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LIFE GOES
ON: AN INTRODUCTION
MY
GRANDPARENTS - I - MY GREAT-GRANDPARENTS - I - MY GREAT-GREAT-GRANDPARENTS - I - MY
GREAT-GREAT-GREAT-GRANDPARENTS
THE SIXTEEN
FAMILIES
KNOTT - I - BOWLES - I - WATERS - I - HARRALL - I - PAGE - I - WISEMAN - I - CROSS - I - CARTER
CORNWELL - I - HUCKLE - I - MORTLOCK - I - MANSFIELD - I - REYNOLDS - I - CARTER - I - ANABLE - I - STEARN
CHRONOLOGY - I - DRAMATIS PERSONAE - I - WHERE PEOPLE CAME FROM - I - CALENDAR
MAP OF ELY - I - MAP OF MEDWAY
MAP OF
CAMBRIDGE AND DISTRICT
THE
WORKHOUSE
WORLD WAR I - I - WORLD WAR II
simonknott.co.uk I home I e-mail
LIFE GOES
ON
The
Mortlock family: crossing the Great Ouse
My Mother's Father's Mother's Father's family
The narrative can be read in conjunction with the Cornwell family tree. You can see
places significant to the Mortlock family on the site map of
Cambridge and district.
This family story includes material from, and links with,
the stories of the Cornwell, Huckle and Mansfield families. My
direct ancestors are highlighted in bold
the first time they appear in the narrative.
The River Ouse
threads up through the brickfields of Bedfordshire and
Huntingdonshire, entering Cambridgeshire to become the
Great Ouse. Virtually all my Cambridgeshire ancestors
through twelve of my sixteen great-great-grandparents
lived within a few miles of it. The Mortlocks lived
closer to it than most. Holywell-cum-Needingworth parish
in Huntingdonshire contains two main settlements, the
larger village of Needingworth and the smaller village of
Holywell, where the parish church is. Beside the
churchyard runs the river, which until 1974 formed the
border with Cambridgeshire. Today,
Holywell-cum-Needingworth is in Cambridgeshire, and the
parish on the opposite bank is Swavesey, where the
Mortlock family were non-conformist millers and farmers
in the late years of the 18th Century. Their name appears
in the parish registers from about 1750 onwards. The name
Mortlock is still visible on a plaque as the builder on
Swavesey windmill.
My
great-great-great-grandfather John Mortlock was born in Swavesey in
about 1793. He was from a farming family. His mother was
from the staunchly non-conformist Lucas family, and
consequently his parents did not have him baptised. He
married my great-great-great-grandmother Mary Moody at
Swavesey parish church on 3rd December 1836, when the
witnesses were John Fuller and
Hannah Gilby. The Moodys were a local family, and in
later years Mary would give her birthplace as Swavesey,
but the only recorded baptism of a baby of the right age
is of a Mary Moody born at Dry Drayton, an adjacent
parish, and baptised at Dry Drayton parish church on
February 20th 1803. Her mother was recorded as Ann, 'an
unmarried woman'. If this is the right Mary, then it may
explain why Mary prefered to give Swavesey as her
birthplace from 1851 onwards. Alternatively, she may
never have known exactly where she was born. Mary's
mother Ann married Joseph Taylor of nearby Childerley on
March 14th 1803, so this was probably Mary's father.
John and Mary would have at least
ten children, the second youngest of whom was my
great-great-grandfather Thomas Moody
Mortlock. There
were probably more. Because they were not baptised, we
only know them through the census data, marriages and
burials until civil registration started in 1837.
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Phebe
Mortlock
Born Swavesey about 1830. Phebe was
recorded on later censuses as being 'an idiot
from birth', meaning that she had a severe
learning disability. She was still at home at the
time of the 1871 census at the age of 41, and
died later that year.Simon
Mortlock
Born Swavesey about 1831. Although I
have found Simon recorded as one of John and
Mary's children, he was in a different household
on the 1841 census, on which relationships were
not recorded. There must be a possibility that he
was actually a nephew. He was an army private in
barracks at Chatham in 1861, and in 1862 married
a girl called Harriet at nearby Dover. By 1871
they were living in Drury Lane in central London,
where Simon was a commissionaire and messenger
for the War Office. They had no children, then or
at later censuses. By 1891 they had moved to
nearby Sackville Street and then to Lambeth in
1901 where Simon was a caretaker. He died in
Lambeth in 1907.
Sarah
Mortlock
Born Swavesey about 1833. She married
Thomas Norman in Swavesey on 27th July 1856. The
witnesses were her brother and sister-in-law John
and Ellen Mortlock.
Elizabeth
Mortlock
Born Swavesey about 1835. She appeared
on the 1841 census, but then not again. There is
no burial in the Swavesey parish records.
John
Mortlock
Born Swavesey about 1836. He married
Ellen Thompson before July 1856, because they
were already married when they were witnesses to
his sister Sarah's marriage. They lived in
Swavesey before moving to Lincolnshire where John
was a master bricklayer employing five people.
They had eight children. They later returned to
Swavesey. In 1868 John was the builder of
Swavesey windmill, and his name is still visible
on the plaque. In 1869, John Mortlock, bricklayer
of Swavesey, was fined 14s 6d for allowing a
horse to stray onto the public highway. John died
in Swavesey in June 1909. The business appears to
have been taken over by his nephew, another John.
