Wednesday 27 March 2013

People of Hutton Rudby in the C18/19: Garbutt to Grundy

... from my working notes ... accuracy not guaranteed ... for explanatory note, see post of 14 Feb 2013



Garbutt

8 Dec 1822:  Joseph Dalking married Jane Garbut [witnesses:  James Smith, Samuel Hebbron]

Matthew Garbutt occupied property, “heretofore used as a coachhouse”, sold by Kay and Colebeck to Mark Barker in 1830

FT 30:  12 & 13 May 1830:  East Side:  John Kay of Hutton cartwright & others to Mark Barker & trustees:  house heretofore used as a coachhouse & formerly occ by James Ingledew, Mary Collyerson & Diana Swales, then by Elizabeth Farnaby, then by Charles Hall, then by Hannah Best, & now by Matthew Garbutt:  bounded by street to E, Mark Barker to W & S, Arthur Douglas to N

late July 1830:  George Garbutt was seen in company with William Huntley and Robert Goldsbrough, who was in 1842 tried for Huntley’s murder, by James Gears and James Maw, and seen drinking with Goldsbrough and others by Anthony Wiles.  The solicitor William Garbutt testified that George Garbutt “disappeared from our neighbourhood in the autumn of 1830.  Warrants have been issued against him, but he could not be found.”  [Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 1842]

Tithe Map:  Isaac Whorlton owned Jacques Barn field, which Robert Garbutt occupied

G Garbutt is in A List of Boys – Middleton Book

Christopher Garbutt jnr, joiner & licensed victualler, 1840-1910, was one of those elected to the first Parish Council.

1851 Census:  Kings Head:  Christopher snr 68 b Marton & Ann Garbutt 53 b Yarm, children Mary Ann 13 and Christopher jnr 11 b Potto

1861 Census:  Kings Head:  widow Ann, son Christopher, and lodger Mary Garbutt 64 b Marton, a sister of Thomas Garbutt of Hutton Grange

1871-91 (inc) Censuses:  Kings Head:  Christopher Garbutt & family

1851 Census:  Hutton Grange:  Joseph Garbutt single 35 farmer employing 3 labourers b Marton, and brother Thomas 22 b Eston, sister Jane Garbutt 31 housekeeper b Marton and sister Elizabeth 27 b Marton;  with farm labourers George Lee 18 b Stokesley and Richard Simpson 14 b Hutton Rudby, and house servant Jane Merrington 17 b Hutton Rudby
1851 Census:  Enterpen:  Miss Mary Willins 56 independent b Hutton Rudby, with lodger Miss Mary Garbutt 50 independent b Nunthorpe
1851 Census:  Enterpen:  Dorothy Garbutt lodged with her cousin Mrs Hannah Terry

Joseph & Thomas Garbutt were two sons of Joseph & Jane Garbutt of Eston Grange.  Of the twelve children who survived to adulthood, six were newly settled in Hutton Rudby in the 1851 Census:  Joseph, Thomas, Jane and Elizabeth at Hutton Grange Farm, and Mary and Dorothy lodging in the village.  A previous tenant of Hutton Grange was their relative, Harrison Terry.  Joseph became in some way incapacitated by 1861, and Thomas took over the farm.  The family remained there for many years.
Thomas Garbutt was churchwarden 1855-7; the churchwarden who signed the articles of inquiry 1857

20 Nov 1855:  Eland to Codling: Mustard Garth 1r 28p:  previously occ by Hannah Kay widow, then by Thomas Eland, now used as allotment gardens occupied by John Sidgwick, Robert Preston, Anthony Smith, Anthony Smith jnr, Thomas Milburn, Thomas Crook and Christopher Garbutt

1859 Whellan:  Hutton Rudby:  Mr Garbutt named as one of the principal proprietors of the soil.  “Hutton Grange is a large brick building with stone dressings a quarter of a mile west from the village”.

