Continuing from my previous success with pre–civil
registration brick-walls, I want to now focus on another distant ancestor, John
Hammond — my mother’s father’s mother’s mother’s mother’s father — born c1796
in Leicestershire. John was a cordwainer, or boot and shoe maker, but seemed to
flit to-and-fro between the neighbouring counties of Leicestershire and
Nottinghamshire.[1] Was it really
one person, or maybe two?
One of my g-g-grandmothers was an Elizabeth Annie Barradell,
and she married a Benjamin Webber — the son of the Robert Webber mentioned in The
Story of Three Brothers — on 27 Feb 1881 at
Nottingham St. Peter.[2]
Her father was a lace maker named Henry Barradell. I could see from the 1871
census that her mother was an Emma,[3]
which helped confirm that Henry Barradell had married Emma Elizabeth Hammond on
11 Jun 1864 at Radford St. Peter, in Nottingham.[4]
Note, however, that although the civil registration and parish register both
recorded her name as Elizabeth Emma Hammonds (forenames switched and an extra
‘s’ on surname), and the associated newspaper notice gave her name as Elizabeth
Emma Hammond (no extra ‘s’),[5]
she never used this forename order anywhere else (see census tables below). In
fact, she was born Emma Elizabeth Hammond in Leicester in c1844 to a mother
with the maiden name Brewin,[6]
and the other forename combination likely originated from a single clerical
error at the time of the marriage.
Finding the birth of Elizabeth Annie Barradell was not
straightforward because there was no visible baptism, and the civil
registration of her birth, on 28 Jan 1863, was under the name of Elizabeth Ann
(not Annie) Hammond (not Barradell), and with no father recorded.[7] In
other words, she was born 18 months before her mother was married to Henry
Barradell, and so her biological father was questionable even though she gave
Henry’s name at her own marriage.
The marriage register identified Emma’s father as John,[8]
and although her mother’s forename would soon come from the census, the
following small tree illustrates the basic starting point for this research.
Figure 1 – Starting point for researching family tree of
John Hammond.
Census
At this point, it was necessary to find these people in the
various census returns of England — something that most people do with far less
information in hand.
Name
|
Sex
|
Age
|
Birth year
|
Occupation
|
Place of birth
|
John
|
M
|
45
|
1796
|
Shoe Maker
|
Leics.
|
Catharine
|
F
|
35
|
1806
|
-
|
-
|
Wm [William]
|
M
|
21
|
1820
|
Shoe Maker
|
-
|
Elzth
[Elizabeth]
|
F
|
11
|
1830
|
-
|
Leics
|
Cathe
[Catherine]
|
F
|
7
|
1834
|
-
|
-
|
Maria
|
F
|
3
|
1838
|
-
|
-
|
Robt. Down
|
M
|
14
|
1827
|
Shoe Maker
|
Leics
|
Rd [Richard?] Townsend
|
M
|
23
|
1818
|
Shoe Maker
|
Leics
|
Name
|
Role
|
Status
|
Sex
|
Age
|
Birth year
|
Occupation
|
Place of birth
|
John
|
Head
|
Married
|
M
|
55
|
1796
|
Cordwainer
|
Lester [Leicester]
|
Catherine
|
Wife
|
Married
|
F
|
46
|
1805
|
-
|
ditto
|
Emma E.
|
Daughter
|
-
|
F
|
7
|
1844
|
-
|
ditto
|
Anne M.
|
Daughter
|
-
|
F
|
5
|
1846
|
-
|
ditto
|
George Roberts
|
Lodger
|
Married
|
M
|
30
|
1821
|
Cordwainer
|
ditto
|
William Roberts
|
Lodger Son
|
-
|
M
|
3
|
1848
|
-
|
Hinckley, Leics.
|
Thomas
Townshend
|
Lodger
|
-
|
M
|
17
|
1834
|
-
|
ditto
|
Table 2 – 1851: Household of John
Hammond. 83 Wharf Street, Leicester.[10]
Name
|
Role
|
Status
|
Sex
|
Age
|
Birth year
|
Occupation
|
Place of birth
|
John
|
Head
|
Married
|
M
|
65
|
1796
|
Cordwainer
|
Wittick [a], Leics.
|
Catherine
|
Wife
|
Married
|
F
|
54
|
1807
|
-
|
Hoby, Leics. [b]
|
Emma E.
|
Daughter
|
-
|
F
|
17
|
1844
|
Factory Hand
|
Leicester
|
Anne M.
|
Daughter
|
-
|
F
|
15
|
1846
|
Factory Hand
|
ditto
|
Harriet
|
Daughter
|
-
|
F
|
9
|
1852
|
-
|
ditto
|
Table 3 – 1861: Household of John Hammond.
