 September 2019
Caerphilly
Saturday, 28 September 2019
fatal accident AT PWLLYPANT QUARRY.
FATAL ACCIDENT AT PWLLYPANT QUARRY.—An acci- dent of a very serious nature took place on Tuesday, in the quarry belonging to Lord Bute. While some men were removing the stones lately blasted, a very large stone, weighing about ten tons, fell upon a labourer of the name of Thomas Wheton, crushing him and caus ing his instant death. The deceased leaves a widow and three children to lament his sudden death. On Wednesday m rning an inquest was held at the Castle Hotel, before Mr R. L. Reece, coroner. The following evidence was given:—Ri-hard Crocker said he lived near the quarry, and where he had worked for four years. He knew the deceased, who had been engaged as quarryman in the quarry for eighteen months. Wit- ness was wording near the deceased on Tuesday. The deceased was working in one of the gangs. The de- ceased and witness worked at No. 2 on the north side. Between eleven and twelve in the forenoon, the de- ceased, by means of an iron bar, removed a small stone from under a large one. The latter stone then fell im- mediately upon him and nearly covered him. The stone was very large, weighing from eighth to ten tons. A good deal of rubble carne down fit the same time. The rubble or stone did not touch anyone else. Wit- ness heard the foreman. William Price, warning him to leave the place where the deceased was killed, because it was dangerous. Others warned him as well as his son. The deceased said ,lit was as iirm as a church," at the same time getting on the top of it. He then came off it, removed the little stene, when the big stone fell upon him. and he was killed instantly. —Mr. J as. L. Monfries said he was the manager of the quarry, and had been so from the commencement, 3k years ago. He was forty yards from the spot when the deceased met his death. He was at the spot about three minutes after it happened, when the deceased was nearly covered with rnbble, the stone having been removed. The stone was from eight to ten tons. The body was removed before he loft the spot. The doctor was sent for, but deceased was dead before he was got out.—The jury found a verdict of Accidental death," and stated that ne blame attached to anyone.
Friday, 27 September 2019
John McConnochie Monfries
Name: John McConnochie Monfries
Event Type: Census
Event Date: 1871
Event Place: Energlyn, Glamorgan, Wales, United Kingdom
Enumeration District: 1
Gender: Male
Age: 18
Marital Status: Unknown
Occupation: Saddler
Relationship to Head of Household: Son
Birth Year (Estimated): 1853
Birthplace: Alderney, Alderney
MONFRISS—GOODEN.—June 29, at St. John's Cliu.-cb, Can- ton, by the Hev. G. A. Jones, Vicar of St. Mary's, John McConnocbie Monfries, to Anna, youngest daughter of the late Richard Nelson Gooden, Esq., M.D., of Nunea- ton.
MOnday 22, at Duttryn Cottage, Ilaiid Cardiff, the wife of John McCounoci.ie Monfries of a son. 8 DEATH. MoriFriES.—May 22. Junes Lauric Nebon lonfr¡e. the infant -Oil of John McConuochie Monfries, at Duffryn Cottage, Llandalr-road, Cardiff.
Name: Anna Gooden
Event Type: Christening
Event Date: 15 Mar 1858
Event Place: Nuneaton, Warwickshire, England
Gender: Female
Father's Name: Richard Nelson Gooden
Mother's Name: Ann Gooden
Event Type: Census
Event Date: 1871
Event Place: Energlyn, Glamorgan, Wales, United Kingdom
Enumeration District: 1
Gender: Male
Age: 18
Marital Status: Unknown
Occupation: Saddler
Relationship to Head of Household: Son
Birth Year (Estimated): 1853
Birthplace: Alderney, Alderney
MONFRISS—GOODEN.—June 29, at St. John's Cliu.-cb, Can- ton, by the Hev. G. A. Jones, Vicar of St. Mary's, John McConnocbie Monfries, to Anna, youngest daughter of the late Richard Nelson Gooden, Esq., M.D., of Nunea- ton.
