Tag Archives: Ancestry

St Mary of the Angels, Batley: One-Place Study Update – 1 to 31 May 2023 Additions

This is the latest Batley St Mary’s one-place study update, looking at the posts added during May 2023. This update also contains links to all the posts in the study to date.

If you are new to to this one-place study and want to know what it is all about, click here. Otherwise read on to discover all the other posts, new and old, containing a wealth of parish, parishioner and wider local Batley history.

St Mary’s Church as seen from Batley Cemetery – photo by Jane Roberts

During May nine posts were in added, bringing the total number for the study to 245. Two others were updated.

These additions included four weekly newspaper pages for May 1917. I have accordingly updated the surname index to these During This Week newspaper pieces, so you can easily identify newspaper snippets relevant to your family.

Two new Great War Memorial biographies were added, Matthew Farrar and Willie Barber.

More men who served and survived the First World War have been identified and are included in that section, though no new biographies were added here this month. They will follow in due course.

Thomas Egan’s biography was added to those men from the parish who died in World War Two.

The final additions this month are two new school log books, covering the Mixed Department in 1914 and 1915.

Below is the full list of pages to date. I have annotated the *NEW* and *UPDATED* ones, so you can easily pick these out. Click on the link and it will take you straight to the relevant page.


Finally for this month, if you do have any information about, or photos of, parishioners from the period of the First World War please do get in touch. It does not have to be War Memorial men. It could be those who served and survived, or indeed any other men, women and children from the parish. 

I would also be interested in information about, and photos of, those parishioners who were killed in World War Two, or others from the parish who undertook any war service and survived. This can be as broad as serving in the military, or work in munitions factories, the Land Army, even taking in refugees. This is an area I’m looking to develop in the future.

I can be contacted at: pasttopresentgenealogy@btinternet.com


Postscript:
I want to say a big thank you for the donations already received to keep this website going. They really do help.

The website has always been free to use, and I want to continue this policy in the future. However, it does cost me money to operate – from undertaking the research to website hosting costs. In the current difficult economic climate I do have to regularly consider if I can afford to continue running it as a free resource. 

If you have enjoyed reading the various pieces, and would like to make a donation towards keeping the website up and running in its current open access format, it would be very much appreciated. 

Please click 👉🏻here👈🏻 to be taken to the PayPal donation link. By making a donation you will be helping to keep the website online and freely available for all. 

Thank you.


1. About my St Mary of the Angels Catholic Church War Memorial One-Place Study;

Batley St Mary’s Population, Health, Mortality and Fertility Information and Comparisons
2.  1914: The Health of Batley School Children Generally, with a Particular Focus on St Mary’s School Children

Batley Statistics and Descriptions – Population, Health, Mortality, Fertility etc.
3. 1914: Borough of Batley – Town Information from the Annual Report of the Medical Officer of Health.
4. Batley and the 1921 Census 
5. Batley Population Statistics 1801-1939

Biographies: Men Associated with St Mary’s Who Died but Who Are Not on the Memorial 
6. Thomas Gannon 
7. Reginald Roberts 
8. William Frederick Townsend

Biographies: The War Memorial Men
9. Edward Barber
10. William Barber (Memorial name spelling) *NEW*
11. Herbert Booth
12. Edmund Battye
13. Dominick (aka George) Brannan
14. Michael Brannan
15. John Brooks
16. Michael Cafferty
17. Patrick Cafferty
18. Lawrence Carney
19. Martin Carney
20. Thomas William Chappell
21. Thomas Curley
22. Peter Doherty
23. Thomas Donlan
24. Mathew Farrer (Memorial name spelling) *NEW*
25. Thomas Finneran
26. Michael Flynn
27. Thomas Foley D.C.M.
28. Martin Gallagher
29. James Garner
30. Thomas Gavaghan
31. Henry Groark
32. James Groark
33. Michael Groark (also known as Rourke)
34. James Griffin
35. Patrick Hopkins
36. Michael Horan
William McManus – See William Townsend below
37. John Leech
38. Michael Lydon
39. Thomas McNamara
40. Patrick Naifsey
41. Austin Nolan
42. Robert Randerson
43. James Rush
44. Moses Stubley
45. William Townsend, also known as McManus
46. James Trainor
47. Richard Carroll Walsh
48. Arthur William Bayldon Woodhead

Biographies: Those who Served and Survived (this includes a list of those identified to date and who will later have dedicated biographical pages) *UPDATED*
49. Patrick Cassidy
50. James Delaney
51. Thomas Donlan (senior)
52. Thomas Gannon
53. Michael Rush

Burials, Cemeteries, Headstones and MIs
54. Cemetery and Memorial Details
55. War Memorial Chronology of Deaths

During This Week
56. During This Week Newspaper Index *UPDATED*
57. 1914, 8 August – Batley News
58. 1914, 15 August – Batley News
59. 1914, 22 August – Batley News
60. 1914, 29 August – Batley News
61. 1914, 5 September – Batley News
62. 1914, 12 September – Batley News
63. 1914, 19 September – Batley News
64. 1914, 26 September – Batley News
65. 1914, 3 October – Batley News
66. 1914, 10 October – Batley News
67. 1914, 17 October – Batley News
68. 1914, 24 October – Batley News
69. 1914, 31 October – Batley News
79. 1914, 7 November – Batley News
71. 1914, 14 November – Batley News
72. 1914, 21 November – Batley News
73. 1914, 28 November – Batley News
74. 1914, 5 December – Batley News
75. 1914, 12 December – Batley News
76. 1914, 19 December – Batley News
77. 1914, 24 December – Batley News
78. 1915, 2 January – Batley News
79. 1915, 9 January – Batley News
80. 1915, 16 January – Batley News
81. 1915, 23 January – Batley News
82. 1915, 30 January – Batley News
83. 1915, 6 February – Batley News
84. 1915, 13 February – Batley News
85. 1915, 20 February – Batley News
86. 1915, 27 February – Batley News
87. 1915, 6 March – Batley News
88. 1915, 13 March – Batley News
89. 1915, 20 March – Batley News
90. 1915, 27 March – Batley News
91. 1915, 3 April – Batley News
92. 1915, 10 April – Batley News
93. 1915, 17 April – Batley News
94. 1915, 24 April – Batley News
95. 1915, 1 May – Batley News
96. 1915, 8 May – Batley News
97. 1915, 15 May – Batley News
98. 1915, 22 May – Batley News
99. 1915, 29 May – Batley News
100. 1915, 5 June – Batley News
101. 1915, 12 June – Batley News
102. 1915, 19 June – Batley News
103. 1915, 26 June – Batley News
104. 1915, 3 July – Batley News
105. 1915, 10 July – Batley News
106. 1915, 17 July – Batley News
107. 1915, 24 July – Batley News
108. 1915, 31 July – Batley News
109. 1915, 7 August – Batley News
110. 1915, 14 August – Batley News
111. 1915, 21 August – Batley News
112. 1915, 28 August – Batley News
113. 1915, 4 September – Batley News
114. 1915, 11 September – Batley News
115. 1915, 18 September – Batley News
116. 1915, 25 September – Batley News
117. 1915, 2 October – Batley News
118. 1915, 9 October – Batley News
119. 1915, 16 October – Batley News
120. 1915, 23 October – Batley News
121. 1915, 30 October – Batley News
122. 1915, 6 November – Batley News
123. 1915, 13 November – Batley News
124. 1915, 20 November – Batley News
125. 1915, 27 November – Batley News
126. 1915, 4 December – Batley News
127. 1915, 11 December – Batley News
128. 1915, 18 December – Batley News
129. 1915, 23 December – Batley News
130. 1916, 1 January – Batley News
131. 1916, 8 January – Batley News
132. 1916, 15 January – Batley News
133. 1916, 22 January – Batley News
134. 1916, 29 January – Batley News
135. 1916, 5 February – Batley News
136. 1916, 12 February – Batley News
137. 1916, 19 February – Batley News
138. 1916, 26 February – Batley News
139. 1916, 4 March – Batley News
140. 1916, 11 March – Batley News
141. 1916, 18 March – Batley News
142. 1916, 25 March – Batley News
143. 1916, 1 April – Batley News
144. 1916, 8 April – Batley News
145. 1916, 15 April – Batley News
146. 1916, 22 April – Batley News
147. 1916, 29 April – Batley News
148. 1916, 6 May – Batley News
149. 1916, 13 May – Batley News
150. 1916, 20 May – Batley News
151. 1916, 27 May – Batley News
152. 1916, 3 June – Batley News
153. 1916, 10 June – Batley News
154. 1916, 17 June – Batley News
155. 1916, 24 June – Batley News
156. 1916, 1 July – Batley News
157. 1916, 8 July – Batley News
158. 1916, 15 July – Batley News
159. 1916, 22 July – Batley News
160. 1916, 29 July – Batley News
161. 1916, 5 August – Batley News
162. 1916, 12 August – Batley News
163. 1916, 19 August – Batley News
164. 1916, 26 August – Batley News
165. 1916, 2 September – Batley News
166. 1916, 9 September – Batley News
167. 1916, 16 September – Batley News
168. 1916, 23 September – Batley News
169. 1916, 30 September – Batley News
170. 1916, 7 October – Batley News
171. 1916, 14 October – Batley News
172. 1916, 21 October – Batley News
173. 1916, 28 October – Batley News
174. 1916, 4 November – Batley News
175. 1916, 11 November – Batley News
176. 1916, 18 November – Batley News
177. 1916, 25 November – Batley News
178. 1916, 2 December – Batley News
179. 1916, 9 December – Batley News
180. 1916, 16 December – Batley News
181. 1916, 23 December – Batley News
182. 1916, 30 December – Batley News
183. 1917, 6 January – Batley News
184. 1917, 13 January – Batley News
185. 1917, 20 January – Batley News
186. 1917, 27 January – Batley News
187. 1917, 3 February – Batley News
188. 1917, 10 February – Batley News
189. 1917, 17 February – Batley News
190. 1917, 24 February – Batley News
191. 1917, 3 March – Batley News
192. 1917, 10 March – Batley News
193. 1917, 17 March – Batley News
194. 1917, 24 March – Batley News
195. 1917, 31 March – Batley News
196. 1917, 7 April – Batley News
197. 1917, 14 April – Batley News
198. 1917, 21 April – Batley News
199. 1917, 28 April – Batley News
200. 1917, 5 May – Batley News *NEW*
201. 1917, 12 May – Batley News *NEW*
202. 1917, 19 May – Batley News *NEW*
203. 1917, 26 May – Batley News *NEW*

Miscellany of Information
204. A Colliery Accident with Tragic Consequences
205. A Grave Disturbance in Batley
206. A “Peace” of Batley History
207. A St Mary’s School Sensation
208. Hot-Cross Buns and the Yorkshire Tea-Cake Dilemma. Plus A Suggested Meal Planner for Batley Families in 1917 *NEW*
209. St Mary of the Angels Catholic Church – 1929 Consecration Service
210. The Controversial Role Played by St Mary’s Schoolchildren in the 1907 Batley Pageant
211. The Great War: A Brief Overview of What Led Britain into the War
212. Willie and Edward Barber – Poems

Occupations and Employment Information
213. Occupations: Colliery Byeworker/Byeworkman/Byworker/Bye-Worker/By-Worker
214. Occupations: Confidential Clerk
215. Occupations: Lamp Cleaner
216. Occupations: Limelight Operator
217. Occupations: Mason’s Labourer
218. Occupations: Office Boy/Girl
219. Occupations: Piecer/Piecener
220. Occupations: Rag Grinder
221. Occupations: Willeyer

The Families
222. A Death in the Church

School Log Books
223. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1913
224. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1914
225. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1915
226. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1916
227. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1917
228. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1918
229. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1919
230. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1920
231. Infant School – Log Book, 1913
232. Infant School – Log Book, 1914
233. Infant School – Log Book, 1915
234. Infant School – Log Book, 1916
235. Infant School – Log Book, 1917
236. Infant School – Log Book, 1918
237. Infant School – Log Book, 1919
238. Infant School – Log Book, 1920
239. Mixed Department – Log Book, 1913
240. Mixed Department – Log Book, 1914 *NEW*
241. Mixed Department – Log Book, 1915 *NEW*

World War Two
242. World War Two Chronology of Deaths
243. Thomas Egan *NEW*
244. Michael Flatley
245. William Smith

St Mary of the Angels, Batley: One-Place Study Update – 1 to 30 April 2023 Additions

This is the latest Batley St Mary’s one-place study update, looking at the posts added during April 2023. This update also contains links to all the posts in the study to date.

If you are new to to this one-place study and want to know what it is all about, click here. Otherwise read on to discover all the other posts, new and old, containing a wealth of parish, parishioner and wider local Batley history.