Mary
Ann Mortlock
Born Swavesey 11th February 1838, her
birth date recorded when she was baptised more
than forty years later. She married James Taylor
in the 1850s, and they were in Luton in 1861
where James was a bricklayer. They had six
children. They returned to Swavesey in the 1860s.
Mary Ann was baptised at Swavesey parish church
on 6th October 1886, when she was 48 years old.
She died in Cambridge in January 1900.
Hephzibah
Mortlock
Born Swavesey 1839. Hephzibah was a
witness to her brother Thomas's marriage to Eliza
Mansfield at Holywells church on 16th January
1861. She married George Thorp at Swavesey parish
church on 13th September 1863, when the witnesses
were Henry Thompson and Jane Mortlock. She seems
to have taken to calling herself Pheobe after
this, which is what she appears as on the 1871
and 1881 censuses - it is clearly the same
person. George was a widower, and had children
from a previous marriage.
Thomas
Moody Mortlock
Born Swavesey July 1841. My
great-great-grandfather - see below.
Jane
Mortlock
Born Swavesey 19th January 1844. She
married Henry Thompson in Swavesey on 29th
November 1863. The witnesses were her brother, my
great-great-grandfather Thomas Mody Mortlock, and
Jemima Williams. Henry Thompson was presumably a
relative of Jane's brother John's wife Ellen
Thompson. Henry and Jane moved to Lincolnshire,
Where Henry was a farm labourer in Asgarby Fen.
They had at least ten children. Jane died in
Sleaford, Lincolnshire in April 1908.
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Thomas Moody Mortlock was nine years old at the
time of the 1851 census. The return showed that he came
from a fairly prosperous household, his father a
mealsman, a dealer in cereals and grain. However, before
the 1861 census there was a dramatic turn in Thomas Moody
Mortlock's life. On 16th January 1861 he married Eliza Mansfield at Needingworth parish
church. Thomas was just 19 years old, two years younger
than his bride. The Mansfields were a notorious family in
the St Ives area, living outside the law, rarely
marrying, and producing children with enthusiasm. Eliza
Mansfield's father Abraham Mansfield had been transported
to Australia for burglary. She herself had spent much of
her childhood in the St Ives Union Workhouse, and,
furthermore, she was six months pregnant at the time of
the marriage. The witnesses were Thomas's elder sister
Hephzibah and Eliza's brother Samuel, recently released
from prison. It cannot have been seen as a good match by
Thomas's parents. Nevertheless, the census of April that
year finds the couple living with Thomas's parents, and
their first child Samuel was already a month old, born
three months after their marriage.
By the time their
daughter, my great-grandmother Eliza
Mortlock, was born in 1865, Thomas,
Eliza and their other children were living in High
Street, Needingworth, and they would live there for the
rest of their lives. Thomas was a bricklayer, probably in
his Uncle John's business. These are the fourteen
children of Thomas and Eliza Mortlock. In general, the
girls went into service, the boys into their father's
trade. They travelled further than any of my other
great-grandparents' families, the censuses finding them
living in Coventry, Essex, Bradford, Leeds and Wiltshire;
several of them ended up in the east end of London. And
yet, most of them came home again. Two of the children
died in infancy, another while still relatively young,
but most of the Mortlocks lived to a good age.
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Samuel
Mortlock
Born Swavesey 1861. Samuel's birth, a
few days after the 1861 census, was three months
after his parents' marriage. He was born in the
house of his grandparents, John and Mary
Mortlock. The family moved to Needingworth a few
months later. Samuel was baptised at Holywell
church on 1st June 1873, when he was 12 years
old. Samuel became a bricklayer like his father.
He married Mary Ellen Toyn at Spilsby in
Lincolnshire in July 1884; she had probably been
in domestic service in the St Ives area. Samuel and
Mary moved into 15 Gloucester Street Cambridge, a
road off of Castle Hill. They had five children:
Matilda, Lawrence, Harold, Nellie and Geoffrey.
In 1911, the sixteen year old Geoffrey was an
apprentice electrical engineer, probably with
Pye. Mary Ellen died on 26th September 1915 at
the age of 55. She was buried in the St Giles
burial ground (today the Ascension burial ground)
on Huntingdon Road, Cambridge. On the same
headstone is her daughter Nellie May, wife of BT
Wolfe, who died two years after Mary Ellen.
Samuel died in Cambridge on September 17th 1930,
and was buried in the same plot. He was 69 years
old. The
headstone is easily found,
immediately to the east of the famous memorial to
Ludwig Wittgenstein.
Emma
Mortlock
Born Needingworth 1862. Emma was
baptised at Holywell church on 1st June 1873,
when she was 11 years old. Emma went into service
as a nursemaid in the household of the farmer
John Hall at Cross Hall near Eaton Socon in
Bedfordshire, actually a few miles from
Needingworth across the county border. In Eaton
Socon she met the carpenter Thomas Smith, and
they married there in 1882, when Emma was 20
years old. They had four children: Thomas,
Merrington, Edwin and Florence. However, a series
of tragedies struck the family during the 1890s.
In December 1892, Emma died. She was just thirty
years old. Five years later, her husband Thomas
also died, leaving the children as orphans.
By
the time of the 1901 census, the two younger
children Edwin and Florence were living with
their grandparents Thomas and Eliza Mortlock in
Needingworth. Merrington, however, was an inmate
in Bedford Prison at the age of sixteen. On 2nd
November 1900 the Cambridge Independent Press
had reported
that Merrington was charged at Huntingdon Assizes, along
with three other youths, with the rape of one
Florence Emily Swales in St Neots. Four other
youths were also charged with being implicated.