MOnday 22, at Duttryn Cottage, Ilaiid Cardiff, the wife of John McCounoci.ie Monfries of a son. 8 DEATH. MoriFriES.—May 22. Junes Lauric Nebon lonfr¡e. the infant -Oil of John McConuochie Monfries, at Duffryn Cottage, Llandalr-road, Cardiff.
Name: Anna Gooden
Event Type: Christening
Event Date: 15 Mar 1858
Event Place: Nuneaton, Warwickshire, England
Gender: Female
Father's Name: Richard Nelson Gooden
Mother's Name: Ann Gooden
Thursday, 26 September 2019
William J Monfries
Event Type: Census
Event Date: 1881
Event Place: Cardiff St John, Glamorganshire, Wales
Registration District: Cardiff
Residence Note: Windsor Place
Gender: Male
Age: 19
Marital Status: Single
Occupation: Clerk
Relationship to Head of Household: Son
Birth Year (Estimated): 1862
Birthplace: Guernsey, Channel Islands
| Household | Role | Sex | Age | Birthplace |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Charlotte Monfrees | Head | F | 57 | Exeter, Devon, England |
| Marion Monfrees | Daughter | F | 21 | Guernsey, Channel Islands |
| William J Monfrees | Son | M | 19 | Guernsey, Channel Islands |
| Annie C Monfrees | Daughter | F | 17 | Guernsey, Channel Islands |
Wednesday, 25 September 2019
family Monfries
Name: Margaret Monfries
Gender: Female
Birth Date: 05 Sep 1864
Birthplace: Guernsey, Channel Islands
Father's Name: James-Lawrie Monfries
Mother's Name: Charlotte Chamberlain
Name: Annie Chamberlain Monfries
Gender: Female
Birth Date: 10 May 1863
Birthplace: Guernsey, Channel Islands
Father's Name: James Lawrie Monfries
Mother's Name: Charlotte Chamberlain
Name: Marion Monfries
Gender: Female
Birth Date: 10 Jun 1859
Birthplace: Guernsey, Channel Islands
Father's Name: Jas. Monfries
Mother's Name: Chtte. Chamberlain
Name: Jessie Monfries
Event Type: Census
Event Date: 1871
Event Place: Energlyn, Glamorgan, Wales, United Kingdom
Enumeration District: 1
Gender: Female
Age: 17
Marital Status: Unknown
Relationship to Head of Household: Daughter
Birth Year (Estimated): 1854
Birthplace: Alderney, Alderney
Name: James Alexander Monfries
Event Type: Census
Event Date: 1871
Event Place: Energlyn, Glamorgan, Wales, United Kingdom
Enumeration District: 1
Gender: Male
Age: 13
Occupation: Engineer
Relationship to Head of Household: Son
Birth Year (Estimated): 1858
Birthplace: France
Name: JAMES ALEXANDER MONFRIES
Event Type: Burial
Event Place: Caerphilly, Caerphilly, Wales, United Kingdom
Cemetery: Saint Martin Church Graveyard
Latitude: 51.57098
Longitude: -3.21966
Birth Date: 20 Jul 1857
Death Date: 12 Aug 1875
Name: William J Monfrees
Event Type: Census
Event Date: 1881
Event Place: Cardiff St John, Glamorganshire, Wales
Registration District: Cardiff
Residence Note: Windsor Place
Gender: Male
age: 19
Marital Status: Single
occupation: Clerk
Relationship to Head of Household: Son
Birth Year (Estimated): 1862
Birthplace: Guernsey, Channel Islands
Gender: Female
Birth Date: 05 Sep 1864
Birthplace: Guernsey, Channel Islands
Father's Name: James-Lawrie Monfries
Mother's Name: Charlotte Chamberlain
Gender: Female
Birth Date: 10 May 1863
Birthplace: Guernsey, Channel Islands
Father's Name: James Lawrie Monfries
Mother's Name: Charlotte Chamberlain
Name: Marion Monfries
Gender: Female
Birth Date: 10 Jun 1859
Birthplace: Guernsey, Channel Islands
Father's Name: Jas. Monfries
Mother's Name: Chtte. Chamberlain
Name: Jessie Monfries
Event Type: Census
Event Date: 1871
Event Place: Energlyn, Glamorgan, Wales, United Kingdom
Enumeration District: 1
Gender: Female
Age: 17
Marital Status: Unknown
Relationship to Head of Household: Daughter