Jun 1866:  Thomas Garbutt lost 38 out of a herd of 40 “very valuable” cattle in the rinderpest outbreak.  Nearly ¾ of his loss took place before the Act of Compensation was passed, and his friends and neighbours, led by Henry Passman, Henry Chapman & George Wilson, made up a private subscription for his benefit:  Mr Barlow £2;  Henry Passman £10;  Henry Chapman £5;  E J Wilson £5;  Rev James Alder Wilson £2;  T Bowes Wilson, Sunderland £2;  John George Wilson, Durham £1;  Medd Scarth, Carlton £2;  Thomas Foster, Ober Green £5;  Allan Bowes Wilson £5;  George Wilson £10;  William Barugh, Seamer £5;  Miss D Boyes, Hutton £2;  Mr J Goldsbro, Hutton £1;  Mr W Goldsborough, Hutton £5;  Robinson Watson Esq, Stainton £5;  F Watson, Stockton £20;  Two friends G Coates & J Hogg £5;  A friend J Wallis 10/-;  T Nesham, Ormesby £1.  Total £93.10.0

1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Miss Garbutt, Enterpen
1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Christopher Garbutt, King’s Head
1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Mrs Elizabeth Garbutt, linen manufr
1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Thomas Garbutt, farmer, Grange

Oddfellows Board:  BG:  Matthw Garbutt, Barnsley, 16 Feb 1844, a50




Garfatt

1841 Census:  Middleton:  Butter Hill:  John Garfat 30 ag lab, Mary 30, William 7 and Ann 4
Oddfellows Board:  Bro:  John Garfatt, Thornt., 7 Sep 1883, a77


Gears

1818:  James Giers and his wife were removed from Boltby to Rudby [which must have been their parish of settlement – why was it so?  Perhaps he had been an apprentice here or was hired here for a year] [Hastings:  Local Govt & Socy]

In 1829 Rudby overseers paid his rent and his doctor’s bill – he had been receiving relief for several years.

late July 1830:  James Gears “a labouring man” last saw William Huntley with Goldsbrough and Garbutt when Gears “was breaking stones at Hutton Rudby … they lighted their pipes, and then went down the lane northwards – that was towards Middleton … [at] between three and four o’clock on the afternoon of the 30th of July.”  On the first Wednesday in August, Gears was looking at potatoes with Robert Goldsbrough when the latter pulled out £20 in five pound notes from his pocket, and Gears said “Robert, thou’s well off – thou’s better than me;  I work hard for my family, and never have a penny I can call my own.” [Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 1842]

James Gears occupied property on East Side:  Tithe Map.  Previously he had lived in Rudby.

1841 Census:  East Side:  James Gears 50 blacksmith, Ann 40, Elizabeth 20 flax spinner, Thomas 15, Mary 12 flax spinner, Catharine 10 and George 10

1851 Census:  East Side:  James Gears 60 blacksmith bBorrowby, wife Ann 51 bBoltby, Elizabeth S 31 bThirsk, Mary S 23 bHutton, Catherine S 19 bHutton, and George 17 farm labourer bHutton, with grandson James 3 bHutton

1851 Census:  Mill House, Hutton:  Thomas Gears 27 [sic] ag lab bHutton and wife Elizabeth 40 [sic] bStainmore, and her children John, Hannah and Mary Ann Wood aged 4 to 9 bHutton

1861 Census:  Bank Top:  James Gears widower 83 labourer unable to work b Borrowby, daughter Elizabeth Gears single 40 housekeeper b Thirsk, and granddaughter Ann Honeyman 6 b Hutton Rudby

“Gears Enterpen” is given 3s 6d in 1869, in Barlow’s Notebook
Bessy Gears appears in a list of names and amounts in Barlow’s Notebook

NBI:  James Gears buried 17 Dec 1869, aged 87

1871 Census:  East Row:  Elizabeth Gears single 50 dressmaker b Thirsk

1871 Census:  Tisbut Row:  George Gears 36 tile maker, Jane 40, Frederick W 11, Hannah 9, John G 5, Sarah A 3 and Alice G 1;  all b Hutton

1881 Census:  North End:  George Gears 46 general labourer, Jane 57, Fredrick 21 gen lab, John 15 and Alice 11

1881 Census:  5 Edmonds Sq, Stockton:  George Crosby 24 coachman b Darlington, Anne 26 and William 2 b Hutton Rudby and Herbert 1 b Stockton;  with visitor Elizabeth Gears single 63 b Thirsk


Gill


7 Aug 1822:  George Drydale, Richard Jowsey & Thomas Gill witnessed the Will of B D Suggitt

1851 Census:  South Side:  Mary Gill 83 widow, formerly rag gatherer, pauper, b Hutton
1851 Census:  South Side:  in household of George Davison, his uncle Thomas Gill widower 65 hand loom weaver linen

