• About
  • Ahentafel index
  • Books
    • Cavenagh, Mainwaring, and Cudmore: A journal of family history
    • Champions from Normandy
    • C F C Crespigny nee Dana
    • Pink Hats on Gentle Ladies: second edition by Vida and Daniel Clift
  • Index
    • A to Z challenges
    • DNA research
    • UK trip 2019
    • World War 1
    • Whitmore, Staffordshire
    • Beggs family index
    • Boltz and Manock family index
    • Budge and Gunn family index
    • Cavenagh family index
    • Chauncy family index
    • Cross and Plowright family index
    • Cudmore family index
    • Dana family index
    • Dawson family index
    • de Crespigny family index
    • de Crespigny family index 2 – my English forebears
    • de Crespigny family index 3 – the baronets and their descendants
    • Edwards, Ralph and Gilbart family index
    • Hughes family index including Hawkins, Plaisted, Taylor families
    • Mainwaring family index
      • Back to 1066 via the Mainwaring family
    • Sullivan family index
    • Symes family index
    • Way and Daw(e) family index
    • Young family index

Anne's Family History

~ An online research journal

Anne's Family History

Category Archives: politics

Oh dear! My grandmother voted for the Communists!

18 Sunday May 2025

Posted by Anne Young in Adelaide, Kathleen, politics

≈ 2 Comments

In 1955 my father’s parents moved from the city of Adelaide to a house by the beach, at Grange. Their new address was within the boundaries of the Federal electorate of Port Adelaide, created in 1949.

Port Adelaide was one of Australia’s safest Labor seats, the only electorate in South Australia to have voted Labor at every federal election since it was formed. Its most notable member was Mick Young, Leader of the House under Prime Minister Bob Hawke.

Labor promoted itself as a ‘progressive’ party of the centre-left. My grandmother Kathleen Cavenagh (Cudmore) Symes (1908-2013), a conservative in politics, opposed Labor policies and, when she could, always directed her vote against the Labor candidate.

This sometimes led to a little awkwardness. What would she do if the more conservative of Australia’s two major parties did not field a candidate in her electorate? She told me that in that case, rather than voting ‘informal’ (an empty vote, the equivalent of not voting at all) or voting for Labor, she would vote for the Communist candidate.

This does not mean that she’d abandoned her conservative opinions and taken up Communism. By voting Communist she was at least withholding what might might seem to count as approval of Labor, directing it to a party opposed to the dominance of the centre-left.

I’ve been wondering when and how often she voted for the Communists.

The Communist party stood for election in Port Adelaide in all nine elections from 1949 to 1969. There was also a candidate from the party in the three elections from 1977 to 1983 and again in 1998 and 2001.

In both 1954 and 1955 only two candidates stood in Port Adelaide, the sitting member, Albert Thompson (1886–1966), and a candidate for the Communist Party. In the 1954 election the candidate was Alan Finger (1909-1985), a medical practitioner. In the 1955 election the candidate was Peter Symon (1922-2008).

Kathleen’s husband and father were both medical practitioners and probably knew Alan Finger.

A profile by the Adelaide News sets out the policies of the two candidates in 1954:

News (Adelaide, SA), Thursday 20 May 1954, page 14


Your election guide No. 5-Pt Adelaide 
ALP has mortgage on this seat 
Mr. A.V. Thompson, the sitting Labor member, is being opposed by a Communist, Dr. Alan Finger, in Port Adelaide.
Not by any stretch of the imagination could Dr. Finger be given a chance of success. 
The LCL decided against bothering to put up a candidate in this blue ribbon Labor seat. 
At the 1951 general election, Mr. Thomson was opposed by Mr. J. A. H. Caskey (endorsed LCL) and Dr. Finger. Mr. Thompson polled 20,000 more than the combined votes of his two opponents. Dr. Finger managed only 1,304 against Mr. Thompson's 33,979. 
The sub-divisions of Port Adelaide are: Albert Park, Dudley Park, Kilburn, Port Adelaide, Semaphore, and Woodville. 
There are 56,762 on the roll (50,460 in 1951). 
24 yrs. in politics. 
A lay preacher, who entered the SA Parliament in 1930, Mr. Thompson has been in politics continuously for 24 years. Before that he was in the transport industry and for many years was president of the Transport Workers' Union. 
In 1947 he represented the IOOF Friendly Society at an international conference in America. 
He was in the SA Parliament for 16 ½  years, representing both Port Adelaide and Semaphore. 
He entered the Federal Parliament when he won Hindmarsh in 1946 and then contested Port Adelaide in 1949. 
He has a family of two sons and four daughters. He has been a consistent advocate in the Federal Parliament for ameliorating the means test for social service benefits. 
Mr. Thompson says: "Saturday week's election will decide the future standards of the people. For the workers, manual or clerical, the question will be one of restoring cost-of-living standards by quarterly adjustment of wages and restoring the value of margins in industry. 
"I urge an increase of £4 a week for pensioners to give the same standard of purchasing power as existed when the Chifley Government was defeated in 1949." 
Doctor's policy 
Dr. Alan Finger, 44, is an Adelaide doctor. He became well known as medical superintendent of Northfield Infectious Diseases Hospital for 11 years. In 1947 he went into private practice at Broken Hill for a short time and returned to Adelaide to practice privately at Pennington in 1949. 
Dr. Finger is married and has four children.
"Ban A-weapons" 
Dr. Finger says: "I stand for a policy of peace. I am against rearming of Japan and for a total ban on all atomic and biological weapons, and for Australian independence from the US or any other Power.
"Increasing living standards, abolition of the means test, free social services, and development of Australia's resources by and for our own people could be provided by ending needless war expenditure, and by more heavily taxing the wealthy concerns as a preliminary to their nationalisation."

……………

Albert Thompson held the seat with 47,355 votes or 94%. Alan Finger received 3,045 votes, 6% of the total. There were 4,083 informal votes, 7% of the total. 96.2% of those on the roll voted.

Nationally the incumbent Liberal–Country coalition led by Prime Minister Robert Menzies (won 64 seats) defeated the opposition Labor Party led by H. V. Evatt (57 seats).

In late 1955 an early election was called to bring the House and Senate elections back in line.

Unfortunately the digitised newspapers do not cover the period so one cannot read the summary of the candidate’s policies online.

Symon had joined the Communist Party of Australia at the age of 16. In the Second World War, Symon served in the army, then the air force, and in later life worked as a waterside labourer in Adelaide. 

Albert Thompson held the seat with 32,813 votes or 85%. There was a swing of 9% against him. Peter Symon received 5,918 votes, 15% of the total. There were 2,906 informal votes, 7% of the total. 96.1% of those on the roll voted.

Nationally the incumbent Liberal–Country coalition led by Prime Minister Robert Menzies increased its majority (75 seats) over the opposition Labor Party, led by H. V. Evatt (47 seats) with a Two-party-preferred swing of 4.9%.

My grandparents moved to Grange in 1955. Kathleen seems to have had in mind that year’s election, when the Communists won 15% of the vote, a surprisingly large proportion for a minor party. Perhaps other conservative voters besides my grandmother were registering the same sort of grievance. When it came to a choice between an unattractive possibility—a Labor win— and an unappealing impossibility—a Communist win—it made sense to vote for the party certain to fail. The protest might encourage the conservatives to field a candidate next time.

My grandparents Kathleen and Geoff de Crespigny 1960

Two cheers…

25 Thursday Jul 2024

Posted by Anne Young in Australia, CdeC Australia, court case, Hughes, politics

≈ 2 Comments

2024 marks the anniversary of 100 years of compulsory voting in Australia.

Queensland introduced compulsory voting in 1915, the first region of the British Empire to implement this measure.

Following a decline in turnout from more than 71% at the 1919 election to less than 60% at the 1922 election, the Commonwealth Electoral Act was amended in 1924 to state that “It shall be the duty of every elector to vote at each election”. The effect was immediate, with turnout at the 1925 election rising to over 91%. Australia has one of the highest electoral turnout rates in the world and it has never fallen below 90% since the introduction of compulsory voting in 1924. This is around 30% higher than the recent average turnout in countries with voluntary voting; in the 2024 United Kingdom election turnout is estimated to have slumped to a record low, 52%.

