Charles(2) and Ann had 4 boys
and 1 girl, Charles(3) Glifford, Mary Ann, James Daniel, John Lewis, Alfred William
plus mystery William born 3 years after Charles (2) died.
Charles(3) Glifford (born 30 Jan 1847), the first son and only child born in London. Once his family moved back to Abergavenny Charley remained there for the rest of his life. As an adult he ran a bakery and raised his family at #15 Victoria Street.
The 1871 census shows Charles (3) living in a small town called Usk (which is about 10 miles away from Abergavenny). He is lodging with and working for Ellen Jenkins who is a grocer and baker. In the same census Emma Pinner is a servant in another home, but the same town. Charles(3) Glifford married Emma Pinner in 1874.
By the 1881 census Charles and Emma were living at #15 Victoria Street. He was listed as a baker and confectioner with two children - Charles(4) and Frederick. In the 1891 census they are still at #15 and Charley is listed as "baker on own account" (self employed). They now have four children - Charles (4) "bakers assistant", Frederick, William and Florence.
.
John spoke very highly and humourously about his brother Charley.
“My brother Charley has just come in from the
bake-house and tells me to give kind regards to you and says that he would
accommodate you with the best room in the house.”
“Charley is very stout and he got a heavy fall full
length into a hole. I told him it was
like a lump of dough falling into a bin.
Well we had to get down into a ravine, climb over a gate and wall, and
then over another spike-topped gate before we could get into Blaenanon. There were a few spikes out on the top
sufficient for me to get over, but not for my brother. I got over and there he was walking up and down
inside trying to find a place to get over.
I thought I should have split laughing and when he did attempt it was so
ludicrous that I was quite sore from laughing at the figure he cut. He laughed himself also.”
Thanks to a descendant of Charley's I do have
a copy of his death certificate and from this I learned that he died from diabetes in 1897.
His death was reported by Emma Watkins. The 1895 Kelly's directory of Monmouthsire
mentions Samuel Watkins, a baker of 20 Victoria Street. Was Samuel learning
the trade from Charley? or brought in to help as a result of Charley's illness? Presumably Emma was his wife.
Charles death left
Emma, his wife, with the care of their 4 children, a bakery to run and a
mother-in-law who was described in the 1901 census as an “imbicile”.[1] The family was now living at #18-20 Victoria Street and Emma was listed as a baker and shopkeeper - her sons Charles and
William are both bakers; Fredrick and Florrie are living there as well.
Near his mother
Ann's grave is Charley's stone
In loving memory of
Charles Glifford Powell
of this town
(Baker)
died Nov. 1st 1897
aged 50 years.
"Thy will be
done"
In 1905 Charles(4) John Powell married Lottie Agnes Hill. The 1911 census shows Charles(4) and Lottie are living at #18-20 Victoria St. He is now a "baker at home" (self employed). In my tree I have Charles middle name as Glifford but in the marriage registration he is listed as Charles "John".
Passed down in the family are a couple of recipes from Charley - Easter Cakes & Rice Cakes. I haven't tried them yet, maybe someday.
Daughter Mary Ann Powell was born in 1850, in Haverfordwest. She married William Davies Credginton[2] in 1868. He was a carpenter from the estate of Ruperra Castle[3]. Ruperra is about 26 miles from Abergavenny. Mary Ann died in 1870, possibly in childbirth or shortly thereafter.
Name:
|
Mary Ann Credgington
|
Gender:
|
Female
|
Burial Date:
|
3 Aug 1870
|
Burial Place:
|
Machen, Monmouth, England
|
By the 1871 census, William was a widow with a very young daughter, Mary Ann. His mother Jane was keeping house for them.
Fortunately young Mary Ann was staying in Abbergavenny with her grandmother, Ann Powell, during the recording of the 1881 census. This was the type of lucky break we genealogists hope for. With an unusual name like Credlinton (as recorded in this census) I thought the search for Mary Ann would be simple. I was wrong – the variation of spelling has been a challenge – Credlinton, Credgington, Credginton, Credjinton, Crudgington.
Mary Ann's father remarried another Ann[4] and raised a large family in the Newport area.