The rape charges were dropped against all the
defendants, but several of the others were found
guilty of carnal knowledge of an under age girl,
and Merrington was found guilty of indecent
assault, for which he received the sentence of
twelve months hard labour. After leaving prison,
he joined the Dragoon Guards at Northampton,
giving his name as Merrington Mortlake Smith,
incidentally declaring on his attestation form
that he had never been 'imprisoned by the civil
power'. He gave his brothers Edwin and Thomas as
his next of kin, and in February 1904 he was
posted to India, where he served for four years,
followed by a spell of two years in South Africa.
He was transferred to the Reserve in 1910, and
discharged from duty five months before the
outbreak of the First World War.
By
1911, Florence was living with her aunt Kate
Mortlock at 80 Meanley Road, Manor Park in East
London, where they worked together as
dressmakers. Merrington was also in East London,
working as a tram conductor and living at 165
Grove Road, Bethnal Green with his new bride, 19
year old Naomi, née West, whom he had married a
few weeks earlier. They would have three
children. One of Merrington's
great-granddaughters in Australia sent me
photographs of Merrington in his Dragoon Guards
uniform, Merrington in his later years, and Merrington
and Naomi with their three children. He died
in east London in 1960, at the age of 75.
Hephzibah
Mortlock
Born Needingworth 1864. Hephzibah was
baptised at Holywell church on 1st June 1873,
when she was 9 years old. At the age of 17 she
was in service as a general servant in the
household of the corn merchant and brewer Thomas
Knights of Church Lane, St Ives, where her name
was recorded as Hipzibah Mortloak by the census
enumerator. Ten years later, she was still in
service as a nurse, but this time many miles from
home in the household of the woollen export
merchant Charles Neumann of 15 St Pauls Road
Manningham in Bradford, in the West Riding of
Yorkshire. In 1901, Hephzibah was still in
Yorkshire. She was living in Leeds, at 8 Lovell
Street, in an area largely inhabited by East
European immigrants. There are two people
recorded in the household that night, Hephzibah
and a 23 year old Music Hall entertainer called
Elizabeth May, who is described as a visitor. The
intriguing detail is that Hephzibah's
relationship to Head of Household is
described as sister. Infuriatingly, of
course, the head of the household's name is not
given, but the only possibility is Hephzibah's
younger sister Kate, who was recorded that night
as a visitor to a house in East London.
Annoyingly,
I have not yet found Hephzibah on the 1911
census. But whatever befell her in the years in
between, Hephzibah returned to Needingworth,
because she died there in 1946, apparently
unmarried, and was buried in the
Holywell-cum-Needingworth churchyard at the age
of 84, beside the grave of her grandmother, my
great-great-great-grandmother, Kezia Mansfield.
She shares the headstone with her younger
brother. The inscription reads In loving
memory of Hephzibah Mortlock who entered into
rest 10th March 1946. Also her brother JOHN
MORTLOCK who entered into rest 1st October 1944
aged 71 years. Resting.
Eliza
Mortlock
Born Needingworth 1865. She was baptised
at Holywell church on 1st June 1873, when she was
8 years old. My great-grandmother - see below.
Thomas
Mortlock
Born Needingworth 1867. Thomas was
baptised at Holywell church on 1st June 1873,
when he was 6 years old. Like his father and
brothers, Thomas became a bricklayer. On
Christmas Eve 1891 he married 21 year old Fanny
Butcher at Holywell church. She was from Over, a
Cambridgeshire village near to Needingworth, and
they lived at 5 Victoria Street in Cambridge, a
short walk from the home of his brother Samuel.
On 17th November 1896, Thomas was a witness at
his brother John's marriage to Mary Webster in
Holywell church. Thomas and Fanny had four
children, Frances, Edwin, Nellie and Katie, but
by 1911 the family had returned in some style to
Needingworth, where they moved into Langham House
in the High Street, Thomas describing himself as
a builder and manager. Had he taken over the
family business from his Uncle John? Mortlocks in
Needingworth today are probably descendants of
Thomas and John. Thomas died in Cambridge in 1948
at the age of 80.
Kate
Ann Mortlock
Born Needingworth 1869. Kate was born in
the last quarter of the year, but her death was
registered before the end of December.
Kate
Mortlock
Born Needingworth 1871. She was given
the same name as her sister, who had been born
and died two years previously. But this Kate
would turn out to be one of the longest lived of
the Mortlocks. Kate was baptised at Holywell
church on 1st June 1873, when she was 2 years
old. Baptised and known to the family under the
abbreviated form of the name, she was recorded as
Catherine on the 1891 census when living as a
general servant in the household of the corn
merchant Richard Mutton in the Sheep Market, St
Ives. Kate was a witness to her sister Jeanette's
marriage to James Medlock in Holywells church on
10th March 1897.
Kate
appears to have been living in Leeds in Yorkshire
at the turn of the century, because her older
sister Hephzibah was living at 8 Lovell Street,
and she described her relationship to the absent
head of the household there as sister.
