Sunday, 28 February 2021

Spotlight on the King's Head Part 2

The story of the King’s Head Part 2



Last week we looked at the most recent history of the Ramada by Wyndham Hotel, which had previously been known as the King’s Head. This week, we’ll look at the various names the establishment has had over the years, and see what, if anything, is the significance of these names. In order to do this we need to look more closely at the development of establishments like the King’s Head.

So, I know what constitutes a hotel, and I know what I mean when I refer to a ‘pub’ in the 21st century, but I’m also aware that the word ‘pub’, while these days seems to refer to something many people recognise, does hide a multitude of different names, and historical establishments – inns, taverns, coaching inns, posting houses, beerhouse, alehouses, gin palaces – all with subtle differences.

Pub origins

Apparently, the pubs of today have developed over many years. In the words of Pryah (1):

“customs and design of the public house today are the results of centuries of gradual development and their roots can be traced back to three separate types of establishment, the alehouse, the tavern and the inn.”

And this is in part confirmed by this comment about the pub – an abbreviation for public house - as we know it, as defined by Ainsworth (2):

“a house open to the public. The name refers … to much earlier centuries when individuals would open their houses for the sale of drink. In the 19th century ‘public house’ tended to refer to fully-licensed premises selling all types of intoxicating liquor, as opposed to beerhouses [or alehouses] which sold just beer.”

The thoughts of Tresidder (3), who writes about the licensed premises in Nottingham between 1758 and 1764, suggests the origins of today’s pubs stem from the posting houses, the taverns and the public houses of the past.

The inn 

The inn was often built along the main public highway, or around a market, and served passing trade, as well as the more wealthy inhabitants of a place, like merchants, guild members, aldermen, justices and the richer pilgrims.

The coaching inn

There had been a small number of taverns and alehouses along the highways from as early as the 14th century, but it was in the 17th century that the coaching network began to be established, when the first turnpike acts were passed in 1663. Despite being situated on the main London to Manchester turnpike road - turnpiked around the mid-1700s - the King’s Head in Loughborough has never been a coaching inn.

However, Charles G. Harper (4) writing in the early 20th century, has the following to say about this particular road:

“our ancestors could not complete their journeys between morning and night, and so the inn was a thing of almost the first consideration. Along these great roads of ours there were inns for every class, for every taste, and to suit all purses.”

He makes mention of these inns in the various places that the travellers passed through, including Leicester, where he finds the Grand, the Bell and the White Hart, and Loughborough where the road passes the King’s Head, the Old Bull’s Head, and the Station. The latter would refer to the Station Hotel associated with the Charnwood Forest Railway on Derby Road, as the route in question would proceed from Loughborough to Derby, and thence on to Manchester via the Peak District. 

The Bull’s Head was Loughborough's main coaching inn along this road, with stables where horses could be changed along the journey, as horses could generally only travel about 10 or 12 miles. Although the original building was demolished for road widening, the establishment continued to trade in a new building and today is destined to become a coffee house.

The post or posting house

Graham (5), in his description of Falmouth as the station for the departure of the mail packets, that is, the overseas postal service, mentions the regular coach service which ran to London and which were serviced by a number of inns and taverns.

In 1794, John Palmer had introduced the idea of carrying mail by coach and this led to the building of what were known as post houses along some of the major early roads. The post house would provide refreshment for anyone who might travel on the mail coach, as well as a change of horses and postillion. Sometimes the post house wouldn’t actually have its own stables, but there would be one very close by.

The keeper of the post house would act as the local postmaster, and would either hold onto the mail for people to collect, or would personally deliver it. The posting house might be the forerunner of the hotel, and it is certain that the King’s Head in Loughborough, once known as the King’s Head and Commercial Inn, was indeed such an establishment. Given that the Bull's Head with its stables was very, very close, it would make sense that the King's Head was a posting house, rather than a coaching inn.

Taverns

Sometimes the line of distinction between a posting house and the best tavern in the town was narrow, and some of the oldest taverns, had a superior reputation, as was certainly the case in Nottingham. Ainsworth, writing about Nottingham,  has this definition of a tavern:

“an urban drinking house serving wine and food, mostly to better-off customers. In modern times the term has been adopted by all kinds of pub establishments.”

Pryah defines a tavern as a place that “catered for farmers, lower-class craftsmen and others with a little money to spend; they probably sold wine rather than ale and in addition they also offered food and accommodation.”