St Mary’s Church as seen from Batley Cemetery – photo by Jane Roberts

April 2023 saw a St Mary’s one-place study milestone – the 38th War Memorial biography was published, marking the halfway point for these. It was one of eight posts added in April, bringing the total number for the study to 236. Three others were updated.

These additions included four weekly newspaper pages for April 1917. I have accordingly updated the surname index to these During This Week newspaper pieces, so you can easily identify newspaper snippets relevant to your family.

Two new War Memorial biographies were added, John Leech and Michael Lydon. The latter was the 38th War Memorial biography. One further biography – that of John Brooks – was updated with some post-war information family information following the death of his mother in 1918.

More men who served and survived have been identified and are included in that section, though no new biographies were added here this month. They will follow in due course.

Reflecting Easter, a new post was added to the Miscellany of Information section. It deals with the food situation in 1917, including the tea-cake debate, and a suggested weekly meal menus for the family at a time of food shortages. It also covers the hot-cross bun crisis which was a concern for many in the run up to Easter.

The final addition this month is a new school log book, covering the Mixed Department in 1913.

Below is the full list of pages to date. I have annotated the *NEW* and *UPDATED* ones, so you can easily pick these out. Click on the link and it will take you straight to the relevant page.


Finally for this month, if you do have any information about, or photos of, parishioners from the period of the First World War please do get in touch. It does not have to be War Memorial men. It could be those who served and survived, or indeed any other men, women and children from the parish.

I would also be interested in information about, and photos of, those parishioners who were killed in World War Two, or others from the parish who undertook any war service and survived. This can be as broad as serving in the military, or work in munitions factories, the Land Army, even taking in refugees. This is an area I’m looking to develop in the future.

I can be contacted at: pasttopresentgenealogy@btinternet.com


Postscript:
Finally a big thank you for the donations already received to keep this website going. They really do help.

The website has always been free to use, and I want to continue this policy in the future. However, it does cost me money to operate – from undertaking the research to website hosting costs. In the current difficult economic climate I do have to regularly consider if I can afford to continue running it as a free resource.

If you have enjoyed reading the various pieces, and would like to make a donation towards keeping the website up and running in its current open access format, it would be very much appreciated. 

Please click 👉🏻here👈🏻 to be taken to the PayPal donation link. By making a donation you will be helping to keep the website online and freely available for all. 

Thank you.


1. About my St Mary of the Angels Catholic Church War Memorial One-Place Study;

Batley St Mary’s Population, Health, Mortality and Fertility Information and Comparisons
2.  1914: The Health of Batley School Children Generally, with a Particular Focus on St Mary’s School Children

Batley Statistics and Descriptions – Population, Health, Mortality, Fertility etc.
3. 1914: Borough of Batley – Town Information from the Annual Report of the Medical Officer of Health.
4. Batley and the 1921 Census 
5. Batley Population Statistics 1801-1939

Biographies: Men Associated with St Mary’s Who Died but Who Are Not on the Memorial
6. Thomas Gannon
7. Reginald Roberts
8. William Frederick Townsend

Biographies: The War Memorial Men
9. Edward Barber
10. Herbert Booth
11. Edmund Battye
12. Dominick (aka George) Brannan
13. Michael Brannan
14. John Brooks *UPDATED*
15. Michael Cafferty
16. Patrick Cafferty
17. Lawrence Carney
18. Martin Carney
19. Thomas William Chappell
20. Thomas Curley
21. Peter Doherty
22. Thomas Donlan
23. Thomas Finneran
24. Michael Flynn
25. Thomas Foley D.C.M.
26. Martin Gallagher
27. James Garner
28. Thomas Gavaghan
29. Henry Groark
30. James Groark
31. Michael Groark (also known as Rourke)
32. James Griffin
33. Patrick Hopkins
34. Michael Horan
William McManus – See William Townsend below
35. John Leech *NEW*
36. Michael Lydon *NEW*
37. Thomas McNamara
38. Patrick Naifsey
39. Austin Nolan
40. Robert Randerson
41. James Rush
42. Moses Stubley
43. William Townsend, also known as McManus
44. James Trainor
45. Richard Carroll Walsh
46. Arthur William Bayldon Woodhead

Biographies: Those who Served and Survived (this includes a list of those identified to date and who will later have dedicated biographical pages) *UPDATED*
47. Patrick Cassidy
48. James Delaney
49. Thomas Donlan (senior)
50. Thomas Gannon
51. Michael Rush

Burials, Cemeteries, Headstones and MIs
52. Cemetery and Memorial Details
53. War Memorial Chronology of Deaths

During This Week
54. During This Week Newspaper Index *UPDATED*
55. 1914, 8 August – Batley News
56. 1914, 15 August – Batley News
57. 1914, 22 August – Batley News
58. 1914, 29 August – Batley News
59. 1914, 5 September – Batley News
60. 1914, 12 September – Batley News
61. 1914, 19 September – Batley News
62. 1914, 26 September – Batley News
63. 1914, 3 October – Batley News
64. 1914, 10 October – Batley News
65. 1914, 17 October – Batley News
66. 1914, 24 October – Batley News
67. 1914, 31 October – Batley News
68. 1914, 7 November – Batley News
69. 1914, 14 November – Batley News
70. 1914, 21 November – Batley News
71. 1914, 28 November – Batley News
72. 1914, 5 December – Batley News
73. 1914, 12 December – Batley News
74. 1914, 19 December – Batley News
75. 1914, 24 December – Batley News
76. 1915, 2 January – Batley News
77. 1915, 9 January – Batley News
78. 1915, 16 January – Batley News
79. 1915, 23 January – Batley News
80. 1915, 30 January – Batley News
81 1915, 6 February – Batley News
82. 1915, 13 February – Batley News
83. 1915, 20 February – Batley News
84. 1915, 27 February – Batley News
85. 1915, 6 March – Batley News
86. 1915, 13 March – Batley News
87. 1915, 20 March – Batley News
88. 1915, 27 March – Batley News
89. 1915, 3 April – Batley News
90. 1915, 10 April – Batley News
91. 1915, 17 April – Batley News
92. 1915, 24 April – Batley News
93. 1915, 1 May – Batley News
94. 1915, 8 May – Batley News
95. 1915, 15 May – Batley News
96. 1915, 22 May – Batley News
97. 1915, 29 May – Batley News
98. 1915, 5 June – Batley News
99. 1915, 12 June – Batley News
100. 1915, 19 June – Batley News
101. 1915, 26 June – Batley News
102. 1915, 3 July – Batley News
103. 1915, 10 July – Batley News
104. 1915, 17 July – Batley News
105. 1915, 24 July – Batley News
106. 1915, 31 July – Batley News
107. 1915, 7 August – Batley News
108. 1915, 14 August – Batley News
109. 1915, 21 August – Batley News
110. 1915, 28 August – Batley News
111. 1915, 4 September – Batley News
112. 1915, 11 September – Batley News
113. 1915, 18 September – Batley News
114. 1915, 25 September – Batley News
115. 1915, 2 October – Batley News
116. 1915, 9 October – Batley News
117. 1915, 16 October – Batley News
118. 1915, 23 October – Batley News
119. 1915, 30 October – Batley News
120. 1915, 6 November – Batley News
121. 1915, 13 November – Batley News
122. 1915, 20 November – Batley News
123. 1915, 27 November – Batley News
124. 1915, 4 December – Batley News
125. 1915, 11 December – Batley News
126. 1915, 18 December – Batley News
127. 1915, 23 December – Batley News
128. 1916, 1 January – Batley News
129. 1916, 8 January – Batley News
130. 1916, 15 January – Batley News
131. 1916, 22 January – Batley News
132. 1916, 29 January – Batley News
133. 1916, 5 February – Batley News
134. 1916, 12 February – Batley News
135. 1916, 19 February – Batley News
136. 1916, 26 February – Batley News
137. 1916, 4 March – Batley News
138. 1916, 11 March – Batley News
139. 1916, 18 March – Batley News
140. 1916, 25 March – Batley News
141. 1916, 1 April – Batley News
142. 1916, 8 April – Batley News
143. 1916, 15 April – Batley News
144. 1916, 22 April – Batley News
145. 1916, 29 April – Batley News
146. 1916, 6 May – Batley News
147. 1916, 13 May – Batley News
148. 1916, 20 May – Batley News
149. 1916, 27 May – Batley News
150. 1916, 3 June – Batley News
151. 1916, 10 June – Batley News
152. 1916, 17 June – Batley News
153. 1916, 24 June – Batley News
154. 1916, 1 July – Batley News
155. 1916, 8 July – Batley News
156. 1916, 15 July – Batley News
157. 1916, 22 July – Batley News
158. 1916, 29 July – Batley News
159. 1916, 5 August – Batley News
160. 1916, 12 August – Batley News
161. 1916, 19 August – Batley News
162. 1916, 26 August – Batley News
163. 1916, 2 September – Batley News
164. 1916, 9 September – Batley News
165. 1916, 16 September – Batley News
166. 1916, 23 September – Batley News
167. 1916, 30 September – Batley News
168. 1916, 7 October – Batley News
169. 1916, 14 October – Batley News
170. 1916, 21 October – Batley News
171. 1916, 28 October – Batley News
172. 1916, 4 November – Batley News
173. 1916, 11 November – Batley News
174. 1916, 18 November – Batley News
175. 1916, 25 November – Batley News
176. 1916, 2 December – Batley News
177. 1916, 9 December – Batley News
178. 1916, 16 December – Batley News
179. 1916, 23 December – Batley News
180. 1916, 30 December – Batley News
181. 1917, 6 January – Batley News
182. 1917, 13 January – Batley News
183. 1917, 20 January – Batley News
184. 1917, 27 January – Batley News
185. 1917, 3 February – Batley News
186. 1917, 10 February – Batley News
187. 1917, 17 February – Batley News
188. 1917, 24 February – Batley News
189. 1917, 3 March – Batley News
190. 1917, 10 March – Batley News
191. 1917, 17 March – Batley News
192. 1917, 24 March – Batley News
193. 1917, 31 March – Batley News
194. 1917, 7 April – Batley News *NEW*
195. 1917, 14 April – Batley News *NEW*
196. 1917, 21 April – Batley News *NEW*
197. 1917, 28 April – Batley News *NEW*

Miscellany of Information
198. A Colliery Accident with Tragic Consequences
199. A Grave Disturbance in Batley
200. A “Peace” of Batley History
201. A St Mary’s School Sensation
202. Hot-Cross Buns and the Yorkshire Tea-Cake Dilemma. Plus A Suggested Meal Planner for Batley Families in 1917 *NEW*
203. St Mary of the Angels Catholic Church – 1929 Consecration Service
203. The Controversial Role Played by St Mary’s Schoolchildren in the 1907 Batley Pageant
205. The Great War: A Brief Overview of What Led Britain into the War
206. Willie and Edward Barber – Poems

Occupations and Employment Information
207. Occupations: Colliery Byeworker/Byeworkman/Byworker/Bye-Worker/By-Worker
208. Occupations: Confidential Clerk
209. Occupations: Lamp Cleaner
210. Occupations: Limelight Operator
211. Occupations: Mason’s Labourer
212. Occupations: Office Boy/Girl
213. Occupations: Piecer/Piecener
214. Occupations: Rag Grinder
215. Occupations: Willeyer

The Families
216. A Death in the Church

School Log Books
217. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1913
218. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1914
219. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1915
220. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1916
221. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1917
222. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1918
223. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1919
224. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1920
225. Infant School – Log Book, 1913
226. Infant School – Log Book, 1914
227. Infant School – Log Book, 1915
228. Infant School – Log Book, 1916
229. Infant School – Log Book, 1917
230. Infant School – Log Book, 1918
231. Infant School – Log Book, 1919
232. Infant School – Log Book, 1920
233. Mixed Department – Log Book, 1913 *NEW*

World War Two
234. World War Two Chronology of Deaths
235. Michael Flatley
236. William Smith

St Mary of the Angels, Batley: One-Place Study Update – 1 to 31 March 2023 Additions

This is the latest Batley St Mary’s one-place study update, looking at the posts added in March 2023. The update also contains links to all the posts in the study to date.

If you are new to to this one-place study and want to know what it is all about, click here. Otherwise read on to discover all the other posts, new and old, containing a wealth of parish, parishioner and wider local Batley history.

St Mary’s Church – photo by Jane Roberts

March 2023 has been a busy month. It saw the addition of 10 new posts, bringing the total number for the study to 228. Seven others were updated.

The additions included five weekly newspaper pages for March 1917. I have accordingly updated the surname index to these During This Week newspaper pieces, so you can easily identify newspaper snippets relevant to your family.