5 Pelican Street, Radford, Nottingham.[11]
[a] Wittick was probably
meant to be Whitwick, but written as pronounced locally.
[b] Census appears to show
“Harby” but she was baptised 28 Sep 1806 in Hoby parish, Leics., to Joseph and
Elizabeth Brewin (“Leicestershire Baptisms”, Findmypast, accessed 16 May 2017).
This data is interesting, but also a little confusing. The
1851 and 1861 censuses are consistent, but 1841 shows an entirely different set
of children for John and Catherine, and disagrees on the birthplace of
Catherine. Do I have the right couple?
According to the 1851 and 1861 censuses, both parents and
all their children were born in the county of Leicestershire, but they had
moved to Nottingham by 1861. It’s temping to simply assume that the older
children had left home and made way for newer children — this indeed being what
some online trees had done. However, Maria would have only been 13 in 1851, had
she been listed, so did she die young?
Figure 2 – NaĆÆve,
and ultimately incorrect, family tree of John Hammond.
There was a need for information from additional sources
that would strain this rash hypothesis to see if it broke down.
Looking at the parish records for Nottingham showed that
John and Catherine’s daughter, Harriett, was born 3 May 1851 but baptised seven
years later (21 Feb 1858) in Nottingham’s St. Barnabas RC parish.[12]
However, the civil registration of her birth was actually in Leicester.[13]
There are several possible explanations for this geographical split, including
that they moved in between, or that the mother stayed with family for the birth,
but the seven-year delay supports the idea that they had resettled in
Nottingham about that time.
There were no further baptisms of children to John and
Catherine in any parish of Nottingham.
Looking at the civil registrations for children of John
Hammond and Catherine Hammond nĆ©e Brewin revealed that they’d lost several young
children while living in Leicestershire, and that the surviving ones were in
agreement with the 1851 and 1861 censuses.
Name
|
Birth GRO Ref
|
Death GRO Ref
|
Maria
|
Leic Union, 1841/Q1 vol.15:106
|
Leic. Union, 1842/Q4 vol.15:64
|
Susanna
|
Leic. Union, 1843/Q1 vol.15:95
|
Leic. Union, 1843/Q4 vol.15:69
|
Emma Elizabeth
|
Leic. Union, 1844/Q1 vol.15:95
|
|
Anne Maria
|
Leic. Union, 1845/Q4 vol.15:86
|
|
John Edward
|
Leic., 1849/Q2 vol.15:139
|
Leic., 1850/Q4 vol.15:78
|
Harriett
|
Leic., 1851/Q2 vol.15:118
|
|
Table 4 – Civil registrations for
children of John and Catherine (nƩe Brewin).[14]
Except, that is, for the birth of Maria Hammond. Having been
registered in Q1 of 1841 then there is no way that she could have been “3” in
the 1841 census, occurring on 6th June, but she could very well have
been “3 months”. This is a prime example of the reliance on a single source
having you chasing phantoms.
None of their children’s births were registered in
Nottingham.
Comparing these events with the registers for Leicestershire
parishes was informative.
Name
|
Date
|
Parish
|
Father Occ.
|
Abode
|
Maria
|
14 Oct 1842
|
Leic. St. Margaret
|
Shoemaker
|
Lower Church Gate [a]
|
Susanna
|
17 Oct 1843
|
Leic. St. Margaret
|
Shoemaker
|
Lower Church Gate [b]
|
Table 5 – Baptisms of children of
John and Catherine Hammond in Leics.
[a] St. Margaret Parish
(Leicester), Baptism Register, p.119, no.946; “Leicestershire baptisms”,
database with images, Findmypast (www.findmypast.co.uk : accessed 15 May
2017); citing archive ref. 24D65/B5; Record Office for Leicestershire.