There had been other milestones and anniversaries in the electoral system for the Australian Federal Government and its former colonies, now States:

1856: manhood suffrage: the right to vote for the South Australian House of Assembly was extended to all adult males without regard to property ownership. In the same year the South Australian Legislative Council passed legislation providing for the secret ballot system of voting to be used for the new parliament, also known as the Australian Ballot.

1870: payment of members of parliament: although most male residents had the right to vote and almost all of those with that right could, in theory, stand for Parliament, very few could afford it until Members were paid. From 1870 in Victoria members of Parliament were reimbursed for their expenses in attending Parliament, effectively providing a salary for all members. Before this, only Ministers and Office holders were provided with a salary. In South Australia payment of members was introduced in 1887; in New South Wales payment of members was introduced in 1889.

1894: in South Australia the franchise was extended to include women.

The 1902 Commonwealth Franchise Act gave suffrage for federal Elections for those who were British subjects over 21 years of age who had lived in Australia for six months (natives of Australia and some other countries were excluded); the Act gave Australian women the right to vote and stand for Federal Parliament.

1908: a permanent Federal electoral roll was established

1911: it became compulsory for all eligible voters to enrol. Compulsory enrolment produced a large increase in voter turnout, even though voting was still voluntary.

Two earlier anniversaries

2011 was the hundredth anniversary of my great grandparents Constantine Trent’s and Beatrix Champion de Crespigny’s failure to comply with the 1911 requirement to register on the electoral roll.

2014 was the hundredth anniversary of their second failure to comply:

NOT ON THE ROLL.
ELECTORAL ACT PROSECUTIONS.
Several persons were dealt with at the Adelaide Police Court on Wednesday for having failed to have their names placed on the Commonwealth electoral rolls within 21 days after they were entitled to do so. The informations were laid by Mr. E. Bromley, returning-officer for the division of Adelaide, and Mr. C. H. Powers prosecuted. Mr. W. H. Wadey, S.M., heard the cases. The following defendants were fined 10/ with 15/ costs:-- Percival and Elsie White, of Gordon-road, Prospect; Cecil Beythien, of East-terrace, city; and Constantine Trent Champion and Beatrice Champion De Crespigny, of Strangways terrace, North Adelaide. In each of the following cases the fines and costs amounted to 16/: Susannah Winifred and Martha Jane Massey, of Molesworth-street. North Adelaide; Florence, Dorothy, Charlotte, and Albert Holland, of Braund-road, Prospect; Edward J. and Eleanor Copley, of Olive-street, Prospect; and Richard Stanley and Annie Myra Wallis, of Gordon road, Prospect.

Beatrix’s casual disregard of her civic duty is a little surprising, for two of her first cousins, Harry Lawson and Vida Goldstein, were very active in politics. Harry Lawson was a member of the Victorian parliament from 1899. He became premier in 1918. Vida Goldstein was a prominent suffragist. She stood unsuccessfully five times for election to Federal parliament.

Polling booth Australian federal election November 2022 at Phoenix P-12 Community College, Sebastopol, Victoria where I complied with my obligation to vote

Related posts and further reading

  • Through her eyes: votes for women 1903: Constantine Trent’s grandmother and aunts registered on the electoral roll in 1903
  • Isabella Goldstein nee Hawkins, Beatrix’s aunt:
    • Isabella Goldstein nee Hawkins 1849 – 1916
  • Vida Goldstein, Beatrix’s cousin:
    • Trove Tuesday: Vida Mary Jane Goldstein (1869 – 1949)
    • Sepia Saturday 195 : International Day of Peace
    • V is for vivacious Vida on the vamp
    • Under the influence
  • Harry Lawson, Beatrix’s cousin:
    • Harry Lawson elected Victorian Premier March 1918
    • Trove Tuesday: MCG not available for 1956 Olympics
    • A visit to Parliament House in Melbourne
  • Compulsory voting in Australia. (2023, November 20). Australian Electoral Commission. https://www.aec.gov.au/about_aec/publications/voting/
  • Strangio, P. (2024, July 21). Compulsory voting in Australia is 100 years old. We should celebrate how special it makes our democracy. The Conversation. https://theconversation.com/compulsory-voting-in-australia-is-100-years-old-we-should-celebrate-how-special-it-makes-our-democracy-234801  
  • COURT CASES. (1914, March 12). The Advertiser (Adelaide, SA : 1889 – 1931), p. 14. Retrieved from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article5419833
  • Two Cheers for Democracy, a collection of essays by E. M. Forster, published in 1951

Wikitree:

  • Constantine Trent Champion de Crespigny (1882 – 1952)
  • Beatrix (Hughes) Champion de Crespigny (1884 – 1943)
  • Isabella (Hawkins) Goldstein (1849 – 1916); Isabella was one of Beatrix’s aunts and the mother of Vida
  • Vida Jane Mary Goldstein (1869 – 1949); Beatrix’s first cousin
  • Harry Sutherland Wightman Lawson KCMG (1875 – 1952); Beatrix’s first cousin

E is for election

05 Friday Apr 2024

Posted by Anne Young in A to Z 2024, politics, Whitmore 2024 A to Z

≈ 16 Comments

“Bribery is Detestable; but Politeness Costs Nothing.”
Punch, vol. 13, no. 319, 21 Aug. 1847, p. 64.

In 1847, when away for the summer at Scarborough with his family, Captain Mainwaring was informed that Lord Brackley, a nephew of the Duke of Sutherland, proposed standing at the General Election as a candidate for the Northern Division of Staffordshire. He wrote to his bailiffs at Whitmore and Biddulph, desiring them to communicate his wish to his tenants that they should give a plumper for Buller. On the 2nd of August he heard that Mr. Buller had withdrawn in consequence of those who had promised him support having deserted him. The next day he was told that Mr. Buller had decided to stand, and on the 4th he went to Stafford with Captain Powys, Lord Anson and Mr. Coyney, and proposed Mr. Buller; Mr. Pye seconded him. Mr. Adderley and Lord Brackley were also nominated. On the 9th of August the Whitmore tenants breakfasted at the Mainwaring Arms: 5 of them went to vote at Stone, and 13 proceeded to Newcastle, all plumpers for Buller; at 3 o’clock they all dined together. On the following day Captain Mainwaring left for Biddulph, and went from there to Leek with 22 voters, making in all, with 1 for Eccleshall and 1 for Cheadle, 42 plumpers.

Mainwarings of Whitmore, page 114
Whitmore to Stone is 9 miles (15 km)
Whitmore to Newcastle-under-Lyme is 4 miles (7 km)
Biddulph to Leek is 8 miles (13 km)

The Northern division of Staffordshire was a county constituency in the county of Staffordshire. It was created in 1832 and abolished in 1885. It returned two Members of Parliament to the House of Commons of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. Elections were by the bloc vote system whereby each voter may cast as many votes as the number of seats to be filled.

A plumper vote is a vote cast at an election for a single candidate when the voter has the right to vote for two or more.

Edward Buller was a member of the Whig Party. He was member of parliament (MP) for North Staffordshire from 1833 to 1841, for Stafford from 1841 to 1847, and for North Staffordshire again from 1865 to 1874.

The Whig Party were ultimately successors to the Roundheads who were supporters of Parliament in the English Civil War (1642 – 1651); the Whigs began as a political faction that opposed absolute monarchy and Catholic emancipation.

During the Civil War the Mainwarings of Whitmore supported the Roundheads. Rowland Mainwaring’s support for the Whigs 200 years later is in line with his ancestors’ political views.

