My great grandfather Charles (Charley/Charlie) Brown served 12 years as a soldier with the British Army in India before marrying cook, Lavinia Seaby, in Cambridgeshire in 1893. His residence at the time was Girtford in Sandy, Bedfordshire, where they spent their short married life. It took a while to trace his birth, and the home … Continue reading Charley Brown: A Herts childhood
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Stocking family holidays (1930s +)
Much of our family life for at least three generations has been recorded on film, in black and white and occasionally a blast of technicolor. Family holidays feature strongly: at 'Lucknow' (my Stocking grandparents' bungalow at Camber Sands), at nearby Rye or elsewhere on the South coast of England and Europe. These are just a … Continue reading Stocking family holidays (1930s +)
Susie and Dot Fage: Sisters of Sandy
My maternal grandmother was one of eight children, four girls and four boys. Her three surviving brothers worked in market gardens before and after their service in WW1. Her three sisters were still alive when I was young, and both she and her sister Vera lived to be over 100, but I knew little about … Continue reading Susie and Dot Fage: Sisters of Sandy
Beth and Vera: Centenarian Fage sisters
My Mum's family were fairly long-lived and indeed, both her own mother and one of her aunts reached their centenaries. Both celebrated their golden weddings with their husbands and, indeed, my Nana Brown was married for 70 years. They lived through two world wars and much much more; how were their milestones celebrated? Elizabeth Sarah … Continue reading Beth and Vera: Centenarian Fage sisters
Fage sons in WW1: Fred, Albert and Jesse
My maternal great grandparents had eight children, seven of whom survived to adulthood. Their three sons all joined the forces and fought in WW1, and one was taken Prisoner of War. My grandmother would have been 17 when war broke out; she and the rest of the family no doubt had an anxious time waiting … Continue reading Fage sons in WW1: Fred, Albert and Jesse
William Fage and Alice Cade: A long residence in Sandy
After solving the minor mysteries of William's name change and Alice's peripatetic childhood, it was fairly easy to trace my maternal great grandparents' married lives and growing family. I had a couple of family photos of them in old age and was pleased to find that their family home at Longfield Road, Sandy, was still … Continue reading William Fage and Alice Cade: A long residence in Sandy
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
Charley and Lavinia Brown: A short marriage
My maternal great grandparents Charles Brown and Lavinia Seaby married fairly late in life; he was 30 and she was 32. Both had had careers before marriage, he as a soldier in India, she as a Cook in London. Their marriage was sadly cut short by Charley's early death. What do we know of their … Continue reading Charley and Lavinia Brown: A short marriage
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?