[b] St. Margaret Parish, Baptism
Register, p.153, no.1218; “Leicestershire baptisms” (accessed 15 May 2017);
citing archive ref. 24D65/B5.
Name
|
Date
|
Parish
|
Age
|
Abode
|
Maria
|
23 Oct 1842
|
Leic. St. Margaret
|
2
|
Lower Church Gate [a]
|
Susanna
|
5 Dec 1843
|
Leic. St. Margaret
|
Infant
|
Lower Church Gate [b]
|
Table 6 – Burials of children of John
and Catherine Hammond in Leics.
[a] St. Margaret Parish
(Leicester), Burial Register, p.192, no.1534; “Leicestershire burials”,
database with images, Findmypast (www.findmypast.co.uk : accessed 15 May
2017); citing archive ref. 24D65/C4; Record Office for Leicestershire.
[b] St. Margaret Parish, Burial
Register, p.236, no.1882; “Leicestershire burials” (accessed 15 May 2017);
citing archive ref. 24D65/C4.
There are a couple of things to note here: only two of the
children were ever baptised in Leicester, and both of them were baptised
shortly before their death suggesting that they were sickly. Although this was
an Anglican parish, a belief in Limbo of Infants
would suggest that either John or Catherine may have been raised a Catholic.
This theory is supported by the fact that their Harriett was later baptised in
a Catholic parish of Nottingham.
Looking for baptisms of the earlier children, who all
preceded civil registration, was not straightforward. The following were the
only candidates that I could find.
Name
|
Date
|
Parish
|
Father Occ.
|
Abode
|
William
|
13 May 1820
|
Melton Mowbray
|
Shoemaker
|
Melton Mowbray [a]
|
Eliza
|
27 Apr 1831
|
Leic. St. George
|
Shoe maker
|
Chatham St., Leic. [b]
|
Catherine
|
11 May 1834
|
Nottm. St. Mary
|
Cordwainer
|
Pipe St., Nottm. [c]
|
Table 7 – Candidate baptisms for
earlier children of John Hammond.
[a] Melton Mowbray Parish
(Leicestershire), Baptism Register, p.84, no.666; “Leicestershire baptisms” (accessed
16 May 2017); citing archive ref. DG36/9.
[b] St. George Parish
(Leicester), Baptism Register, p.100, no.799; “Leicestershire baptisms” (accessed
16 May 2017); citing archive ref. 3D71/17.
[c] Nottinghamshire Family
History Society (NottsFHS), Parish
Register Baptism Index, CD-ROM, database (Nottingham, 1 Jan 2013), database
version 3.0, entry for Eliza Hammond, 11 May 1834, Nottingham St. Mary; CD
hereinafter cited as NottsFHS-Baptisms.
It’s possible that, like the subsequent children, they were
never baptised. Apart from these possibilities matching on father’s name,
baptismal dates being very close to census birth dates, and on father’s
occupation, they all had a mother whose name was Elizabeth. If they were the correct ones then it meant that I needed
to search for an earlier marriage. It would also suggest that this Elizabeth’s
preference was for children baptised in Anglican parishes, and hence that his
second wife (Catherine) was the one with any Catholic leanings. The second of
these baptisms was for an explicit “Eliza”, but her mother was “Elizabeth” and
so the census use of the longer form would not be unexpected. Being pre–civil registration,
we have to assume that the baptism place matches the birth place (unlike
Harriett, above), but the geographical scattering would still need justifying —
Pipe Street was in the Sneinton area of Nottingham, and Melton Mowbray is a
small town about 20 miles NE of Leicester.
Elizabeth Hammond (maiden name yet to be determined) had died
22 Sep 1838 at 24 Narrow Marsh, Nottingham, aged 47, associated with “child
birth”; occupation of her husband, John, was a cordwainer.[15]
No living child was recorded from her pregnancy. The newspapers reported it as
follows: “Nottingham, on the 24th instant, in childbed, aged 47, Elizabeth,
wife of Mr. John Hammond, shoemaker, formerly of Leicester”,[16]
and that confirms we have the correct person. Elizabeth was buried on 26 Sep
1838 at Nottingham St. Mary,[17]
the same parish where her daughter, Catherine, was baptised four years before.