This month there is one new Memorial biography, James Groark. More men who served and survived have been identified and are included in that section, though no new biographies were added here this month. They will follow in due course. And thanks to information received, a new man associated with the parish who lost his life in the War has been identified, Martin Flatley. He has therefore been added to the section covering Men Associated with St Mary’s Who Died but Who Are Not on the War Memorial. I very much appreciate it when people contact me with information about St Mary’s parishioners to include in this one-place study.

A new occupation post has been added this month – a colliery bye-worker (and other variants by which the job was known).

Following on from this, a new post has been added to the Miscellany of Information section, dealing with a coal mining accident with tragic consequences which involved four parishioners. With thanks to Joanne Harrison for allowing me to use a family photo for this piece.

If anyone does have any photos which could be included in this one-place study, they would be gratefully received.

The last couple of additions this month are two new school log books have been added for the Infants’ school, covering 1919 and 1920.

Below is the full list of pages to date. I have annotated the *NEW* and *UPDATED* ones, so you can easily pick these out. Click on the link and it will take you straight to the relevant page.


Finally for this month, if you do have any information about, or photos of, parishioners from the period of the First World War, including any men who served (be it those who died or those who survived), or any parishioners who died in World War Two, it is always gratefully received.

I can be contacted at: pasttopresentgenealogy@btinternet.com


Postscript:
Finally a big thank you for the donations already received to keep this website going. They really do help.

The website has always been free to use, but it does cost me money to operate. In the current difficult economic climate I do have to consider if I can continue to afford to keep running it as a free resource.

If you have enjoyed reading the various pieces, and would like to make a donation towards keeping the website up and running in its current open access format, it would be very much appreciated. 

Please click 👉🏻here👈🏻 to be taken to the PayPal donation link. By making a donation you will be helping to keep the website online and freely available for all.

Thank you.


1. About my St Mary of the Angels Catholic Church War Memorial One-Place Study;

Batley St Mary’s Population, Health, Mortality and Fertility Information and Comparisons
2.  1914: The Health of Batley School Children Generally, with a Particular Focus on St Mary’s School Children

Batley Statistics and Descriptions – Population, Health, Mortality, Fertility etc.
3. 1914: Borough of Batley – Town Information from the Annual Report of the Medical Officer of Health.
4. Batley and the 1921 Census 
5. Batley Population Statistics 1801-1939

Biographies: Men Associated with St Mary’s Who Died but Who Are Not on the Memorial *UPDATED*
6. Thomas Gannon
7. Reginald Roberts
8. William Frederick Townsend

Biographies: The War Memorial Men
9. Edward Barber
10. Herbert Booth
11. Edmund Battye
12. Dominick (aka George) Brannan
13. Michael Brannan
14. John Brooks
15. Michael Cafferty
16. Patrick Cafferty
17. Lawrence Carney
18. Martin Carney *UPDATED*
19. Thomas William Chappell
20. Thomas Curley
21. Peter Doherty
22. Thomas Donlan
23. Thomas Finneran *UPDATED*
24. Michael Flynn
25. Thomas Foley D.C.M.
26. Martin Gallagher
27. James Garner
28. Thomas Gavaghan
29. Henry Groark
30. James Groark *NEW*
31. Michael Groark (also known as Rourke)
32. James Griffin
33. Patrick Hopkins
34. Michael Horan
William McManus – See William Townsend below
35. Thomas McNamara
36. Patrick Naifsey
37. Austin Nolan
38. Robert Randerson
39. James Rush
40. Moses Stubley
41. William Townsend, also known as McManus
42. James Trainor
43. Richard Carroll Walsh
44. Arthur William Bayldon Woodhead

Biographies: Those who Served and Survived (this includes a list of those identified to date and who will later have dedicated biographical pages) *UPDATED*
45. Patrick Cassidy
46. James Delaney
47. Thomas Donlan (senior)
48. Thomas Gannon
49. Michael Rush

Burials, Cemeteries, Headstones and MIs
50. Cemetery and Memorial Details *UPDATED*
51. War Memorial Chronology of Deaths *UPDATED*

During This Week
52. During This Week Newspaper Index *UPDATED*
53. 1914, 8 August – Batley News
54. 1914, 15 August – Batley News
55. 1914, 22 August – Batley News
56. 1914, 29 August – Batley News
57. 1914, 5 September – Batley News
58. 1914, 12 September – Batley News
59. 1914, 19 September – Batley News
60. 1914, 26 September – Batley News
61. 1914, 3 October – Batley News
62. 1914, 10 October – Batley News
63. 1914, 17 October – Batley News
64. 1914, 24 October – Batley News
65. 1914, 31 October – Batley News
66. 1914, 7 November – Batley News
67. 1914, 14 November – Batley News
68. 1914, 21 November – Batley News
69. 1914, 28 November – Batley News
70. 1914, 5 December – Batley News
71. 1914, 12 December – Batley News
72. 1914, 19 December – Batley News
73. 1914, 24 December – Batley News
74. 1915, 2 January – Batley News
75. 1915, 9 January – Batley News
76. 1915, 16 January – Batley News
77. 1915, 23 January – Batley News
78. 1915, 30 January – Batley News
79 1915, 6 February – Batley News
80. 1915, 13 February – Batley News
81. 1915, 20 February – Batley News
82. 1915, 27 February – Batley News
83. 1915, 6 March – Batley News
84. 1915, 13 March – Batley News
85. 1915, 20 March – Batley News
86. 1915, 27 March – Batley News
87. 1915, 3 April – Batley News
88. 1915, 10 April – Batley News
89. 1915, 17 April – Batley News
90. 1915, 24 April – Batley News
91. 1915, 1 May – Batley News
92. 1915, 8 May – Batley News
93. 1915, 15 May – Batley News
94. 1915, 22 May – Batley News
95. 1915, 29 May – Batley News
96. 1915, 5 June – Batley News
97. 1915, 12 June – Batley News
98. 1915, 19 June – Batley News
99. 1915, 26 June – Batley News
100. 1915, 3 July – Batley News
101. 1915, 10 July – Batley News
102. 1915, 17 July – Batley News
103. 1915, 24 July – Batley News
104. 1915, 31 July – Batley News
105. 1915, 7 August – Batley News
106. 1915, 14 August – Batley News
107. 1915, 21 August – Batley News
108. 1915, 28 August – Batley News
109. 1915, 4 September – Batley News
110. 1915, 11 September – Batley News
111. 1915, 18 September – Batley News
112. 1915, 25 September – Batley News
113. 1915, 2 October – Batley News
114. 1915, 9 October – Batley News
115. 1915, 16 October – Batley News
116. 1915, 23 October – Batley News
117. 1915, 30 October – Batley News
118. 1915, 6 November – Batley News
119. 1915, 13 November – Batley News
120. 1915, 20 November – Batley News
121. 1915, 27 November – Batley News
122. 1915, 4 December – Batley News
123. 1915, 11 December – Batley News
124. 1915, 18 December – Batley News
125. 1915, 23 December – Batley News
126. 1916, 1 January – Batley News
127. 1916, 8 January – Batley News
128. 1916, 15 January – Batley News
129. 1916, 22 January – Batley News
130. 1916, 29 January – Batley News
131. 1916, 5 February – Batley News
132. 1916, 12 February – Batley News
133. 1916, 19 February – Batley News
134. 1916, 26 February – Batley News
135. 1916, 4 March – Batley News
136. 1916, 11 March – Batley News
137. 1916, 18 March – Batley News
138. 1916, 25 March – Batley News
139. 1916, 1 April – Batley News
140. 1916, 8 April – Batley News
141. 1916, 15 April – Batley News
142. 1916, 22 April – Batley News
143. 1916, 29 April – Batley News
144. 1916, 6 May – Batley News
145. 1916, 13 May – Batley News
146. 1916, 20 May – Batley News
147. 1916, 27 May – Batley News
148. 1916, 3 June – Batley News
149. 1916, 10 June – Batley News
150. 1916, 17 June – Batley News
151. 1916, 24 June – Batley News
152. 1916, 1 July – Batley News
153. 1916, 8 July – Batley News
154. 1916, 15 July – Batley News
155. 1916, 22 July – Batley News
156. 1916, 29 July – Batley News
157. 1916, 5 August – Batley News
158. 1916, 12 August – Batley News
159. 1916, 19 August – Batley News
160. 1916, 26 August – Batley News
161. 1916, 2 September – Batley News
162. 1916, 9 September – Batley News
163. 1916, 16 September – Batley News
164. 1916, 23 September – Batley News
165. 1916, 30 September – Batley News
166. 1916, 7 October – Batley News
167. 1916, 14 October – Batley News
168. 1916, 21 October – Batley News
169. 1916, 28 October – Batley News
170. 1916, 4 November – Batley News
171. 1916, 11 November – Batley News
172. 1916, 18 November – Batley News
173. 1916, 25 November – Batley News
174. 1916, 2 December – Batley News
175. 1916, 9 December – Batley News
176. 1916, 16 December – Batley News
177. 1916, 23 December – Batley News
178. 1916, 30 December – Batley News
179. 1917, 6 January – Batley News
180. 1917, 13 January – Batley News
181. 1917, 20 January – Batley News
182. 1917, 27 January – Batley News
183. 1917, 3 February – Batley News
184. 1917, 10 February – Batley News
185. 1917, 17 February – Batley News
186. 1917, 24 February – Batley News
187. 1917, 3 March – Batley News *NEW*
188. 1917, 10 March – Batley News *NEW*
189. 1917, 17 March – Batley News *NEW*
190. 1917, 24 March – Batley News *NEW*
191. 1917, 31 March – Batley News *NEW*

Miscellany of Information
192. A Colliery Accident with Tragic Consequences *NEW*
193. A Grave Disturbance in Batley
194. A “Peace” of Batley History
195. A St Mary’s School Sensation
196. St Mary of the Angels Catholic Church – 1929 Consecration Service
197. The Controversial Role Played by St Mary’s Schoolchildren in the 1907 Batley Pageant
198. The Great War: A Brief Overview of What Led Britain into the War
199. Willie and Edward Barber – Poems

Occupations and Employment Information
200. Occupations: Colliery Byeworker/Byeworkman/Byworker/Bye-Worker/By-Worker *NEW*
201. Occupations: Confidential Clerk
202. Occupations: Lamp Cleaner
203. Occupations: Limelight Operator
204. Occupations: Mason’s Labourer
205. Occupations: Office Boy/Girl
206. Occupations: Piecer/Piecener
207. Occupations: Rag Grinder
208. Occupations: Willeyer

The Families
209. A Death in the Church

School Log Books
210. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1913
211. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1914
212. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1915
213. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1916
214. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1917
215. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1918
216. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1919
217. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1920
218. Infant School – Log Book, 1913
219. Infant School – Log Book, 1914
220. Infant School – Log Book, 1915
221. Infant School – Log Book, 1916
222. Infant School – Log Book, 1917
223. Infant School – Log Book, 1918
224. Infant School – Log Book, 1919 *NEW*
225. Infant School – Log Book, 1920 *NEW*

World War Two
226. World War Two Chronology of Deaths
227. Michael Flatley
228. William Smith


St Mary of the Angels, Batley: One-Place Study Update – 1 to 28 February 2023 Additions

This is the latest Batley St Mary’s one-place study update, looking at the posts added in February 2023. The update also contains links to all the posts in the study to date.

If you are new to to this one-place study and want to know what it is all about, click here. Otherwise read on to discover all the other posts, new and old, containing a wealth of parish, parishioner and wider local Batley history.

St Mary’s Church – photo by Jane Roberts

February 2023 saw the addition of six new posts, bringing the total number for the study to 218. Two others were updated.

The additions included four weekly newspaper pages for February 1917. I have accordingly updated the surname index to these During This Week newspaper pieces, so you can easily identify newspaper snippets relevant to your family.

Unfortunately, because I have been in hospital throughout most of February, there have been no new Memorial biographies. And although more men who served and survived have been identified and that page includes these new names, no new biographies were added here this month either.

The posts which were added this month are a new occupation post – that of mason’s labourer. And the 1918 Infants’ School Log Book.

Below is the full list of pages to date. I have annotated the *NEW* and *UPDATED* ones, so you can easily pick these out. Click on the link and it will take you straight to the relevant page.


