Tuesday, 20 October 2015

Drewing conclusions

Writing about the two Frederick Lewis Drews has cleared my mind - so much that  I now favour a third Frederick, born in Canterbury in January or October 1830, given a medical discharge from the 64th Regiment of Foot in 1856.

His army discharge papers describe him as a carpenter. The army background fits with becoming a civil guard at a convict prison. The 64th Foot were in India in 1851, so this explains his absence from the 1851 census.

There is a moral there somewhere, so I won't jump to any conclusions!

Monday, 19 October 2015

The Mystery of Frederick Drew

In 1861, Frederick Drew, aged 30 and born in Canterbury, was a civil guard at the convict prison at Portland. Civil guards were responsible for security while the convicts were out of the prison, working in the quarries or building the breakwater for the large naval harbour. They were armed, and had usually come from an army background.

From his wife and children, it is certain that this is the same person as the Frederick L Drew living at 35 Cross Street, Battersea in 1871 - a carpenter (aged 40, but born in London), the Frederick Drew at 58 Dashwood Road, Battersea in 1881 - a railway porter (aged 50, born in Canterbury), and the Frederick Drew at 122 Stewarts Road, Battersea in 1891 - a carpenter (born in Canterbury, but aged 64).

This Frederick married Sarah Aldon at Kennington on 20 September 1857. He gave his father as John Drew, and his middle name as Loderwick. On his death certificate, (aged 73 in 1899) his second name is recorded as Lewis.

A Frederick Lewis Drew was baptized at St Pancras on 18 February 1827, son of John and Sarah Drew. (Frederick's second daughter was named Sarah).
A Lewis Frederick Drew was baptized at Margate on 9 August 1829 , having been born at Portsea on 10 September 1828, son of George Drew (a coastguard officer) and Caroline his wife.

Neither of these quite fit. George Drew went on to be the superintendent of a convict settlement in Tasmania; the son, Lewis Frederick, was at the Bluecoat School in London from 1836 to 1844, and later was apprenticed in the merchant navy. The Frederick Lewis born in St Pancras has not been found in the 1841 census, and neither of the two can be found in the 1851 census.

So which of them was "our" Frederick? Or was there yet another?




Friday, 1 May 2015

Edwin Paul Corin in London

We believe that Edwin P Corin (misdescribed as Edward by the enumerator) was a warehouseman, and was at 4,5 and 6 Love Lane in Aldermanbury on census night, 7 April 1861.

We know that on 31 July 1862, Edwin was working for Hirsch Oppenheimer at 16-18 Gutter Lane, in the City of London.

We know that he married Eliza Knight at Christ Church, Battersea 0n 8 April 1862, by archbishop's licence dated 31 March, and that at that time he lived in St John's Road, Battersea. (In 1864, they moved to Forest Hill.)

So when did Edwin get to London, what induced him to leave Penzance.

Are there clues in the Love Lane address?

Is there any information in the archbishop's licence?

Scope for further research...

Saturday, 28 March 2015

Thomas Castell - Edward Baker and Margaret Castell revisited

There is a possibility that Edward was the father of Margaret's illegitimate daughter, also Margaret, who was born on 6 July 1813 and baptized the next day at St Clement's, Sandwich.

Edward was baptized in Wingham in April 1766. He had been declared bankrupt in 1810 as a result of his partnership with John Stevens (the husband of a cousin). (However, his salary as clerk to the Collector of Customs in Sandwich was £100 p.a.)

At the end of 1812, he would have been 46. It was in the summer of 1812 that he moved to a large house in Sandwich, near where one of Margaret's relatives lived.

He finally married Margaret in July 1822, when he was 56.

In August 1815, Margaret's father-in-law formally disinherited her because of her infidelity. The will stated that Margaret's husband had been out of the country on service - the implication is that he was abroad between 1812 and 1815, and also that he was still alive in 1815.

In 1822, Margaret described herself as a widow.

So what happened to Thomas Castell?