It was then easy to show that John Hammond’s marriage to Catherine
Brewin was on 22 Jan 1840 at Leicester St. Margaret, well after the earlier
three children were born. The marriage certificate confirmed that John was a
widowed shoemaker living on Dover Street, Leicester.[18]
Since John had a particular job then checking the trade
directories might give his address; however, after checking over a dozen ones
covering the right locations and time periods, only the following two mentions
could be found:
- [1846, Leic.] Jno. Hammonds [John Hammond], shoemkr [shoe maker]. Church gt [gate].[19]
- [1862, Nottm.] John Hammond, shoe maker, Pelican Street, Alfreton Road, Radford.[20]
There were no mentions in the London Gazette.
There were a small number of additional newspaper reports.
In 1857, his residence was being auctioned along with others: "And also
all those NINE MESSUAGES OR DWELLING-HOUSES situate in Pelican Street, New
Radford, in the respective occupations of ... Mr. Hammond ...".[21]
The following two were of court appearances:
[1847] John Hammond, of Church-gate, was
charged with neglecting to clean the street in front of the house, after
night-soil [human excrement collected at night from buckets, cesspools, and
outhouses and sometimes used as manure] had been emptied on Friday morning. The
defendant stated that the water had been so much frozen that it was impossible
to wash the causeway, but it was effected as soon as a thaw took place. Case
dismissed.[22]
[1851] A middle-aged man, named
John Hammond, a shoemaker of Wharf-street, was yesterday committed to the
Borough Gaol for two months, in default of paying ten pounds, for grossly
assaulting two girls of about eleven years each.[23]
But this still hadn’t identified who John’s first wife was
so the Leicestershire marriages were searched for one between a John Hammond
and any Elizabeth, before or near the birth of William in 1820. There were
none! Given that Hammond was sometimes transcribed as Hammonds, the surname was
relaxed to Hamm*, i.e. anything beginning “Hamm”, and it found just one
candidate between 1812 and 1845, but it was between a John Hammans and Elizabeth
Whalley on 7 Apr 1820 in the parish of Melton Mowbray.[24] Now
this was very interesting because William was born in this same parish — in
fact, he was baptised in the very next month — and if John was a visitor to the
parish then the clerk might not have been familiar with his surname.
Coincidence? Well, we know that John’s Elizabeth was 47 when
she died in 1838, and that would mean she was born in 1791. Elizabeth Whalley
was born in Melton Mowbray on 2 Mar 1791,[25]
and so that clinched it. The eleven-year gap between their first and second
child might have something to do with this having been a shotgun wedding as no evidence of military service or imprisonment could
be found during that period.
Lastly, the very next entry in the marriage register was for
a Thomas Brewin; although unverified here, it is possible that he was a
relation to John’s second wife (Catherine).
John died in Nottingham in 1865, aged 69, and was buried 29
Aug 1865 in Radford Christ Church.[26]
Catherine’s death didn’t show up in any of the parish
registers because she was buried on 13 Aug 1881 in Nottingham’s privately-run General Cemetery,
along with members of the Barradell family.
Name
|
Burial
|
Death
|
Marie Theresa De Bouvain
|
20 Jun 1899
|
Unrecorded
|
Catherine Hammond
|
13 Aug 1881
|
Unrecorded
|
John Barradell
|
26 Aug 1870
|
Unrecorded
|
Lillie Gadsby
|
3 Jul 1870
|
Unrecorded
|
Frank Barradell
|
26 Jun 1870
|
Unrecorded
|
Elizabeth Ann Barradell
|
25 Apr 1866
|
Unrecorded
|
Nelly Maria Barradell
|
17 Apr 1866
|
Unrecorded
|
Harry Woodhouse
|
24 Aug 1864
|
22
Aug 1864
|
Table 8 – Burial details for
Catherine Hammond.[27]
Some incidental facts:
- John Hammond had other family in the Lower Church Street area of Leicester, including a William (another shoemaker) and a Jethro Joshua.
- One of the witnesses to John and Catherine’s marriage was a John Thomas Hallam. After Emma Elizabeth’s husband (Henry Barradell) died in 1891, she re-married to a Luke Hallam, and there may be a family connection there.
So what of Elizabeth’s three children?
