# |
Person ID |
Last Name |
First Name |
Birth Date |
Death Date |
Living |
note |
Tree |
1651 |
I2166 |
QUARTERMAN |
Grace Florence |
5 Feb 1894 |
11 Jul 1986 |
0 |
July 1986 15 845 786 Wandsworth |
mr1 |
1652 |
I2161 |
QUARTERMAN |
John Thomas |
1848 |
|
0 |
Dec Q 1848 1 290 St. Pancras |
mr1 |
1653 |
I000165 |
QUARTERMAN |
June Ann |
6 Jun 1948 |
|
1 |
Jun Q 1948 5c 2141 Lambeth |
mr1 |
1654 |
I2061 |
QUARTERMAN |
Leonard Owen |
28 Jan 1912 |
27 Nov 1991 |
0 |
Nov 1991 14 193 1191 Lambeth |
mr1 |
1655 |
I2061 |
QUARTERMAN |
Leonard Owen |
28 Jan 1912 |
27 Nov 1991 |
0 |
Home address: 20 Lavengro Road, West Norwood, London, SE27 |
mr1 |
1656 |
I2162 |
QUARTERMAN |
Maria |
1856 |
|
0 |
Sep Q 1856 1a 348 Marylebone |
mr1 |
1657 |
I2163 |
QUARTERMAN |
Owen Guy |
11 Nov 1878 |
19 Nov 1882 |
0 |
Dec Q 1878 1d 184 St. Saviour, Southwark |
mr1 |
1658 |
I2163 |
QUARTERMAN |
Owen Guy |
11 Nov 1878 |
19 Nov 1882 |
0 |
Dec Q 1882 1d 270 Lambeth |
mr1 |
1659 |
I2068 |
QUARTERMAN |
Roy H |
1920 |
1922 |
0 |
Jun Q 1922 1d 107 Lambeth |
mr1 |
1660 |
I2068 |
QUARTERMAN |
Roy H |
1920 |
1922 |
0 |
First name(s) ROY H
Last name QUARTERMAN
Birth year 1920
Birth quarter 4
Mother's last name BARRY
District LAMBETH
County London
Country England
Volume 1D
Page 538 |
mr1 |
1661 |
I2165 |
QUARTERMAN |
Sidney Alfred |
25 Mar1887 |
19 Sept 1971 |
0 |
Jun Q 1887 1d 389 Lambeth |
mr1 |
1662 |
I2165 |
QUARTERMAN |
Sidney Alfred |
25 Mar1887 |
19 Sept 1971 |
0 |
Sep Q 1971 5d 284 Lambeth |
mr1 |
1663 |
I2164 |
QUARTERMAN |
Stanley Victor |
21 Aug 1880 |
11 Mar 1908 |
0 |
Dec Q 1880 1d 391 Lambeth |
mr1 |
1664 |
I2164 |
QUARTERMAN |
Stanley Victor |
21 Aug 1880 |
11 Mar 1908 |
0 |
Mar Q 1908 1d 179 Lambeth |
mr1 |
1665 |
I2164 |
QUARTERMAN |
Stanley Victor |
21 Aug 1880 |
11 Mar 1908 |
0 |
From Burial Card |
mr1 |
1666 |
I1930 |
RAVEN |
Frank |
1869 |
Mar 1933 |
0 |
Mar Q 1933 1d 1277 Greenwich |
mr1 |
1667 |
I1930 |
RAVEN |
Frank |
1869 |
Mar 1933 |
0 |
Sep Q 1869 1d 840 Woolwich |
mr1 |
1668 |
I1930 |
RAVEN |
Frank |
1869 |
Mar 1933 |
0 |
Probate granted 20th April 1933 to Isabella Raven, Widow.