Fortunately young Mary Ann was staying in Abbergavenny with her grandmother, Ann Powell, during the recording of the 1881 census. This was the type of lucky break we genealogists hope for. With an unusual name like Credlinton (as recorded in this census) I thought the search for Mary Ann would be simple. I was wrong – the variation of spelling has been a challenge – Credlinton, Credgington, Credginton, Credjinton, Crudgington.
I have not been able to
ascertain what eventually happened to Mary Ann, the daughter, except that
she married John William Berriman Burns. John was in the military and his WW1 pension records confirm that his wife was Mary Ann Credginton.
Mary Ann's father remarried another Ann[4] and raised a large family in the Newport area.
In 1884 John
Lewis visited Mary Ann’s daughter and widowed husband, again, this information came
from one of John Lewis Powell’s letters back to Sarah Oakley:
“I was down upon Monday to a place called Ruperra
Castle, seeing my brother-in-law about my niece, and after that went over to a
place called Tydee to see my father's sister.
It was a lovely day and the country was looking very beautiful. How much I did wish that you were with me
that you may enjoy the beautiful scenery of this country. Ruperra is about 26 miles from my home and it
was there my sister used to live and she married a carpenter off the estate.”
James Daniel Powell was born in Haverfordwest
in 1851. He eventually went to
Sheffield, England where he owned and operated a Plumbing and Gas-fitting
store. He had 2 daughters, Louisa and Mary Ann plus a son that died very young.
Both he and his wife passed away in the 1920’s.
Both he and his wife passed away in the 1920’s.
James Daniel Powell in front of his plumbing shop in Sheffield |
Alfred William
Powell was
born in 1856 in Haverfordwest. By the
1871 census Alfred’s occupation was listed as tailors trimmer. In that same census, Edward Lewis, tailor and
his wife Mary, a dressmaker, lived next door.
Edward may have been Ann’s brother and perhaps this is who Alfred was
apprenticed to. In the 1881 census
Alfred was still living at home. I have not
been able to find him in later census records, nor did John Lewis mention
Alfred in his letters. A family story related
to me was that one of John’s brothers was coming to Canada to see him, but was
killed in a train accident. Could this be what happened to Alfred?
William Powell, was born in 1861, the only child
born in Abergavenny. He was 1 month old
at the time of the census and his mother was a widow. Her deceased husband Charles could not
be the father of this child, as he died in 1857.
I did send for young William's death certificate which confirmed that his mother was Ann. William died of bronchitis on the 9th of January 1832. There were no other Powells living at Byfield Lane at this time so I knew I had found Ann's William.
A burial record at St. Mary's Church dated 11th Jane 1862 for William Powell of Byefield Lane aged 10 months. No gravestone was discovered, and chances are Ann was too poor to afford one. She was a charwoman at the time of William's death and was raising a young family on her own. The father of this child remains a mystery.
I did send for young William's death certificate which confirmed that his mother was Ann. William died of bronchitis on the 9th of January 1832. There were no other Powells living at Byfield Lane at this time so I knew I had found Ann's William.
A burial record at St. Mary's Church dated 11th Jane 1862 for William Powell of Byefield Lane aged 10 months. No gravestone was discovered, and chances are Ann was too poor to afford one. She was a charwoman at the time of William's death and was raising a young family on her own. The father of this child remains a mystery.
[1]Meaning infirmities of old age that make
an old person like a child, and was a legal term for physical and mental
incapacity in old age. (http://studymore.org.uk/mhhglo.htm#imbecile)
[2] The Crudgingtons take their name from the small village
of Crudgington, in Shropshire, England
http://websfor.me.uk/crudgington/home/home.asp?A710
[3] Ruperra Castle was built in 1626 by Sir Thomas Morgan,
who was knighted by King James 1st.
After being destroyed by fire in 1785 the castle was rebuilt and the
original gables replaced by battlements. In 1875 Captain Godfrey Charles
Morgan, of the Charge of the Light Brigade fame became Lord Tredegar and during
the 19th Century the eldest son of the Tredegar family lived at Ruperra which saw
its heyday as a great Victorian country estate with historic gardens and
parklands.
[4] Some trees on Ancestry have attached the children from
the second Ann to the first Ann. John’s
letter records that his sister died after the birth of her first child.
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