Kate herself was a visitor on the night of the
1901 census in the house of a widow, Eliza
Lindsay, at 28 Latimer Road West Ham in East
London. She gave her occupation as a typist. Kate
was soon living in East London herself, because
in 1911 she was recorded as the head of the
household at 80 Meanley Road Manor Park in
Bethnal Green. She was a self-employed
dressmaker, and living with her as a dressmaker's
assistant was her niece Florence Smith, the
daughter of her sister Emma who had died in 1892.
In
the second quarter of 1917, when Kate was 45
years old, she married John Payne at Romford in
Essex, and they lived in Westcliff-on-Sea in the
suburbs of Southend. But Kate came back to
Needingworth after John's death. She died herself
in 1955. Her grave in Holywell-cum-Needingworth
churchyard reads: In Loving
Memory of KATE PAYNE, Widow of John Charles
Payne, Late of Westcliff-on-Sea and Daughter of
Thomas M and Eliza Mortlock, who entered into
rest 26th June 1955 aged 83 years. Until the day
break and the shadows flee away.
John
Mortlock
Born Needingworth 1873. John was
baptised at Holywell church on 1st June 1873.
Like his father and brothers, John became a
bricklayer, but at the time of his marriage to
Mary Webster at Holywell on 17th November 1896 he
was described as a police constable. The
witnesses were John's brother and sister Thomas
and Jeanette. John and Mary seem to have spent
the rest of their lives in Needingworth. They had
four children, Thompson, Stanley, Lillian and
Ethel. John was a master builder, and was a
significant member of the Swavesey Baptist
community. He rebuilt the Swavesey Bethel church
in 1913. Mary died in 1943, and was buried in
Holywell-cum-Needingworth churchyard. John died
in in 1944, and is buried in a grave near to
hers, beside the grave of his grandmother, my
great-great-great-grandmother, Kezia Mansfield.
He shares the inscription with his older sister
Hephzibah: In loving memory of Hephzibah
Mortlock who entered into rest 10th March 1946.
Also her brother JOHN MORTLOCK who entered into
rest 1st October 1944 aged 71 years. Resting.
Ann
Caroline Mortlock
Born Needingworth 1874. Ann's birth was
registered in the second quarter of the year, but
her death was registered before the year ended.
She does not appear to have been baptised.
Jeanette
Mortlock
Born Needingworth 1875 and baptised in
Holywell church on 18th April. Jeanette's birth
was registered under the name Jannetta, and she
was baptised at Needingworth church under the
name Jennetta. However, by the age of sixteen she
had adopted the use of the name Jeanette, and
this she remained until nearly the end. She was
in service in 1891 as a general servant in the
household of the brewer and malster James Knights
of Mill House in Hemingford Grey, the next
village to Needingworth. James Knights may well
have been related to the brewer Thomas Knights of
St Ives, in whose household her sister Hephzibah
had been a servant ten years earlier. On 17th
November 1896, Jeanette was a witness at her
brother John's marriage to Mary Webster in
Holywell church.
Jeanette
married John James Manning Medlock at
Needingworth church on 10th March 1897 when she
was 22 years old. Her brother Thomas and her
sister Kate were witnesses. Medlock was from
Cambridge originally, but he was already living
in Warwickshire, and the 1901 census finds
Jeanette and James living in Station Street East,
Coventry in Warwickshire, where James was the
superintendent of a tramcar shed. They had two
children, Reginald and Doris, and living with
them was Jeanette's sister Julia, who gave her
occupation as a cook, presumably for another
household. Ten years later, there were three more
children, Vincent, Maud and Ada, although Maud
was actually the illegitimate daughter of
Jeanette's sister Julia. Living in the household
was Johns's cousin Arthur Medlock, also born in
Cambridge, and working as a tram conductor.
In
1925, John died at the age of 56. Jeanette died
in 1942, in Salisbury in Wiltshire, while
visiting her daughter Doris. She was 72 years
old, and her death was registered under the name
Jeanetta.
Julia
Mortlock
Born Needingworth 1876 and baptised in
Holywell church on 15th October. She left home to
work as a cook, and in 1901 she was living in the
household of her sister Jeanette and husband John
in Station Street East, Coventry in Warwickshire.
In 1902 or 1903, Julia had an illegitimate
daughter, who she called Maud. In 1911, Maud was
living with Julia's sister Jeanette, and was
recorded as Maud Medlock, the daughter of
Jeanette and her husband John, although her
birthplace was recorded as Cambridge rather than
Coventry. At the same census, the 36 year old
Julia Julia was still a cook, this time at
Berners Hall near Ongar in Essex. This was the
home of James, Charles and Caroline Glasse, two
brothers and a sister from Morwenstowe in
Cornwall who managed the estate and farmed the
land.
In
1917, Julia Mortlock was recorded in the
Chelmsford Chronicle as one of the subscribers to
a retirement gift presented by her employer James
Glasse to the Rector of Willingale Doe. In the
last quarter of 1922, Julia's daughter Maud
married John Middleton in Coventry. She gave her
father's name as John Medlock. A
photograph around the time of her marriage shows
Jeanette sitting bottom right with Maud beside
her. Soon after, Maud and John Middleton
emigrated to Australia. On the 18th July 1924,
the Chelmsford Chronicle reported in its wills
and bequests column that Mr JF Glass (sic)
of Berners Hall had left £50 to his
housekeeper Miss Julia Mortlock if in his
service, and one months wages to other servants.
His entire estate amounted to almost £25,000.
The Berners Hall Farm was bought by the
Co-operative Society, who still run it today.