Catherine married a somewhat-older James Jackson — a dyer,
born c1826 in Nottingham[28] —
at Radford St. Peter, Nottingham, on 26 Dec 1864.[29]
James died in 1898,[30]
and in 1901 Catherine was living in Leicester with her 27-year-old daughter, Kate
Elizabeth Jackson, born in Loughborough, Leics.[31]
Eliza eventually married a much younger man, John Jowett — a
pawnbroker’s assistant, born c1846 in Basford, Nottingham[32] —
in Leicester in 1867.[33] No
church equivalent found. Using a combination of the census and newspaper
reports, it can be shown that they moved from Leicester to Nottingham in 1891. Eliza
died in Nottingham in c1917 aged 85.[34]
The eldest son, William, moved to Leighton Buzzard,
Bedfordshire, and married a Sarah Sanders of that place in 1847.[35]
He became a master shoemaker,[36]
and died in 1904.
·
At Leighton Buzzard, on the 29th ult. [29 Aug
1904], Mr. William Hammond, aged 83 years.[37]
·
21, HOCKLIFFE STREET, LEIGHTON BUZZARD. OLD-ESTABLISHED
BOOT and SHOE BUSINESS. MRS. HAMMOND Begs to tender sincere thanks to the
numerous ladies and gentlemen who have patronised her late husband during the
period over fifty years has carried the above business, which, she takes this
opportunity of apprising them, will in future be conducted by herself, in
conjunction with her son, WILLIAM HAMMOND. She assures them that no pains will
be spared to merit a continuance of the confidence so long reposed in her late
husband, and hopes, by employing only skilled and experienced workmen, to merit
the generous support of the public of the town and neighbourhood.[38]
It’s always a good plan to create a timeline for what you
know. This can often shed new light on your information, and possibly explain changes
and geographical movements.
Date
|
Event
|
Place
|
7 Apr 1820
|
Marriage of John to Elizabeth Whalley
|
Melton Mowbray, Leics.
|
13 May 1820
|
Baptism of son William
|
Melton Mowbray, Leics.
|
27 Apr 1831
|
Baptism of daughter Eliza
|
Chatham Street, Leic.
|
11 May 1834
|
Baptism of daughter Catherine
|
Pipe Street, Sneinton, Nottm.
|
22 Sep 1838
|
Death of John’s first wife (Elizabeth)
|
Narrow Marsh, Nottm.
|
22 Jan 1840
|
Marriage of John to Catherine Brewin
|
Dover Street, Leic.
|
14 Oct 1842
|
Baptism of daughter Maria
|
Lower Church Gate, Leic.
|
6 Jun 1841
|
Census
|
Lower Church Gate, Leic.
|
23 Oct 1842
|
Burial of daughter Maria
|
Lower Church Gate, Leic.
|
17 Oct 1843
|
Baptism of daughter Susanna
|
Lower Church Gate, Leic.
|
5 Dec 1843
|
Burial of daughter Susanna
|
Lower Church Gate, Leic.
|
Q1 1844
|
Birth reg. of daughter Emma Elizabeth
|
Leic. Union reg. district
|
Q4 1845
|
Birth reg. of daughter Anne Maria
|
Leic. Union reg. district
|
1846
|
Trade directory listing
|
Church gate, Leic.
|
Feb 1847
|
Court appearance over street cleaning
|
Church Gate, Leic.
|
Q2 1849
|
Birth reg. of son John Edward
|
Leic. reg. district
|
Q4 1850
|
Death reg. of son John Edward
|
Leic. reg. district
|
30 Mar 1851
|
Census
|
Wharf Street, Leic.
|
3 May 1851
|
Birth of daughter Harriett
|
Leic. reg. district
|
Sep 1851
|
Sentenced to two months for defaulting on £10 over assault
|
Wharf Street, Leic.
|
15 Jan 1857
|
Residence to be auctioned
|
Pelican St. New Radford
|
21 Feb 1858
|
Baptism of daughter Harriett
|
Nottm. St. Barnabas RC parish
|
7 Apr 1861
|
Census
|
Pelican St., Radford, Nottm.
|
1862
|
Trade directory listing
|
Pelican St., Radford, Nottm.
|
8 Jan 1863
|
Birth of Elizabeth Annie Hammond
|
Pelican St., Radford, Nottm.
|
11 Jun 1864
|
Marriage of Henry Barradell to Emma Elizabeth Hammond
|
Radford, Nottm.
|
29 Aug 1865
|
Burial of John Hammond
|
Radford Christ Church parish
|
13 Aug 1881
|
Burial of Catherine Hammond
|
Nottm. General Cemetery
|
Table 9 – Timeline for events in the
life of John Hammond.