Despite the support of Rowland Mainwaring and his tenants for Mr Buller, in 1847 Lord Brackley became Member of Parliament for North Staffordshire and held the seat until 1851 when he resigned due to ill health. He was a member of the Conservative Party, a Tory. The second successful candidate for North Staffordshire was Charles Adderley, also a conservative, who had been a member since 1841.
The 1847 United Kingdom general election resulted in the Whigs in control of government despite candidates calling themselves Conservatives winning the most seats. The Conservatives were divided between Protectionists, led by Lord Stanley, and a minority of free-trade Tories led by former prime minister Sir Robert Peel. This left the Whigs, led by Prime Minister Lord John Russell, in a position to continue in government.

Related posts and further reading

  • Rix, K. (2019, February 26). Corruption at elections in Britain in the 19th century. The Victorian Commons. https://victoriancommons.wordpress.com/2019/02/26/corruption-at-elections-in-britain-in-the-19th-century/
  • Salmon, P. (2014, February 5). The mathematics of Victorian representation: part 1. The Victorian Commons. https://victoriancommons.wordpress.com/2014/02/05/the-mathematics-of-victorian-representation-part-1/
    • “In general elections, meanwhile, electors in two-member constituencies could cast votes for two candidates from the same party (straights), share their votes between candidates from different parties (splitting), or cast just one of their votes (plumping).”
  • Salmon, P. (2022, November 22). The 1872 Secret Ballot and Multiple Member Seats. The Victorian Commons. https://victoriancommons.wordpress.com/2022/11/22/the-1872-secret-ballot-and-multiple-member-seats/
    • “The calmness and order of Britain’s new secret elections, by contrast, was striking. At the first by-elections to be held in Pontefract, Preston, Tiverton and Richmond, it was widely reported that there was none of the usual ‘horse play’ and ‘excitement’. Some commentators even complained that the secret ballot had ‘taken all the life out of elections’, making them ‘dull’. They have become ‘the most monotonous of monotonies’, commented the South Wales Daily News, wistfully recalling the agitation and passion of ‘olden times’.”
    • “The biggest problem, however, which was to become a significant issue in the 1874 general election, was the question of how to cast a good old fashioned ‘plumper’ in those constituencies that continued to elect two (or more) MPs. It is often forgotten that unlike today with our first-past-the-post system, before 1885 the vast bulk of England’s parliamentary seats were multi-member. This created a much more complex voting system in which electors could either divide their support between different candidates or use just one of their multiple votes to support a single candidate, by casting a ‘plumper’. Shortly before the 1874 general election the Reading Mercury, 31 Jan. 1874, published this extraordinary but by no means uncommon advice:
      • “If the voter intends to vote … all he has to do is put a cross (X) against the names of the candidates … Of course if the voter intends to give a “plumper” two crosses must be written opposite the name of the candidate thus favoured.”
      • … the advice was inaccuarate – under the new rules “special notices had to be issued telling electors that ‘you cannot give more than one vote to any one candidate or mark more than one X after the name of such candidate’.”

Wikitree:

  • Edward (Buller-Yarde-Buller) Manningham-Buller Bt (1800 – 1882)
  • Rowland Mainwaring (1782 – 1862)

200th birthday of Wentworth Cavenagh 1822 – 1895

13 Sunday Nov 2022

Posted by Anne Young in Cavenagh, Cavenagh-Mainwaring, gold rush, Kent, politics, South Australia

≈ 3 Comments

My great great grandfather Wentworth Cavenagh (1822 – 1895) was born 200 years ago on 13 November 1822 at Hythe, Kent, England to James Gordon Cavenagh and Ann Cavenagh nee Coates, the fifth of their eight children. He was baptised on 12 March 1823 at St Leonard’s, Hythe.

Wentworth’s father James Gordon, born Irish, was a surgeon of the Royal Staff Corps, an army engineering corps with its headquarters in Hythe, responsible in part for supervising the construction of static defence measures including the Royal Military Canal against Napoleon’s threatened invasion.

After their marriage in March 1815, the Cavenaghs lived at Hythe. In 1825 Cavenagh retired on half pay.

The Cavenagh family returned to Wexford in Ireland in 1837 and lived at Castle House. Wentworth Cavenagh attended the Ferns Diocesan School. It is believed he began training as a pharmacist in Wexford, but after the potato famine struck in the 1840s the economy was so bad he realised there was no future for him in Ireland and emigrated.

Wentworth Cavenagh emigrated to Canada, hoping to become a farmer there. He later moved to Ceylon to take up coffee-planting, then to Calcutta where he unsuccessfully sought a Government appointment. In 1852 he sailed from Calcutta to Australia and joined the gold rush to Bendigo then moved to South Australia to farm at Peachey Belt some twenty miles north of Adelaide.

Map of Wentworth Cavenagh’s travels

In 1863 Cavenagh was elected to the South Australian House of Assembly for the District of Yatala. He served in the Legislature for nineteen years, including period as Commissioner of Crown Lands from 1868 to 1870 in the Strangways Ministry, and Commissioner of Public Works from 1872 to 1873 in the Administration formed by Sir Henry Ayers. At the time Darwin was surveyed in 1869 Cavenagh was Commissioner of Crown Lands; a main street is named after him.

In 1865 at the age of 42 he married Ellen Mainwaring, the daughter of a neighbouring farmer. They had ten children.

Portrait of Wentworth Cavenagh, from the collection of a cousin

Wentworth Cavenagh returned to England in 1892. On his departure the Adelaide Evening Journal of 27 April 1892 published a brief biography:

PASSENGERS BY THE BALLAARAT.—The following. are the passengers booked to leave Adelaide by the Ballaarat to-day:—For London —Mr. and Mrs. Wentworth Cavenagh-Mainwaring, Misses Eva, May, Kathleen, Helen, Queenie, and Gertrude, and Master Hugh Cavenagh-Mainwaring, and Misses Herring, Schomburgk, and Horn. For Albany—Messrs. Green, Richards, and Radcliffe.

THE HON. WENTWORTH CAVENAGH-MAINWARING.—This gentleman, accompanied by his wife, six daughters, and one son, leaves by the Ballarat to-day for England, where he is about, to take up his residence at Whitmore Hall. He is a son of James Gordon Cavenagh, who was army surgeon in the Royal Staff Corps. He served in the army for thirty-five years, and went all through the Peninsula War. while he was also present at the Battle of Waterloo and the taking of Paris. He was a brother of General Sir Orfeur Cavenagh, K.C.S.I., lately deceased, who served in India in various campaigns, and who, as Town Major of Fort William, is supposed to have saved Calcutta during the mutiny. He was afterwards for several years Governor of the Straits Settlements. Another brother, General Gordon Cavenagh, served in various actions in China and India. The Hon. Wentworth Cavenagh-Mainwaring was born at Hyde, Kent, on November 13, 1822. He was educated at Ferns Diocesan School, County Wexford, Ireland, and when eighteen years of age he left home for Canada, where he was engaged for some years farming. He subsequently relinquished this occupation and started coffee planting in Ceylon. Afterwards he tried to obtain a Government appointment at Calcutta, but was unsuccessful. Attracted by a Government advertisement he came to Australia, arriving in Melbourne in 1852. Thence he went to the Bendigo diggings, and from there he came to South Australia and started farming at Peachy Belt. He stopped there for several years, and in 1863 was elected to Parliament with the late Hon. L. Glyde for the District of Yatala. For nineteen years he remained in the Legislature without a break, and during that period he was Commissioner of Crown Lands in the Strangways Ministry, and Commissioner of Public Works in the Administration formed by Sir Henry Ayers. In the elections of 1881 he was rejected when the Hon. D. Murray and Mr. Gilbert (the present member) were elected On February 16, 1865, he married Ellen Jane, the eldest daughter of Gordon Mainwaring, an officer in the East Indian Civil Service, who was at one time Inspector of Police in the early days of South Australia, and on the death of his father, Admiral Mainwaring, he succeeded to the family estates in Staffordshire. On the death of her brothers without heirs Mrs. Cavenagh-Mainwaring became entitled to the estates and adopted the name and arms of Mainwaring.

Wentworth Cavenagh died at the age of 72 in Southsea. He was buried in Whitmore, Staffordshire.