Birth Year (Estimated): 1854
Birthplace: Alderney, Alderney
Name: James Alexander Monfries
Event Type: Census
Event Date: 1871
Event Place: Energlyn, Glamorgan, Wales, United Kingdom
Enumeration District: 1
Gender: Male
Age: 13
Occupation: Engineer
Relationship to Head of Household: Son
Birth Year (Estimated): 1858
Birthplace: France
Name: JAMES ALEXANDER MONFRIES
Event Type: Burial
Event Place: Caerphilly, Caerphilly, Wales, United Kingdom
Cemetery: Saint Martin Church Graveyard
Latitude: 51.57098
Longitude: -3.21966
Birth Date: 20 Jul 1857
Death Date: 12 Aug 1875
Name: William J Monfrees
Event Type: Census
Event Date: 1881
Event Place: Cardiff St John, Glamorganshire, Wales
Registration District: Cardiff
Residence Note: Windsor Place
Gender: Male
age: 19
Marital Status: Single
occupation: Clerk
Relationship to Head of Household: Son
Birth Year (Estimated): 1862
Birthplace: Guernsey, Channel Islands
Tuesday, 24 September 2019
Masonic gathering
Monday, 23 September 2019
Margaret Monfries
Name: Margaret Monfries
Gender: Female
Birth Date: 05 Sep 1864
Birthplace: Guernsey, Channel Islands
Father's Name: James-Lawrie Monfries
Mother's Name: Charlotte Chamberlain
Gender: Female
Birth Date: 05 Sep 1864
Birthplace: Guernsey, Channel Islands
Father's Name: James-Lawrie Monfries
Mother's Name: Charlotte Chamberlain
Sunday, 22 September 2019
Jessie Thomson Monfries
Name: Jessie Monfries
Event Type: CensusEvent Date: 1871
Event Place: Energlyn, Glamorgan, Wales, United Kingdom
Enumeration District: 1
Gender: Female
Age: 17
Marital Status: Unknown
Relationship to Head of Household: Daughter
Birth Year (Estimated): 1854
Birthplace: Alderney, Alderney
MARRIAGE. DAVENPORT-MONFRIES.—September 17, at St. Andrew's Church, by the Rev. J. Holme Russell, B.A. Howard Howelld Davenport, to Jessie Thompson, eldest daughter of the late James Monfries, Esq., of Pwlly- pant.
census 1911
Saturday, 21 September 2019
Charlotte Chamberlain
As we know from Richard Morgan’s life story in the blog, on the sudden death of James Lawrie Monfries in 1871, Charlotte Monfries, Richard’s mother-in-law, was left a widow at 47 with six young children. Charlotte was born in Broadclyst, a village just outside Exeter in 1824, and all her children born in her 30s. Her marriage to James must have been about 1856: Charlotte Laura is b. 1857, James Alexander 1858 (died 1875), Marion 1860, William Jeffrey 1861, Ann 1863 and Margaret 1864; Jessie Thomson (1854) and Merivel may have died in infancy in 1859 and 1862. However, Charlotte was already a widow when she married James, as she had been married first to William Ernest Hall, whose birth, death and marriage dates we do not yet know. This marriage, like that to James, took place in India, where William Ernest seems to have been in government service. Charlotte was clearly a talented milliner and dressmaker: although one business fell into bankruptcy in 1869, in 1880 she is listed in the Cardiff Business Directory as trading at 29 Windsor Place, at the heart of the city. Charlotte and Charlotte Laura, on the eve of her marriage to Ernest Hall in Calcutta in 1880, are living in the terraced streets of Crockherbtown just outside the East Gate, one of the lost districts of Cardiff. And here we have a fascinating puzzle. Ernest is b. 1854, so three years older than Charlotte Laura; his father is Arthur Hall (his mother, probably Maria, was dead in 1915 when their only son, also William Ernest, was killed at Gallipoli), who must be a brother or cousin of Charlotte’s first husband.