1. About my St Mary of the Angels Catholic Church War Memorial One-Place Study;

Batley St Mary’s Population, Health, Mortality and Fertility Information and Comparisons
2.  1914: The Health of Batley School Children Generally, with a Particular Focus on St Mary’s School Children

Batley Statistics and Descriptions – Population, Health, Mortality, Fertility etc.
3. 1914: Borough of Batley – Town Information from the Annual Report of the Medical Officer of Health.
4. Batley and the 1921 Census
5. Batley Population Statistics 1801-1939

Biographies: Men Associated with St Mary’s Who Died but Who Are Not on the Memorial
6. Thomas Gannon
7. Reginald Roberts
8. William Frederick Townsend

Biographies: The War Memorial Men
9. Edward Barber
10. Herbert Booth
11. Edmund Battye
12. Dominick (aka George) Brannan
13. Michael Brannan
14. John Brooks
15. Michael Cafferty
16. Patrick Cafferty
17. Lawrence Carney
18. Martin Carney
19. Thomas William Chappell
20. Thomas Curley
21. Peter Doherty
22. Thomas Donlan
23. Thomas Finneran
24. Michael Flynn
25. Thomas Foley D.C.M.
26. Martin Gallagher
27. James Garner
28. Thomas Gavaghan
29. Henry Groark
30. Michael Groark (also known as Rourke)
31. James Griffin
32. Patrick Hopkins
33. Michael Horan
William McManus – See William Townsend below
34. Thomas McNamara
35. Patrick Naifsey
36. Austin Nolan
37. Robert Randerson
38. James Rush
39. Moses Stubley
40. William Townsend, also known as McManus
41. James Trainor
42. Richard Carroll Walsh
43. Arthur William Bayldon Woodhead

Biographies: Those who Served and Survived (this includes a list of those identified to date and who will later have dedicated biographical pages) *UPDATED*
44. Patrick Cassidy 
45. James Delaney
46. Thomas Donlan (senior) 
47. Thomas Gannon 
48. Michael Rush

Burials, Cemeteries, Headstones and MIs
49. Cemetery and Memorial Details 
50. War Memorial Chronology of Deaths

During This Week
51. During This Week Newspaper Index *UPDATED*
52. 1914, 8 August – Batley News
53. 1914, 15 August – Batley News
54. 1914, 22 August – Batley News
55. 1914, 29 August – Batley News
56. 1914, 5 September – Batley News
57. 1914, 12 September – Batley News
58. 1914, 19 September – Batley News
59. 1914, 26 September – Batley News
60. 1914, 3 October – Batley News
61. 1914, 10 October – Batley News
62. 1914, 17 October – Batley News
63. 1914, 24 October – Batley News
64. 1914, 31 October – Batley News
65. 1914, 7 November – Batley News
66. 1914, 14 November – Batley News
67. 1914, 21 November – Batley News
68. 1914, 28 November – Batley News
69. 1914, 5 December – Batley News
70. 1914, 12 December – Batley News
71. 1914, 19 December – Batley News
72. 1914, 24 December – Batley News
73. 1915, 2 January – Batley News
74. 1915, 9 January – Batley News
75. 1915, 16 January – Batley News
76. 1915, 23 January – Batley News
77. 1915, 30 January – Batley News
78 1915, 6 February – Batley News
79. 1915, 13 February – Batley News
80. 1915, 20 February – Batley News
81. 1915, 27 February – Batley News
82. 1915, 6 March – Batley News
83. 1915, 13 March – Batley News
84. 1915, 20 March – Batley News
85. 1915, 27 March – Batley News
86. 1915, 3 April – Batley News
87. 1915, 10 April – Batley News
88. 1915, 17 April – Batley News
89. 1915, 24 April – Batley News
90. 1915, 1 May – Batley News
91. 1915, 8 May – Batley News
92. 1915, 15 May – Batley News
93. 1915, 22 May – Batley News
94. 1915, 29 May – Batley News
95. 1915, 5 June – Batley News
96. 1915, 12 June – Batley News
97. 1915, 19 June – Batley News
98. 1915, 26 June – Batley News
99. 1915, 3 July – Batley News
100. 1915, 10 July – Batley News
101. 1915, 17 July – Batley News
102. 1915, 24 July – Batley News
103. 1915, 31 July – Batley News
104. 1915, 7 August – Batley News
105. 1915, 14 August – Batley News
106. 1915, 21 August – Batley News
107. 1915, 28 August – Batley News
108. 1915, 4 September – Batley News
109. 1915, 11 September – Batley News
110. 1915, 18 September – Batley News
111. 1915, 25 September – Batley News
112. 1915, 2 October – Batley News
113. 1915, 9 October – Batley News
114. 1915, 16 October – Batley News
115. 1915, 23 October – Batley News
116. 1915, 30 October – Batley News
117. 1915, 6 November – Batley News
118. 1915, 13 November – Batley News
119. 1915, 20 November – Batley News
120. 1915, 27 November – Batley News
121. 1915, 4 December – Batley News
122. 1915, 11 December – Batley News
123. 1915, 18 December – Batley News
124. 1915, 23 December – Batley News
125. 1916, 1 January – Batley News
126. 1916, 8 January – Batley News
127. 1916, 15 January – Batley News
128. 1916, 22 January – Batley News
129. 1916, 29 January – Batley News
130. 1916, 5 February – Batley News
131. 1916, 12 February – Batley News
132. 1916, 19 February – Batley News
133. 1916, 26 February – Batley News
134. 1916, 4 March – Batley News
135. 1916, 11 March – Batley News
136. 1916, 18 March – Batley News
137. 1916, 25 March – Batley News
138. 1916, 1 April – Batley News
139. 1916, 8 April – Batley News
140. 1916, 15 April – Batley News
141. 1916, 22 April – Batley News
142. 1916, 29 April – Batley News
143. 1916, 6 May – Batley News
144. 1916, 13 May – Batley News
145. 1916, 20 May – Batley News
146. 1916, 27 May – Batley News
147. 1916, 3 June – Batley News
148. 1916, 10 June – Batley News
149. 1916, 17 June – Batley News
150. 1916, 24 June – Batley News
151. 1916, 1 July – Batley News
152. 1916, 8 July – Batley News
153. 1916, 15 July – Batley News
154. 1916, 22 July – Batley News
155. 1916, 29 July – Batley News
156. 1916, 5 August – Batley News
157. 1916, 12 August – Batley News
158. 1916, 19 August – Batley News
159. 1916, 26 August – Batley News
160. 1916, 2 September – Batley News
161. 1916, 9 September – Batley News
162. 1916, 16 September – Batley News
163. 1916, 23 September – Batley News
164. 1916, 30 September – Batley News
165. 1916, 7 October – Batley News
166. 1916, 14 October – Batley News
167. 1916, 21 October – Batley News
168. 1916, 28 October – Batley News
169. 1916, 4 November – Batley News
170. 1916, 11 November – Batley News
171. 1916, 18 November – Batley News
172. 1916, 25 November – Batley News
173. 1916, 2 December – Batley News
174. 1916, 9 December – Batley News
175. 1916, 16 December – Batley News
176. 1916, 23 December – Batley News
177. 1916, 30 December – Batley News
178. 1917, 6 January – Batley News
179. 1917, 13 January – Batley News
180. 1917, 20 January – Batley News
181. 1917, 27 January – Batley News
182. 1917, 3 February – Batley News *NEW*
183. 1917, 10 February – Batley News *NEW*
184. 1917, 17 February – Batley News *NEW*
185. 1917, 24 February – Batley News *NEW*

Miscellany of Information
186. A Grave Disturbance in Batley
187. A “Peace” of Batley History
188. A St Mary’s School Sensation
189. St Mary of the Angels Catholic Church – 1929 Consecration Service
190. The Controversial Role Played by St Mary’s Schoolchildren in the 1907 Batley Pageant
191. The Great War: A Brief Overview of What Led Britain into the War
192. Willie and Edward Barber – Poems

Occupations and Employment Information
193. Occupations: Confidential Clerk
194. Occupations: Lamp Cleaner
195. Occupations: Limelight Operator
196. Occupations: Mason’s Labourer *NEW*
197. Occupations: Office Boy/Girl
198. Occupations: Piecer/Piecener
199. Occupations: Rag Grinder
200. Occupations: Willeyer

The Families
201. A Death in the Church

School Log Books
202. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1913
203. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1914
204. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1915
205. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1916
206. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1917
207. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1918
208. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1919
209. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1920
210. Infant School – Log Book 1913
211. Infant School – Log Book 1914
212. Infant School – Log Book 1915
213. Infant School – Log Book 1916
214. Infant School – Log Book 1917
215. Infant School – Log Book 1918 *NEW*

World War Two
216. World War Two Chronology of Deaths
217. Michael Flatley
218. William Smith


Postscript:
Finally a big thank you for the donations already received to keep this website going. They really do help.

The website has always been free to use, but it does cost me money to operate. In the current difficult economic climate I am considering if I can continue to afford to keep running it as a free resource, especially as I have to balance the research time against work commitments. 

If you have enjoyed reading the various pieces, and would like to make a donation towards keeping the website up and running in its current open access format, it would be very much appreciated. 

Please click here to be taken to the PayPal donation link. By making a donation you will be helping to keep the website online and freely available for all. 

Thank you.

St Mary of the Angels, Batley: One-Place Study Update – 1 to 31 January 2023 Additions

This is the latest Batley St Mary’s one-place study update, looking at the posts added in January 2023. The update also contains links to all the posts in the study to date.

If you are new to to this one-place study and want to know what it is all about, click here. Otherwise read on to discover all the other posts, new and old, containing a wealth of parish, parishioner and wider local Batley history.

St Mary’s Church – photo by Jane Roberts

January 2023 saw the addition of nine new posts, bringing the total number for the study to 212. Three other pages were updated. Two other categories, looking at statistics for Batley and the parish of St Mary’s, were renamed.

The additions included four weekly newspaper pages for January 1917. I have accordingly updated the surname index to these During This Week newspaper pieces, so you can easily identify newspaper snippets relevant to your family.

January saw the addition of two new Memorial biographies, those for Arthur William Bayldon Woodhead and Martin Gallagher,

More men who served and survived have been identified and that page includes these new names. However, no new biographies were added here this month. They will follow in due course.

And this month there is an unusual tale in the Miscellany of Information section – a post about a bizarre crime which took place in Batley cemetery under cover of black-out darkness in 1942.

As for the renamed categories, Batley Descriptions now becomes Batley Statistics and Descriptions – Population, Health, Mortality, Fertility etc. It will cover general information about Batley. This will provide an overview of the town where St Mary of the Angels is located and therefore some more context to the lives of the parishioners. Two new posts have been added here. One looks at the population of Batley between 1801 and 1939. The other looks at Batley in the 1921 census, with all the changes wrought by the war.

The other renamed category is Population, Health, Mortality and Fertility, which has been renamed Batley St Mary’s Population, Health, Mortality and Fertility Information and Comparisons. This will look at population and health issues at a parish rather than town level, and may draw on information from the town section to enable comparisons.

Below is the full list of pages to date. I have annotated the *NEW* and *UPDATED* ones, so you can easily pick these out. Click on the link and it will take you straight to the relevant page.


1. About my St Mary of the Angels Catholic Church War Memorial One-Place Study;

Batley St Mary’s Population, Health, Mortality and Fertility Information and Comparisons
2. 1914: The Health of Batley School Children Generally, with a Particular Focus on St Mary’s School Children

Batley Statistics and Descriptions – Population, Health, Mortality, Fertility etc.
3. 1914: Borough of Batley – Town Information from the Annual Report of the Medical Officer of Health.
4. Batley and the 1921 Census *NEW*
5. Batley Population Statistics 1801-1939 *NEW*

Biographies: Men Associated with St Mary’s Who Died but Who Are Not on the Memorial
6. Thomas Gannon
7. Reginald Roberts
8. William Frederick Townsend *UPDATED*

Biographies: The War Memorial Men
9. Edward Barber
10. Herbert Booth
11. Edmund Battye
12. Dominick (aka George) Brannan
13. Michael Brannan
14. John Brooks
15. Michael Cafferty
16. Patrick Cafferty
17. Lawrence Carney
18. Martin Carney
19. Thomas William Chappell
20. Thomas Curley
21. Peter Doherty
22. Thomas Donlan
23. Thomas Finneran
24. Michael Flynn
25. Thomas Foley D.C.M.
26. Martin Gallagher *NEW*
27. James Garner
28. Thomas Gavaghan
29. Henry Groark
30. Michael Groark (also known as Rourke)
31. James Griffin
32. Patrick Hopkins
33. Michael Horan
William McManus – See William Townsend below
34. Thomas McNamara
35. Patrick Naifsey
36. Austin Nolan
37. Robert Randerson
38. James Rush
39. Moses Stubley
40. William Townsend, also known as McManus
41. James Trainor
42. Richard Carroll Walsh
43. Arthur William Bayldon Woodhead *NEW*

Biographies: Those who Served and Survived (this includes a list of those identified to date and who will later have dedicated biographical pages) *UPDATED*
44. Patrick Cassidy
45. James Delaney
46. Thomas Donlan (senior)
47. Thomas Gannon
48. Michael Rush