Another use of a timeline in situations like this one is locational consistency: if the locations
of the similarly-named people changed after discrete periods of time (rather
than randomly) then it strongly supports them being the same person. If there
are records suggesting they were in different places at a similar time then it
weakens the case, and if a single record suggests they were in different places
at the same time then it’s a complete show-stopper.
The above timeline shows several movements between the two
counties (Nottinghamshire in white, and Leicestershire in blue) but they were
not random. In fact, they say something important about their lives. John and
Elizabeth had tried to move to Nottingham between 1831 and 1834, but the death
of Elizabeth in 1838 caused John to return home. After remarrying to Catherine,
he came back to Nottingham between 1851 and 1857; whether this was related to
the stigma of the preceding assault case and his subsequent imprisonment is
just conjecture.
We’re now in a position to show a more realistic family tree
for John Hammond.
Figure 3 – Researched family tree of John Hammond.
[1] Common British abbreviations
used here: Nottm. (town of Nottingham), Notts. (county of Nottinghamshire),
Leic. (town of Leicester), Leics. (county of Leicestershire).
[2] England, marriage certificate for Benjamin
Webber and Elizabeth Annie Barradell, married 27 Feb1881;
citing 7b/324/114, registered Nottingham
1881/Mar [Q1]; General Register Office (GRO), Southport.
[3] “1871 England Census”, database with images, Ancestry
(www.ancestry.co.uk : accessed 10 May 2017), household of Henry
Barradell (age 34); citing
RG 10/3527, folio 47, page 26; The National Archives of the UK (TNA).
[4] NottsFHS,
Parish Register Marriage Index, CD-ROM, database (Nottingham,
1 Jan 2013), database version 3.0, entry for Henry Barradell and Elizabeth Emma Hammonds, 11 Jun 1864, Radford St. Peter; CD hereinafter cited as NottsFHS-Marriages. Transcribed GRO Index for England and Wales (1837–1983), database, FreeBMD (http://freebmd.rootsweb.com/cgi/seach.pl
: accessed 10 May 2017), marriage entry for Henry
Barradell and Elizabeth Emma Hammonds; citing Radford, 1864, Jun [Q2], vol.7b:211.
[6] Online transcriptions
of GRO birth and death index, General
Register Office (https://www.gro.gov.uk/gro/content/certificates/indexes_search.asp
: accessed 10 May 2017), entry for Emma Elizabeth Hammond; citing Leicester Union,
1844, Mar [Q1], vol.15:95; hereinafter cited as GRO-Births-Deaths.
[7] England, birth certificate for Elizabeth
Ann Hammond, born 28 Jan 1863; citing 7b/171/286, registered
Radford 1863/Mar [Q1]; GRO.
[8] Transcribed UK parish registers (pre-1837), database, FreeREG
(http://www.freereg.org.uk/cgi/Search.pl : accessed 21 May 2017), marriage entry for Henry Barradell and Elizabeth Emma Hammonds
[Emma Elizabeth Hammond], 11 Jun 1864; citing
St. Peter
(Radford, Nottingham).
[9] "1841 England Census", database with images, Ancestry (www.ancestry.co.uk :
accessed 13 May 2017), household of John
Hammond (age 45); citing
HO 107/604, bk.17, fo.34, p.17; TNA.
[10] "1851 England Census"
(accessed 13
May 2017), household of John
Hammond (age 55); citing
HO 107/2088, fo.487, p.11.
[11] "1861 England Census"
(accessed 13
May 2017), household of John
Hammond (age 65, transcribed as 45); citing RG
9/2448, fo.47, p.19.
[12] NottsFHS-Baptisms, entry for Harriett
Hammond, 21 Feb 1858, Nottingham St. Barnabas; the RC parishes routinely included the mother’s
maiden name (Brewin, in this case).
[13] GRO-Births-Deaths (accessed 15 May 2017), birth entry for
Harriett Hammond; citing Leicester, 1851, Jun [Q2], vol.15:118.