1904
MONFREES.—On the 18th inst., at 12, Chamber- combe-terrace, Ilfracombe, Charlotte, wido a of the late James Laurie Monfries, of Pwllypant,
Name: Charlotte Chamberlain
Gender: Female
Christening Date: 03 Nov 1822
Christening Date (Original): 03 NOV 1822
Christening Place: BROAD CLYST,DEVON,ENGLAND
Father's Name: John Chamberlain
Mother's Name: Sarah Willey
fire in Broadclyst in 1870
Five other blocks of houses destroyed in the same road were occupied by Samuel Tar, a carpenter, his wife and four children; John Northcombe and wife; Thomas Wilkins and family; Robert Southcott, cooper and wife; Wm Ascott and wife; Mr. John Chamberlain, builder and family, whose workshop and stock were also destroyed. Mr. Chamberlain had a valuable stock of timber upon his premises. He is engaged in building a parsonage house at Brampford Speke and had a quantity of materials in his workshop to be used there. A new staircase that had been prepared was alone worth £40 and his loss of stock and tools that are uninsured is not less than £200.
Name: John Chamberlain
Spouse's Name: Sarah Willey
Event Date: 06 Oct 1818
Event Place: Broad Clyst,Devon,England
1904
MONFREES.—On the 18th inst., at 12, Chamber- combe-terrace, Ilfracombe, Charlotte, wido a of the late James Laurie Monfries, of Pwllypant,
Name: Charlotte Chamberlain
Gender: Female
Christening Date: 03 Nov 1822
Christening Date (Original): 03 NOV 1822
Christening Place: BROAD CLYST,DEVON,ENGLAND
Father's Name: John Chamberlain
Mother's Name: Sarah Willey
fire in Broadclyst in 1870
Five other blocks of houses destroyed in the same road were occupied by Samuel Tar, a carpenter, his wife and four children; John Northcombe and wife; Thomas Wilkins and family; Robert Southcott, cooper and wife; Wm Ascott and wife; Mr. John Chamberlain, builder and family, whose workshop and stock were also destroyed. Mr. Chamberlain had a valuable stock of timber upon his premises. He is engaged in building a parsonage house at Brampford Speke and had a quantity of materials in his workshop to be used there. A new staircase that had been prepared was alone worth £40 and his loss of stock and tools that are uninsured is not less than £200.
Name: John Chamberlain
Spouse's Name: Sarah Willey
Event Date: 06 Oct 1818
Event Place: Broad Clyst,Devon,England
Friday, 20 September 2019
Forestry
Thursday, 19 September 2019
marriage Richard Morgan and Annie Chamberlain
Wednesday, 18 September 2019
SUDDEN DEATH OF MR. MONFRIES, OF I PWLL-Y-PANT
Tuesday, 17 September 2019
James Lawrie Monfries in court: the case of the injured quarry horse
James Lawrie Monfries in court: the case of the injured quarry horse
The Cardiff Times of 30 July 1870, reporting on the cases brought before the
Glamorganshire Summer Assizes, featured ‘a suit to recover £50 damages for
injuries to a horse by the negligence of the railways’. The plaintiff in the case was
James Lawrie Monfries, who had to provide horses to work in the Pwill-y-pant
quarry, ‘the property of the Earl of Bute’. In March 1870 he had bought three
horses at the Brecon Fair, which he had intended to send back to the quarry by
the Mid-Wales Railway. There was no proper horse box at Talgarth Station, so
the horses were put in a cattle truck; when they arrived at Talyllyn, it was found
that one of them had severely injured two of its legs after falling through a hole
in the truck floor. James was suing the railway company, as carrier of the horses,
for being negligent in their duty to provide ‘suitable and proper accommodation’
for their ‘passengers’. James Lawrie said that when he loaded the horses, he was
instructed not to tie them up in the truck, ‘as they would ride better unfastened’.
