Wednesday 5 February 2014

The Beaumonts and the Ironworks (1)

There will probably be several things to say about this.

The first is that it dawned on me many years ago that George Beaumont (d.1736) must have been involved in the ironworks somehow, because of the cast iron memorials in Darton and Sandal churches.

It transpires that cast iron funerary memorials are inherently quite rare. In the words of Joseph Hunter:
The memorials to the [Beaumonts - in Darton church] are on two large plates of cast iron, the letters in relief. This, if any thing, will ensure perpetuity. Marble or monumental brass cannot, in this point, compare with it. There are a few other instances in the churches of this district; but it is wonderful that, in a country abounding with iron-works, recourse has not been had more frequently to this mode of perpetuation.

(Hunter, Joseph, South Yorkshire, vol. ii p.372).

Moreover it is practically speaking unheard of to find them commemorating people who were not connected with the industry (please post a comment about that, especially if you think what I say is wrong).

Now, the internal evidence of the dating of the two Darton slabs (by that, I mean what can be deduced just from looking at them - please trust me on this for now) is that they were both made at the same time, no earlier than 1713. In that year George Beaumont was 17 and of course, he died early in 1736. I think that his uncle and he were instrumental in having the slabs made, soon after 1713.

The second point for today, after which I will stop, is that there is documentary evidence of George being involved in financing the Wortley Ironworks at exactly this period.

The main proof that I have seen comes in a schedule of securities** listing amounts owing to his estate in 1740. Some of the documents evidencing these debts had George himself  as a party and were dated when he was alive, and others had the executors as parties and later dates. These (I suppose) were transactions "rolled over" from George's lifetime, but they could have been new loans, we have no way to know.

Amongst those owing money were Matthew Wilson, James Oats, and William Murgatroyd, the bonds in question being dated from 1737 onwards. All three of these were partners in the forge. The total amount owing to George's estate from these three borrowers was considerable, over £700.

It has been stated that James Oats died in 1738 and that shortly after this Matthew Wilson declined to carry on the management following a crisis involving Murgatroyd (who was later arrested) carrying on a venture of his own (see Miss R.Meredith, writing in C.Reginald Andrews, The Story of Wortley Ironworks, 3rd edition, 1975, at p.95).  But in the 1740 schedule Oats is not referred to as deceased.

The Rev. Mr Cockshutt, through his own family and his relatives the Spencers of Cannon Hall, was well acquainted with the partners of the Wortley Forge and it would be fascinating to know whether his handling of these affairs was, shall we say, as helpful to his own friends as it was to the Beaumont children, and indeed whether the debts were ever collected.

** This schedule is now in the Yorkshire Arch. Soc., part of its DD70 collection, probably in DD70/93. They supplied me with a copy of it, but unfortunately its exact reference is not noted. They have given me permission to reproduce a copy of it, which I shall do another day. It is a list of securities delivered to William Wrightson after Mr. Cockshutt died (see post dated 31 January).

Miss Meredith was the archivist at Sheffield, The source for what she states may perhaps be the Spencer-Stanhope archives from Cannon Hall. If you are familiar with these papers please post a comment.


Monday 3 February 2014

Uncle Tom's World Tour

In the archive (1/083) is a letter to George Beaumont at East Bridgford from his younger brother Thomas, sent from Melbourne in March 1871.

Uncle Tom, as he was known even to my father, was the youngest child of George Beaumont senior.


He was staying at the Port Philip Club Hotel..... a very nice place and a first rate Hotel with a jolly back yard and garden at the back for smokers, there is a veranda covered with (festooned) passion flowers magnolia trees and an artificial roof covering the whole yard, made of grapes & vines, secure on straight wires, a rock work and fountain is in the centre, altogether it is very jolly. Notwithstanding mosquito curtains I have been bitten slightly by these fierce insects which find you out anywhere and raise very sore red spots. There are some very fine streets here all of which are set out at right angles to each other.

His passage, on the "Superb," had taken no less than thirteen weeks. He says:
I got through the voyage very well but towards the end it got awfully stale – we ran out of champagne claret potatoes &c &c meat (sans vegetables) for six weeks is very stale work.

He had sent some things home:
I have consigned to you a box of furs and Indian goods – and I hope to enclose you a receipt for the goods I send, when the goods reach you please pay carriage and tell the parties who write to you that "you expect Yr. Brother T.E.B. home in a week or two and he will give a receipt as soon as he comes" – Unpack the furs &c and see that they do not get moths &c in them. I hope to reach home before the goods but I tell you this by way of precaution.