Related posts

  • N is for neighbours
  • W is for Wexford
  • E is for Eden Park, home of Wentworth Cavenagh
  • 1892 journey on the ”Ballaarat”

Wikitree: Wentworth (Cavenagh) Cavenagh-Mainwaring (1822 – 1895)

U is for Upton upon Severn

25 Monday Apr 2022

Posted by Anne Young in A to Z 2022, Bath, Champion de Crespigny, England, politics, Somerset

≈ 7 Comments

My fifth great grandmother Dorothy Scott was born on 15 November 1765 at Betton Strange Hall, near Shrewsbury in Shropshire to Richard Scott (1731 – 1770) and Elizabeth Scott nee Gough (1735 – 1772). She had three older brothers.

In 1770, with Dorothy not yet five years old, her father died, and two years later her mother. I do not know who brought up Dorothy when she was orphaned.

On 20 January 1783, at the age of seventeen, Dorothy married Philip Champion Crespigny, a lawyer, forty-four years old; she was his fourth wife. Of the nine children by his previous wives, seven were living at the time of his marriage to Dorothy Scott.

Dorothy and Philip had four children, one of whom died in infancy. The polyphiloprogenitive Philip died, on 1 January 1803; he and Dorothy had been married for nearly 20 years.

Portrait of Dorothy Crespigny painted by George Romney in 1790 and now in the collection of the Philadephia Museum of Art

On 27 March 1804 at St Swithin’s Church, Walcot, Bath, Dorothy married for a second time, to Sir John Keane (1757 – 1829).

Keane was an Irish Tory Member of Parliament, who had been made a baronet in 1801. In the Irish Parliament he represented Bangor from 1791 to 1897; Youghal from 1797 to 1800; and he represented Youghal in the House of Commons from 1801to 1806 and from 1807 to 1818. The ‘History of Parliament‘ notes that “evidence of his presence at Westminster is very thin”. “In February 1817 the chief secretary was informed that he was living at Southampton and should be asked to pay a visit to Westminster. On 15 April 1818 he turned up to vote with ministers on the Duke of Clarence’s Marriage Grant. He did not seek re-election that year.”

Dorothy and John Keane had one son, George (1805 – 1880). Keane had been married previously and had at least four children by his first wife. He died on 18 April 1829 at his house in the Royal Crescent, Bath.

Royal Crescent, Bath

The dowager Lady Keane died on 5 July 1837 at Malvern Wells, Worcestershire. Her death was registered at Upton upon Severn, six miles to the east. (New legislation concerning civil registration had come
into effect on 1 July 1837 and her death was one of the first to be registered under the Births and Deaths Registration Act 1836. The new law required that “within Three Days after the day of such Death…[notice should be given] to the Registrar of the District”.)

Index of deaths in the July quarter 1837 from the registers maintained by the General Register Office for England and Wales

The death of the dowager Lady Keane was announced in several newspapers. The London ‘Morning Post‘ of Saturday, July 8, 1837 wrote: ‘Died: At Malvern, on the 5th inst., the Dowager Lady Keane, relict of Sir John Keane, Bart., of Bath’. The Worcester ‘Berrows Worcester Journal‘ of Thursday, July 13, 1837 had: ‘July 5th, at Malvern Wells, aged 72, the Dowager Lady Keane, relict of Sir John Keane, Bart., of the Crescent, Bath’.

Great Malvern – St Ann’s Well
The spring or well is named after Saint Anne, the maternal grandmother of Christ and the patron saint of many wells. The building housing the spring dates back to 1813.

Malvern Wells, where Lady Keane seems to have resorted after the death of her husband, was a spa town, whose water was thought for centuries to have beneficial properties. In 1817 an enthusiast named John Chambers published A General History of Malvern, embellished with plates, intended to comprise all the advantages of a Guide, with the important details of chemical, mineralogical and statistical information. In the 19th century Malvern became famous for the water cure, and it rapidly developed into to a busy town with many large hotels. Hydrotherapists promoted the cure, and the resort’s many well-known patients and patrons—one was Lord Lytton, who in 1845 published “Confessions of a Water-Patient“– contributed to Malvern’s renown.

Dorothy was buried with her second husband in St. Nicholas’ Churchyard, Bathampton, Somerset.

St Nicholas Church, Bathampton
The grave of Dorothy Scott Keane at Bathampton. Photograph by K. C. Mellem and retrieved from FindAGrave; used with permission.

Related posts

  • Philip Champion de Crespigny (1738 – 1803)
  • Concerning her three children surviving with Philip:
    • George: D is for Durham Light Infantry
    • George (1783-1813) :  D is for Durham Light Infantry
    • Eliza (1784-1831) : G is for Gretna Green
    • Charles Fox (1785-1875) : Charles Fox Champion de Crespigny (1785 – 1875)
  • On the sale of her portrait by her great grandson: Great expectations – disappointed

Further reading

  • Jupp, P. J. “KEANE, John (1757-1829), of Belmont, co. Waterford.” History of Parliament , The History of Parliament Trust, www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1790-1820/member/keane-john-1757-1829.

Wikitree:

  • Dorothy (Scott) Keane (1765 – 1837)

P is for Parliament

18 Saturday Apr 2020

Posted by Anne Young in A to Z 2020, politics

≈ 3 Comments

The Palace of Westminster is the meeting place of the House of Commons and the House of Lords, the Parliament of the United Kingdom. Informally known as the Houses of Parliament, the Palace lies on the north bank of the River Thames in the City of Westminster, in central London.

The palace was originally the principal residence of the English monarch. Parliament first met there in 1265.

However, in 1512, during the reign of Henry VIII, a fire destroyed part of the building and the King moved to the Palace of Whitehall.

Print_of_Houses_of_Parliament_before_1834_Fire

Parliament before the 1834 fire with Old Palace Yard in the foreground. Drawn by J. Shury & Son, Printed by Day & Haghe Date circa 1834. Retrieved through Wikimedia Commons.

In 1834 a large fire destroyed both Houses of Parliament and many of its
ancillary buildings.

Joseph_Mallord_William_Turner,_English_-_The_Burning_of_the_Houses_of_Lords_and_Commons,_October_16,_1834_-_Google_Art_Project

The Burning of the Houses of Lords and Commons, 16th October, 1834 by J. M. W. Turner retrieved through Wikimedia Commons

Several of my forebears and relatives served in Parliament.

Thomas Crew (1564 – 1634), one of my 11th great grandfathers, was elected at Lichfield in 1604. He was Speaker of the House of Commons in 1624 and 1625. Thomas Crew’s father was a tanner of Nantwich, who put his two sons into law. Both Thomas and his brother Ranulphe (1559 – 1646) became Speakers of the House of Commons, the only brothers ever to have had this distinction.

Crew Thomas

Portrait of Sir Thomas Crewe, Speaker 1623 – 1625. Given by his descendant Ralph Cartwright, Esq. 1805. In the collection of the UK Parliament (catalogue number WOA 2702) Crew displeased James 1 by upholding the liberties of Parliament as ‘matters of inheritance, not of grace’ but later said by the King to be the ‘ablest Speaker known for years’.

John Crew (1598 – 1679), son of Thomas and one of my 10th great grandfathers, was first elected to Parliament in 1624 and served until after 1660.

Edward Mainwaring (1635 – 1703), one of my 8th great grandfathers, represented the seat of Newcastle-Under-Lyme in 1685 He was a Tory(a Monarchist), on the committee on the bill for the general naturalization of Huguenot refugees (a committee whose recommendations were of great significance to my Huguenot refugee forebears).

Two generations after arriving as Huguenot refugees, my Champion de Crespigny 5th great grandfather and his Fonnereau brothers-in-law entered Parliament.

Philip Champion Crespigny (1738 – 1803), one of my 5th great grandfathers, first entered Parliament in 1780, Philip Crespigny supported the Tory Prime Minister Lord North. Philip later transferred his allegiance to the radical Whig Charles James Fox (1749-1806); Fox formed a coalition with Lord North in 1783. Philip’s second son by his fourth wife Dorothy nee Scott, born in 1785, was baptised Charles [James] Fox. Philip’s address at that time was number 4, Old Palace Yard, an elegant residential terrace conveniently close to the Houses of Parliament.