He travelled as a second-class passenger, and when he had to change carriages at
Talyllyn he found the injured horse; he paid for a vet to attend the accident and
his view was that it had happened solely through the ‘unsoundness of the truck’.
However the horses had been loaded at the plaintiff’s risk, and the railway would
be liable only if the truck was indeed unsound when it left the station, which it
contested. Its case was that while plunging about in an untethered state, the
horse’s hoof had got caught in one of the gaps in the truck floor and wrenched a
board out while trying to get free, which the company could not have been
expected to guard against. The jury did not believe it and upheld the suit, leave to
have a stay of execution to review the case was refused, and James Lawrie got his
£50 (£5,000 today).
Thanks are due to The Cardiff Times of 30 July 1870 for their court report. and to Barbara.
more on James Lawrie Monfries
James Lawrie Monfries
James Lawrie Monfies
The Cardiff Times of 30 July 1870, reporting on the cases brought before the
Glamorganshire Summer Assizes, featured ‘a suit to recover £50 damages for
injuries to a horse by the negligence of the railways’. The plaintiff in the case was
James Lawrie Monfries, who had to provide horses to work in the Pwill-y-pant
quarry, ‘the property of the Earl of Bute’. In March 1870 he had bought three
horses at the Brecon Fair, which he had intended to send back to the quarry by
the Mid-Wales Railway. There was no proper horse box at Talgarth Station, so
the horses were put in a cattle truck; when they arrived at Talyllyn, it was found
that one of them had severely injured two of its legs after falling through a hole
in the truck floor. James was suing the railway company, as carrier of the horses,
for being negligent in their duty to provide ‘suitable and proper accommodation’
for their ‘passengers’. James Lawrie said that when he loaded the horses, he was
instructed not to tie them up in the truck, ‘as they would ride better unfastened’.
He travelled as a second-class passenger, and when he had to change carriages at
Talyllyn he found the injured horse; he paid for a vet to attend the accident and
his view was that it had happened solely through the ‘unsoundness of the truck’.
However the horses had been loaded at the plaintiff’s risk, and the railway would
be liable only if the truck was indeed unsound when it left the station, which it
contested. Its case was that while plunging about in an untethered state, the
horse’s hoof had got caught in one of the gaps in the truck floor and wrenched a
board out while trying to get free, which the company could not have been
expected to guard against. The jury did not believe it and upheld the suit, leave to
have a stay of execution to review the case was refused, and James Lawrie got his
£50 (£5,000 today).
Thanks are due to The Cardiff Times of 30 July 1870 for their court report. and to Barbara.
more on James Lawrie Monfries
James Lawrie Monfries
James Lawrie Monfies
Wednesday, 11 September 2019
James Lawrie (Laurie) Monfries
James
Lawrie (Laurie) Monfries
We know James as the second husband of Charlotte Chamberlain and father of Charlotte Laura and Ann Monfries, but his career has great
interest in its own right.
According to the page dedicated to him in The Western Mail of 13 January 1871,
reporting his ‘awfully sudden’ death two days before, leaving ‘a numerous family, some of whom are very young’, he had for the previous five years been Superintendent of the Pwill-y-Pant mine in Caerphilly, South Wales, owned by Lord Bute, from where stone had been sent to build the new Penarth Dock that opened in 1865. We have another Cory/Monfries connection here, as it was Corys who saw that a new dock on the Ely tidal harbour would be ‘advantageous to shipowners’ and ‘lucrative to merchants’. They put money into the project and the steamer ‘The William Cory’ was the first ship the pass through the dock gates on the opening day, as cannon were fired and the crowd cheered. G. H. Andrews painted two beautiful water colour pictures in the same year, showing ships at anchor below Penarth Head Hill.
reporting his ‘awfully sudden’ death two days before, leaving ‘a numerous family, some of whom are very young’, he had for the previous five years been Superintendent of the Pwill-y-Pant mine in Caerphilly, South Wales, owned by Lord Bute, from where stone had been sent to build the new Penarth Dock that opened in 1865. We have another Cory/Monfries connection here, as it was Corys who saw that a new dock on the Ely tidal harbour would be ‘advantageous to shipowners’ and ‘lucrative to merchants’. They put money into the project and the steamer ‘The William Cory’ was the first ship the pass through the dock gates on the opening day, as cannon were fired and the crowd cheered. G. H. Andrews painted two beautiful water colour pictures in the same year, showing ships at anchor below Penarth Head Hill.