In
Australia, Maud had two daughters, Moya and
Aileen Julia (does the middle name of her second
daughter suggest that Maud did indeed know who
her real mother was?). Both girls, Julia's
granddaughters, lived into their eighties, dying
within a few months of each other in 2011. Maud
herself had lived into her nineties, dying on
15th July 1997. Her granddaughter Judy recalls
that right
up until her death, her mind was as sharp as a
whip. She and my mum would write to each
other every week and her handwriting was
perfect. It does not appear that
Julia ever married, and she returned to
Needingworth, where she died in 1957. Her grave in Needingworth churchyard reads:
In Loving Memory of JULIA MORTLOCK who entered
into rest 7th February 1957 aged 80 years.
Resting.
Ruth
Elizabeth Mortlock
Born Needingworth 16th December 1877.
She was baptised in Holywell church on 20th June
1880. In 1901, she was working as a
nurse-housemaid in the household of the corn
merchant Joseph Lyons in Gower Street, London.
She was still living in the same household as a
nurse in 1911, at Brixton Hill in Lambeth, South
London. There are no marriages of a Ruth Mortlock
in England after this date. It is not a common
name, and there are only four possible registered
deaths of a Ruth Mortlock, the most likely of
which is a Ruth Mortlock who died at York in
1948.
Martha
Ethel Mortlock
Born Needingworth on Boxing Day 1879.
She was baptised in Holywell church on 20th June
1880. Martha was still living at home with her
parents in 1911 when she was 31 years old. The
form listed no disability or infirmity. She never
married, and died in Needingworth in 1935 at the
age of 55. The memorial stone below her parents'
headstone reads Also in ever loving memory of
their daughters MARTHA ETHEL MORTLOCK who entered
into rest February 14th 1935 RIP also of ALICE
MAUD KEZIA MORTLOCK died 2nd June 1964 aged 83
years.
Alice
Maud Kezia Mortlock
Born Needingworth 1st April 1881, and
baptised in Holywell church on 21st October 1892
when she was 11 years old. Alice was still at
home in 1901, but in 1911 she was living as a
dressmaker on the premises of the drapers Spratt
and Son, in Forest Gate, East London. She did not
marry, and died in Cambridge in 1964 at the age
of 83. The memorial stone below her parents'
headstone reads Also in ever loving memory of
their daughters MARTHA ETHEL MORTLOCK who entered
into rest February 14th 1935 RIP also of ALICE
MAUD KEZIA MORTLOCK died 2nd June 1964 aged 83
years.
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Thomas's father
John Mortlock died in Huntingdonshire in October 1872. He
was 79 years old. An interesting incident is recorded the
following year in the Holywell-cum-Needingworth parish
records. On the 1st June 1873, Thomas and Eliza took the
eight children that had been born to them so far to
church and had them baptised, probably with water from
the holy well in the churchyard which gives the hamlet
its name. The occasion was the baptism of their new
infant son, John. Perhaps the parish had a new Rector who
was filled with enthusiasm, or perhaps Thomas and Eliza
underwent a conversion of some kind - Thomas himself had
been baptised three months earlier. Or perhaps it was
simply his father's death that had concentrated Thomas's
mind.
Thomas declared
himself as self-employed on the 1911 census, when he was
69. He died seven years later. His wife, my
great-grandmother's mother, lived for almost another
twenty years, dying in Needingworth in the first quarter
of 1938 when she was a few weeks short of her 99th
birthday. Their gravestone in Needingworth churchyard
reads In loving memory of THOMAS MOODY MORTLOCK who
entered into rest March 3rd 1919 in his 78th year.
"Today Thou shalt be with me in Paradise". Also
of ELIZA MORTLOCK wife of the above who entered into rest
March 23rd 1938 aged 98. Until the day break and the
shadows flee away. Six of their children also have
memorials in the churchyard, two of them next to Thomas
and Eliza's headstone.
The Mortlocks seem
to have been a close family, who overcame adversity to
put down roots and build a strong home. The churchwarden
of Holywell-cum-Needingworth tells me that there are
still Mortlocks living in Needingworth village today.
My
great-grandmother Eliza Mortlock was living at home
in Needingworth at the time of the 1871 census, but by
the age of 15 she was living as a servant in the
household of James Stevens, a grocer of Alexandra Place
in St Ives. Four years later, Eliza married William
Huckle Cornwell, an agricultural labourer, on the
22nd March 1885 at St Andrew's Church, Histon,
Cambridgeshire. William signed the register with a cross,
indicating that he was illiterate, but Eliza was able to
sign her own name. The witnesses were John Royal Hounsham
and William's sister Hannah. If Hounsham were William's
friend and witness, it suggests that Hannah Cornwell was
Eliza's, and that Eliza and William had met because Eliza
and Hannah were friends. John Hounsham and Hannah
Cornwell would marry later in the year.
William
and Eliza lived in High Street, Histon, and their first
child was born the following December. By 1891, they had
two further children, and then the Cornwells moved a mile
or so to Oakington before the next census, and were
living in Dry Drayton Road. There would be five further
children before their youngest child my grandfather Edmund Stanley Cecil
Cornwell was born in 1903. These are the
nine children of William and Eliza Cornwell:
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Clarence
Charles Cornwell
Born Histon, Cambridgeshire on the 19th
December 1885. His birth was registered under the
surname Cornell rather than Cornwell, but when he
was baptised at St Andrew's church in Histon on
17th January 1886, his surname was recorded as
Cornwell. In 1911, Charles was still living
at home and working as a farm labourer. However,
in the second quarter of 1911 he married Caroline
Flack of Trumpington in the Chesterton
Registration District. When the First World War
broke out, Charles enlisted as a private soldier
with the Cambridgeshire Regiment, but was
transferred to become a Lance-Corporal in the
Military Foot Police. His medal
record shows that he landed in France on
the 14th February 1915, when he was 29 years old.