Oddfellows Board:  Bro:  Thomas Gill, Stockton, 20 Jan 1876, a37


Goldbeck [Colebeck]


“Mr Goldbeck 5s 6d” appears in William Sayers Calculations 1815 in the Middleton Book


Goldsbrough

23 Nov 1808:  John Goldsborough occupied property – probably house with garth & yard – on East Side, bought by Joseph, Thomas & William Whorlton [East Side deeds]

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  Bartholomew Goldsborough, butcher

7 Oct 1826:  George Sanderson married Ann Goldsbro [witnesses:  John Pattinson, Eliz Goldsbro, Robt Preston]

Bartholomew Goldsborough was married at Middleton in 1828.

FQ 560:  2 & 3 Nov 1829:  ppty bought by Jane Willans widow in Enterpen:  garth of 1r 3p where a cottage formerly stood, formerly occ by John Miller, then by George Wilson, Mary Young & Hannah Young, then by Matthew Richardson jnr, then by John Burden, bounded by Thomas Wayne to N, E & W, and by street called Enterpen to S; with the houses “lately erected upon the garth” & now occupied by Simeon Burden, John Smelt, Paul Oates, John Goldsbrough, William Jowsey, Abraham Holdgate and William Burnsides

15 & 16 Feb 1830:  property on East Side occupied by William Goldsborough and Robert Dowson [Dawson?] mortgaged by Edmund Taylor  [East Side deeds]

late July 1830:  William Huntley disappeared, and Robert Goldsbrough was locally suspected of murdering him.  Goldsbrough moved to Barnsley in the autumn, where he lived under the name Towers (probably his mother’s maiden name).  He was tried for Huntley’s murder after the discovery of a skeleton in 1841 [Yorkshire Gazette 21 Aug 1841 & 12 Mar 1842]

Robert Goldsbrough is described in the newspaper accounts as a widower with two children.  The PR transcripts show that John Goldsbrough married Ann Towers on 15 Aug 1776 (she signed, he made his mark;  witnesses:  Richard Nightingale and William Ableson).  John, son of John, labourer, was baptised 26 Jan 1777;  Elizabeth, daughter of John, was baptised 12 Mar 1780;  Ann, daughter of John, was baptised 2 Aug 1782.  William, son of John, lace-weaver, was baptised 11 Apr 1788.  Robert, son of John & Ann, was baptised 24 Nov 1793, making him a late child of the marriage, born when his mother was 45.  The NBI indicates that Ann died in 1814 aged 66, and John in June 1828 aged 80.

The PR transcripts show that Robert married Susannah Smith on 12 Dec 1815 (both signed the register;  witnesses:  Thomas Eland and William Preston) and they had two sons:  Robert bap 4 Feb 1816, and William bap 7 Jun 1818.  On 27 Feb 1828 Susannah died aged 49.  Goldsbrough claimed that Huntley pressed him to go to America with him, but he refused as he had two children “whom he thought it was his duty to report” according to the solicitor, Wm Garbutt.

Robert Goldsbrough is described in the testimony of James Maw in the case report as having a sister-in-law, Sophia Goldsbrough.  The PR transcripts show William Gouldsbrough married Sophia Armstrong on 9 Dec 1807, witnesses John Imeson, James Catchasides, William Paterson and John Passman.

There may have been several Goldsbrough families in the village in the late C18/ early C19: besides John & Ann (see above), an LDS member records a John Goldsbrough & Elizabeth Brass having sons George, William, John, Robert and Thomas in the 1770s;  and John Goldsbrough married Elizabeth Bradley on 2 Jan 1803 and had Ann bap 23 Oct 1803, Elizabeth bap 1806, William bap 1808, William bap 1810, Sarah bap 1813, John 1815, Jane 1819 and Robert 1822 (according to the PR records on the IGI).
A Mary Goldsbro, daughter of John & Ann, was baptised on 17 Mar 1825.
Bartholomew Goldsbrough, son of Ralph & Ann and baptised in Stainton-in-Cleveland, farmed at Middleton Grange and was also a butcher.