James’ career before that point is less
certain. The Western Mail obituary
has him employed, presumably also as Superintendent, at the ‘Duke of
Somersetshire’s quarries in Devon’. These were the Bourton Hall and Afton Tor
mines on the duke’s estate at Berry Pomeroy, near Totnes: unlike the stone
quarries at Pwill-y-Pant, the Devonian limestone deposits were prized for
architectural use, such as the cream and coral-banded stone in the Afton Red
Rift mine or the pale and black-banded marble from Bourton Hall used for the
floor in Exeter Cathedral. James must have worked there for only about two
years, however, as we know he went to Pwill-y-Pant around 1866 and his youngest
child Margaret was born in 1864 when he was still in the Channel Islands. The Western Mail says he had ‘for many
years held an appointment on the Government Works’ in Guernsey, and we know
that all his children (apart from his eldest son, James Alexander, who was born
in Cherbourg) were born there over the previous nine years. He could have been employed
to oversee work in the granite mines on the island, which grew significantly
with the building boom in London in the 1860s and 1870s: Guernsey granite was
used to build London Bridge, Blackfriars Bridge, the steps of St Paul’s
Cathedral and the Embankment and Strand in the capital. But ‘Government Works’
implies that he was working in the Engineers Department on the repair and
upkeep of the extensive defences –
forts, gun batteries and coastal fortifications at Castle Cornet, the Clarence
Battery and Fort Le Marchant – that had been erected during the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars to
repel any invasion from France.
We know James, born of an old Scottish
Family in Musselburgh outside Edinburgh in 1818, as ‘James Lawrie’, but his
headstone in the ancient chapel of St
Martin in Caerphilly has ‘James Laurie’. On the assumption that Charlotte
Laura, born in 1857, was the eldest surviving child, Charlotte Hall and James
must have been married about 1855–1856; James would have been in his late 30s
so might also have been a widower, or just deferred marriage until he was
settled in his profession. The records showing his marriage in Calcutta may be
an confusion with that of their daughter (Charlotte Laura) who certainly did
marry Ernest Hall in India in 1880. We also do not know how their eldest son,
James Alexander, came to die as a teenager in Cardiff in 1875; his death is
recorded on his father’s headstone in Caerphilly. We do know that, like Richard Morgan, ‘he had a large heart,
a generous disposition, and was universally esteemed by both his employers and
the men over whom he exercised control’.
Thanks are due to The Western Mail of 13 January 1871, that gave us the skeleton from
which we could build a life.
Thanks to Barbara for all this information!
Sunday, 8 September 2019
James Lawrie Monfries
| Name: | James Lawrie Monfries |
|---|---|
| Sex: | Male |
| Wife: | Charlotte Chamberlain |
| Daughter: | Annie Chamberlain Monfries |
Other information in the record of Annie Chamberlain Monfries
from Channel Islands Births and Baptisms
| |
| Name: | |
| Gender: | |
| Birth Date: | |
| Birthplace: | |
| Father's Name: | |
| Mother's Name: | |
James Laurie Monfries on Alderney
We now know a little more of James’ earlier history.