He survived the War, and remained in the forces,
joining the Grenadier Guards. My mother remembers
him visiting her family in uniform when she was a
child in the 1940s. Clarence died in Cambridge in
the 4th quarter of 1956.Lily Elizabeth Cornwell
Born Histon, Cambridgeshire on the 13th August
1887. Her birth was registered under the surname
Cornell rather than Cornwell, but when she was
baptised at St Andrew's church in Histon on 11th
September, her surname was recorded as Cornwell.
She went to work as a nanny in France. She
married Thomas Shemilt at Leigh in Stoke-on-Trent
in Staffordshire in 1909. Shemilt was born at
Godstone in Staffordshire in 1884. In 1911, the
couple lived with Thomas's mother Emma Shemilt,
née Cope, who was a widow; her husband of three
years, George Shemilt of Stone, Staffordshire,
had died in 1885. In 1923, Lily's sister Ruth was
living with her husband John nearby at Corton. In
1944, Lily's father William was staying with them
at Rough Park Bungalow, Handsall Ridware near
Rugeley when William died. Lily died at
Burton-upon-Trent in Staffordshire in 1957, at
the age of 70.
Walter
Eric Cornwell
Born Histon, Cambridgeshire on the 29th June
1889. His birth was registered under the surname
Cornell rather than Cornwell, but when he was
baptised at St Andrew's church, Histon on 4th
August his surname was recorded as Cornwell. He
married Gertrude Simpkins in the Chesterton
registration district in the second quarter of
1915. Walter died in Cambridge in 1967 at the age
of 77.
Violet
Maude Cornwell
Born Histon, Cambridgeshire on the 15th
September 1892. She was the first of the children
whose birth was registered under the surname
Cornwell. She was baptised at St Andrew's church,
Histon on 23rd October. She married Ernest
Frederick Golding at St Andrew's church,
Oakington on 3rd February 1912. Golding was a
farm labourer who also came from Oakington.
Violet died in September 1961 in Manchester.
Catherine
Ayliffe Grace Cornwell
Born Histon, Cambridgeshire on 15th
February 1894. She was baptised at St Andrew's
church, Histon on 25 March. She worked in service
at Roxford Grange at Hertingfordbury in
Hertfordshire. She married Frederick George
Cannon on the 30th August 1919 at
Hertingfordbury, Hertfordshire. They lived in
Hertfordshire. Catherine died in Hertfordshire in
the last quarter of 1962.
Frances
Eliza Cornwell
Born Histon, Cambridgeshire on the 29th
April 1895. She was the last of the children to
have her birth registered under the surname
Cornell. When she was baptised at St Andrew's
church, Histon on 26th May, her surname was
recorded as Cornwell. She married Charles Hewitt
at Elham in Kent in July 1924. They lived in
Worthing in Sussex, where I visited and stayed
with them in the early 1960s, although I do not
remember this. She died in 1972. Her daughter
Joan remained great friends with her cousin, my
mother, until she died in 2010.
Ruth
Mortlock Cornwell
Born Oakington, Cambridgeshire on 30th April 1899
and baptised along with her brother William at St
Andrew's church Oakington on 25th August 1901.
She married John Wheeldon at St Andrew's church
Oakington on 5 Jan 1921. John was a platelayer
from Burton-on-Trent in Staffordshire (Ruth's
sister Lily lived in Staffordshire, which may be
significant). Two years later in 1923, they were
living at Colton Hall Barn Cottages, Corton near
Rugeley in Staffordshire when Ruth's younger
brother Edmund was married from that address. In
1944, Ruth's sister Lily and her husband were
living four miles away at Hamstall Ridware, and
it is possible that they were near neighbours at
this time, too. Ruth died in March 1967 at
Hastings in East Sussex.
William
Arthur James Cornwell
Born Oakington, Cambridgeshire on 28th June 1901.
and baptised along with his sister Ruth at St
Andrew's church Oakington on 25th August 1901. He
married Gladys Shepherd in the last quarter of
1927 in Bethnal Green, London. In later life he
lived in south London, where he kept a garage. I
can just remember visiting and staying with him
in the 1960s. He died in Redbridge in the last
quarter of 1974.
Edmund Stanley
Cecil Cornwell
Born Oakington, Cambridgeshire on 31st July 1903,
and baptised at St Andrew's church, Oakington on
27th September. My grandfather - see below.
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When Edmund Stanley 'Stan' Cornwell
was born, Stan's father William gave his occupation on
the birth certificate as a bricklayer's labourer, but by
1911 he is shown as a roadman for Chesterton District
Council, and this would also appear on his death
certificate 33 years later. William had adapted his
parents' surname of Cornell into Cornwell. Nevertheless,
some of Stan's siblings had their births registered under
the surname Cornell rather than Cornwell. In later years,
Edmund was always known as Stan. He
married my grandmother Winifred Ellen Reynolds in 1923. She came from the neighbouring
village of Dry Drayton, but they married in Lichfield,
Staffordshire when they were both just 19 years old. They
gave false ages to acquire the certificate, as one of
them had to be of age, that is to say 21 or over. They
were in Staffordshire because my grandmother was
pregnant, and they had run away to get married. Stan's
older sister Ruth lived at Colton on the outskirts of
Rugeley, and she arranged the marriage for them. Their
first child was born less than three months later. He had
a learning disability, and lived with his mother for the
rest of her life.