Effects £3446 3s 1d |
mr1 |
1669 |
I1931 |
RAVEN |
Nellie Hilda |
12 Jan 1908 |
4 May 2000 |
0 |
Mar Q 1908 1d 1228 Woolwich |
mr1 |
1670 |
I1931 |
RAVEN |
Nellie Hilda |
12 Jan 1908 |
4 May 2000 |
0 |
Registration District: Greenwich
County: London
Year of Registration: 2000
Month of Registration: April
Date of Birth: 12 January 1908
District No: 2291C
Reg No: C64
Ent No: 196
DOR: 0400
|
mr1 |
1671 |
I1931 |
RAVEN |
Nellie Hilda |
12 Jan 1908 |
4 May 2000 |
0 |
RAVEN NELLIE HILDA Death 04 May 2000 Probate No. 409350 05 April 2000 Grant and will Brighton |
mr1 |
1672 |
I000818 |
RAWLINGS |
Elizabeth Jane |
1868 |
Yes, date unknown |
0 |
Jun Q 1868 5a 153 Warminster |
mr1 |
1673 |
I001114 |
READ |
Eliza |
1821 |
1853 |
0 |
IGI |
mr1 |
1674 |
I001114 |
READ |
Eliza |
1821 |
1853 |
0 |
Illegitimate |
mr1 |
1675 |
I001114 |
READ |
Eliza |
1821 |
1853 |
0 |
FreeFormatDate:Sep Q 1853 5a 129 |
mr1 |
1676 |
I001114 |
READ |
Eliza |
1821 |
1853 |
0 |
Illegitimate |
mr1 |
1677 |
I1770 |
READ |
Sophia |
1806 ? |
|
0 |
Possible marriage to Solomon Goodfellow in Fovant 23 Sep 1827
IGI |
mr1 |
1678 |
I1770 |
READ |
Sophia |
1806 ? |
|
0 |
IGI - Inferred from Marriage register.
Other dates - 1799,1802 |
mr1 |
1679 |
I000072 |
REEVES |
Doris Elizabeth |
3 Oct 1902 |
2001 |
0 |
Letter written by Doris Reeves to Stan and Sheila Hemming after hearing of the deaths of Len Billson and Ivy Billson nee Hemming. Stan and Sheila had found her address among Len's papers and wrote to her.
There are many errors in her early history which I have since rectified. Everything before Anne married Sidney Henry Billson is wrong. I have still to prove or otherwise the detail about Chatsworth and Paxton. (She may have confused Chatsworth with Chiswick House.)
Corin. I don't know when Doris died. (now known)
I wrote a letter to her address in NZ but had no reply.
13-1-93
5-20 Weymouth Rd. Manurewa
Dear Stan & Sheila
Many thanks for your letter received on Xmas Eve. Very kind of you to write me all details. I somehow had a feeling that Len and Ivy were not with us but I sent the Calendar in case they could use it, and I decided that I would write after Xmas to the Matron of the home and ask for news. I also have an address in Kent for Len's daughter and one in L.A for Fred but they are very old by now.
As Len's second cousin I would like to thank you both for the care you gave them. When in England last (1979) I stayed a few happy days with them and some good snaps taken in the garden. Among Len's papers you may have come across one giving the family tree with our relationship. It is very strange how some happenings in life cause families to come together. I'll try to make it clear as to how we're related.
Back in the early 1800's in Derbyshire (I think) was a Baron Hewart and his wife Anne who had an only daughter, also named Anne who married a London Lawyer named Henry George Whittaker and they had a daughter named Anne who married a Sydney Billson of either Jersey or Guernsey, Channel Islands. His parents ran ships to England and France. Sydney B had T.B and the treatment in those days was to take in as much sea air as possible so he used to take trips on the boats and it happened on one that an awful storm arose and for 5 days they were all soaked resulting in Sydney dying, leaving Anne and a 1 year old baby. Anne wished to return to her parents but the Billson parents demanded that they keep young Henry Sydney to bring up and educate but Anne (who was very stubborn) somehow got back to England. What happened in the intervening seven years I've never heard, but when H.S Billson was 8 he and Anne came to Chatsworth; she as "sewing maid" for the Duchess of Devonshire and 8 years later she married my Grandfather, William Reeves who had been apprenticed as a gardener to the Duke at the age of 13. (By the way I'm committing the Family History on to tapes. As I'm now 91, I must get on with it before I forget it all). Now 8 years later when the Great Exhibition of 1851 was started the Duke gave the Government the loan of his Head Gardener, William Paxton and a number of gardeners. After the Exhibition Paxton was knighted and started his own business and my Grandfather worked with him for some years. Then there was a depression and he went back to Chatsworth. (I have my father's Birth Certificate, he was born at Chiswick and his father's occupation was given at that date, as Gentleman's Gardener. The date was Feb.25th 1865).