Name: James Lawrie Monfries
Gender: Male
Christening Date: 12 May 1818
Christening Place: , CARRINGTON, MIDLOTHIAN, SCOTLAND
Father's Name: Alexander Monfries
Mother's Name: Maron Ingles
Name: James Lawrie Monfries
Gender: Male
Christening Date: 12 May 1818
Christening Place: , CARRINGTON, MIDLOTHIAN, SCOTLAND
Father's Name: Alexander Monfries
Mother's Name: Maron Ingles
In 1851 he was married to Charlotte and working on Alderney in the Channel
Islands. In the 1850s and 1860s Alderney, like Guernsey, saw extensive
Government Works on strategic fortifications against the French – 13 forts, a
protective harbour of refuge, a breakwater and in particular Fort Albert
(originally Fort Touraille, but renamed after Prince Albert’s death in 1861), built
in a unique state-of-the art polygonal design with fortifications arranged in a
defensive ring. This was the prototype of the ‘Palmerston Forts’ built along the
English coast from Plymouth to Dover after the report of the Royal Commission
on the Defence of the United Kingdom in 1859 (also known as ‘Palmerston Follies’,
since they required significant expenditure and were thought by many to be an
overkill response: William Gladstone, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, resigned
in protest at what he saw as a waste of public money). James and Charlotte must
have moved to Guernsey around 1856, since at least five of their surviving
children were born there, and then to Pwill-y-Pant ten years later. If their
marriage was around 1849–1850, it is strange that we know of no child born in
Alderney or before 1856/1857 (Charlotte Laura).
There is also still the mystery of Charlotte’s first marriage. The 1841 Census
places a ‘Charlotte Hall’ in Guernsey but only 17 years old (if her birth date of
1824 is correct), and a ‘William Hall’ aged 20, and a there is a record of a
marriage in that year: is this them?
Thursday, 5 September 2019
Ernest Hall of Shimla
Ernest
Hall of Shimla
One handwritten line on a faded school admissions’
document can open up a life.
Exeter School still holds the ‘home’ address
of Ernest Hall – ‘Fontainebleau,
Simla’ – from when his son, William Ernest Hall, entered the School in 1905.
‘Fontainebleau Cottage’, to give it its proper name, was built in sandstone and light blue limestone some time
in the 1880s in the heavily ornamented Indo-Saracenic style, with the ‘sun and
moon with morning star’ motif on a pediment, the house name above the door and
exquisite ornamentation on the columns holding up the roof. The house was almost
certainly the work of Jacob Henry Irwin, ‘the architect of British India’. Situated
just off The Mall, at the heart of the administrative district of the city, it
housed the staff of the Civil Secretariat who administered British India in the
summer months from Gorton Castle further along The Mall – Simla (now Shimla) became the ‘summer capital’ of India in 1864. A
photograph taken in 2015 shows it to be a derelict wreck, but one taken in 1890
show what a beautiful house it must have been.
So Ernest Hall, like Reginald Peel and ArchieVlieland, was in Government service – Archie would have recognised
Fontainebleau Cottage, as much of Kuala Lumpur, the administrative capital
Selangor when he was in Malaya, was built in the same style, attempting to
combine Mughal (Mogul) and British traditions. Ernest must have entered the
administration in 1876, but since he married Charlotte Laura Monfries in Calcutta in 1880, their surviving son
was born in Darjeeling in 1892, and Ernest was in Shimla in 1915 when William
Ernest died and in 1919 when Richard Morgan died, it looks as if he may have been in some branch of government
that had him moving about the
subcontinent. There is a question about the Hall children. If William Ernest
was born 12 years into the marriage there must surely be older children who
predeceased him. The Exeter College Oxford Roll of Honour listing William
Ernest’s death in the second battle of Krithia in Gallipoli in May 1915 has him
as the ‘only son’ of Ernest Hall, but this could imply ‘only surviving son’,
and Ernest is the only relative apart from Arthur (Ernest’s father), listed, so
Charlotte Laura must also be dead by that time. Exeter School is a day school, which
William Ernest entered aged 13, so there must have been a ‘British home’ in
Exeter that we do not know about, where Ernest and Charlotte spent their
furlough time on home leave and their son came home after school, unless he
lived with a Hall/Monfries relative while his parent(s) were in India. There is
a big cluster of Hall families in the St Leonards area of the city (the
district including Southernhay, where the Vlielands lived), so it is almost
certainly somewhere there.
Many thanks are due to Karen Dart and Kevin
White at Exeter School, without whose archival research this story could not
have been told.
And to Barbara!
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