Stan and Win returned to Cambridge after the birth of
their first child, and lived firstly at Oakington with
Stan's parents and then in Castle Row near to Win's
parents. In the late 1920s they moved away, first to
Barway near Ely and then to Grunty Fen on the other side
of the river, before settling in Little Thetford.
His parents William
and Eliza were still living in Oakington, in a house in
Wheeler Street. Eliza trained and worked as a midwife,
cycling around the south Cambridgeshire villages. She
died of a cerebral hemorrhage on 16th February
1929 at the age of 63. William
outlived his wife, and died at the age of 80 on December
3rd 1944, while staying with his daughter Lily at
Hamstall Ridware near Rugeley in Staffordshire. My mother
tells a story of how, after he died, another daughter
Frances went to his cottage wanting to retrieve a
memento. Unable to get in, she smashed a window and took
a tea strainer off of the draining board. My mother knew him as
Grandpa William, and she was photographed
with him in
July 1938, when she was two and he was seventy-four.
These are the nine children of
Edmund Stanley Cornwell and Winifred Ellen Reynolds:
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Cecil
Thomas Walter Cornwell
Born Colton, Staffordshire on 29th
October 1923. Cecil had a learning disability,
and lived with his mother for the rest of her
life. After her death, he lived in a care home at
Toft, Cambridgeshire. He died in his sleep there
in February 1990.Stanley Arthur James
Cornwell
Born Oakington, Cambridgeshire in 1925, and
baptised at St Andrew's church, Oakington on 27th
September. Known to the family as Jim. This
suggests that the family were living with Stan's
parents at the time. He signed up for the Navy in
the Second World War. He was badly injured on
16th September 1942 aboard HMS Warspite. He was
just 17 years old. The battleship was taking part
in the Salerno Landings off the toe of Italy when
it was hit by a German glider bomber. This photograph shows the ratings being
addressed shortly before the battle. Jim is in
this photograph somewhere. He never recovered
from his injuries, and died in 1946 at the age of
twenty. He was buried in Little Thetford
Cemetery, and is mentioned on the Little Thetford
war memorial.
Jack
Travers Cornwell
Born 2 Castle Row, Cambridge in 1928,
and baptised in St Giles's church, Cambridge on
4th March. He was named after Jack Travers
Cornwell, a 16 year old posthumous winner of the
Victoria Cross, who at the time was one of the
great heroes of the First World War. He married
Edna Martin in Ely in 1954, and they lived at
Mepal, Cambridgeshire.
Reginald
Trevor Cornwell
Born River Bank, Barway, Cambridgeshire,
0n 28th January 1930, and baptised at St
Nicholas's church, Barway on 6th April. Known to
the family as Reggie. Married Beryl Dennis at Ely
in 1954. Two years later, their father being
dead, Reggie gave away my mother when she
married. Reggie and Beryl lived at Little
Thetford and then at Wilburton, Cambridgeshire.
They had three children, two boys and a girl.
Reggie died on 16th August 2001.
Edward
Malcolm Cornwell
Born River Bank, Barway, Cambridgeshire
1931, and baptised at St Nicholas's church,
Barway on 7th June. Known to the family as
Malcolm. Married Betty Rudderham at Ely in 1950.
They lived at Wilburton, and had five children,
four girls and a boy. Betty died in 2015, Malcolm
in August 2016.
Betty
Katherine Cornwell
Born River Bank, Barway,Cambridgeshire on 1st
December 1932, and baptised at St Nicholas's
church, Barway on 7th June 1933. Betty contracted
polio as a child, and was confined to a
wheelchair for the rest of her life. She spent
time at Manfield Hospital in Northampton, and
then after 1956 living in the home for the
physically disabled at Dorincourt, Leatherhead,
Surrey, later the Queen Elizabeth Foundation. She
died in Leatherhead in 1987.
June
Frances Cornwell
Born Red Fen Lane, Grunty Fen, Little Thetford,
Cambridgeshire in 1934. She married Keith Anthony
Palmer at St George's church, Little Thetford on
9th April 1955. They lived at Little Downham and
had two children, a boy and a girl.
Marion
Patricia Cornwell
Born Red Fen Lane, Grunty Fen, Little Thetford,
Cambridgeshire on 27th February 1936. She married
Graham Knott at St George's church, Little
Thetford on 4th August 1956. They lived at Little
Thetford and then in Cambridge, and had three
children, all boys. Marion died in Cambridge on
30th June 2016.
Albert
Paul Cornwell
Born Front Street, Little Thetford,
Cambridgeshire in 1937. Known to the family as
Sonny. He married Shirley Carter at St Mary's
church, Ely in 1957. They lived in Ely and had
two children, both boys.