Thomas_Malton_-_Old_Palace_Yard,_Westminster

“Old Palace Yard, Westminster” watercolour by Thomas Malton, probably exhibited in the Royal Gallery in 1796

The website called “The History of Parliament Online” has biographies of members of Parliament and the history of constituencies. These cover Parliamentary politics and other aspects of the history of the institution. This project has published 41 volumes, with 24,000 biographical articles on MPs from 1386 to 1832, and a blog with contributions from some of the project’s historians. Recent articles on the blog include:

  • Social Distancing – Medieval Style: a Petition of the Commons in
    the Parliament of 1439
  • Isolation, Containment and Financial Assistance: Parliament’s
    response to epidemics in the 1640s

 

AtoZ map P

The Palace of Westminster is marked with a black x

Sources

The History of Parliament http://www.histparl.ac.uk/

  • CREWE, Thomas (1566-1634), of Gray’s Inn, London and Steane, Northants.; later of Serjeants’ Inn, Fleet Street, London.
  • CREWE, Ranulphe (1559-1646), of Lincoln’s Inn, London and Crewe Hall, Barthomley, Cheshire; later of Westminster
  • CREW, John (c.1598-1679), of Steane, Northants and Lincoln’s Inn Fields, Mdx.
  • MAINWARING, Edward II (1635-1703), of Whitmore, Staffs.
  • CRESPIGNY, Philip Champion (d.1803), of Burwood, nr. Cobham, Surr.

Related posts

  • Samuel Pepys and the Crew family
  • Temperance Crew nee Bray (abt 1580 – 1619)
  • Macavity wasn’t there!
  • O is for Old Palace Yard

Through her eyes: votes for women 1903

13 Thursday Feb 2020

Posted by Anne Young in 52 ancestors, Beggs, CdeC Australia, Eurambeen, politics, Through her eyes

≈ 2 Comments

My third great grandmother Charlotte Frances Champion Crespigny née Dana, lived from 1820 to 1904, a period of great change in the political status of women.

Charlotte Frances Dana

Charlotte Frances Champion Crespigny née Dana (1820 – 1904) photograph probably taken in the late 1850s

In 1902, when she was 82 years old, the Commonwealth Franchise Act 1902 granted Australian women the right to vote and the right to stand for election to the Commonwealth Parliament.

When the list of voters was compiled, Charlotte was recorded on the Electoral Roll for the polling place of Beaufort, Division of Grampians, State of Victoria, as Charlotte Champion, living at Eurambeen, occupation home duties. (Eurambeen was about 11 kilometers west of Beaufort.) Also on the Roll were her daughters Viola Julia Champion and Helen Rosalie Beggs née Champion Crespigny, both also living at Eurambeen with the occupation of home duties.

RDAUS1901_100835__0055-00023

The Commonwealth of Australia 1903 Electoral Roll for the polling place of Beaufort, Division of Grampians, State of Victoria, pages 2 and 3 showing the surnames of Beggs and Champion. Image retrieved from ancestry.com

 

Oddly, it appears that Charlotte and Viola were recorded twice. There are entries  on page 4 of the roll for Crespigny Frances and Crespigny Constantia, also both of Eurambeen; Frances was Charlotte’s middle name and Constantia was Viola’s third given name. When names were collected for the roll the surname Champion Crespigny went over two lines and so did their given names. There was not enough space on the form: the result was two Roll entries each.

RDAUS1901_100930__0076-00062

The Commonwealth of Australia 1903 Electoral Roll for the polling place of Beaufort, Division of Grampians, State of Victoria, pages 4 and 5 showing the surname Crespigny. Image retrieved from ancestry.com

On the 1909 roll Viola’s surname was changed to Crespigny, with her full name recorded as Crespigny, Viola Julia Con. C. At that time she living at St Marnocks with her sister and brother-in-law.

A Victorian state election was held in October 1902 but for this women were as yet not enfranchised. The next year, however, there was a Federal election on 16 December and Charlotte and her daughters were eligible to vote.

The Federal Division of Grampians was retained by the sitting member Thomas Skene (1845 – 1910) of the Free Trade Party, an anti-socialist party which advocated the abolition of tariffs and other restrictions on international trade.

Charlotte and her daughters, from a prosperous family of graziers, probably supported Skene, a pastoralist. Voting was not compulsory, however, and though she was entitled to vote, Charlotte was unwell and probably unable to travel to the polling station at Beaufort to cast her vote.

There was provision for postal voting but it was very complicated, with specific witnesses required.

All in all, the story of my great grandmother’s enfranchisement is not especially remarkable. She was not a fire-breathing suffragist, but an ordinary person who, late in life, accepted a new political privilege with no great fuss.

Sources

  • Australia, Electoral Rolls, 1903 retrieved through ancestry.com first published by the Australian Electoral Commission
  • Geoff Browne, ‘Skene, Thomas (1845–1910)’, Australian Dictionary of Biography, National Centre of Biography, Australian National University, http://adb.anu.edu.au/biography/skene-thomas-8441/text14837, published first in hardcopy 1988, accessed online 12 February 2020.
  • VOTING BY POST. (1903, December 9). The Argus (Melbourne, Vic. : 1848 – 1957), p. 9. Retrieved from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article10586768
  • A new genealogy prompt ~ Through Her Eyes Thursday! #ThroughHerEyesThursday https://thishoosiersheritage.blogspot.com/2020/01/new-genealogy-prompt-through-her-eyes.html

S is for Shrewsbury

22 Monday Apr 2019

Posted by Anne Young in A to Z 2019, Dana, Edinburgh, Johnstone, Kinnaird, Massachusetts, Northamptonshire, politics, Shropshire

≈ 9 Comments

My fifth great grandfather Edmund Dana (1739 – 1823) was born in Charleston, near Boston, Massachusetts to Richard Dana (1700 – 1772), a lawyer and a prominent local politician, and Lydia Dana nee Trowbridge (1710 – 1776). He was their second child.

Edmund entered Harvard in 1756 and graduated in 1759. After a brief apprenticeship with a local doctor, he travelled to England, never to return. By 1764 he was at Edinburgh, perhaps he was studying medicine and science at the university.

Edmund Dana miniature

The Reverend Edmund Dana (1739-1823) A miniature in the possession of my father.

 

At Edinburgh Edmund Dana met the Hon. Helen Kinnaird (abt. 1749 – 1795), daughter of Charles (1723-1767), sixth Baron Kinnaird of Inchture, and his wife Barbara Kinnaird nee Johnstone (1723 – 1765). Edmund and Helen were married on 9 July 1765 at the church of St Cuthbert in Leith, Edinburgh’s port, a few miles from the city.

The couple moved to London where their first three children were born.

On 18 December 1768, at a ceremony in the Chapel Royal of Whitehall, Edmund was ordained a deacon of the Church of England. Two months later he was made a priest and appointed as Vicar of Brigstock Northamptonshire with the chapel of Stanion in the Diocese of Peterborough.

In a letter to his father Richard, written soon after his appointment to Brigstock he explained his new situation and his decision to abandon his medical studies:

My living has been magnified beyond measure, but I have great privileges in it [wh[ich] no other person ever had upon acc[oun]t of its being upon an Estate of Mr Pulteney. I really understood before I took the gown that whatever deficiencys it labor[e]d under Mr Pulteney w[oul]d make good.

In effect, therefore, Edmund had accepted the assurances of his wife’s family, notably of his wife’s uncle William [Johnstone] Pulteney (1729 – 1805), that a career in the church would be assured and well paid. The parish of Brigstock itself was controlled by the Crown through the Bishop of Peterborough, but Edmund’s letter indicates that the land was owned by William Pulteney and that his basic salary would be supplemented. Given the influence of his wealth and position, it would not have been difficult for Pulteney to persuade the bishop to find a place for his niece’s husband.