William and Anne Reeves had 5 children, Frank, Harriet, Amy, Horace and Effie and Henry George Billson was their half-brother. H.G.B married Emily Butler and they had a large family. Their eldest son was Edmund and Len was his son hence my 2nd cousin. I've met Len's daughter and his son Fred. Len's Cousin Vera Brown of Seaton, Devon, a widow wrote to me at Xmas and said she had not heard from her for several years. She is crippled with arthritis and several other complaints so I've written to her and told her the news. Also, a cousin of Len's lives here in Auck (land). He is Philip? Son of Horace Billson and he and Olive came to N.Z some years ago as his daughter lives in Tauranga. They live in very good Pensioner Flats at Blockhouse Bay on the opposite side of Auckland to me. My brother Frank and I visit them every Xmas and we ring & (-----) the years so I've told them your news. Henry S and Emily's eldest daughter, Beatrice (Len's Aunt) came to NZ in 1926 aged 50 and she stayed here in a very good job and lived to be 2 months off 90 when she died. I was not in NZ so Frank attended to her burial etc. She is buried in the same grave as her G-Mother and mine, Anne Reeves at our Purewa Cemetery in Remuera. Ann Reeves died Jan 21st 1901 aged 79. She had every tooth as sound as a bell and had never had a headache. My mother lived with William and Anne for the 1st year of her married life and said she was very hard on anyone who was sick as she claimed she had never felt a pain of any kind, even though she had had 6 children. Her family called her the last of the (Barans?). Here I am waffling on and you may not be interested in the queer quirks which bring together families who live at each end of the earth. By the way I'm "Miss" an unclaimed treasure and have had a wonderful life of working at all sorts of unusual jobs having trained as a Nurse. Went to England for the Coronation and stayed 3 years. Went again in 1959 for 8 years and again in 1979 for 3 months holiday. Retired 20 years ago from a School Matronship in Australia. I would have answered your letter sooner but I stayed with my Sister in Law over Xmas and New Year.
I worked at the Choirboys School at Windsor Castle for the Year 1961 then toured Canada and the U.S.A in a Motorised Caravan with 2 Australian girls. I do hope you will get your wish to visit N.Z but don't be too long as I may not be here to greet you. I have arthritis but otherwise have good general health. Now I must get this into the post.
With Best of Wishes for a happy 1993,
Yours very Sincerely
Doris Reeves |
mr1 |
1680 |
I000072 |
REEVES |
Doris Elizabeth |
3 Oct 1902 |
2001 |
0 |
Registration No. 1901/13738 |
mr1 |
1681 |
I000072 |
REEVES |
Doris Elizabeth |
3 Oct 1902 |
2001 |
0 |
Registration No. 1902/15215 |
mr1 |
1682 |
I000039 |
REEVES |
Effie |
1870 |
Yes, date unknown |
0 |
Mar Q 1870 2a 223 Croydon |
mr1 |
1683 |
I000711 |
REEVES |
Frank |
Abt 1863 |
1954 |
0 |
Registration No. 1954/31296 |
mr1 |
1684 |
I000329 |
REEVES |
Frank Andrew |
22 May 1910 |
2003 |
0 |
Registration No. 1910/2125 |
mr1 |
1685 |
I000329 |
REEVES |
Frank Andrew |
22 May 1910 |
2003 |
0 |
Registration No. 2003/11241 |
mr1 |
1686 |
I000035 |
REEVES |
Frank William |
25 Feb 1865 |
1938 |
0 |
Was noted as next of kin to his father William Reeves in 1926 |
mr1 |
1687 |
I000035 |
REEVES |
Frank William |
25 Feb 1865 |
1938 |
0 |
Registration No. 1938/25240 |
mr1 |
1688 |
I000038 |
REEVES |
Horace |
3 May 1905 |
8 May 1905 |
0 |
Can't be by William & Ann - must have been a child of Frank Reeves |
mr1 |
1689 |
I000038 |
REEVES |
Horace |
3 May 1905 |
8 May 1905 |
0 |
Description: aged 5 days old |
mr1 |
1690 |
I000038 |
REEVES |
Horace |
3 May 1905 |
8 May 1905 |
0 |
Registration No. 1905/22211 |
mr1 |
1691 |
I000038 |
REEVES |
Horace |
3 May 1905 |
8 May 1905 |
0 |
Registration No. 1905/2272 |
mr1 |
1692 |
I000710 |
REEVES |
Horace Walter |
1869 |
1942 |
0 |
Registration No. 1942/18305 |
mr1 |
1693 |
I000710 |
REEVES |
Horace Walter |
1869 |
1942 |
0 |
Mar Q 1869 2a 245 Croydon |
mr1 |
1694 |
I000034 |
REEVES |
William |
1826 |
20 Nov 1926 |
0 |
Description: to the 6th Duke of Devonshire at Chatsworth |
mr1 |
1695 |
I000034 |
REEVES |
William |
1826 |
20 Nov 1926 |
0 |
According to Doris Reeves - (daughter of Frank William Reeves)
Aged 13 he was apprenticed to the Duke of Devonshire at Chatsworth House as a gardener.
