Wednesday, September 27, 2017

Bath time!

My dad's middle name is Bromley.  It is his grandmother's maiden name.  I knew that the Bromleys were from England.  It's time to see life through their eyes.

Family member name: William and Anne Amelia Bromley and their son Henry Bromley
Relation: My 2x great grandfather (Henry) and my 3x great grandparents

William and Anne lived in Bath.  Ah, Bath! Known for its beautifully preserved white Georgian style buildings and its curative hot springs, Bath has been a destination for who's who of British society for centuries. 

And the Bromleys lived right in the middle of it. Anyone who has lived in Bath or has ever visited Bath for even one day is familiar with where they lived. 

In 1858, they moved into the downtown area of Bath.  They lived on the 3rd and 4th floor attic of 25 Union Street.  The ground floor and second floor was used for retail.  Union Street is a pedestrian shopping area in the heart of the town. And just across the street is the Roman hot baths along with the famous Pump Room restaurant. The Pump Room is named for the actual water pump that brings the mineral water up from the deep spring below directly into the restaurant. Centuries old plumbing! 

Here I am directly below their apartment. Downstairs is now a clothing store called COS.  Their windows would have been the ones above the letters COS. The Bromleys were so downtown.




Jane Austen, who lived in Bath from 1801 to 1806 wrote about the Bromleys' corner.

From chapter 7 of Northanger Abbey:
Half a minute conducted them through the pump-yard to the archway, opposite Union Passage; but here they were stopped. Everybody acquainted with Bath may remember the difficulties of crossing Cheap Street at this point; it is indeed a street of so impertinent a nature, so unfortunately connected with the great London and Oxford roads, and the principal inn of the city, that a day never passes in which parties of ladies, however important their business, whether in quest of pastry, millinery, or even (as in the present case) of young men, are not detained on one side or other by carriages, horsemen, or carts.  This evil has been felt and lamented, at least three times a day, by Isabella since her residence in Bath.




In the 1860s, William was the manager and editor of a newspaper, also listed as a printer, which I think is fantastic since I also work for a publishing company. Maybe that's where I get some of my obsession with grammar and punctuation. (I know I get some from you too mom!) That profession meant he was educated and no doubt well-known around town. Anne Amelia was a dressmaker. Did she create fashion-forward clothes for the high society ladies to show off at the theatre? How cool would that be?  Anne made enough to support herself since William moved out of the home in the late 1860s. We don't know why.  Anne lived there until 1874. 

Here are some pictures of the sources I found at the Bath Records Office.

Bath City Directory 1860-1861
Bromleys listed in Bath 1860 Directory at 25 Union Street
1852 map of Bath.  I added the star at 25 Union Street.








Tuesday, September 12, 2017

On the road in Wales

This was not an ancestry road trip.  But if we find some ancestors along the way, we might as well stop, right? #genealogistmotto

Dru's dad's side of the family is from Wales and England.

Dru from LA
His dad Gary Hargreaves born in Canada
Gary's mom Mary Edith Jones born in Canada
Mary Edith's dad James Caradoc Jones born in Wales
James' parents William and Mary Frances Jones born in Wales

William Jones was a clergyman in the Church of England in the late 1800s, early 1900s. He served in a couple different areas in the north of Wales, not too far from Liverpool.  One town is called Brynford, Holywell.  He lived there with his wife and children for a few years around the turn of the century.  He later changed parishes and ended up passing away in the new location years later. Brynford must have been special to them because the family plots are here.

We came to visit.  Here is Dru at the grave of his great great grandparents.  The headstone is damaged and sadly not well maintained.


This is the church.  The grave is in the churchyard.




We caught the current rector as she was leaving.  Another church member, perhaps her assistant, offered to retrieve the burial records.  How nice!  These were in the Burial Register with records from 1917 on.





It is interesting that William Jones was a clergyman. That was a very good profession in those days. The job usually came with a home to live in called the vicarage. Each little town in England has one. One of the locations they lived in had 14 rooms. That's a lot even by today's standards!

Makes me wonder what kind of a person he was. Was he a spiritual person? Why did he become a clergyman? Did he always want to know God and the Bible? Did he see the difference between the Bible and what the church taught? How did he feel about that? Did he instill a love for God in his children?  Did Dru's family's values trickle down in some way from this Welsh family?