Goldsbrough’s house:  was in a yard;  there was a box near the fireside on which James Bainbridge saw Huntley sitting in late July 1830;  it was two storey – Farnaby saw Goldsbrough with a sack which he took upstairs; there was a silver watch hanging up on the chimney piece, which Stephen Catchasides took down;  when Elizabeth Shaw called she found Goldsbrough “sitting by the fire reading”;  the fire was very large and he said “he had been putting some old rubbish from under the stairs, to burn in the fire”   [Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 1842]

Dalkin asked Goldsbrough where Huntley had gone, and was told, “me and Huntley have had that matter talked over about the money he owes you, and it’s no use thee going, as he never intends paying thee.”  [Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 1842]

John Kaye said:  Prisoner followed Dalkin out;  he stood against the door cheek and said to me – “That gentleman’s been at my house asking for Huntley.  He’ll neither find him at my house, nor at Whitby, nor nowhere else.”  [Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 1842]

early Aug 1830:  Anthony Wiles saw Robert Goldsbrough, Thomas Grundy, William Patterson and George Sanderson “at Scotson’s, public-house … They were sitting in the front kitchen drinking.  They might have “teens” of pints of ale.  The prisoner paid for them;  he paid half-a-crown every two or three pints.  They remained there till about four in the morning;  they came in at twelve o’clock at night” [Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 1842]

M Goldsboro is in a List of Girls – Middleton Book
R Goldsboro was in A List of Boys – Middleton Book

Mr Goldsboro gave 6s 4 ½d to Rudby School, Oct 24th 1832 – Middleton Book

Churchwardens’ accounts 1832/3:  “John Goldsbrough getting coals &c  1s”

Bartholomew Goldsborough signed the churchwardens’ accounts in July 1832.  He signed the appointment of churchwardens on 9 Apr 1833.

Tithe Map:  Middleton:  Bartholomew Goldsborough farmed Middleton Grange (landlord:  Lord Falkland)

1840 Whites:  Hutton:  Bartholomew Goldsborough, butcher
1840 Whites:  Middleton:  Bartholomew Goldsborough, farmer

1841 Census:  Middleton, Hall:  Bart Goldsborough 45 farmer, Ann 40, Ralph 13, John 11, Thomas 10, Ann 8, Elizabeth 5, Mary 4 and Henry 2, with George Walton 40 and Hannah Wilkinson 20 servants
1841 Census:  John Goldsborough 65 ag lab, Elizabeth 60, Sarah 25, Jane 21, Rob 15 and Hannah 5 (Sarah’s daughter) on East Side

Yorkshire Gazette 21 Aug 1841 & 12 Mar 1842:  reports of the trial of Robert Goldsbrough, who had been living in Barnsley since autumn 1830.  Bartholomew Goldsbrough gave evidence at the trial on seeing blood on the road near Middleton wood, on the road to Yarm.

‘The Cleveland Repertory’   1 Mar 1843
“Police Intelligence”: “ February 4th 1843.  Present Sir Wiliam Foulis, Bar., Edmund Turton, and Robert Hildyard, Esquires.  Upon the complaint of John Watson, of Ingleby Greenhow, woodman, against Elizabeth Goldsbrough, of Hutton Rudby, for having on the 30th of Jan done damage to a quantity of topwood, at the township of Skutterskelfe, the property of Sir William Foulis.  Ordered to pay one penny damage and costs, on or before the 25th of February.”

‘The Cleveland Repertory’ 1 Jan 1844:
At Middleton, on the 10th ult. aged 51, Mr Bartholomew Goldsbro’, lamented by a wide circle of neighbours and acquaintance.
Bartholomew Goldsborough d 11 Dec 1843 a50, grave 406 – not in PRs

‘The Cleveland Repertory’ 1 Feb 1844:
“In the affairs of Mr Bartholomew Goldsbrough, late of Middleton-on-Leven, in Cleveland, farmer and butcher, deceased.
All Persons having any Claim against the Estate and Effects of the above named Bartholemew Goldsbrough, are hereby requested immediately to forward an Account of their respective claims, with the nature of their Securities (if any), to Robert Palmer, of Stokesley, the Solicitor to the Executors, in order that the same may be examined, and (if correct) discharged.  By order of the Executors, Robert Palmer.  Stokesley, 10th Feb., 1844”.