In November 1772 the Reverend Edmund Dana took up new duties as Vicar of the parish of Wroxeter in Shropshire, in the diocese of Coventry and Lichfield. Wroxeter is a village five miles east of Shrewsbury. William Pulteney had first entered Parliament in 1768 as member for Cromartyshire in Scotland, but he had substantial interests in Shropshire and had also contested the seat of Shrewsbury. Successful at the 1775 election, he held the borough until his death in 1805. Because of the property William Pulteney held, he was patron of several livings in the area: that is, he had authority to name the priest who would head the parish as rector or vicar. The previous incumbent at Wroxeter, Robert Cartwright, had died, and the vacancy was free for Pulteney to nominate his nephew by marriage.

Edmund Dana and his family  settled in the region of Shrewsbury, and William Pulteney continued his support. In 1775 the living of Aston Botterell became vacant through the death of the former Rector Nehemiah Tonks, and Edmund Dana was appointed his successor.

In 1781 Edmund Dana received two further appointments as Rector: to Harley and Eaton Constantine. Both parishes were in the diocese of Coventry and Lichfield and both lay southeast of Shrewsbury, Eaton Constantine just two miles from Wroxeter and Harley a couple of miles further. The livings were formally in the gift of a certain John Newport, but Newport was under age and William Pulteney was his official guardian.

img_4690

Helen continued to bear children: thirteen, nine girls and four boys, in twenty-one years. Three died in infancy. Helen died at Shrewsbury on 17 April 1795, aged about forty-five, and was buried at Wroxeter on 22 April. She and Edmund were married three months short of thirty years; he did not marry again.

Though Edmund Dana had no previous contact with Shropshire, the patronage of William Pulteney gave some status to the newcomer. Wroxeter is a notable parish: a short distance east of Shrewsbury, it occupies the site of the ancient Roman town of Uriconium. Some time after his arrival, Edmund Dana became a local magistrate.

An early supporter of the great engineer Thomas Telford, William Pulteney arranged for him to work on the refurbishment of Shrewsbury Castle during the 1780s, and a few years later had him appointed Surveyor of Public Works for the county, where he constructed roads, bridges and canals. Edmund Dana was a member of the trust concerned with roads and streets, so the two men were at least acquaintances. When Telford was commissioned to construct a new prison in the city, close to the castle, Dana had Telford construct a passage from the castle, across the line of the present-day railway, to the main entrance of the prison and then some distance along the River Severn. The route became known as The Dana, and local custom applied the same name to the prison itself.

Lancasterian School with Castle and Dana path. Before construction of the Railway Station in 1848.

Lancasterian School with Castle and Dana path. Before construction of the Railway Station in 1848. Shrewsbury Museums Service (SHYMS: FA/1991/125). Image sy8896

Dana Shrewsbury geograph-4643002-by-Jaggery

Former HM Prison Shrewsbury viewed across the road named The Dana at the end of May 2014. The prison constructed during 1787-1793, closed in March 2013.

 

Some sources claim that Edmund Dana lived in Castle Gates House, close to the entrance to the castle, and it is possible that for a while he did. From the time that he arrived there, however, all his children were born and baptised at Wroxeter, and his wife Helen died and was buried there.

Dana family tree

abbreviated family tree showing William Pulteney, Helen Kinnaird, Edmund Dana, William Pulteney Dana (his son who was jailed),  granddaughter Anna, and great- nephew Richard Henry Dana Jr

 

In 1856 Edmund’s great-nephew Richard Henry Dana Jr (1815 – 1882), grandson of Edmund’s brother Francis, visited England and spent three days at Shrewsbury. On the first day he met his cousin Anna Penelope Wood nee Dana (1814 – 1890), Edmund’s grand-daughter. Anna’s husband William Henry Wood escorted him on a tour of the city. Richard Dana was shown the Dana Terrace, “principal walk of the castle, and named from the Rev Edmund Dana, who planned it.” He also saw an old house with black timber cross-beams, where the future King Henry VII was said to have spend the night on his way to defeat Richard III at Bosworth in 1485. There was no mention, however, of Edmund Dana living in the city and, since Anna Penelope Wood nee Dana was nine years old and living near Shrewsbury when her grandfather Edmund died in 1823, she probably would have remembered it if he had.

Richard Henry Dana’s diary entry for the following day, Sunday 10 August, records how he accompanied Mr and Mrs Wood to Wroxeter, where they attended the evening service. In somewhat romantic style, he tells how:

Wroxeter is a fair specimen of the old English parish Church, parsonage and village. . . The church stands in the midst of the graves of the villagers, and the vicarage opens into the Church Yard. In this vicarage, lived and died, Edmund Dana, my grandfather’s only brother. Here he officiated from 1766 to 1823 – a period of fifty seven years. Here he brought his beautiful noble bride, a peer’s daughter, in the bloom of her charm, and here he laid her, under the stone of the chancel, at middle life, the mother of twelve children, loved and honoured by all. Here he lies by her side, and here most of this children are buried. . . . . Here grew up, here played, here walked and studied, and loved, and married, those beautiful daughters, whom Mrs President Adams [ Abigail Adams nee Smith] says were the most elegant women she saw in England, and whom George III called the roses of his court.

He goes on to describe the church itself, with the tombs of Edmund Dana, his wife Helen, and several of their children, placed before the chancel.

Wroxeter Church watercolour

Wroxeter Church, Shropshire. Watercolour. Artist: J. Homes Smith. Shrewsbury Museums Service (SHYMS: FA/1991/071/40) image sy1325

Richard Henry Dana remarked that the Wroxeter local bridge, a Roman column in the churchyard, and several trees were named in memory of Edmund Dana who had died 33 years earlier, while the old people of the parish still call him the “old gentleman”, and look upon the present rector, who has been here twenty years, as the “new vicar”, and complain of his innovations.

Excavation_at_Uriconium_by_Francis_Bedford2

Excavation at Uriconium by Francis Bedford Retrieved from Wikipedia. Original from the Victor von Gegerfelt collection, Volume K 1:3, Region- och Stadsarkivet Göteborg.

Related posts

  • J is for jail: Bankruptcy of William Pulteney Dana

Sources

  • research by my father, Rafe de Crespigny
  • Dana, Richard Henry, Jr and Lucid, Robert F. (Robert Francis),1930-, (ed.) The journal. Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, Cambridge, 1968.
  • Thorne, R.G. “PULTENEY, William (1729-1805), of Westerhall, Dumfries and The Castle, Shrewsbury.” History of Parliament Online, The History of Parliament Trust, https://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1790-1820/member/pulteney-william-1729-1805.
  • http://shrewsburylocalhistory.org.uk/street-names/the-dana

O is for Old Palace Yard

17 Wednesday Apr 2019

Posted by Anne Young in A to Z 2019, Champion de Crespigny, freemason, London, politics

≈ 9 Comments

At one time, my fifth great grandfather, Philip Champion de Crespigny (1738 – 1803), lived at 4 Old Palace Yard, beside the Palace of Westminster (the Houses of Parliament). Philip Crespigny was a lawyer: an advocate at Doctors’ Commons from 1756 and a King’s Proctor from 1768 – 1784. He also served as a member of Parliament.

Old Palace Yard was opposite the King’s Entrance to the House of Lords near the Poets’ Corner of Westminster Abbey. It was one of a block of old houses re-fronted in the Georgian style. The residence leased by Philip de Crespigny was the property of the Dean and Chapter of Westminster Abbey.

Old and New Palace Yards were two main courtyards of the medieval Palace of Westminster.

Thomas_Malton_-_Old_Palace_Yard,_Westminster

“Old Palace Yard, Westminster” watercolour by Thomas Malton, probably exhibited in the Royal Gallery in 1796. No 4 Old Palace Yard is apparently one of the houses pictured.