The ale or beerhouse to the public house

The mediaeval alehouse served drink, and fed the social needs of the lower orders of the environs, and was rather like what we might call the local today. However, such places were not open on a permanent basis and most of the ale sold was for consumption off the premises. This developed into premises which sold only ale – a term which has been used interchangeably with the word ‘beer’ for over 200 years – so wine and spirits would not be available here. This was often just an ordinary house in which the landlord was licensed to make a room available for serving beer: often the landlord or landlady would lean through a hatch and serve drink to a customer via a pot boy, so not in individual glasses. The law was changed at some point and so such premises were also able to sell spirits, and in 1830 when the Beer Act was passed, duty on beer was abolished and so anyone was allowed to sell beer in their own house upon payment of two guineas.

The public house was the place to go for discussion and argument, and often, those who were unable to read would go to the pub to listen to the latest news being read aloud from the newspaper. Also, property sales were often held in public houses, as were shows, like the Nottingham annual Auricula and Polyanthus Show, which were often followed by a dinner. Back rooms of pubs often became home to working-class organisations, like friendly societies and later trade union branches.

The King’s Head – a coaching house? A posting house? An inn? A public house?

In a trade directory for 1822, John Fowler is listed as the postmaster at the King’s Head and Commercial Inn (and posting house), and states that the mail coach for London leaves the King’s Head at five in the evening, and that for Manchester, Nottingham and Leeds leaves the premises at nine in the morning. In addition to the mail coach, the stagecoach to London, called the Royal Telegraph, departed from the King’s Head every morning at two, and to Manchester every morning at eight.

John Fowler is still listed as the postmaster in a trade directory for 1828-9, and the London mail arrives in Loughborough at eight in the morning and is despatched at six in the evening. The mail from the North arrives in Loughborough at six in the evening and is despatched at eight in the morning.

The situation is similar in 1841 as listed in the trade directory, and John Fowler is still the postmaster. Letters from London arrive every morning at seven, and are despatched every evening at six. Letters from the North arrive every evening at six and are despatched every morning at a quarter past seven. There is an important addition to the entry in this directory that senders would do well to be aware of: “The Box closes an hour before the departure of the mails; but letters are received until the despatch upon payment of one penny each.”

In all three directories, as well as its entry under the general heading of 'Post office', the King’s Head is also listed under the section headed ‘Inns’, and followed by the names of John and George Fowler.

Conclusion

So, it would appear that the King’s Head was both a posting house and an inn. To find out if the premises could at one time also have been described as a public house, pop back next time!

References:

(1) Pryah, Chris (1984). Inns and taverns of Leicester. Blaby: Anderson Publications

(2) Ainsworth, Paul (ed.) (2015). Real heritage pubs, the Midlands: pub interiors of special historic interest. St Albans: CAMRA

(3) Tresidder, R.S. (1980). Nottingham pubs. (Get to know Nottingham – 5). Nottingham: Nottingham Civic Society.

(4) Harper, Charles G. (s.d.). Historic and picturesque inns of old England. London: Ed. J. Burrow

(5) Graham, Frank (1965). Old inns and taverns of Cornwall. Newcastle-upon-Tyne: V. Graham. 3rd ed.     

Posted by lynneaboutloughborough 28 February 2021

You are welcome to quote passages from any of my posts, with appropriate credit. The correct citation for this looks as follow:

Dyer, Lynne (2021). Spotlight on the King's Head Part 2. Available fromhttps://lynneaboutloughborough.blogspot.com/2021/02/spotlight-on-kings-head-part-2.html [Accessed 28 February 2021]

Take down policy:
I post no pictures that are not my own, unless I have express permission so to do. All text is my own, and not copied from any other information sources, printed or electronic, unless identified and credited as such. If you find I have posted something in contravention of these statements, or if there are photographs of you which you would prefer not to be here, please contact me at the address listed on the About Me page, and I will remove these.

You can leave comments below, but do check back as my reply will appear here, below your comment.

Thank you for reading this blog. 

Lynne                  

Sunday, 21 February 2021

Spotlight on the King's Head

The Story of the King’s Head, High Street, Loughborough

Part 1, the 21st century

Ramada by Wyndham, 2021

The twenty-first century

2021

In February 2021, the news came in that the Ramada by Wyndham, the hotel on Loughborough High Street, had been sold, and planning permission had been submitted for a change of use. This would involve a conversion from an 88 bedroom hotel to student accommodation.

