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LANCASHIRE FAMILY HISTORY AND HERALDRY SOCIETY
Rossendale Branch Newsletter June 2004
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Programme: 2004 |
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Wednesday 2nd June
Researching the mariner Miles Standish
Rev. Dr. John Cree. |
Wednesday 7th July
Research Evening |
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Wednesday 4th August
A visit to Rossendale Museum.
Whittaker Park, Rawtenstall
Meet 7-00pm at Musuem |
Wednesday 1st September
The Civil War in Lancashire. Fred Holcroft |
Coming Events
Saturday 26th June
York Family History
Fair. York Racecourse.
Friday 1st October
2004
LFHHS - Annual
Dinner. Whalley Abbey.
Hosted by Ribble
Valley Branch. £16.00.
Details in
"Lancashire" May 2004.
LFHHS
Constitution -Final Draft
The final draft of
the revised constitution was submitted to the AGM 22nd May. This
constitution will, when it has been agreed by the Charity
Commissioners replaces the existing one.
The final item
should be of interest to Branch Workers.
Under the heading
"Standing Orders"
5. Travelling and
Other Expenses
a. Executive
Committee members and others on Society business carried out at the
request of the Executive Committee may claim mileage or the cost of
public transport.
b. Branch members
working on projects for publication by the Society, may claim
travelling expenses, as above, and for consumables (for example
paper and printer ink to produce the master hard copy of the
project) from their Branch. The Society will reimburse the branch
for these expenses when the project is completed for publication.
c. Branch
representatives attending Executive Committee meetings may claim
travelling expenses, as above from their branch.
A full copy of the
constitution is available on request.
Mills Mansions
and Corner Shops
A Major New
Resource for the history of the North West.
The 2nd N.W. Access
to Archives (A2A) project provides free online access to thousands
of archive catalogues of family, estate, business and industry
collections from 25 different archive repositories across the
region.
The archives chosen
for this project illustrate the historical development and diversity
of the region, they represent major centres of industry and
population as well as sparsely populated rural communities.
The types of
records include: manorial papers, maps, plans, surveys, leases,
estate accounts, title deeds, correspondence, journals accounts etc.
For further
information pick up a leaflet or check out the web site
www.a2a.org.uk
Membership
Secretary
At the Society AGM
Pip Cowling from Bradford agreed to take over from Vicky Barlow as
Membership Secretary. She is to be assisted by Roy Dewhurst from the
Hyndburn Branch.
.... and Society
Treasurer
No one has yet been
found to take over from Carole Walker as Treasurer. Anyone
interested in shadowing Carole, with a view to learning the job
should contact Tony Foster, the Society Chairman.
Rossendale
Ancestry
Dean Mill and Nab
Colliery/ HEYWORTH
Des Heyworth
(member 7848) says he has a good line back to Robert Heyworth of Nab
Farm, Water (b.c. 1690). This man is known as "Robert the Water
man."
According to family
tradition he had amongst his children "Straight-up Robert" , Richard
"Shankum" who is buried at Lumb Baptist chapel, John "Hubbub",
Hannah and Alice who married Lawrence Ormerod.
"Straight-up" never
married but left a will which gave the above details. Des’s line
descends from Richard "Shankum". It is known that Robert "Water man"
had a brother James who lived at Dean Clough and was a feoff. Des
has an extract from the Clitheroe Court Rolls which reads:
Elizabeth Heyworth
surrendered 1661 to John Heyworth in Wolfenden.
John Heyworth
surrendered 1682 to James Heyworth.
James Heyworth
surrendered in 1690 to Oliver Ormerod in trust.
Richard Heyworth
surrendered with Oliver Ormerod to John in Wolfenden, Grace and John
Heyworth of Bankend and Greensnook, Bacup.
Des has a tentative
pedigree. He says he is interested in the original ownership of Dean
Mill and the nearby Nab Colliery, which possibly powered it. He
believes that Dean Mill originally went by another name.
All this is very
complex, if anyone can shine any light on these Heyworths or on Dean
Mill contact Des
email:
des.heyworth@virgin.net
The Haworth’s –
A journey back to Haslingden.
Growing up all I
knew about my maternal grandmother’s family was that
Great-grandfather was a HAWORTH from Yorkshire, that he was the
black sheep of the family and that he had been cheated out of his
inheritance by a crooked solicitor. His father, it was believed by
all the relations, had been a wealthy hotel-owning doctor in
Scarborough.
It was the arrival
one summer of the 1881 census on CDs that has sent me off on a long
and fascinating journey backwards in time to Haslingden in 1787.
Fortunately for me the 1881 census had Great-grandfather under his
full name – William Pick HAWORTH. It’s true he was a Yorkshireman,
being born in Keighley in 1864, but the family didn’t live in
Scarborough – they lived in Filey. The revelation was that his
father James, the wealthy doctor, came from Oswaldtwistle. The
GENUKI pages gave me more information from a Trades Directory – in
the 1890’s James was in partnership with his son John and had
written a book.
Filey Library
recognised the title but thought that I should try the Filey Archive
at the Town Hall. The Filey Archive was wonderful. I just mentioned
James’ name
and hit a veritable
goldmine of information. James had left a scrapbook of cuttings
about his life to the Archive! From them I have received copies of
reports on family marriages, music composed by James, letters to
newspaper editors and 50th wedding cards. The only thing that is
missing is an obituary.
A phone call from
the Filey Archive finally sent me off to Lancashire; James had a
brother John who lived in Accrington. And if Filey was a goldmine,
Accrington was a diamond mine. Over the next few months more
obituaries arrived, local history books were borrowed, baptismal
registers and 1851 census data photocopied. I started borrowing
census films at my local LDS, but realized because the name is so
common that I would have to list every HAWORTH in Oswaldtwistle.
This was a good move, as every so often yet another one of them
joins the family.
It was a
combination of the 1851 census and John Haworth’s obits that led me
back to Haslingden. John’s father was Jonathan and his uncles were
Richard and James and they were all born in Haslingden; Jonathan
about 1789, James in 1792 and Richard in 1798. Their father was
Richard.
My next step was
the online IGI. I found them all there and also some possible
siblings – John(1790), Jane(1794) and Elizabeth(1803). IGI had their
mother as Isabel(la) and I found a marriage for Richard HAWORTH to
Isabella BIRTWISTLE in Haslingden in 1787.
And that is where
my journey may end for I have no way of knowing who Richard or
Isabella’s parents were; their marriage entry simply gives their
names – no parents, no address, and no profession. Jackie Ramsbottom
has kindly checked the registers for me and although the baptism
registers have an address of Grane or Hartley House, no other
information is given.
Did John, Elizabeth
or Jane survive and marry? Why didn’t they move to Oswaldtwistle
with the rest of the family? Were Richard and Isabella born in
Haslingden? Who were their parents? I think to answer these
questions may prove more difficult than unravelling the
Oswaldtwistle chapter of their lives.
By the way, James
of Filey didn’t own hotels – his house became one after he died and
the so-called crooked solicitor was in fact William’s brother-in-law
who was an executor of James’ estate and who I think may just have
made some bad investments. But I will have to consult the News of
the World for the story on that so I am told!
Submitted by Fiona
Hall who runs the Society’s "Helping Hands" service. email:
fiona.j.hall@btopenworld.com
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