Burials, Cemeteries, Headstones and MIs
49. Cemetery and Memorial Details
50. War Memorial Chronology of Deaths

During This Week
51. During This Week Newspaper Index *UPDATED*
52. 1914, 8 August – Batley News
53. 1914, 15 August – Batley News
54. 1914, 22 August – Batley News
55. 1914, 29 August – Batley News
56. 1914, 5 September – Batley News
57. 1914, 12 September – Batley News
58. 1914, 19 September – Batley News
59. 1914, 26 September – Batley News
60. 1914, 3 October – Batley News
61. 1914, 10 October – Batley News
62. 1914, 17 October – Batley News
63. 1914, 24 October – Batley News
64. 1914, 31 October – Batley News
65. 1914, 7 November – Batley News
66. 1914, 14 November – Batley News
67. 1914, 21 November – Batley News
68. 1914, 28 November – Batley News
69. 1914, 5 December – Batley News
70. 1914, 12 December – Batley News
71. 1914, 19 December – Batley News
72. 1914, 24 December – Batley News
73. 1915, 2 January – Batley News
74. 1915, 9 January – Batley News
75. 1915, 16 January – Batley News
76. 1915, 23 January – Batley News
77. 1915, 30 January – Batley News
78 1915, 6 February – Batley News
79. 1915, 13 February – Batley News
80. 1915, 20 February – Batley News
81. 1915, 27 February – Batley News
82. 1915, 6 March – Batley News
83. 1915, 13 March – Batley News
84. 1915, 20 March – Batley News
85. 1915, 27 March – Batley News
86. 1915, 3 April – Batley News
87. 1915, 10 April – Batley News
88. 1915, 17 April – Batley News
89. 1915, 24 April – Batley News
90. 1915, 1 May – Batley News
91. 1915, 8 May – Batley News
92. 1915, 15 May – Batley News
93. 1915, 22 May – Batley News
94. 1915, 29 May – Batley News
95. 1915, 5 June – Batley News
96. 1915, 12 June – Batley News
97. 1915, 19 June – Batley News
98. 1915, 26 June – Batley News
99. 1915, 3 July – Batley News
100. 1915, 10 July – Batley News
101. 1915, 17 July – Batley News
102. 1915, 24 July – Batley News
103. 1915, 31 July – Batley News
104. 1915, 7 August – Batley News
105. 1915, 14 August – Batley News
106. 1915, 21 August – Batley News
107. 1915, 28 August – Batley News
108. 1915, 4 September – Batley News
109. 1915, 11 September – Batley News
110. 1915, 18 September – Batley News
111. 1915, 25 September – Batley News
112. 1915, 2 October – Batley News
113. 1915, 9 October – Batley News
114. 1915, 16 October – Batley News
115. 1915, 23 October – Batley News
116. 1915, 30 October – Batley News
117. 1915, 6 November – Batley News
118. 1915, 13 November – Batley News
119. 1915, 20 November – Batley News
120. 1915, 27 November – Batley News
121. 1915, 4 December – Batley News
122. 1915, 11 December – Batley News
123. 1915, 18 December – Batley News
124. 1915, 23 December – Batley News
125. 1916, 1 January – Batley News
126. 1916, 8 January – Batley News
127. 1916, 15 January – Batley News
128. 1916, 22 January – Batley News
129. 1916, 29 January – Batley News
130. 1916, 5 February – Batley News
131. 1916, 12 February – Batley News
132. 1916, 19 February – Batley News
133. 1916, 26 February – Batley News
134. 1916, 4 March – Batley News
135. 1916, 11 March – Batley News
136. 1916, 18 March – Batley News
137. 1916, 25 March – Batley News
138. 1916, 1 April – Batley News
139. 1916, 8 April – Batley News
140. 1916, 15 April – Batley News
141. 1916, 22 April – Batley News
142. 1916, 29 April – Batley News
143. 1916, 6 May – Batley News
144. 1916, 13 May – Batley News
145. 1916, 20 May – Batley News
146. 1916, 27 May – Batley News
147. 1916, 3 June – Batley News
148. 1916, 10 June – Batley News
149. 1916, 17 June – Batley News
150. 1916, 24 June – Batley News
151. 1916, 1 July – Batley News
152. 1916, 8 July – Batley News
153. 1916, 15 July – Batley News
154. 1916, 22 July – Batley News
155. 1916, 29 July – Batley News
156. 1916, 5 August – Batley News
157. 1916, 12 August – Batley News
158. 1916, 19 August – Batley News
159. 1916, 26 August – Batley News
160. 1916, 2 September – Batley News
161. 1916, 9 September – Batley News
162. 1916, 16 September – Batley News
163. 1916, 23 September – Batley News
164. 1916, 30 September – Batley News
165. 1916, 7 October – Batley News
166. 1916, 14 October – Batley News
167. 1916, 21 October – Batley News
168. 1916, 28 October – Batley News
169. 1916, 4 November – Batley News
170. 1916, 11 November – Batley News
171. 1916, 18 November – Batley News
172. 1916, 25 November – Batley News
173. 1916, 2 December – Batley News
174. 1916, 9 December – Batley News
175. 1916, 16 December – Batley News
176. 1916, 23 December – Batley News
177. 1916, 30 December – Batley News
178. 1917, 6 January – Batley News *NEW*
179. 1917, 13 January – Batley News *NEW*
180. 1917, 20 January – Batley News *NEW*
181. 1917, 27 January – Batley News *NEW*

Miscellany of Information
182. A Grave Disturbance in Batley *NEW*
183. A “Peace” of Batley History
184. A St Mary’s School Sensation
185. St Mary of the Angels Catholic Church – 1929 Consecration Service
186. The Controversial Role Played by St Mary’s Schoolchildren in the 1907 Batley Pageant
187. The Great War: A Brief Overview of What Led Britain into the War
188. Willie and Edward Barber – Poems

Occupations and Employment Information
189. Occupations: Confidential Clerk
190. Occupations: Lamp Cleaner
191. Occupations: Limelight Operator
102. Occupations: Office Boy/Girl
193. Occupations: Piecer/Piecener
194. Occupations: Rag Grinder
195. Occupations: Willeyer

The Families
196. A Death in the Church

School Log Books
197. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1913
198. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1914
199. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1915
200. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1916
201. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1917
202. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1918
203. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1919
204. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1920
205. Infant School – Log Book 1913
206. Infant School – Log Book 1914
207. Infant School – Log Book 1915
208. Infant School – Log Book 1916
209. Infant School – Log Book 1917

World War Two
210. World War Two Chronology of Deaths
211. Michael Flatley
212. William Smith


Postscript:
Finally a big thank you for the donations already received to keep this website going. They really do help.

The website has always been free to use, but it does cost me money to operate. In the current difficult economic climate I am considering if I can continue to afford to keep running it as a free resource, especially as I have to balance the research time against work commitments.

If you have enjoyed reading the various pieces, and would like to make a donation towards keeping the website up and running in its current open access format, it would be very much appreciated. 

Please click here to be taken to the PayPal donation link. By making a donation you will be helping to keep the website online and freely available for all. 

Thank you.

A Grave Disturbance in Batley

On an evening in late May 1942, under cover of darkness in wartime black-out Batley, a bizarre crime was under way. The mystery would make headlines in newspapers across the country – including the nationals.

On Saturday night, 23 May, Allan Pollard of Coal Pit Lane, employed by Batley Corporation as the Cemetery Ranger, undertook his normal routine at Batley cemetery. At 8pm, after checking thoroughly to make sure everything was in order and that the grounds were empty of the living, he locked the gates for the night.

In Batley police station, Monday 25 May was proving a fairly routine morning for 27-year-old Police Constable Arthur Peakman of the West Riding of Yorkshire Constabulary. But things took a dramatic turn and became anything but routine at 9.25am, when Robert Edward Cardwell, foreman gardener at Batley cemetery, burst in to report a strange occurrence.

Cardwell lived on Towngate Road, local to the cemetery, and had entered the cemetery grounds at 7.50am on Sunday morning. He could not believe the sight which met his eyes in the Roman Catholic portion. One of the graves, S.1078, had been re-opened. The opening measured five feet long, two feet wide and five feet deep. Soil had been thrown on surrounding graves causing damage to five of them, estimated to be around five shillings in each case.

Cardwell initially informed Fred Burn, the Cemetery Registrar, who confirmed the grave had been opened without his permission. After going through the register and identifying the owners of the affected graves, they agreed the incident must be reported to the police… although there was a delay of a day between the discovery of the incident and its official reporting.

After hearing Cardwell’s incredible tale and taking down his official statement, PC Peakman, accompanied by his superior, Sergeant Micklethwaite went to investigate. The graves were located near to the boundary wall on the Healey side of the cemetery. In this period, prior to the building of Healey Estate, it was a particularly secluded area.

Ordnance Survey Maps – Six-inch England and Wales, 1842-1952, Yorkshire CCXXXII.11.SE, Revised: 1938, Published: 1946 – National Library of Scotland, shared under the the Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY) licence.

With trepidation, the two policemen used a prodder to examine the plot further. It was with immense relief that around one foot below the re-opened depth the prodder struck something solid – the coffin was still there. It had not been tampered with. Nothing appeared to have been stolen from this grave, or those surrounding it.

Continuing their search of the cemetery and surrounding fields, the policemen found traces of clay on the boundary wall, indicating where someone had climbed over to the Cemetery Fields footpath. There the trail ended. The police also found a small area of clay with the imprint of clothing on it. The assumption is this is where the culprit had knelt. Unfortunately the ‘digger’ had been sufficiently alert to ensure he left no tools.

The conclusion of the investigating officers was :

The person who re-opened the grave is evidently strong and virile and might be called an expert in the use of a spade judging form the method in which he cut the clay out.1

Photo by Jane Roberts

But who had carried out this act? And why, as none of the burials in the graves involved in this odd event were so remarkable as to warrant this attention? Was it a solo venture, or were there accomplices? What was being sought? Did the ‘digger’ or ‘diggers’ achieve their objectives, or were they disturbed? Did they fail to complete their task before daybreak and the lifting of blackout restrictions, just after 5am. And which graves were involved?

The disturbed plot was owned by Lilian Igo. The grave contained the body of her husband, 32-year-old James Igo, a Denby Grange Colliery miner, who died in hospital on 8 February after a sudden illness. A parishioner of St Joseph’s, the Batley Carr Catholic parish, his funeral was conducted in Batley cemetery on 13 February 1940.

The damaged graves belonged to:

  • Michael Finn, an ex-serviceman from the Great War. His wife Ann was buried there on 24 April 1941, age 60.2 They were St Mary’s parishioners.
  • James Harkin (sometimes the spelling is Horkin). The Harkin family were associated with St Mary’s parish. James’ 57-year-old wife, Mary, was buried there on 2 April 1931.
  • John William Harkin, whose 45-year-old wife Mary Jane, was buried there on 30 March 1941.3 This family were also associated with St Mary’s.
  • Mary Hill. This grave contained the body of her 33-year-old husband John Herbert (Jack) Hill. He had been killed in a tragic accident whilst building an air-raid shelter at Batley Hospital on 14 March 1940. A former St Mary’s parishioner, the family had recently moved into St Joseph’s parish.
  • Mary Travis. The most recent burial in this grave, on 17 October 1940, was 44-year-old Harold Travis, husband of Agnes (formerly Cairns) of St Mary’s parish.
Batley Cemetery, Photo by Jane Roberts

Following up, PC Peakman now conducted a series of interviews. Later that day he took formal evidence from Cemetery Ranger Allan Pollard, who was adamant that between 6pm and 8pm on 23 May, on his two visits in the vicinity of the grave, all was correct.

Peakman also spoke with Mary Ann Igo (mother of James), Lilian Igo (his widow) and Fathers Kennedy and McMendmin, priests at St Josephs, who had officiated at the funeral.

Accompanied by Inspector Hunter, Peakman’s enquiries continued. These included another visit to Lilian Igo. The policemen also spoke with her father, Harry Riley. Others questioned included Joe Igo and his wife, (brother and sister-in-law of James), Edward Kerfoot (stepbrother of James) and Fathers McBride and Mahoney of St Mary’s. All to no avail. No useful information was gained. They were no further forward in solving the mystery.

The police maintained a nightly vigil of the cemetery for a week afterwards, but no further incidents occurred.

The Batley News paid surprisingly little attention to the strange goings-on in the cemetery, giving them minimal coverage. Describing it as an “Incident That Stirred up the Imagination4 the newspaper castigated London and provincial newspapers for letting their imaginations run riot. The Batley News take was:

…there is little to relate except that the earth was removed in the dead of night and the digging had been neatly done…it seems a trivial event in the history of a town to create national interest.5

But national interest it did create, with reports of police guards in the cemetery to prevent further desecration of graves. The Daily Mirror even interviewed James’s bewildered mother, with her quotes appearing in the newspaper, as follows:

Why should James’s grave have been chosen? He had not been married for a year when he died in hospital a few days after two urgent operations.6

The most macabre theory doing the rounds involved a Yorkshire murder victim.