Anne Billson (nee Whitaker) with son Henry Sydney came to Chatsworth as a sewing maid to the Duchess and sometime after the death of Henry Billson (1855), she married William Reeves. (Her son was then 16 years old).
He worked with Paxton, (the Duke's Head Gardener) on the gardens at the Crystal Palace for 20 years. Eventually he went back to Chatsworth for the Duke, and then in 1875 emigrated to Auckland, New Zealand
There is a possibility that Chatsworth was a mistake. Considering where they all lived it's more likely that they went to Chiswick House.
William Spencer Cavendish (1790 - 1858) succeeded to the dukedom, and inherited 8 historic houses and 200,000 acres of land in 1811 at the age of 21. The 'Bachelor' Duke never married but loved entertaining and spent the 47 years of his dukedom improving his houses and embellishing them with every kind of object. He made extensive travels in Europe and said that "..at Rome.....the love of marble possesses most people like a new sense.". The most important room in the North Wing at Chatsworth, commissioned by him from Jeffry Wyatt (later Sir Jeffry Wyatville), was the Sculpture Gallery containing his outstanding collection of neo-classical (i.e. contemporary) sculpture. He also bought two complete libraries, many paintings and curiosities including the giant marble Colossal Foot and the Turkish Barge.
The Duke was Lord Chamberlain to King William IV. His friendships were very varied; he was particularly close to Czar Nicholas I of Russia and to the head gardener at Chatsworth, Sir Joseph Paxton, but also enjoyed friendships with the novelist Charles Dickens and the sculptor Antonio Canova. As Paxton's patron the Duke became fascinated by gardening and their alterations to the garden at Chatsworth included the creation of rockeries, fountains and glass buildings, culminating in the Great Conservatory, forerunner to the Crystal Palace, built by Paxton for the Great Exhibition of 1851. They also rebuilt the village of Edensor in the Park at Chatsworth.
The Duke wrote a "Handbook to Chatsworth and Hardwick" (published privately in 1844), in which he showed his enthusiasm and love for the two houses he owned in Derbyshire and his enjoyment of his possessions. |
mr1 |
1696 |
I000034 |
REEVES |
William |
1826 |
20 Nov 1926 |
0 |
1861 Census - born in Langley |
mr1 |
1697 |
I000034 |
REEVES |
William |
1826 |
20 Nov 1926 |
0 |
Description: Block E, Row 37, Plot 66 |
mr1 |
1698 |
I000394 |
RICHARDSON |
Charles David |
1 Jan 1945 |
20 Sep 1998 |
0 |
Name: Charles D Richardson
Mother's Maiden Surname: Forbes-robertson
Date of Registration: Jan-Feb-Mar 1945
Registration district: Marylebone
Inferred County: Greater London
Volume Number: 1a
Page Number: 534 |
mr1 |
1699 |
I000394 |
RICHARDSON |
Charles David |
1 Jan 1945 |
20 Sep 1998 |
0 |
Name: Charles David Richardson
Birth Date: 1 Jan 1945
Date of Registration: Oct 1998
Age at Death: 53
Registration district: Watford
Inferred County: Hertfordshire
Register Number: C45D
District and Subdistrict: 5361C
Entry Number: 283 |
mr1 |
1700 |
I000394 |
RICHARDSON |
Charles David |
1 Jan 1945 |
20 Sep 1998 |
0 |
Probate
RICHARDSON CHARLES DAVID
Date of Probate - 2 February 1999
34016
Date of Death - 20 September 1998
Grant only
Winchester |
mr1 |