The hotel was most recently franchised by the Wyndham hotel group, a large chain, with around 907 hotels in the group, stretching across the world. Like most of the rest of the hospitality industry, the hotel has been adversely affected by the pandemic of 2020-21, with few visitors traveling away from home, and therefore little need for overnight accommodation.

Local events, too, had been cancelled: lockdowns made such things impossible, and even illegal, and during periods when lockdown was eased, social distancing guidelines made meetings, and events difficult to administer.

In the report which appeared in the Leicester Mercury on Tuesday 16th February 2021, it was stated that business for the Ramada by Wyndham had declined over the past few years, attributed in part to the university having developed its own hotel, which is used to accommodate visiting academics, and others, thus no longer having need for a town centre hotel.

Further, the arrival in town of budget hotel accommodation, like that offered by the very nearby Travel Inn, together with the increase in the number of Airbnb properties in the vicinity also had a negative impact on the hotel, making it increasingly financially unviable. 

The hotel as it stands is a real piece of Loughborough’s history. Let’s look at the most recent story of the hotel.

2020

As late as 8th March 2020, a group of women of all ages and ethnicities, from across the Loughborough area met in one of the hotel’s larger meeting rooms, under the watchful eye of the Reverend Wendy Dalrymple. The event was a screening of a video recording made in the parish church of the women of Loughborough singing a song especially written for International Women’s Day.

Rehearsal at All Saints with Holy Trinity church

 

Under the baton of choral conductor, Emma Trounson, in her role as Director of Mission through Music of the church of All Saints with Holy Trinity in Loughborough, the song was rehearsed, performed and recorded earlier in the month. As it was due for release to the world via YouTube, on International Women’s Day, the chosen song was ’Twenty-first-Century Woman’ by Joanna Forbes LeStrange, and had been written only a year earlier for the same international day. After a short introduction from the Rector, the assembled party watched the video with a whole range of emotions!!

The rector addressing the crowds

Further addresses

 

Although it was evening, the large room in which the event was hosted was known to be one of the ones that had views out onto the bustling Loughborough High Street. The hotel had kindly allowed the group to bring in their own catering, and the buffet provided by Heaven on a Plate didn’t disappoint! Following a period of mingling, the event closed, with everyone agreeing to do something similar, in 2021.

Cake by Heaven on a Plate

Mingling!

2019

On a very hot day at the end of July 2019, one of the smaller meeting rooms was the venue for a book launch event. The hotel and staff were very accommodating and the hosts were allowed to decorate the room appropriately. Bubbly and cake was served to the 50+ invited guests who wandered in and out during the tw0-hour event, which saw the launch of ‘Secret Loughborough’. Such was the interest from the people of Loughborough and the surrounding area, that it was hoped to launch a follow-up book in August 2020 – ‘A-Z of Loughborough’. Sadly, such plans will now no longer come to fruition: while the publisher has delayed publication until August 2021, the hotel will no longer be available as a venue.

Book signing at the Ramada

Mingling at a book launch in the Ramada



2017

The Ramada by Wyndham seems to have been a popular venue for the holding of book launches, a earlier one, in the summer of 2017 being the launch of ‘Tales from Holt Cottage’, a collection of memories collected by a grandmother and told by a granddaughter, of their and their parent’s time living in Holt Cottage, which lies just besides what is now known as the Forest Green Belt, an area surrounding the Wood Brook that has again, in 2021, won a Green Flag Award.


 

 2015

In December 2015, there was a big splash on the front of the ‘Loughborough Echo’, the local newspaper, announcing that the Ramada had been sold for the sum of £2million. The owners at the time were BV Holdings who operated under the Ramada franchise, and at the time of the sale regular occupancy rates were running at around 35%, compared with rates in the early 2000s, which were around 80%.

2005

BV bought the hotel in July 2005 at a cost of £4million, and allocated a sum of money to “maintain the character and spruce it up a bit” and aimed, amongst other things, to add another dozen bedrooms. It was planned to re-name it from the Ramada Jarvis to the Ramada King’s Head. As a franchise of the Ramada hotel chain, in order to remain a part of it, they also introduced some exacting customer service standards, and expected staff to greet breakfast guests within 60 seconds of them appearing at the restaurant door and lead them to a table; approach them 3 minutes after seated with an offer of drinks; and wish them a ‘nice day’ when they depart the restaurant. At evening meal, staff have just 1 minute to approach diners at their table with the drinks offering. Meanwhile, over in the lounge bar, one simply has to take the drinks order promptly!