On the evening of 10 June 1939 Charles Borman, an amateur bird-spotter, made a gruesome discovery in a hedge at Leggett Wood, Scholes: a newspaper parcel containing the head of a woman. Police were summoned and two further similar parcels discovered, containing the woman’s left arm and left leg. The woman’s torso was discovered two days later in Low Wood, near Wellington Hill, Leeds.

The victim was identified as 20-year-old Thornhill-born Ethel Wraithmell, also known as Shirley, whose last known residence was Leeds.

Ethel’s brother, Harry, lived in Batley. For this reason apparently, on 21 July 1939, her remains were encased in a square box and interred in a public grave in Batley cemetery. The location of this public grave was only yards away from the disturbed graves.

Police continued to investigate the “Leeds Torso” case. Almost a year elapsed before it was finally solved. On 27 April 1940, 28-year-old railway worker Wilfred Lowe handed himself into the police, with the words:

I have heard you have been making further inquiries and I have come to tell you it is me you want.7

Wilfred Lowe’s trial commenced at Leeds Assizes on 15 July 1940. He pleaded not guilty. On the second day of the trial, the jury reached its verdict. They agreed, acquitting him of murder, but finding him guilty of manslaughter. He was sentenced to twelve months’ imprisonment.

These sensational events would still be very familiar to many West Riding folk. However, in Batley, the theory of any link between the Wraithmell case and the grave re-opening was roundly dismissed. Registrar Fred Burn told the police he believed the perpetrator had opened the grave he intended to, as all the graves in that portion had number stones. It was not a case of mistaking the grave for that of Ethel Wraithmell.

With police investigations at a dead end, on 3 June 1942 Dewsbury-based Superintendent Stone, wrote to the Batley Town Clerk to inform him that:

…so far no trace has been found of the person or persons responsible….Should any information concerning the matter be obtained I will have you informed.8

The files I viewed contained no further information, although it is clear some other documents concerning the case did exist. Unfortunately, I have not traced them. Perhaps they do not survive.

However, this story does show the importance of local archives. I found the initial information about this bizarre episode purely by chance. I was intrigued by a West Yorkshire Archive Service (WYAS) catalogue description which read “Crime report relating to the re-opening of a grave by persons unknown in Batley Cemetery.” The documents were held by the Kirklees Branch of the WYAS. I quickly made an appointment to view them before this branch’s temporary closure.

When I began reading the file, my interest increased, because it was the Catholic part of Batley Cemetery. It fitted in with my Batley St Mary’s one-place study. My jaw hit the floor though as I read on. One of the graves involved in the incident was my grandad’s.

The files held a series of crime scene photos – and these include my grandad’s damaged grave, with its original wooden cross maker. I cannot publish these photos as they are subject to WYAS copyright. But they are an amazing addition to my family history. And it was a story no living member of the family had heard about.

It goes to show that archives catalogue descriptions (if they do exist, as not everything is catalogued) do not always tell the full story – they are signposts. And research curiosity does sometimes really pay unexpected dividends.

As yet I’ve not found out the identity of the individual(s) who tampered with the grave. Neither have I found a motive. Perhaps the mystery was never solved….unless you know different?


Postscript:
Finally a big thank you for the donations already received to keep this website going. 

The website has always been free to use, but it does cost me money to operate. In the current difficult economic climate I am considering if I can continue to afford to keep running it as a free resource, especially as I have to balance the research time against work commitments. 

If you have enjoyed reading the various pieces, and would like to make a donation towards keeping the website up and running in its current open access format, it would be very much appreciated. 

Please click here to be taken to the PayPal donation link. By making a donation you will be helping to keep the website online and freely available for all. 

Thank you.


Footnotes:
1. Crime report relating to the re-opening of a grave by persons unknown at Batley Cemetery, WYAS, Ref KMT1/Box63/TB83.
2. In Robert Edward Cardwell’s witness statement, as taken by PC Peakman, Michael Finn is incorrectly referred to as Michael Timms.
3. The Batley Cemetery Burial Register incorrectly records her age as 69.
4. Batley News, 6 June 1942.
5. Ibid.
6. Daily Mirror, 1 June 1942.
7. Yorkshire Evening Post, 21 May 1940.
8. Crime report, Ibid.

Other Sources:
• 1939 Register.
• Batley Cemetery Burial Register.
Batley News, 22 July 1939, 17 February 1940, 16 March 1940, 23 March 1940, 20 July 1940, 19 October 1940, 5 April 1941, 26 April 1941, 23 May 1942.
Bradford Observer, 30 May 1942.
• Census of England and Wales, 1891 – 1921.
Daily News (London), 30 May 1942.
• GRO Indexes.
Leeds Mercury, 15 June 1939, 22 June 1939, 23 June 1939.
Nottingham Evening Post, 30 May 1942.
• Parish Registers (various).
Yorkshire Evening Post, 12 June 1939, 13 June 1939, 14 June 1939, 15 June 1939, 17 June 1939, 22 June 1939, 29 April 1940, 21 May 1940, 3 July 1940, 15 July 1940, 16 July 1940, 17 July 1940, 29 May 1942.
Yorkshire Post & Leeds Intelligencer, 12 June 1939, 13 June 1939.

Should Prince Harry’s ‘Spare’ Present Ethical Dilemmas for Family Historians?

If you are interested in family history, please do read. This post is not what it may at first seem to be.

Few people in UK and the United States will have avoided the media frenzy surrounding the publication of Prince Harry’s memoir Spare. It has provided headline news for days. In the run up to the 10 January release date its contents have been poured over and analysed ad nauseam, spawning daily discussions on radio, TV and in the newspapers. Even passing people in shops, cafes or in the street you can here snippets of conversation about it. Becoming the fastest selling non-fiction book ever in the UK, it has been difficult to escape from all the hype and noise.

Tescos in Batley, the day after publication – photo by Jane Roberts

But what relevance does this publication have for family historians? I would argue it has huge implications, and should perhaps provoke some thought and debate amongst this cohort.

As someone wanting to get to know my ancestors beyond mere names and dates, to really dig into their individual life stories setting them against the context of their communities and times, I’ve always believed autobiographical notes, diaries, letters etc., have been akin to a family historian’s holy grail. Particularly ones they wrote. But the contents of Spare have caused me more than a twinge of discomfort … and on several levels. Here’s why.

From a personal perspective I was an avid diarist from around the age of 13 right through to becoming a mother. After that I was too exhausted to keep up the discipline. However, I still have them all – many volumes tucked away in an inaccessible cupboard, along with old Christmas decorations.

Diaries by non-public figures who are not thinking of a future potential audience, are more likely to contain intimate and authentic thoughts and words. Mine are probably filled with teenage angst. Truth is I haven’t looked at them in donkey’s years. I couldn’t face it. And if I find the thought of reading them horrifying, would I really want close family seeing them?

But I can’t bear to throw them away either … yet. They were a record of my life and feelings set in the context of the time they were written. They would be immensely useful for family historians of the future – not just my descendants (if any ever are interested in family history) – but descendants of all others who may find themselves unwillingly featuring! Though looking at it from yet another perspective, would passing them on place an immense moral burden for whoever inherited them?

For me Prince Harry’s autobiography has also brought into sharper focus another family history source – letters. I have the letters my dad wrote to my mum when they were courting. I’ve had them for a few months. But I have no intention of reading them. Dad died only a few years ago. Mum is still alive but ill. It is all too close, both in time and relationship, and feels like a massive intrusion of privacy.

Conversely I was given the letters an uncle wrote home whilst on National Service in the 1950s. He was killed in the course of this service. I never knew him. And although I did find it difficult, I have read them, and they do provide a unique insight into his life and personality. I feel immensely privileged to have them. So perhaps there is something there about proximity in relationship and time.

As for autobiographies, how does Prince Harry’s searingly personal account of his life (perhaps in parts it could be described as providing ‘too much information’) leave me feeling? If I’m honest, confused.

First impression it’s family history gold dust if you inherited something like that. But then pause for thought. If you are writing your story to set it out for descendants how honest should you actually be? Should it be warts and all? Or should you employ some element of self-censorship both for personal details and in relation to others named in the narrative – because perhaps some things should remain private.

These autobiographies, whether the rich or famous like Prince Harry, or those written by ordinary individuals to hand down to their families once more lead me back to diaries which may have been used as the basis for writing them. What happens to them?

And, as hinted at earlier, all this leads to a whole new set of dilemmas. If you do discover, or inherit, letters, diaries, life stories etc, how (if at all) should these be shared? What responsibilities do you have? Is it to tell the full story? Or do you have some duty to handle information with sensitivity. And is there a difference between information relating to your direct family, or information relating to distant relatives, or those to whom you have no familial connection?

This post provides no answers. But I hope it does highlight some of the ethical dilemmas of creating, coming across or owning this type of document.


Postscript:
Finally a big thank you for the donations already received to keep this website going. 

The website has always been free to use, but it does cost me money to operate. In the current difficult economic climate I am considering if I can continue to afford to keep running it as a free resource, especially as I have to balance the research time against work commitments. 

If you have enjoyed reading the various pieces, and would like to make a donation towards keeping the website up and running in its current open access format, it would be very much appreciated. 

Please click here to be taken to the PayPal donation link. By making a donation you will be helping to keep the website online and freely available for all. 

Thank you.

St Mary of the Angels, Batley: One-Place Study Update – 1 to 31 December 2022 Additions

The Batley St Mary’s one-place study hit a major milestone in December 2022 – the two hundredth post was published, a little over two years after the study started. More of that later.

If you are new to to this one-place study and want to know what it is all about, click here. Otherwise read on to find out what the milestone post was, and discover all the other posts, new and old, containing a wealth of parish, parishioner and wider local Batley history.

St Mary’s Church – photo by Jane Roberts

December 2022 saw the addition of eight new posts, bringing the total number for the study to 203. Two other pages were updated.

The additions included five weekly newspaper pages for December 1916. I have accordingly updated the surname index to these During This Week newspaper pieces, so you can easily identify newspaper snippets relevant to your family.

There were also three new school log books added, for the infants’ department. These covered 1913, 1916 and 1917. And it is the 1917 log book which has the distinction of being the study’s two hundredth post.

Unfortunately, due to other work priorities, this month there were no new Memorial biographies. I hope to begin adding to them once more in the New Year, if time and work permits. And, although more men who served and survived have been identified and that page includes these new names, no new biographies were added here either.

Below is the full list of pages to date. I have annotated the *NEW* and *UPDATED* ones, so you can easily pick these out. Click on the link and it will take you straight to the relevant page.


1. About my St Mary of the Angels Catholic Church War Memorial One-Place Study;

Batley Descriptions – Directories etc.
2. 1914: Borough of Batley – Town Information from the Annual Report of the Medical Officer of Health.