[14] Data compiled from GRO-Births-Deaths (accessed 15 May 2017)
by searching for Hammond births with mother’s maiden name of Brewin, in Leics.
or Notts., and checking those children against the deaths index.
[15] England, death certificate for Elizabeth
Hammond, died
22 Sep 1838; citing 15/342/157, registered Nottingham 1838/Sep [Q3]; GRO.
[17] NottsFHS,
Parish Register
Burial Index, CD-ROM, database (Nottingham, 1 Jan 2013), database version 3.0, entry for Elizabeth Hammond, 22 Sep 1838, Nottingham St. Mary; CD hereinafter cited as NottsFHS-Burials.
[18] England, marriage certificate for John
Hammond and Catherine Brewin, married 22 Jan 1840;
citing 15/115/291, registered Leicester
1840/Mar [Q1]; GRO.
[19] History, Gazetteer &
Directory of Leicestershire & Rutland, 1846, online PDF, University of Leicester, compiler,
Historical Directories (http://specialcollections.le.ac.uk/cdm/compoundobject/collection/p16445coll4/id/167136/rec/1 : accessed 16 May 2017), p.141, image 140/707,
under “Hammonds Jno.”
[20] Wright's Nottingham
Directory, 1862, online PDF, University of Leicester, compiler, Historical Directories (http://specialcollections.le.ac.uk/cdm/compoundobject/collection/p16445coll4/id/112448/rec/2 : accessed 16 May 2017), p.98, under “HAMMOND
John”; also p.200 and p.303.
[21] "Freehold Business premises ... to be SOLD by AUCTION, by Mr.
J.M.POTT...", Nottinghamshire
Guardian (15 and 22 Jan 1857): p.1, col.1, under "Lot 2".
[24] Melton Mowbray Parish (Leicestershire), Marriage Register, p.45, no.134; “Leicestershire marriages”, database with images, Findmypast
(www.findmypast.co.uk : accessed 16 May 2017), entry for
John Hammans [Hammond] and Elizabeth Whalley, 7 Apr 1820; citing archive ref. DG36/20; Record Office for Leicestershire.
[25] Melton Mowbray Parish (Leicestershire), Baptism Register, p.2 (not
printed), no.9; “Leicestershire baptisms” (accessed
16 May
2017), entry for Elizabeth
Whalley, 2 Mar 1791 (transcribed as 9 Mar 1791);
citing archive ref. DG36/5.
[27] “The central database for UK burials and cremations”, database with images, deceased online (www.deceasedonline.com
: accessed 15 May 2017), entries for grave of Catherine Hammond, 1881,
Nottingham General Cemetery, grave ref. /19849.
[28] “1891 England Census"
(accessed 13
May 2017), household of James
Jackson (age 70); citing
RG 12/2528, fo.69, p.5.
[29] FreeREG (accessed 17 May 2017), marriage entry for Catherine Hammond and James
Jackson, 26 Dec 1864; citing St. Peter (Radford, Nottingham).
[30] FreeBMD (accessed
18 May
2017), death entry for James Jackson; citing Nottingham, 1898, Dec [Q4], vol.7b: 215.
[31] “1901 England Census"
(accessed 18
May 2017), household of Kate
Jackson (age 67); citing
RG 13/2988, fo.170, p.14. GRO-Births-Deaths (accessed 18 May 2017), birth entry for Kate
Elizabeth Jackson; citing Loughborough, 1872, Dec [Q4], vol.7a:119.
[32] “1891 England Census"
(accessed 18
May 2017), household of John
Jowett (age 45); citing
RG 12/2683, fo.67, p.9.
[33] FreeBMD (accessed
18 May
2017), marriage entry for John Jowett and Eliza Hammond; citing Leicester, 1867, Dec [Q4], vol.7a:525.
[34] FreeBMD (accessed
18 May
2017), death entry for Eliza Jowett; citing Nottingham, 1917, Mar [Q1], vol.7b:487.
[35] FreeBMD (accessed
16 May
2017), marriage entry for William Hammond and Sarah Sanders; citing Leighton
Buzzard, 1847, Dec [Q4], vol.6:164.
[36] "1851 England Census"
(accessed 16
May 2017), household of William
Hammond (age 30); citing
HO 107/1756, fo.150, p.15.
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