It appears that he made the trip for his health:
You may however report that my health generally is better than when I left and though I am rather short of wind yet I am decidedly better and I trust shall be mended before I reach home – I was never sick on board for a day – I had slight and fashionable sore throats but never worse than that – I have received your and Annie’s letters for which I am obliged. It is of no use recapitulating the news they convey or can I at this distance express any opinions on it. It is strange but not I trust stranger than true. I hear by the last mail of Paris having fallen and peace being proclaimed. Bravo

I wonder what this news was, that his brother and sister had told him in their letters.

He intends to leave Melbourne shortly, and then:
I expect to stay at Sydney till 8th April. I then embark on the Wanga Wonga for Fiji, Honolulu, & San Francisco...........I hope to see in crossing America – Salt Lake perhaps Denver & Colorado City, Chicago then by Detroit to Niagara Falls, then to St.Lawrence and down the River Hudson to New York. I hope to be there early in June. It is six days from Sydney to Auckland NZ where I call for any letters, 18 days Auckland to Honolulu where change steamers and 10 days to San Francisco. I wish my outward voyage had been shorter but it cannot be helped now.

The family's Tory leaning is revealed by the mention of someone's despicable friend Gladstone

and nothing really changes does it:
Such politicians serve old England badly and simply render [her the] object of the derisive pity of her rising and progressive dependencies which they leave in their infancy to fight their own battles after their mismanagement has fanned the flame of a war of extermination.

Uncle Tom did get home. He went to Sheffield where he married a rich widow and lived in an enormous house, now a hotel.





Saturday 1 February 2014

More cooking and food things

More old recipe books from Box 1.031.

A Bill of Fare for Every Month
This is an extract from something else (lost), late 18th century I would say.

Fairburn
Fairburn's Town & Country Cookery has lost its cover but I think it dates from the early nineteenth century. I don't think it is complete.

Mary Ingleman's Receipt Books

The book from Mary Ingleman is most likely to have come from the Becher family, since they lived in Southwell long before we did.

Francis Ingleman married Mary Bousfield at Southwell in 1768 and children were christened there. I don't know if this is the right people but I suppose it is likely.

The book, handwritten and referring to her as deceased by 1845, is presumably a copy taken from Mary's own book. Though it says "Vol.1st" it is all we have of this.

They are all in a folder
here

Happy cooking!

Friday 31 January 2014

The Industrious Housewife

This book of useful cooking instructions and recipes was in the house at Southwell. It must have been from either the Beaumonts or the Bechers, I don't know which.

It has lost its covers and end papers so I don't know its age or correct details. It might well not be complete. It might have a different title. I think it may date before 1800. The paper is very soft and fragile. If anyone knows could they please post a Comment.

Item: Printed material BA Box 1.031 (part)

I scanned it in 12 page sections
here

Chapters
1 - Boiling
2 - Roasting (p.20)
3 - Frying (p.33)
4 - Broiling (p.43)
5 - Gravies & Sauces (p.46)
6 - Stewing (p.54)
7 - Hashes (p.66)
8 - Soups (p.70)
9 - Fricassees (p.81)
10 - Ragouts (p.90)
11 - Pastry - pies (p.94) - tarts (p.103)
12 - Cakes (p. 106)
13 - Puddings (p.115)
14 - Dumplings (p.122)
15 - Syllabubs, Creams, and Flummery (p.123)
16 - Jellies, Jams, and Custards (p.126)
17 - Potting (p.128)
18 - Collaring (p.129)
19 - Preserving, Drying, and Candying (p.131)
20 - Pickling (p.137)
21 - Made Wines (p.140)


George Beaumont's Executors and his children's Guardians, 1736-1741

Frances died in April 1735. George made a new Will in September. His executors - in the words of the will itself "Administrators" until his eldest son should be old enough to prove the Will - were to be William Wrightson Esq (of Cusworth near Doncaster), Rev. Thomas Hall (of Westborough, Lincs), Henry Wentworth, Gent (of Hoyland), and Rev. Thomas Cockshutt (Vicar of Cawthorne).

These four were to be guardians of the children - aged from 11 down to 8.

Here is the portrait of George. It will be for another post one day to consider the question of who painted it, when, and where:



George did die towards the end of January. This was before the change of calendar, so it was still 1735. In modern parlance he died in January 1736, though we could add "NS" for New Style.

