When James Caithness died suddenly of an asthma attack in
1826, his widow Ann, aged 30, was expecting their fifth child (Charles). The
four older children were James Ramsay b 1815, George b 1818 (1817 on his Master's 'ticket'), Mary Ann b 1820
and William b 1824.
It was a dire situation for any woman but Ann rose to the challenge, making successful application for her two eldest boys to attend theRoyal Hospital
School , Greenwich , to be trained as mariners and
receive an education.
The first ten, even twenty, years of Ann's widowhood must have been extremely difficult. Whether she would have continued to receive James's naval pension of 20 pounds a year has yet to be established. By 1841 William, then 17, was working as a servant in Redbridge, in the parish of Millbrook, a small village in South Stoneham union. (The entry was hidden under the surname Kaithness.) His mother, aged 45, was living on her own in Totton. Charles was nearby, a baker’s apprentice at 15.
It was a dire situation for any woman but Ann rose to the challenge, making successful application for her two eldest boys to attend the
Map shows Totton, Eling (and its mill), Redbridge, Millbrook and Marchwood |
St Mary's, Southampton |
George was pursuing his career in the mercantile marine, serving as an apprentice, seaman and mate during the decade 1830-1840. Charles was a journeyman baker by the late 1850s and, in keeping with the family's maritime associations, became a ship’s baker; he was with the Peninsular and Oriental line by 1861. They were all making their way and forging their own lives.
There’s a rumour that William visited South Africa in
1853 but documentary evidence of this is lacking. In March 1851 he was with his
mother in Millbrook village, working as a labourer. Nothing changed by 1861,
other than their ages: Ann was then sixty-five and William thirty-five. It was the last Census in which he would be listed.
It’s all very well tracing ancestors using the Census: the
entries do provide milestones to hang their story on, giving some indication of where they lived, who was in the household and
their occupations, but the important years between could remain invisible
history unless other extant records are covered. The possibilities are endless:
vestry minutes, churchwardens’ accounts, settlement papers, monumental
inscriptions, apprentice bindings, muster rolls, poll books and many more
sources.
Ann and William at Mousehole, Millbrook, Hampshire: 1861 Census |
Equally vital – and just as fascinating - is background and
contextual research: the setting in which the ancestors found themselves, their
social scene, their neighbourhood, external influences such as economics,
politics, epidemics and wars – even the weather – in fact everything that
affected their lives, bringing us a closer understanding of their
circumstances, actions and experiences. This makes the difference between a
grayscale picture and one in glorious colour.
To be continued
Eling Riverside Walk |
To be continued
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