2004

In 2004 the building had been added to the Borough Council’s register of Locally Listed Buildings, because of its importance to the town throughout its existence, and particularly to the history of Loughborough in the late 1920s-early 1930s when such was the prosperity of the town that demolition of some of its older buildings was possible, as was the widening of the town centre streets, and the building of new properties more appropriate for the needs of the day. The Ramada, then known as the King’s Head, was one such building that was replaced with a new one, although rather than being built in the avant-garde Art Deco style like many of the town’s other buildings of the 1930s, the King’s Head was built in a neo-Georgian style. 

Throughout the twenty-first century, the hotel has been the chosen venue for numerous events in the town, including hosting a recruitment drive in June 2004 for volunteers to help out at Rainbows, the local children’s hospice. Roles included things like gardening, reception and secretarial work, as well as housekeeping, and since the hospice received very little in the way of funding, and most of its services were made available through money taken in fund-raising activities, it was also looking for people to organise fund-raising events.

In the year 2000 itself, the Jarvis King’s Head hotel was the venue for the signing of a bid for money under the government’s Single Regeneration Budget scheme. The application, submitted by the Loughborough Outreach Partnerships, if successful would be used to improve the health, community safety and the environment for people living in five wards, in underprivileged parts of Loughborough – being the Ashby, Hastings, Lemyngton, Woodthorpe and Storer wards - and a number of Charnwood villages – being Mountsorrel, Sileby, Thurmaston, Anstey and Syston. Almost five years earlier, a consortium of local organisations, led by Charnwood Borough Council, had been successful in their application for £1.3 million under the same scheme, so there was no reason to be other than hopeful this time round.

Pop back soon, when we'll go back a bit in the history of the Ramada Hotel, aka the King's Head.

Posted by lynneaboutloughborough 21 February 2021

You are welcome to quote passages from any of my posts, with appropriate credit. The correct citation for this looks as follow:

Dyer, Lynne (2021). Spotlight on the King's Head. Available fromhttps://lynneaboutloughborough.blogspot.com/2021/02/spotlight-on-kings-head.html [Accessed 21 February 2021]

Take down policy:
I post no pictures that are not my own, unless I have express permission so to do. All text is my own, and not copied from any other information sources, printed or electronic, unless identified and credited as such. If you find I have posted something in contravention of these statements, or if there are photographs of you which you would prefer not to be here, please contact me at the address listed on the About Me page, and I will remove these.

You can leave comments below, but do check back as my reply will appear here, below your comment.

Thank you for reading this blog. 

Lynne                  

Sunday, 14 February 2021

Spotlight on Holy Trinity Church

Holy Trinity Church

In March 1868, a letter appeared in the Leicester Mail commenting upon how the church of All Saints was never full to capacity during either the morning or evening services, and that Emmanuel church was not full during the only time when it was open, which was during the morning. The letter-writer was therefore questioning why a need had been identified for a new church to be built in Loughborough.

This need had been articulated in a report in the Leicester Chronicle in 1865, which suggested that the Church Extension Society was contemplating building a new church in Loughborough, at an outlay of £6,000 and with an endowment of £300 per annum. Apparently, a site had not yet been determined upon.

The date of that newspaper article was 1st April 1865, but this was certainly no April Fool’s Day joke. The laying of the foundation stone for what was to become the Holy Trinity Church, on Moor Lane took place 12 years later, on Tuesday 20th November 1877. Lord John Manners laid the stone, and the service on the site was conducted by the Lord Bishop of Peterborough, William Connor Magee – a busy week for the Bishops who also consecrated St Lawrence church in Northampton. The procession to the new Holy Trinity church left from the nearby Warner School on Pinfold Gate at 12.30pm and luncheon was served at the Bull’s Head Hotel on High Street – to those who had paid in advance.

Holy Trinity Church

 

The new church was designed by William Arthur Blomfield who, as we know from last week’s blogpost about the Reverend Eddowes at Jackfield, was responsible for designing the new church at Jackfield, and also for the renovations at St Mary’s church in Sileby. The cost of building the Holy Trinity church was expected to be just over £4,500, and would be constructed by Mr Clipsham, the builder from Newark, the fabric of the building being made from Mountsorrel stone with Bath stone dressings. The internal height would be 24 feet, and from the eaves to the roof would be another 24 feet. There would also be a turret of 84 feet, the west side of the church would be 186 feet and the north and south sides 60 feet.

The church was to be positioned on land given by Mr Edward Warner and the committee responsible for organising the contributions to the endowment included Dr John Henry Eddowes, grandfather to Arthur Eddowes, who had just been born, and who would later become vicar of Jackfield.