 

Philip de Crespigny’s maternal uncle, Thomas Fonnereau (1699 – 1779) lived at 4 Old Palace Yard and died there 20 March 1779. Thomas was a member of Parliament; his residence was conveniently close to the Houses of Parliament. (I wrote about Thomas Fonnereau earlier in this series of posts. He commissioned the building of the lighthouse on Lizard point, Cornwall.)

In 1780 Philip re-entered Parliament. In 1774 he had been returned to Parliament on the Fonnereau interest at Sudbury after a contest, but lost his seat on petition. In 1780 he was returned unopposed at Aldeburgh on the Fonnereau interest, and at Sudbury after a contest. He held both seats until 1781 when he lost Sudbury on petition, and continued to sit for Aldeburgh. Philip de Crespigny supported the administration of Lord North, a Tory, or conservative, administration.

On 14 February 1780 P.C. Crespigny Esq. of Old Palace Yard joined the Somerset House Lodge of Freemasons and that year he also joined another Lodge of Freemasons, the Stewards’ Lodge.

Philip Champion de Crespigny portrait by Opie

Philip Champion de Crespigny (1738–1803), MP by John Opie RA (1761–1807) Portrait in the collection of Kelmarsh Hall and image retrieved through https://artuk.org/discover/artworks/philip-champion-de-crespigny-17381803-mp-49154

 

In 1786 Philip sold the lease of 4 Old Palace Yard to William Wilberforce (1759 – 1833), later to become a noted leader of the movement to abolish the slave trade.

On 16 October 1834 the Houses of Parliament caught fire. Among the buildings burned was 4 Old Palace Yard. Number 6 and 7 Old Palace Yard survived.

Joseph_Mallord_William_Turner,_English_-_The_Burning_of_the_Houses_of_Lords_and_Commons,_October_16,_1834_-_Google_Art_Pr

The Burning of the Houses of Lords and Commons by J.M.W. Turner

geograph-2507777-by-Philip-Pankhurst

6 – 7 Old Palace Yard. The Palladian design is said to be by Isaac Ware.

 

In the 1890s and early 1900s the Office of Works acquired the leaseholds to 1-4 Old Palace Yard and 1 – 3A Poet’s Corner. The site was redeveloped as a memorial to King George V.

geograph-2507750-by-Philip-Pankhurst

The statue of George V and the Henry VII Chapel of Westminster Abbey

Related posts

  • Philip Champion de Crespigny (1738 – 1803)

Sources

  • De Crespigny, Rafe Champions from Normandy : an essay on the early history of the Champion de Crespigny family 1350-1800 AD. Lilli Pilli, New South Wales Richard Rafe Champion de Crespigny, 2017. Can be viewed at Champions from Normandy
  • Drummond, Mary M. “CRESPIGNY, Philip Champion (d.1803), of Burwood, nr. Cobham, Surr.” History of Parliament Online, The History of Parliament Trust ,https://www.historyofparliamentonline.org/volume/1754-1790/member/crespigny-philip-champion-1803.
  • Library and Museum of Freemasonry; London, England; Freemasonry Membership Registers; Description: Register of Members, London, vol I, Folios 46, 85 viewed through ancestry.com
  • “Old Palace Yard Watercolour.” Art in Parliament, UK Parliament, 10 Jan. 2009, www.parliament.uk/about/art-in-parliament/news/2009/malton/.
  • Cundall, H. M. (Herbert Minton), 1848-1940, (author.) and Project Gutenberg Masters of Water-Colour Painting. Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, Salt Lake City, 2007. Retrieved from http://www.gutenberg.org/files/22379/22379-h/22379-h.htm
  • The National Archives (UK): Office of Works and successors WORK 20/18, Acquisition of leaseholds of 1-4 Old Palace Yard and 1-3A Poets’ Corner (afterwards King George V Memorial Site) 1894 – 1902
  • Google books:
    • Pollock, John (20 December 2013). Wilberforce. David C. Cook. p. 54.
    • Metropolitan Improvements; Or London in the Nineteenth Century: Displayed in a Series of Engravings… Jones and Company. 1828. p. 153

Macavity wasn’t there!

05 Monday Nov 2018

Posted by Anne Young in lawyer, Mainwaring, politics

≈ 2 Comments

Today, 5 November, is the anniversary of the Gunpowder Plot, an abortive attempt to assassinate King James I of England and blow up the Houses of Parliament. Some of my forebears were English politicians of the time. I’ve been trying to find out if any were involved or implicated or put in danger.

Edward Mainwaring (1577 – 1647), one of my 10th great grandfathers, was elected to Parliament on 30 September 1601 for the borough of Newcastle Under Lyme. However, he was not re-elected in the next election, on 28 February 1604, so at the time of the plot in November 1605, he would not have been present in Parliament.

 

Mainwaring Edward 1577 - 1647

Edward Mainwaring, portrait from opposite page 63 of The Mainwarings of Whitmore and Biddulph in the County of Stafford. An account of the family, and its connections by marriage and descent; with special reference to the Manor of Whitmore. J.G. Cavenagh-Mainwaring, about 1935

 

Edward Mainwaring matriculated at Magdalen Hall, Oxford,  on 8 November 1594. He entered Middle Temple, one of the four Inns of Court in 1595. In his history of the Mainwarings of Whitmore, Gordon Mainwaring says:

At this time there was considerable litigation concerning manorial dues, and lords of manors began to realise that a knowledge of law was essential in the management of their estates. Among the papers at Whitmore is an interesting correspondence between this Edward and his father concerning the refusal of Sir John Bowyer of Knipersly to recognise their right to a heriot [a tribute paid by the estate of a
deceased tenant].

In 1601 Edward Mainwaring married Sara Stone. In 1604 his father died and he succeeded to the Whitmore estate. Perhaps he decided to forgo a parliamentary career to concentrate on running the estate.

Edward Mainwaring was elected again to Parliament in 1625. There is a suggestion that the person elected was not Edward Mainwaring (1577 – 1647) but  his son, also named Edward (1603 – 1674).

Sources

  • The Mainwarings of Whitmore and Biddulph in the County of Stafford. An account of the family, and its connections by marriage and descent; with special reference to the Manor of Whitmore. J.G. Cavenagh-Mainwaring, about 1935
  • History of Parliament online:
    • Edward Mainwaring 1577 – 1647
    • Edward Mainwaring c. 1602 – 1674
    • Borough of Newcastle-under-Lyme 1558 – 1603
    • Borough of Newcastle-under-Lyme 1604 – 1629
← Older posts
Follow Anne's Family History on WordPress.com