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Stan was a farrier, working with
horses on farms in the Isle of Ely. During the Second
World War he was in the Cambridgeshire Regiment. He was
missing for six months before his family discovered he
was in a hospital. He is the only one of my grandparents
that I did not know - he died of a heart attack at the
age of 50, in 1953, nine years after his father died and
eight years before I was born. He is buried in Little
Thetford cemetery.
|
AT A GLANCE: DETAILS FROM
REGISTERS AND CENSUS DATA
all addresses are in
Huntingdonshire or Cambridgeshire unless
otherwise stated. |
|
|
Birthplace |
1881
census |
1891
census |
1901
census |
1911
census |
married
to |
|
(date
registered) |
age |
address |
age |
address |
age |
address |
age |
address |
date
of marriage |
Thomas
|
Swavesey, Cambs (1841)
|
39
|
High
Street, Needingworth
|
49
|
Front
Street, Needingworth
|
59
|
Front Street,
Needingworth
|
69
|
Bluntisham
Road, Needingworth
|
Thomas
married Eliza Mansfield on the 16th
January 1861 at Needingworth,
Huntingdonshire
|
Eliza
(Mansfield)
|
Needingworth, Hunts (1839)
|
40
|
High
Street, Needingworth
|
50
|
Front
Street, Needingworth
|
60
|
Front Street,
Needingworth
|
71
|
Bluntisham
Road, Needingworth
|
Eliza
married Thomas Moody Mortlock on the 16th
January 1861 at Needingworth,
Huntingdonshire
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Samuel
|
Swavesey, Cambs (1861)
|
20
|
High
Street, Needingworth
|
30
|
15
Gloucester Street, Cambridge
|
40
|
15
Gloucester Street, Cambridge
|
50
|
15
Gloucester Street, Cambridge
|
Samuel
married Mary Ellen Toyn in July 1884 at
Spilsby in Lincolnshire
|
Emma
|
Needingworth, Hunts (1862)
|
20
|
Cross
Hall, Eaton Socon, Beds
|
28
|
Mill
Cottages, Eaton Socon, Beds
|
|
Emma was dead by the time of the 1901
census
|
|
|
Emma
married Thomas Smith in the 4th quarter
of 1882, at Eaton Socon, Bedfordshire
|
Hephzibah
|
Needingworth, Hunts (1864)
|
18
|
Church
Lane, St Ives
|
26
|
15
St Pauls Road, Manningham, Bradford,
Yorks
|
39
|
8
Lovell Street, Leeds, Yorks
|
|
I have not yet found Hephzibah on the
1911 census
|
|
Eliza
|
Needingworth, Hunts (1865)
|
15
|
Alexandra
Place, St Ives
|
27
|
High
Street, Histon
|
37
|
Dry
Drayton Road, Oakington
|
47
|
Dry
Drayton Road, Oakington
|
Eliza
married William Cornwell on the 22nd
March 1885 at Histon, Cambridgeshire
|
Thomas
|
Needingworth, Hunts (1867)
|
13
|
High
Street, Needingworth
|
23
|
Front
Street, Needingworth
|
32
|
5
Victoria Street, Cambridge
|
43
|
Langham
House, High Street, Needingworth
|
Thomas
married Fanny Butcher on Christmas Eve
1891 at Needingworth, Huntingdonshire
|
Kate
|
Needingworth, Hunts (1869)
|
|
Kate was dead by the time of the 1881
census
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Kate
(Catherine)
|
Needingworth, Hunts (1871)
|
9
|
High
Street, Needingworth
|
19
|
Sheep
Market, St Ives
|
29
|
28
Latimer Road, West Ham, London
|
39
|
80
Meanley Road, Manor Park, London
|
Kate
married John Charles Payne in the second
quarter of 1917 at Romford, Essex
|
John
|
Needingworth, Hunts (1873)
|
7
|
High
Street, Needingworth
|
17
|
Front
Street, Needingworth
|
28
|
Church
Street, Needingworth
|
37
|
Church
Street, Needingworth
|
John
married Mary Webster in the 4th quarter
of 1896 at Needingworth, Huntingdonshire
|
Ann
|
Needingworth, Hunts (1874)
|
|
Ann was dead by the time of the 1881
census
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Jeanette
(Jannetta,
Jannett)
|
Needingworth, Hunts (1875)
|
5
|
High
Street, Needingworth
|
15
|
Mill
House, Hemingford Grey
|
26
|
138
Station Street East, Coventry, Warks
|
36
|
138
Station Street East, Coventry, Warks
|
Jeanette
maried John Medlock on the 10th March
1897 at Needingworth, Huntingdonshire
|
Julia
|
Needingworth, Hunts (1876)
|
4
|
High
Street, Needingworth
|
14
|
Front
Street, Needingworth
|
24
|
138
Station Street East, Coventry, Warks
|
36
|
Berners
Hall, Ongar, Essex
|
|
Ruth
|
Needingworth, Hunts (1877)
|
3
|
High
Street, Needingworth
|
13
|
Front
Street, Needingworth
|
23
|
21
Gower Street, London
|
|
Brixton
Hill, Lambeth, London
|
|
Martha
|
Needingworth, Hunts (1879)
|
1
|
High
Street, Needingworth
|
11
|
Front
Street, Needingworth
|
21
|
Front Street,
Needingworth
|
31
|
Bluntisham
Road, Needingworth
|
|
Alice
|
Needingworth, Hunts (1881)
|
3 days
|
High
Street, Needingworth
|
10
|
Front
Street, Needingworth
|
19
|
Front Street,
Needingworth
|
29
|
26-34
Wood Grange Road, Forest Gate, London
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|