Biographies: Men Associated with St Mary’s Who Died but Who Are Not on the Memorial 
3. Thomas Gannon 
4. Reginald Roberts 
5. William Frederick Townsend

Biographies: The War Memorial Men
6. Edward Barber
7. Herbert Booth
8. Edmund Battye
9. Dominick (aka George) Brannan
10. Michael Brannan
11. John Brooks
12. Michael Cafferty
13. Patrick Cafferty
14. Lawrence Carney
15. Martin Carney
16. Thomas William Chappell
17. Thomas Curley
18. Peter Doherty
19. Thomas Donlan
20. Thomas Finneran
21. Michael Flynn
22. Thomas Foley D.C.M.
23. James Garner
24. Thomas Gavaghan
25. Henry Groark
26. Michael Groark (also known as Rourke)
27. James Griffin
28. Patrick Hopkins
29. Michael Horan
William McManus – See William Townsend below
30. Thomas McNamara
31. Patrick Naifsey
32. Austin Nolan
33. Robert Randerson
34. James Rush
35. Moses Stubley
36. William Townsend, also known as McManus
37. James Trainor
38. Richard Carroll Walsh

Biographies: Those who Served and Survived (this includes a list of those identified to date and who will later have dedicated biographical pages) *UPDATED*
39. Patrick Cassidy 
40. James Delaney
41. Thomas Donlan (senior) 
42. Thomas Gannon 
43. Michael Rush

Burials, Cemeteries, Headstones and MIs
44. Cemetery and Memorial Details 
45. War Memorial Chronology of Deaths

During This Week
46. During This Week Newspaper Index *UPDATED*
47. 1914, 8 August – Batley News
48. 1914, 15 August – Batley News
49. 1914, 22 August – Batley News
50. 1914, 29 August – Batley News
51. 1914, 5 September – Batley News
52. 1914, 12 September – Batley News
53. 1914, 19 September – Batley News
54. 1914, 26 September – Batley News
55. 1914, 3 October – Batley News
56. 1914, 10 October – Batley News
57. 1914, 17 October – Batley News
58. 1914, 24 October – Batley News
59. 1914, 31 October – Batley News
60. 1914, 7 November – Batley News
61. 1914, 14 November – Batley News
62. 1914, 21 November – Batley News
63. 1914, 28 November – Batley News
64. 1914, 5 December – Batley News
65. 1914, 12 December – Batley News
66. 1914, 19 December – Batley News
67. 1914, 24 December – Batley News
68. 1915, 2 January – Batley News
69. 1915, 9 January – Batley News
70. 1915, 16 January – Batley News
71. 1915, 23 January – Batley News
72. 1915, 30 January – Batley News
73. 1915, 6 February – Batley News
74. 1915, 13 February – Batley News
75. 1915, 20 February – Batley News
76. 1915, 27 February – Batley News
77. 1915, 6 March – Batley News
78. 1915, 13 March – Batley News
79. 1915, 20 March – Batley News
80. 1915, 27 March – Batley News
81. 1915, 3 April – Batley News
82. 1915, 10 April – Batley News
83. 1915, 17 April – Batley News
84. 1915, 24 April – Batley News
85. 1915, 1 May – Batley News
86. 1915, 8 May – Batley News
87. 1915, 15 May – Batley News
88. 1915, 22 May – Batley News
89. 1915, 29 May – Batley News
90. 1915, 5 June – Batley News
91. 1915, 12 June – Batley News
92. 1915, 19 June – Batley News
93. 1915, 26 June – Batley News
94. 1915, 3 July – Batley News
95. 1915, 10 July – Batley News
96. 1915, 17 July – Batley News
97. 1915, 24 July – Batley News
98. 1915, 31 July – Batley News
99. 1915, 7 August – Batley News
100. 1915, 14 August – Batley News
101. 1915, 21 August – Batley News
102. 1915, 28 August – Batley News
103. 1915, 4 September – Batley News
104. 1915, 11 September – Batley News
105. 1915, 18 September – Batley News
106. 1915, 25 September – Batley News
107. 1915, 2 October – Batley News
108. 1915, 9 October – Batley News
109. 1915, 16 October – Batley News
110. 1915, 23 October – Batley News
111. 1915, 30 October – Batley News
112. 1915, 6 November – Batley News
113. 1915, 13 November – Batley News
114. 1915, 20 November – Batley News
115. 1915, 27 November – Batley News
116. 1915, 4 December – Batley News
117. 1915, 11 December – Batley News
118. 1915, 18 December – Batley News
119. 1915, 23 December – Batley News
120. 1916, 1 January – Batley News
121. 1916, 8 January – Batley News
122. 1916, 15 January – Batley News
123. 1916, 22 January – Batley News
124. 1916, 29 January – Batley News
125. 1916, 5 February – Batley News
126. 1916, 12 February – Batley News
127. 1916, 19 February – Batley News
128. 1916, 26 February – Batley News
129. 1916, 4 March – Batley News
130. 1916, 11 March – Batley News
131. 1916, 18 March – Batley News
132. 1916, 25 March – Batley News
133. 1916, 1 April – Batley News
134. 1916, 8 April – Batley News
135. 1916, 15 April – Batley News
136. 1916, 22 April – Batley News
137. 1916, 29 April – Batley News
138. 1916, 6 May – Batley News
139. 1916, 13 May – Batley News
140. 1916, 20 May – Batley News
141. 1916, 27 May – Batley News
142. 1916, 3 June – Batley News
143. 1916, 10 June – Batley News
144. 1916, 17 June – Batley News
145. 1916, 24 June – Batley News
146. 1916, 1 July – Batley News
147. 1916, 8 July – Batley News
148. 1916, 15 July – Batley News
149. 1916, 22 July – Batley News
150. 1916, 29 July – Batley News
151. 1916, 5 August – Batley News
152. 1916, 12 August – Batley News
153. 1916, 19 August – Batley News
154. 1916, 26 August – Batley News
155. 1916, 2 September – Batley News
156. 1916, 9 September – Batley News
157. 1916, 16 September – Batley News
158. 1916, 23 September – Batley News
159. 1916, 30 September – Batley News
160. 1916, 7 October – Batley News
161. 1916, 14 October – Batley News
162. 1916, 21 October – Batley News
163. 1916, 28 October – Batley News
164. 1916, 4 November – Batley News
165. 1916, 11 November – Batley News
166. 1916, 18 November – Batley News
167. 1916, 25 November – Batley News
168. 1916, 2 December – Batley News *NEW*
169. 1916, 9 December – Batley News *NEW*
170. 1916, 16 December – Batley News *NEW*
171. 1916, 23 December – Batley News *NEW*
172. 1916, 30 December – Batley News *NEW*

Miscellany of Information
173. The Controversial Role Played by St Mary’s Schoolchildren in the 1907 Batley Pageant
174. The Great War: A Brief Overview of What Led Britain into the War
175. Willie and Edward Barber – Poems
176. A St Mary’s School Sensation
177. St Mary of the Angels Catholic Church – 1929 Consecration Service
178. A “Peace” of Batley History

Occupations and Employment Information
179. Occupations: Confidential Clerk
180. Occupations: Lamp Cleaner
181. Occupations: Limelight Operator
182. Occupations: Office Boy/Girl
183. Occupations: Piecer/Piecener
184. Occupations: Rag Grinder
185. Occupations: Willeyer

The Families
186. A Death in the Church

School Log Books
187. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1913
188. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1914
189. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1915
190. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1916
191. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1917
192. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1918
193. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1919
194. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1920
195. Infant School – Log Book 1913 *NEW*
196. Infant School – Log Book 1914
197. Infant School – Log Book 1915
198. Infant School – Log Book 1916 *NEW*
199. Infant School – Log Book 1917 *NEW*

Population, Health, Mortality and Fertility
200. 1914: The Health of Batley School Children Generally, with a Particular Focus on St Mary’s School Children

World War Two
201. World War Two Chronology of Deaths
202. Michael Flatley
203. William Smith


Postscript:
My website has always been free to use, but it does cost me money to operate. In the current difficult economic climate I am considering whether I can continue to afford to keep running it as a free resource, especially given the time this research takes.

If you have enjoyed reading the various pieces, and would like to make a donation towards keeping the website up and running in its current open access format, it would be very much appreciated. 

Please click here to be taken to the PayPal donation link. By making a donation you will be helping to keep the website online and freely available for all. 

Thank you.

St Mary of the Angels, Batley: One-Place Study Update – 1 to 30 November 2022 Additions

This is the latest Batley St Mary’s one-place study update. If you want to know more about the background to this one-place study click here. Otherwise read on to discover all the posts, new and old, containing a wealth of parish, parishioner and wider local Batley history.

St Mary’s Church – photo by Jane Roberts

November 2022 saw the addition of six new posts, bringing the total number for the study to 195. Two other pages were updated.

The additions included four weekly newspaper pages for November 1916. I have accordingly updated the surname index to these During This Week newspaper pieces, so you can easily identify newspaper snippets relevant to your family.

I have written two new War Memorial biographies, those of Thomas William Chappell and Henry Groark.

More men who served and survived have been identified. I have updated that page accordingly. No new biographies were added here in November, but they will follow in due course.

Below is the full list of pages to date. I have annotated the *NEW* and *UPDATED* ones, so you can easily pick these out. Click on the link and it will take you straight to the relevant page.


1. About my St Mary of the Angels Catholic Church War Memorial One-Place Study;

Batley Descriptions – Directories etc.
2. 1914: Borough of Batley – Town Information from the Annual Report of the Medical Officer of Health.

Biographies: Men Associated with St Mary’s Who Died but Who Are Not on the Memorial
3. Thomas Gannon
4. Reginald Roberts
5. William Frederick Townsend

Biographies: The War Memorial Men
6. Edward Barber
7. Herbert Booth
8. Edmund Battye
9. Dominick (aka George) Brannan
10. Michael Brannan
11. John Brooks
12. Michael Cafferty
13. Patrick Cafferty
14. Lawrence Carney
15. Martin Carney
16. Thomas William Chappell *NEW*
17. Thomas Curley
18. Peter Doherty
19. Thomas Donlan
20. Thomas Finneran
21. Michael Flynn
22. Thomas Foley D.C.M.
23. James Garner
24. Thomas Gavaghan
25. Henry Groark *NEW*
26. Michael Groark (also known as Rourke)
27. James Griffin
28. Patrick Hopkins
29. Michael Horan
William McManus – See William Townsend below
30. Thomas McNamara
31. Patrick Naifsey
32. Austin Nolan
33. Robert Randerson
34. James Rush
35. Moses Stubley
36. William Townsend, also known as McManus
37. James Trainor
38. Richard Carroll Walsh

Biographies: Those who Served and Survived (this includes a list of those identified to date and who will later have dedicated biographical pages) *UPDATED*
39. Patrick Cassidy
40. James Delaney
41. Thomas Donlan (senior)
42. Thomas Gannon
43. Michael Rush

Burials, Cemeteries, Headstones and MIs
44. Cemetery and Memorial Details
45. War Memorial Chronology of Deaths

During This Week
46. During This Week Newspaper Index *UPDATED*
47. 1914, 8 August – Batley News
48. 1914, 15 August – Batley News
49. 1914, 22 August – Batley News
50. 1914, 29 August – Batley News
51. 1914, 5 September – Batley News
52. 1914, 12 September – Batley News
53. 1914, 19 September – Batley News
54. 1914, 26 September – Batley News
55. 1914, 3 October – Batley News
56. 1914, 10 October – Batley News
57. 1914, 17 October – Batley News
58. 1914, 24 October – Batley News
59. 1914, 31 October – Batley News
60. 1914, 7 November – Batley News
61. 1914, 14 November – Batley News
62. 1914, 21 November – Batley News
63. 1914, 28 November – Batley News
64. 1914, 5 December – Batley News
65. 1914, 12 December – Batley News
66. 1914, 19 December – Batley News
67. 1914, 24 December – Batley News
68. 1915, 2 January – Batley News
69. 1915, 9 January – Batley News
70. 1915, 16 January – Batley News
71. 1915, 23 January – Batley News
72. 1915, 30 January – Batley News
73. 1915, 6 February – Batley News
74. 1915, 13 February – Batley News
75. 1915, 20 February – Batley News
76. 1915, 27 February – Batley News
77. 1915, 6 March – Batley News
78. 1915, 13 March – Batley News
79. 1915, 20 March – Batley News
80. 1915, 27 March – Batley News
81. 1915, 3 April – Batley News
82. 1915, 10 April – Batley News
83. 1915, 17 April – Batley News
84. 1915, 24 April – Batley News
85. 1915, 1 May – Batley News
86. 1915, 8 May – Batley News
87. 1915, 15 May – Batley News
88. 1915, 22 May – Batley News
89. 1915, 29 May – Batley News
90. 1915, 5 June – Batley News
91. 1915, 12 June – Batley News
92. 1915, 19 June – Batley News
93. 1915, 26 June – Batley News
94. 1915, 3 July – Batley News
95. 1915, 10 July – Batley News
96. 1915, 17 July – Batley News
97. 1915, 24 July – Batley News
98. 1915, 31 July – Batley News
99. 1915, 7 August – Batley News
100. 1915, 14 August – Batley News
101. 1915, 21 August – Batley News
102. 1915, 28 August – Batley News
103. 1915, 4 September – Batley News
104. 1915, 11 September – Batley News
105. 1915, 18 September – Batley News
106. 1915, 25 September – Batley News
107. 1915, 2 October – Batley News
108. 1915, 9 October – Batley News
109. 1915, 16 October – Batley News
110. 1915, 23 October – Batley News
111. 1915, 30 October – Batley News
112. 1915, 6 November – Batley News
113. 1915, 13 November – Batley News
114. 1915, 20 November – Batley News
115. 1915, 27 November – Batley News
116. 1915, 4 December – Batley News
117. 1915, 11 December – Batley News
118. 1915, 18 December – Batley News
119. 1915, 23 December – Batley News
120. 1916, 1 January – Batley News
121. 1916, 8 January – Batley News
122. 1916, 15 January – Batley News
123. 1916, 22 January – Batley News
124. 1916, 29 January – Batley News
125. 1916, 5 February – Batley News
126. 1916, 12 February – Batley News
127. 1916, 19 February – Batley News
128. 1916, 26 February – Batley News
129. 1916, 4 March – Batley News
130. 1916, 11 March – Batley News
131. 1916, 18 March – Batley News
132. 1916, 25 March – Batley News
133. 1916, 1 April – Batley News
134. 1916, 8 April – Batley News
135. 1916, 15 April – Batley News
136. 1916, 22 April – Batley News
137. 1916, 29 April – Batley News
138. 1916, 6 May – Batley News
139. 1916, 13 May – Batley News
140. 1916, 20 May – Batley News
141. 1916, 27 May – Batley News
142. 1916, 3 June – Batley News
143. 1916, 10 June – Batley News
144. 1916, 17 June – Batley News
145. 1916, 24 June – Batley News
146. 1916, 1 July – Batley News
147. 1916, 8 July – Batley News
148. 1916, 15 July – Batley News
149. 1916, 22 July – Batley News
150. 1916, 29 July – Batley News
151. 1916, 5 August – Batley News
152. 1916, 12 August – Batley News
153. 1916, 19 August – Batley News
154. 1916, 26 August – Batley News
155. 1916, 2 September – Batley News
156. 1916, 9 September – Batley News
157. 1916, 16 September – Batley News
158. 1916, 23 September – Batley News
159. 1916, 30 September – Batley News
160. 1916, 7 October – Batley News
161. 1916, 14 October – Batley News
162. 1916, 21 October – Batley News
163. 1916, 28 October – Batley News
164. 1916, 4 November – Batley News *NEW*
165. 1916, 11 November – Batley News *NEW*
166. 1916, 18 November – Batley News *NEW*
167. 1916, 25 November – Batley News *NEW*