The consecration of the church took place on Tuesday 8th October 1878, the event taking place at 11.30 in the morning and being delivered by the Lord Bishop of Peterborough. The procession again started from Warner School, at 11am, and lunch was provided in the Victoria Rooms in the Town Hall – to those who had paid in advance. The evening service took place at 7pm, and the sermon was preached by the Reverend Leonard Leader Cooper, MA, the Vicar of Raunds, who had recently left his position as Chaplain to the Board of Guardians in Loughborough, and who would shortly move to become the vicar of St John The Divine church, in Leicester.  

Once the new church building was consecrated and completed, in December 1878 the incumbency of Holy Trinity church was confirmed as being conferred upon the Reverend Edward Bell, who had been born 30 years earlier in Ireland, son of Daniel, a clerk in holy orders. On August 12th 1879, Reverend Edward Bell married Sarah Elizabeth Noble. Sarah had been born in Loughborough, also in 1848, and was the daughter of Frederic Collins Noble, a surgeon of the town. The marriage ceremony took place at St John’s church in Ealing, the Right Reverend the Bishop of Travancore and Cochin presiding.

Holy Trinity Church

 

By the time of the 1881 census, Edward and Sarah were living at 17 Leicester Road, which is the rectory associated with the Holy Trinity church, now an exclusive, boutique guest house, although now numbered 68a. Edward and Sarah's daughter, Mary Winifred Bell had been born 3 months before the census was taken, and the family were supported by three servants, Elizabeth Ann Marston (?) the 29-year old domestic cook born in Thrussington, Martha Sharratt the 18-year old nurse, and Eliza Alice Barman (?) the 16-year old housemaid, both born in Manchester. A further daughter for Edward and Sarah, Kathleen Margaret, arrived in 1885.

The former Rectory to Holy Trinity Church

 

The 1891 census records the family still living and working in Loughborough, but in September 1892, Reverend Edward bell moved to St Stephens in Saltash to become the vicar there, replacing the Reverend William Fraser who was moving from Saltash to - would you believe - Loughborough. When Reverend Fraser moved away from Loughborough’s Holy Trinity church, he was followed by Reverend Samuel Wathen Wigg, and the Reverend David Dewar.

There are many more stories to tell about the church of Holy Trinity in Loughborough, and of the resident vicars, but these must wait for another day. Suffice to say that the church ceased operation as a church in 1996, and the name passed to the All Saints church, now referred to as All Saints with Holy Trinity. The former church is now a school and the church hall home to Affixxus Films.

Posted by lynneaboutloughborough 14 February 2021

You are welcome to quote passages from any of my posts, with appropriate credit. The correct citation for this looks as follow:

Dyer, Lynne (2021). Spotlight on Holy Trinity Church. Available fromhttps://lynneaboutloughborough.blogspot.com/2021/02/spotlight-on-holy-trinity-church.html [Accessed 14 February 2021]

Take down policy:
I post no pictures that are not my own, unless I have express permission so to do. All text is my own, and not copied from any other information sources, printed or electronic, unless identified and credited as such. If you find I have posted something in contravention of these statements, or if there are photographs of you which you would prefer not to be here, please contact me at the address listed on the About Me page, and I will remove these.

You can leave comments below, but do check back as my reply will appear here, below your comment.

Thank you for reading this blog. 

Lynne                  

Sunday, 7 February 2021

Loughborough to Jackfield to Yorkshire to Leicestershire to Loughborough


Terracotta detail on Ashby Road


The journey of one Loughborough clergyman.



The curate at St Mary the Virgin church in Jackfield heard that he’d obtained joint probate with his older brother, when his mother died in 1915.








Jackfield was part of the industrial area around Ironbridge, and the St Mary’s church in question was a newer one that had replaced earlier one around 1863. The new church was designed by William Arthur Blomfield, and unsurprisingly is constructed of local material, including locally-crafted tiles.

Tiles in Jackfield church


Tiles in Jackfield church


Some of the stained glass windows were made by the London firm of Heaton, Butler and Bayne (originally Heaton, Bath and Bayne), who also produced windows for Westminster Abbey, Wimborne Minster and Peterborough cathedral. The latter was the chief, or ‘mother’ church of the diocese which included Loughborough.

Stained glass in Jackfield church


Wimborne Minster

Despite being constructed in the Victorian era, the Jackfield church contains some furniture from the 1600s and some woodwork that was brought from an older chapel of ease, the wood dating from the mid-1700s.