An Inventory of his goods and possessions was promptly prepared. It was signed on 6th February by John Rimington, Jonathan Heron, John Archer, and John Green. John Green, who was George's servant and was left £5 by the will, continued to work for the family at Darton for several years. He provided horses to go to Nottingham in 1741, whilst on another occasion a messenger was paid 3d to go "to Darton to John Green to get him to go to Whitley for some linnen."

George junior's Accounts (Box 1.001) show that Henry Wentworth took charge of things but that he too died before the end of 1736. Mr Wrightson and Mr Cockshutt proved the Will as "testamentary tutors" in June 1737. Mr Cockshutt lived nearest. He was also very well acquainted with all the people involved, as George Beaumont had been, in financing the iron works locally.

But Mr Cockshutt was elderly and his own health was poor. He no doubt did his best. He arranged for the boys to have stays with some of the local gentry, and there were occasional visits to their uncle (their mother's younger brother) at Whitley, and to Nottingham, where the clergyman uncle Thomas Beaumont lived, and two aunts, Elizabeth Beaumont and Jane Smith.

Mr Cotton of Haigh sent word in December 1739 (the boys were then staying in his house) that they had "ye itch, for ye curing 'em of which he [Mr Cotton] supposes some speedy care will be taken by me [Mr Cockshutt] upon ye notice he has now given me of it. I know no better way than to send 'em to your House...." (Letter to John Margetson at Heath near Wakefield - in YAS DD/70/93/3).

Indeed the boys were now spending much of their time lodging with Mr Margetson at Heath and being educated there. Mr Margetson was really, the most hands-on guardian. A Mr Hyde was paid for schooling, and a Mr Randal for teaching French.

Then - two more deaths. Mr Cockshutt early in 1740 and Mr Margetson himself later that year!

Now, William Wrightson had been a friend of the Whitley Beaumonts for years, but I get the impression that his input was somewhat impersonal. Mr Hall perhaps was too far away. Anyway Mr Cockshutt's son (also a clergyman) sent everything to Mr Wrightson and thereafter the money side of things was now left to a lawyer in Barnsley called William Marsden.

One can only feel sorry for these children, wealthy though they were. Much of my knowledge comes from the Accounts, very correctly kept, detailing pocket money and the cost of things like new breeches, shoe-mending, and French books.

After Mr Margetson's death the boys spent more time at Nottingham. I am not sure if they both went to live there but I think George certainly did. Payments were made to the Revd Mr Beaumont there in autumn 1741 on behalf of both of them. Payments for George are detailed in the Account Book in this archive (Box 1.001), and for Thomas, in one now in Doncaster archives (DD/BW/T/3) which must have come from Mr Wrightson's house. Both of these were prepared by William Marsden.

Sunday 26 January 2014

About Boxes 1, 17 and 18


Box 17
contains items formerly at Nottinghamshire Archives with reference PF/143.

These, I think, remained at East Bridgford Hill until its sale in 1908 when they must have gone to R.H. Beaumont’s office in Nottingham and thence to Southwell. They then seem to have gone to Perry Parr & Ford, the firm of solicitors, back in Nottingham, in which R.M.Beaumont was a partner. They were deposited by R.M.Beaumont in 1952. These were personal papers belonging to him. They remained at Nottingham Archives until June 2006 when I withdrew them.

The numbering system in Box 17 is that (for example) 143/76 is now Box 17/76. 
Box 17 contains about 80 items. These begin from the late 17th century (copy leases etc) and contain a number of 18th century items concerning the Chapelthorpe (near Wakefield) lands, which eventually came mostly to Rev. Thomas Beaumont of East Bridgford, who I think sold most of this by c.1800. But Box 17 also contains some late 19th century items mostly relating to my grandfather R.H.Beaumont 1865-1952.

Box 18
contains items formerly at Nottinghamshire Archives with reference PF/2184. These items were in R.M. Beaumont's desk and cupboards at Southwell and in a box in the loft when he died in 1998. I think that from East Bridgford my grandfather must have taken them to Nottingham and thus they ended up in Southwell but did not go to PF&F. I deposited them and they remained at Nottingham Archives until June 2006 when I withdrew them.

The numbering system in Box 18 is that (for example) 2184/3/4 is now 18/304 and 2184/5 is now 2184/500.
Box 18 contains about 60 items, roughly between 1790 and 1935, relating mainly to the family in Nottinghamshire.