‘Stokesley News & Cleveland Reporter’ 1 Apr 1844:
Births:
On Tuesday, March 26th, at Middleton-on-Leven, the widow of the late Mr Bartholomew Goldsbrough, Butcher, of a son

1851 Census:  North Side:  Edward G Goldsbrough 38 butcher b Middleton-one-Row and wife Ann 38 b Easby, with son Edward 4 b Hurworth
1851 Census:  Jackson’s Yard:  Elizabeth Goldsbrough widow 73 pauper b Middleton-on-Leven, and daughter Jane single 27 and granddaughter Hannah 13, both b Hutton

Goldsboro’s wife was weeding potatoes for Barlow in July 1856 – Barlow’s Notebook

1861 Census:  Burnt House:  Goldsborough

Jun 1866:  Mr J Goldsbro’, Hutton gave £1 to the subscription for Thomas Garbutt
Jun 1866:  Mr W Goldsbro’, Hutton gave £5 to the subscription for Thomas Garbutt

1871 Census:  Manor House:  Goldsborough
1872 Post Office Directory:  Manor House:  Wm Goldsborough

1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  Bartholomew Goldsborough, butcher
1872 Post Office Directory:  Hutton Rudby:  William Goldsborough, farmer, Manor house

24 Feb 1879:  Sarah Goldsborough occupied a house on East Side bought by Matthew Hall [East Side deeds]

Bartholomew Goldsborough owned land east of Gowling Hill Garth [deed 13 May 1896, sale to Annie Hutton Wilson] corresponding to Tithe Map close 183, then belonging to Thomas Spence.  It was described as Bartle Goldsbrough’s cow house in the Tree Planting map.
1881 Census:  Crowell House area of North Side:  Bartholomew Goldsborough, his brother, two married sisters, an apprentice and a niece Jessie Goldsborough 15, who had planted a tree on South Side
1891 Census:  Beech House, South Side:  Bartholomew Goldsborough, who may have built the house, which he owned until he sold to Wanless in 1917


Goodall

1867/8 Slaters:  Mr Goodall, surgeon, Hutton Rudby [Dr Stout]


Gowland

27 Nov 1779:  Hannah Baller [signed Balery] married Roger Gowland [witnesses:  John Bordon, Hannah Fletcher, Richard Ramsell]

1787-8:  George Gowland, Sexhow, was churchwarden
1792-3:  Philip Gowland was churchwarden

DY 88:  26 Mar 1816:  Philip Gowland’s mortgage of Bay Horse properties

1823 Baines:  Sexhow:  Philip Gowland, farmer

ET 601:  23 & 24 May 1823:  Bay Horse area remtge “together with the new erection and buildings”

FB 195:  19 & 20 Nov 1824:  Philip Gowland & ttees to James Catchasides the younger shopkeeper & ttees
Philip Gowland of Sexhow mortgaged property in the Bay Horse area in 1816 – houses, warehouse, cowhouse, garden, 2 ¼ acre close – to John Calvert of Carlton.  Some of the properties were newly built.  He remortgaged in 1823 and sold to James Catchasides jnr in Nov 1824
Philip Gowland was churchwarden in 1825 and 1826
“Principal inhabitants” signing the Rudby terrier 1825:  Simon Kelsey, Robert Brigham, William Wood, Michael Sidgwick, Philip Gowland, James Catchasides <jnr>, and churchwardens James Catchasides and John Wrightson


Gowthorp

1872 Post Office Directory:  Skutterskelfe:  George Gowthorp, Folly hill


Graham

EH 212 & EG 295:  relate to the same ppty:  a house which had been divided into two tenements and in 1818 was “lately occupied in four different tenements or dwellinghouses”:  tenants were previously Jane Whorlton & her tenants William Easby, Oliver Jackson & William Honeyman; tenants were in 1818 William Honeyman, Thomas Graham, Robert Walton and Robert Codling:  bounded to E by Christopher Flintoff decd, to S & W by townstreet, to N by David Simpson decd

1823 Baines:  Hutton:  Thomas Graham, agent to Mr Nevill

1851 Census:  South Side:  Thomas Graham widower 61 handloom weaver linen b Aycliffe


Grainge

T Grainge was in A List of Boys – Middleton Book


Gravins

Anne Gravins is in a list of names in the Middleton Book
Anne Gravins is in a List of Girls – Middleton Book


Greenwell

‘Stokesley News & Cleveland Reporter’
, 1 Sep 1844:
Births:  On Friday, July 19th, at Hutton Rudby, the wife of Mr Thomas Greenwell, Saddler, of a son


Grice

Yorkshire Poll Book 1807:  Hutton Rudby:  Jeremiah Grice clerk (freehold in West Rounton)

