Lavinia Brown: A long life and loss in Sandy

My maternal great grandmother Lavinia Brown, nee Seaby, lived a long life much characterised by struggle and loss. Two children died in infancy, her husband Charley Brown died of cancer and her eldest son Walter Charles Brown was killed in action in WW1. Her later life is less well-recorded, but she was clearly loved and … Continue reading Lavinia Brown: A long life and loss in Sandy

Lavinia Brown: Family struggles and a lost son

A 1910 local newspaper commented that my great grandmother, "Mrs Brown ... has had a hard struggle to bring up her large and young family and several times illness and other misfortunes have befallen them". Born Lavinia Seaby, she was widowed in 1904 when her husband Charley Brown died of cancer. What other records give … Continue reading Lavinia Brown: Family struggles and a lost son

Lavinia Seaby (1861-1944): Cook to the gentry?

My maternal great-grandmother Lavinia Seaby was born in Dry Drayton, in rural Cambridgeshire, but family tales suggested that before she married Charles Brown, she was a Cook 'to the gentry' in London. Censuses do show that she worked in service, latterly as a Cook, in private houses in fashionable Notting Hill, London. What more could … Continue reading Lavinia Seaby (1861-1944): Cook to the gentry?

Elizabeth Sarah Fage (1901-2002): Musicians, malnutrition and misadventure

My maternal grandmother lived to the grand age of 101. In her 80s, she told of being Nanny for the children of well-known 'theatricals' in London and being starved by another employer. A man climbed through her bedroom window when she was working for an elderly couple in Biggleswade, leading to her appearance as a … Continue reading Elizabeth Sarah Fage (1901-2002): Musicians, malnutrition and misadventure