Monday, September 09, 2013

A Letter to an Ancestor - Edward Huntley KING

Today I am writing a letter to one of my ancestors, I will be very shocked if I receive a reply from him but then again information is inherited in various ways so who know, he may send my an answer via another descendant.  


Dear Grancha,

I am writing to ask if you can fill in some gaps that I keep finding in your life and the lives of your immediate family.  You puzzle me, as the way documents record you seem to have mistruths and ambiguity laced within them. With that in mind, the following is what I have amassed from various sources and documents.

You were born Edward Huntley KING on 13 March 1851 in Kirkley, Suffolk, England to Edward Irvine KING, a police constable, and his wife Mary Jane (aka Jeannette) HUNTLEY.  As you child you moved around Suffolk and later to Surrey due to the changes in your father’s employment.  In April 1871, you were enumerated as Stone Mason lodging at the home of John ALEXANDER in Farncombe, Surrey, England.  Then on 31 August 1871, you married John’s youngest daughter, Emma ALEXANDER, at the local parish church.  One of the witnesses to that marriage was you own sister, Florence KING. 


Your first child appears to be Edward Alexander KING who was born 3 January 1879, baptised 30 November 1879 and died 6 December 1879 of Teething Convulsions, all taking place in Lambeth, Surrey, England.  The following year you had a daughter, Kathleen Mary KING, born on 17 December 1880 in Lambeth.  In April 1881, Kathleen was enumerated at the home of your parents and sister in Goldalming, Surrey while you and Emma were enumerated in Streatham, London, England.  Sadly, Kathleen’s life was cut short and on 26 July 1882 in Battersea, Surrey, England by Pertussis (Whooping Cough) and Pneumonia.  The last child I can locate that you had with Emma is John Alexander KING born circa 2 Feb 1883 although I have been unable to locate a birth registration for him.  He was baptised 2 May 1889 at St John’s Battersea (along with 90 other individuals) and appears to have been left in your parents’ custody, as this where they resided.  John was enumerated with your parents in 1891 and attended a number of schools in the Battersea area.  I am still looking for a record of Emma’s death and latter records of John.

Meanwhile you were living in Hythe, Kent, England where on 18 March 1889 you married Bertha TOURNAY, daughter of William TOURNAY and his wife Sarah MARSHALL, at the Register Office in Elham, Kent while claiming to be a Bachelor.  
Just six months later, on the 9 October 1889, Bertha bore her first child, Catherine Norah KING.  The 1891 census enumerates you, Bertha and baby Catherine in Hythe, Kent, England where you were a Stone Mason.  By 1901 two more children, Winifred Olive KING and Edward Tournay KING had been born (06 Oct 1891 in Hythe and 19 Nov 1898 in Dover, Kent respectively).  Another daughter was the next to be Born, Hilda Kathleen KING although she would always tell the family that you ‘forgot to register her’ she believed that she had been born on 9 April 1900 even though she is missing from the 1901 census.  The last child was born in 1904 and you named him Hugh Huntley KING.  When you were enumerated for the 1911 census, you and Bertha had the youngest four children living at home while Catherine was residing with her employer.  Interestingly Hilda’s age is recorded as 11 then changed to 10 on the census image. 


In January 1909, you found your way into the local newspaper, The Dover Express and East Kent News, as a result of falling from your ladder, which required you to seek hospital treatment.  The same newspaper provides us with your obituary and reports that you died 7 April 1915 and were buried at St James’ Cemetery on 10 April 1915.  There is no mention of Emma or the children she bore you in the obituary.  Only Bertha and her children are listed as mourners although Mr and Mrs Padgham sent you a floral tribute.

In conclusion my dear Grancha, what I wanted to ask was;-
  • Did you register John’s Birth?  If so where and when?
  • Why did you leave him with your parents?
  • What happened to Emma?  Did she die or did you divorce her?
  • Did Bertha know about Emma and the children she bore you? 
  • What was the real reason Hilda’s birth was never registered?
  • Why did both your marriage certificates say you were a bachelor?  Surely, the second should say Widower or Divorcee unless you were a very naughty boy and committed bigamy.
  • Who are Mr and Mrs Padgham?



With love from,

Your Great-Great-Granddaughter.

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Huntley Naming Patternes


Several weeks ago I received an email asking me if I had any naming patterns or traditions in my family tree that I would like to contribute to a podcast – I thought about it and remembered that some branches of the tree did have a pattern.  However, between the beginning of December until Easter is a very busy time in work, which leaves you physically and mentally drained at the end of the day.  I feel that it may now be too late to contribute to the podcast but since I have already drafted a few notes I have decided to type them up and publish them here.

The family they I decided to look at was that of my 4xGreat-Grandfather, His name was Edmund Boyce HUNTLEY and his family has two naming patterns that I was to address – Mother’s Maiden names as a given name and Forename inheritance.


 Mother’s Maiden names as a given name

In this case, Edmund’s mother was called Elizabeth BOYCE.  As he come down the line we see some interesting (in my opinion at least) things.  Edmund’s wife was called Judith MOORE; their only son was also was Edmund Boyce HUNTLEY.  The couple’s daughter married Mary Jane HUNTLEY named her eldest son Edward Huntley KING who in turn gave three of his sons their mothers’ maiden names.


Forename inheritance

As you may already have realised, Edmund was used more than once in this family.  I have in fact found it used in eight generations of this family as shown in the below diagram:



In summery more than one naming pattern can exist in a single branch of the family.  You may find that names are used repeatedly through the generations and that they sometimes form patterns as to the order they appear in.  For those of you interested in the podcast I mentioned earlier, it is called Genies Down Under.  Genies Down Under is a podcast that provides information and suggestions to those genealogist with Australian connections.