Box 1
contains the oldest Beaumont items that I found in the houses at Southwell and Fishbourne (mainly Southwell). These have never been lent or deposited with any public archive. Box 1 contains just over 200 separate items, many very small. Generally these are of the nineteenth century and earlier. This collection includes some early photographic images.

The Box 17 and 18 items are in fact now stored in one box. Box 1 is a whole box.

I hope to put posts in this blog soon showing my full catalogue for at least Boxes 1 and 17. The Box 18 (2184) items are still listed in the Nottinghamshire Archives catalogue (as at today), so they are already accessible in that way. That Nottinghamshire catalogue also contains a series (2126) of photographs of the family pictures. I had the pictures photographed in 1998 and gave the copies to Notts. Archives.

George Beaumont's dog Pickle (1816)

Details:

Lock of Pickle's hair, the enclosing paper is marked:-
Pickle. This was cut from his tail and leg by me Octr. 7, 1816, the day after he had worryed our neighbour Waldron's cat, for which all our house was incensed against him. But I by my dextrous pleading for the dumb animal re-instated him in favour with his bones whole. G.B..
And on the packet:- 
Pickle. The faithful and affectionate friend of my youth, who has hazarded his life for me and whose sagacity I shall always remember.


Item: BA Box 1.084 (There is also a kind of soliloquy between Master and Dog (George and Pickle - a spaniel - referring to November 1816).
Provenance: Southwell (from East Bridgford).

Comments:
This is George Beaumont 1796-1882. The incident with the cat presumably occurred at Ashted.


“Pickle” was the name of the ship that brought news of Trafalgar to England in late 1805 – George put a cutting about that into his scrapbook.

Commission to Richard Beaumont (Derbyshire Militia, 1782)

Transcript:
The Right Honourable George Cavendish Esquire commonly called Lord George Cavendish Lord Lieutenant and custos rotulorum //
of the county of Derby; and one of His Majesty's most Honourable Privy Council,//
To Richd. Beaumont Gent.://
I reposing special trust and confidence in your Loyalty Courage and Conduct to do His Majesty good and faithfull service, by virtue of the power and authority to //
me given by the King's most Excellent Majesty under the Great Seal of Great Britain, as Lord Lieutenant of the said County of Derby and in pursuance of an Act//
of Parliament made and passed in the Second year of His Majesty's reign entitled an Act to Explain, Amend and Reduce into one Act of Parliament the several//
Laws now in being relating to the raising and training the Militia within that part of Great Britain called England and of all other laws now in being relating to//
the said Militia; have nominated, constituted appointed and given Commission to and by these Presents do nominate, constitute, appoint and give Commission to you//
the said Richard Beaumont to be Ensign in a Company of the Militia of the said County of Derby under my command whereof His Grace the Duke of Devonshire//
is Colonel, you are therefore to take the said Company into your care and charge as Ensign thereof; and duly to train, exercise, and discipline the inferior Officers and//
other persons armed and arrayed or to be armed and arrayed in the same according to the rules and discipline of War and the direction of the said Act of Parliament.//
or any other laws now in force relating to the said Militia; and I do hereby command them and every of them to obey you as their Ensign and you are to observe and//
follow such orders and directions as you shall from time to time receive from His Majesty, myself, my deputy Lieutenants, your Colonel, or any other your superior//
officer; pursuant to the trust hereby reposed in you and your duty to His Majesty. Given at London under my hand and seal this twenty fifth day of January in//
the twenty second year of the reign of our Sovereign Lord George the Third by the Grace of God of Great Britain, France, and Ireland, King Defender of the//
Faith, &c and in the year of our lord one thousand seven hundred and eighty two.
George Cavendish Lieutenant
Stamps and seal


Item: Original document BA Box 1.121
Provenance: Southwell (from East Bridgford)
Comment: I think he was christened in February 1761, so at this date he was just, or about to be, 21. It appears likely that he will have gone, with the Derbyshire Militia, to Devon in 1782 (see newspaper reports, Derby Mercury). It also seems that the Militia was stood down or "disembodied" early in 1783, assembling most years thereafter for four weeks training. He remained in it until at least 1789, when he was promoted to Lieutenant shortly before that year's assembly (London Gazette, Derby Mercury). He lived, later in his life, in Birmingham (lots of evidence in this Archive), and it seems that he is the RB who was living there from 1784. There are various puzzles about him, including in particular about his marriages, which I intend to bring up in later posts.