Jeremiah Grice, Will dated 1 May 1820, died 13 May 1820, a71
Jeremiah Grice was born in Halifax, and took his degree at Cambridge.  His father’s name, according to the Marchants, was John;  according to the IGI it was Henry, and Jeremiah was baptised 2 Apr 1749.  His sister was bap 30 Apr 1747.  He was the last vicar to be buried within the altar rails.  He left a house and land in the Hutton Fields area, and a house and land at Trenholm.  He left property to Mary Ballieur, who was 13 when she inherited the contents of Mr Grice’s house in Hutton township with a life interest in his house and lands at Trenholme.  Her parents inherited life interests in the house and lands at Hutton Moor, subject to an annuity to his sister, who inherited after their death.  She inherited his property in Halifax and his personalty.
EK 48:  18 & 19 Jun 1819:  part of Hutton Moor House or Field Farm:  Matthew Appleton to Jeremiah Grice
EK 50:  21 Jun 1819:  part of Hutton Moor / Field Farm:  Matthew Appleton to parish, with QAB


Grundy

31 Jan 1803:  baptism of Thomas Grundy, son of William
7 Jan 1810:  baptism of Jane Grundy, daughter of William

29 Nov 1828:  William Pattison married Jane Grundy [witnesses:  William Goldsbro, Jane Pattison, Samuel Hebbron]

early Aug 1830:  Thomas Grundy told the magistrates that he was asked by Goldsbrough to move a sack.

early Aug 1830:  Anthony Wiles saw Robert Goldsbrough, Thomas Grundy, William Patterson and George Sanderson “at Scotson’s, public-house … They were sitting in the front kitchen drinking.  They might have “teens” of pints of ale.  The prisoner paid for them;  he paid half-a-crown every two or three pints.  They remained there till about four in the morning;  they came in at twelve o’clock at night” [Yorkshire Gazette 12 Mar 1842]

1 Jan 1831:  Thomas Groundy married Hannah Farnaby [witnesses:  Joseph Richinson, Eleanor Jolly]

1841 Census:  Thomas Grundy 30 linen weaver, Hannah 35, Mary 9, John 7, with William Farnaby 12 spinner, South Side

Aug 1841:  Thomas Grundy, weaver, was taken into custody in York Castle having been charged as an accessory after the fact of the murder of William Huntley, and having failed to produce sureties for his appearance at the next assizes.  Grundy had said that several days after Huntley’s disappearance, Goldsbrough had asked Grundy to help him move a sack which contained the body of Huntley.
Thomas Grundy was a weaver.  “He was married, and his wife had had two children since their marriage, and one before.”  His wife was trying to get bail for him and he expected to be out “in a day or two”.  Grundy committed suicide within hours of arrival in York Castle, using his neckerchief and braces to strangle himself.  [Yorkshire Gazette 21 Aug 1841]

Hannah Grundy was born Hannah Farnaby in 1805, daughter of William & Jane Farnaby.  She married Thomas Grundy in 1831;  according to the newspaper report of 1841, they had three children in all – Mary [born ?1832] and John [born 1834] are named in the 1841 census, and Jane [born ?1838] in the 1851 census, but the PR transcripts show entries only for John in 1834 and Hannah in 1839.

1851 Census:  Enterpen:  Hannah Grundy widow 47 seamstress and daughter Jane 13, both b Hutton Rudby

1861 Census:  Brickyard, Enterpen:  Hannah Grundy 55 weaver’s widow and John Grundy single 26 ag lab, with lodgers Jane Farnaby and John Farnaby, aged 23 & 20, house servant and labourer in field;  all born HR [William Farnaby, widower, 51, ag lab – Hannah’s brother – lives next door]

1871 Census:  Brickgarth, Enterpen:  Hannah Grundy 76 widow and John Grundy 37 single, general labourer

John Grundy was gathering potatoes with 8 women in Oct 1862 when Barlow cut his hedge – Barlow’s Notebook
Grundy is listed in “Days work for men at the church” – Barlow’s Notebook

NBI:  John Grundy buried 22 May 1876, aged 41, and his mother Hannah seems to have moved to Osmotherley.  Her mother Jane Bowes Farnaby had died there in 1862;  Hannah died in 1879.  The 1881 census for Osmotherley shows the household of William Farnaby, aged 32, b Osmotherley, and four households of Bowes families.



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