Jackfield church

Jackfield church entrance

More tiles at Jackfield church

Although the bell of St Mary the Virgin is not from Taylors bellfounders of Loughborough, someone from Taylors, has done some research into the bell, and the following appears in an account of the church’s history:

“There is a single bell in St Mary’s, fixed rigid in a wooden trestle frame and is rung by a clapper activated by a lever system and rope. It carries the inscription “G.MEARS & CO., FOUNDERS, LONDON, 1863” so is a product of this famous Whitechapel foundry. It is 75cms or 30 inches diameter at the mouth and weighs approximately 550lbs (250kg). Its note is E flat.”

Whitechapel Bellfoundry

In 1878 and 1880, William Arthur Blomfield designed some renovations to a church dating from the 13th to 15th centuries, and also supervised this work. This church was also called St Mary’s but this one was – and still is – situated in Sileby. Of the 10 bells in the Sileby church, the oldest from 1622 is by Hugh Watts, and the new set were added by Taylors in 1978. Blomfield is also more closely connected to Loughborough, but that is for a future blogpost. Let’s return to our curate.

In 1916, shortly after the death of his mother, the curate of St Mary the Virgin moved to Hutton Rudby, in Yorkshire, where he remained until his own death in March 1927. During his time as vicar at All Saints church, Hutton Rudby, he wrote a short book about the history of the church and the parish, in 1923.

It was also during 1923-4 that the vicar commissioned a full-scale restoration of the church. This work was designed by the architect Walter Henry Brierley, who was based in York, who, during his partnership with James Hervey Rutherford (1918 to the death of Brierley in 1926), also seems to have had a hand in designing the bathrooms in Harewood House. Brierley had been diocesan surveyor for York between 1908 and 1921, and restored numerous small country churches, Hutton Rudby being one of them.

A bathroom in Harewood House

So, back to the vicar … Prior to taking up these positions in Jackfield and Hutton Ruby, the vicar of the latter had trained as an articled clerk to a solicitors, and in 1901 was lodging with his aunt in Chesils, on Christ Church Road, London. In 1907, he married Eva Betsy Turgoose, in Retford, and in 1908, he appears to be the curate at Alderwasley.

On the 1911 census return, the couple are living at The Parsonage, Eaglescliffe in County Durham, with a general domestic servant, Lucy Spendlove, originally from Shottle, near Wirksworth. Another move, this time before 1915, takes them to Aboyne, where he is curate-in-charge while the Rector was absent, and later in 1915 comes the short-term move to Jackfield, mentioned above, and thence to Hutton Rudby for the remainder of his life.

Arthur Eddowes, is buried in the churchyard of All Saints church in Hutton Ruby. He had been born in 1877 in Loughborough, the eldest son of Dr Arthur Benjamin Jackson Eddowes, and nephew of Dr John Henry Eddowes. On the 1881 and 1891 census returns the young Arthur is living with his parents and siblings at No.6 Market Place, a property from which his grandfather, Dr John Henry Eddowes (snr.) had worked.

Arthur’s parents, Arthur and Frances, had married in March 1876, at St James church, Litchurch, Normanton, part of Derby, and following the birth of Arthur, went on to have another five children. Sometime after 1901 they moved from Market Place to Ashby Road. When Arthur’s father died on 10th July 1908, he was living at Theydon, Ashby Road, and it was here that Frances Louisa Eddowes, mother to the vicar of Jackfield, also died on 22 nd March 1915, and probate was granted to her oldest son, Arthur, and youngest, Charles Frederick Beaumont Eddowes.

And I still don’t know which house exactly on Ashby Road is, or was Theydon!

Posted by lynneaboutloughborough 7 February 2021

You are welcome to quote passages from any of my posts, with appropriate credit. The correct citation for this looks as follow:

Dyer, Lynne (2021). Loughborough to Jackfield to Yorkshire to Leicestershire to Loughborough. Available from:https://lynneaboutloughborough.blogspot.com/2021/02/loughborough-to-jackfield-to-yorkshire.html [Accessed 7 February 2021]

Take down policy:
I post no pictures that are not my own, unless I have express permission so to do. All text is my own, and not copied from any other information sources, printed or electronic, unless identified and credited as such. If you find I have posted something in contravention of these statements, or if there are photographs of you which you would prefer not to be here, please contact me at the address listed on the About Me page, and I will remove these.

You can leave comments below, but do check back as my reply will appear here, below your comment.

Thank you for reading this blog. 

Lynne