Miscellany of Information
168. The Controversial Role Played by St Mary’s Schoolchildren in the 1907 Batley Pageant
169. The Great War: A Brief Overview of What Led Britain into the War
170. Willie and Edward Barber – Poems
171. A St Mary’s School Sensation
172. St Mary of the Angels Catholic Church – 1929 Consecration Service
173. A “Peace” of Batley History

Occupations and Employment Information
174. Occupations: Confidential Clerk
175. Occupations: Lamp Cleaner
176. Occupations: Limelight Operator
177. Occupations: Office Boy/Girl
178. Occupations: Piecer/Piecener
179. Occupations: Rag Grinder
180. Occupations: Willeyer

The Families
181. A Death in the Church

School Log Books
182. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1913
183. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1914
184. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1915
185. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1916
186. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1917
187. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1918
188. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1919
189. Boys’ School – Log Book, 1920
190. Infant School – Log Book 1914
191. Infant School – Log Book 1915

Population, Health, Mortality and Fertility
192. 1914: The Health of Batley School Children Generally, with a Particular Focus on St Mary’s School Children

World War Two
193. World War Two Chronology of Deaths
194. Michael Flatley
195. William Smith


Postscript:
My website has always been free to use, but it does cost me money to operate. In the current difficult economic climate I’m having to consider whether I can continue to afford to keep running it as a free resource. 

If you have enjoyed reading the various pieces, and would like to make a donation towards keeping the website up and running in its current open access format, it would be very much appreciated. 

Please click here to be taken to the PayPal donation link. By making a donation you will be helping to keep the website online and freely available for all. 

Thank you.

An Unexpected Holiday Family History Link

Family historians will ‘get’ the feeling of pure elation I felt one damp Tuesday afternoon in Northumberland in late November 2022.

The changeable weather that day prompted a post-lunch visit to Kirkharle Courtyard. These converted 18th century stone farm buildings house a lovely selection of independent craft and artisan shops, so it seemed a perfect pre-Christmas haven to escape any threatened showers. Here’s the website link for more details.

Kirkharle Coffee House – photo by Jane Roberts

As it happened, the weather improved which meant we could explore further the wider Courtyard surroundings.

The tiny hamlet of Kirkharle was the birthplace of the iconic landscape gardener Lancelot “Capability” Brown. Here the Shakespeare of English gardening took the first fledgling steps in his illustrious career, employed as a gardener on Sir William Loraine’s Kirkharle estate until 1739.

But he retained a connection to his birthplace, and first employer’s family, even after he had moved onwards and upwards. One of his landscape designs for Kirkharle was discovered in 1980, shoved at the back of some drawers. Thought to date from around 1770, when he was at nearby Alnwick, his vision finally came to fruition in 2010, interpreted and adapted to fit the current Kirkharle landscape. We enjoyed a pleasant stroll around the serpentine lake, the centrepiece of this plan.

As usual, driven by the obsession of a family historian, I now felt compelled to visit Kirkharle’s tiny church. It is only a short walk from the courtyard complex, and on the way you pass a Grade II listed monument to Robert Loraine who was “barbarously murdered” here by the Scots in 1483. He was on his way home from church when set upon by them.

In a gruesome warning to others who would – like him – defend the borderlands against the Scottish raiders, the attackers cut his corpse up into tiny pieces, stuffed them into his horse’s saddlebags and set it loose to wander home. That was some kind of warning message!

The Loraine Monument, Kirkharle – photo by Jane Roberts

The inscription reads:

This
New stone was set up
In the place of an
old one by S[i]r William
Loraine Bar[one]t in 1728
In Memory of Robert
Loraine his Ancestor
Who was Barbarously
Murderd in this place
by the Scots in 1483
for his good service to
his Country against
their thefts & Robbery
As he was returning
home from the Church
Alone Where he had
Been at his private
Devotions

This replacement monument would have been erected during the period “Capability” Brown worked here.

On then to St Wilfrid’s Church, or St Wilfred in the Historic England Grade I listing. This small, simple, squat building, dating mainly from 1336 and restored in 1884, is best known as the baptism place of “Capability” Brown, on 30 August 1716.

Inside I was drawn to the font. Dating from the 15th/16th century, I was stunned to discover until 1786 it was the baptismal font at the old All Saints church, Newcastle upon Tyne. Therefore not the one in which a young “Capability” Brown was inducted into the church. For me this was no disappointment – it was now far more thrilling and personal.

Image if the old All Saints church, from Sopwith’s A Historical and Descriptive Account of All Saints’ Church, in Newcastle upon Tyne’, published in 1826, out of copyright.

Completed in 1286 and initially known as All Hallows’ church, by 1786 the old All Saints church in Newcastle upon Tyne had fallen into such a state of disrepair and collapse that a meeting of parishioners in the vestry room on Easter Tuesday, 18 April voted unanimously to completely demolish it and build a new church.1

Ruined interior of the old All Saints’ Church, Newcastle upon Tyne, from
The local historian’s table book, of remarkable occurences, historical facts, traditions, legendary and descriptive ballads, etc., etc., connected with the counties of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, Northumberland and Durham, Vol II – published 1841 – out of copyright

The last service in the old church was held on 9 July 1786, and by August 1789 its total demolition was complete.2 This included disposal of all the old fixtures and fittings, even to the extent of placing an advert in the Newcastle Courant of 15 July 1786 requesting anyone entitled to any of the monuments or monumental inscriptions to immediately remove them.

The foundation stone for the new church was laid on 14 August 1786, and the building completed with the placing of the top stone of the spire on 21 October 1796. It went on to be used as a place of worship until 1959.

The new All Saints Church, Newcastle upon Tyne, from Sopwith’s A Historical and Descriptive Account of All Saints’ Church, in Newcastle upon Tyne’, published in 1826, out of copyright.

But back to my particular interest – the old All Saints church font, now at Kirkharle. I discovered it had a varied – and colourful – history. This included being hidden by stone mason Cuthbert Maxwell from Scots raiders in around 1640. It was eventually reinstated in the Newcastle upon Tyne church in 1660 following the Restoration of King Charles II.3

The font from the old Newcastle All Saints Church demolished in 1786, it is now at St Wilfrid’s Kirkharle – photo by Jane Roberts

There is a description of the font in T. Sopwith’s A Historical and Descriptive Account of All Saints’ Church, in Newcastle upon Tyne. It reads:

The font, which was of stone, was placed immediately on entering the body of the Church by the middle aisle, a situation which it generally occupied in former times, and by which was intimated the baptismal entrance of the Christian Church. It was a plain octangular pillar, the sides of which extending outward at the top, formed large cavettos,4 supporting an octagon of a larger size, with concave sides, decorated with armorial bearings…Above this octagon which contained the bason,4 a cover was formerly suspended. In the churchwardens’ accounts for 1636, mention occurs of a charge for hanging the font cover – in 1685, a bason and cover for the font cost £2, and in 1700, it was new painted and gilded. On the demolition of the Church, the stone font was given to Alderman Hugh Hornby, by whom it was placed in the garden of his house, in Pilgrim-Street, and left there when the house was sold to Mr. Clapham.6

Its worn appearance may therefore owe something to its period as a garden ornament.

So how did it come to end up in a tiny church in rural Northumberland?

In 1836 Thomas Anderson of Little Harle purchased Kirkharle from the Loraine family. His father had acquired the font three years earlier. When St Wilfrid’s was restored in 1884, Thomas’ son George placed the font in the church.6

And why did all this send shivers down my spine?

Newcastle All Saints was a church associated with my paternal ancestors. It is where my 4x great grandmother, Ann Jackson, was baptised on 22 August 1773. More details of her here.

I’d quite by chance stumbled across a religious artefact associated with my family history. I had absolutely no idea the baptismal font from her era was at Kirkharle.

This was the highlight of my holiday – made all the better for its sheer unexpectedness.


Footnotes:
1. Mackenzie, E. A Descriptive and Historical Account of the Town and County of Newcastle upon Tyne Including the Borough of Gateshead. Vol 1, 1827. Page 292-322
2. Sopwith, Thomas. A Historical and Descriptive Account of All Saints’ Church in Newcastle upon Tyne: Illustrated with Plans, Views, & Architectural Details. Newcastle: Edward Walker, 1826. Page 21
3. Bourne, Henry. The History of Newcastle upon Tyne or, the Ancient and Present State of That Town. by the Late Henry Bourne, M.A. Curate of All-Hallows in Newcastle. Newcastle upon Tyne: J White, 1736.
4. A concave moulding with a regular curved profile that is part of a circle, widely used in architecture as well as furniture, picture frames, metalwork and other decorative arts.
5. A variant spelling of basin.
6. Sopwith, Thomas, ibid. Page 40
7. Information board at St Wilfrid’s church, Kirkharle.


Other sources not directly referenced:
• “Biography: Lanelot ‘Capability’ Brown – The Gardens Trust.” Accessed November 27, 2022. https://thegardenstrust.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/11/Lancelot_Capability_Brown_biog.pdf.
• “Brown, Lancelot [Known as Capability Brown] (Bap. 1716, d. 1783), Landscape Gardener and Architect.” Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Accessed November 27, 2022. https://www.oxforddnb.com/view/10.1093/ref:odnb/9780198614128.001.0001/odnb-9780198614128-e-3635.
• “Church of St Wilfred, Kirkwhelpington – 1370499: Historic England.” , Kirkwhelpington – 1370499 | Historic England. Accessed November 27, 2022. https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1370499?section=official-list-entry.
• Countryfilemag. “Kirkharle, Northumberland.” Countryfile.com. Countryfile.com, November 9, 2018. https://www.countryfile.com/go-outdoors/days-out/kirkharle-northumberland/.
• “Development of Kirkharle Landscape and Lake.” Development of Kirkharle Landscape and Lake – News | Capability Brown. Accessed November 27, 2022. https://www.capabilitybrown.org.uk/news/development-kirkharle-landscape-and-lake/.
• “Kirkharle Hall, History & Visiting: Historic Tyne & Wear Guide.” Britain Express. Accessed November 27, 2022. https://www.britainexpress.com/attractions.htm?attraction=3438.
• “Kirkharle, Northumberland – St Wilfrid.” Northernvicar’s Blog, August 23, 2019. https://www.northernvicar.co.uk/2019/08/23/kirkharle-northumberland-st-wilfrid/.
• Kelly’s Directory of Durham and Northumberland: With Coloured Maps: 1921
. London: Kelly’s Directories Ltd., 1921. Page 171.
• “Loraine Memorial Stone C.60 Yards South-West of Kirkharle Manor, Kirkwhelpington – 1155480: Historic England.” , Kirkwhelpington – 1155480 | Historic England. Accessed November 27, 2022. https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/the-list/list-entry/1155480.
• “Monument to Robert Loraine, Kirkharle: Co-Curate.” Co-curate. Accessed November 27, 2022. https://co-curate.ncl.ac.uk/resources/view/79099/.
• Richardson, Moses Aaron. The Local Historian’s Table Book: Of Remarkable Occurences, Historical Facts, Traditions, Legendary and Descriptive Ballads, &c., &c., Connected with the Counties of Newcastle-upon-Tyne, Northumberland and Durham. 2. Vol. 2. Newcastle-upon-Tyne: M.A. Richardson, 1841.