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Categories

  • . Surnames (709)
    • Atkin (1)
    • Bayley, Bayly, Baillie (6)
    • Beggs (17)
    • Bertz (4)
    • Bock (1)
    • Boltz (22)
    • Branthwayt (1)
    • Bray (2)
    • Brown (1)
    • Budge (8)
    • Cavenagh (27)
    • Cavenagh-Mainwaring (40)
      • Diana Beckett (8)
    • Champion de Crespigny (184)
      • apparently unrelated Champion de Crespigny (5)
      • CdeC 18th century (3)
      • CdeC Australia (46)
        • Rafe de Crespigny (20)
      • CdeC baronets (17)
    • Chauncy (51)
      • Philip Chauncy's 1877 memoir (4)
    • Clark (1)
    • Corrin (2)
    • Crew (4)
    • Cross (21)
      • Cross SV (7)
    • Cudmore (73)
      • Kathleen (17)
    • Dana (33)
    • Darby (3)
    • Davies (1)
    • Daw (4)
    • Dawson (8)
    • Duff (6)
    • Edwards (15)
    • Ewer (1)
    • Fish (8)
    • Fonnereau (6)
    • Furnell (2)
    • Gale (1)
    • Gibbons (2)
    • Gilbart (7)
    • Goldstein (9)
    • Gordon (1)
    • Granger (2)
    • Green (2)
    • Grueber (2)
    • Grust (2)
    • Gunn (5)
    • Harvey (1)
    • Hawkins (12)
    • Henderson (2)
    • Hickey (4)
    • Holmes (1)
    • Horsley (2)
    • Hughes (29)
    • Hunter (1)
    • Hutcheson (3)
    • Huthnance (2)
    • James (4)
    • Johnstone (4)
    • Jones (1)
    • Kemmis (2)
    • Kinnaird (4)
    • La Mothe (2)
    • Lane (1)
    • Lawson (3)
    • Leister (7)
    • Mainwaring (62)
    • Manock (14)
    • Massy Massey Massie (1)
    • Mitchell (5)
    • Morley (4)
    • Morris (1)
    • Movius (2)
    • Murray (6)
    • Niall (7)
    • Nihill (10)
    • Odiarne (2)
    • Orfeur (5)
    • Palliser (3)
    • Peters (3)
    • Phipps (4)
    • Plaisted (11)
    • Plowright (17)
    • Pye (2)
    • Ralph (1)
    • Reher (1)
    • Reveley (2)
    • Richards (1)
    • Russell (2)
    • Sherburne (4)
    • Sinden (2)
    • Skelly (6)
    • Skerritt (3)
    • Smyth (6)
    • Snell (2)
    • Sullivan (18)
    • Symes (12)
    • Taylor (5)
    • Toker (5)
    • Torrey (1)
    • Tuckfield (4)
    • Tunks (2)
    • Vaux (4)
    • Wade (2)
    • Way (16)
    • Whiteman (8)
    • Wilkes (2)
    • Wilkins (9)
    • Wright (1)
    • Wymer (2)
    • Young (38)
      • Charlotte Young (3)
      • Greg Young (9)
  • .. Places (520)
    • Africa (4)
    • All About That Place (1)
    • Australia (222)
      • Canberra (11)
      • New South Wales (12)
        • Albury (2)
        • Binalong (1)
        • Lilli Pilli (2)
        • Murrumburrah (2)
        • Orange (1)
        • Parkes (3)
        • Wentworth (2)
      • Northern Territory (1)
      • Queensland (6)
      • Snowy Mountains (1)
      • South Australia (48)
        • Adelaide (31)
        • Glenelg (1)
      • Tasmania (13)
      • Victoria (139)
        • Amherst (3)
        • Apollo Bay (2)
        • Ararat (1)
        • Avoca (10)
        • Ballarat (18)
        • Beaufort (6)
        • Beechworth (3)
        • Bendigo (4)
        • Bentleigh (2)
        • Betley (1)
        • Birregurra (1)
        • Bowenvale (1)
        • Bright (1)
        • Brighton (4)
        • Carngham (4)
        • Carwarp (1)
        • Castlemaine (3)
        • Charlton (2)
        • Clunes (1)
        • Collingwood (1)
        • Creswick (2)
        • Dunolly (3)
        • Eurambeen (10)
        • Geelong (7)
        • Heathcote (5)
        • Homebush (19)
        • Lamplough (6)
        • Lilydale (1)
        • Melbourne (13)
        • Portland (8)
        • Prahran (1)
        • Queenscliff (1)
        • Rokewood (1)
        • Seddon (1)
        • Snake Valley (4)
        • St Kilda (2)
        • Talbot (4)
        • Timor (1)
        • Windsor (1)
        • Yarraville (1)
      • Western Australia (3)
    • Belgium (1)
    • Canada (7)
    • China (3)
    • England (165)
      • Bath (7)
      • Cambridge (6)
      • Cambridgeshire (2)
      • Cheshire (3)
      • Cornwall (14)
        • Gwinear (1)
        • St Erth (9)
      • Devon (7)
      • Dorset (2)
      • Durham (1)
      • Essex (1)
      • Gloucestershire (10)
        • Bristol (1)
        • Cheltenham (5)
        • Leckhampton (3)
      • Hampshire (3)
        • Southsea (1)
      • Hertfordshire (2)
      • Kent (7)
      • Lancashire (3)
      • Lincolnshire (4)
      • Liverpool (10)
      • London (14)
      • Middlesex (1)
        • Harefield (1)
      • Norfolk (2)
      • Northamptonshire (12)
        • Kelmarsh Hall (6)
      • Northumberland (1)
      • Nottinghamshire (1)
      • Oxfordshire (6)
        • Oxford (5)
      • Shropshire (6)
        • Shrewsbury (2)
      • Somerset (3)
      • Staffordshire (45)
        • Whitmore (45)
          • Whitmore 2024 A to Z (26)
      • Suffolk (2)
      • Surrey (4)
      • Sussex (5)
      • Wiltshire (4)
      • Yorkshire (4)
    • France (19)
      • Normandy (1)
    • Germany (27)
      • Berlin (15)
      • Brandenburg (4)
    • Guernsey (1)
    • Hong Kong (3)
    • India (27)
    • Ireland (45)
      • Antrim (2)
      • Cavan (3)
      • Clare (2)
      • Cork (4)
      • Dublin (10)
      • Kildare (2)
      • Kilkenny (4)
      • Limerick (6)
      • Londonderry (1)
      • Meath (1)
      • Monaghan (1)
      • Tipperary (6)
      • Westmeath (1)
      • Wexford (5)
      • Wicklow (1)
    • Isle of Man (2)
    • Jerusalem (4)
    • Malaysia (1)
    • New Guinea (3)
    • New Zealand (4)
    • Scotland (18)
      • Caithness (1)
      • Edinburgh (1)
    • Singapore (4)
    • Spain (1)
    • USA (12)
      • Massachusetts (8)
    • Wales (8)
  • 1854 (6)
  • A to Z challenges (353)
    • A to Z 2014 (27)
    • A to Z 2015 (27)
    • A to Z 2016 (27)
    • A to Z 2017 (27)
    • A to Z 2018 (28)
    • A to Z 2019 (26)
    • A to Z 2020 (27)
    • A to Z 2021 (27)
    • A to Z 2022 (28)
    • A to Z 2023 (27)
    • A to Z 2024 (28)
    • A to Z 2025 (27)
    • A to Z 2026 (27)
  • AAGRA (1)
  • Australian Dictionary of Biography (1)
  • Bank of Victoria (7)
  • bankruptcy (1)
  • baronet (13)
  • British Empire (2)
  • cemetery (32)
    • grave (5)
  • census (5)
  • Cherry Stones (13)
  • Christmas (3)
  • class (1)
  • cooking (5)
  • court case (23)
  • crime (16)
  • divorce (10)
  • dogs (6)
  • education (14)
    • university (4)
  • encounters with indigenous Australians (8)
  • family history (56)
    • family history book (4)
    • UK trip 2019 (36)
  • Father's day (1)
  • freemason (3)
  • French Revolution (3)
  • genealogical records (26)
  • genealogy tools (90)
    • ahnentafel (6)
    • Artificial Intelligence (AI) (6)
    • DNA (41)
      • AncestryDNA (13)
      • FamilyTreeDNA (FTDNA) (2)
      • GedMatch (6)
    • DNA Painter (13)
    • FamilySearch (5)
    • MyHeritage (13)
    • tree completeness (16)
    • wikitree (14)
  • geneameme (134)
    • 52 ancestors (34)
    • Sepia Saturday (29)
    • Through her eyes (4)
    • Trove Tuesday (52)
    • Wedding Wednesday (5)
  • gold rush (6)
  • Governor LaTrobe (1)
  • GSV (3)
  • heraldry (10)
  • illegitimate (3)
  • illness and disease (26)
    • cholera (5)
    • tuberculosis (9)
    • typhoid (7)
  • immigration (39)
  • inquest (1)
  • insolvency (2)
  • land records (4)
  • military (188)
    • air force (8)
    • American Revolution (8)
    • ANZAC Day and Remembrance Day (7)
    • army (11)
    • Australian War Memorial (2)
    • Civil War (5)
    • Crimean War (1)
    • Durham Light Infantry (1)
    • Napoleonic wars (13)
      • Waterloo (2)
    • navy (27)
    • prisoner of war (17)
    • Remembrance Day (5)
    • World War 1 (78)
      • 24th Bn 13th Rfts AIF (2)
    • World War 2 (23)
  • obituary (11)
  • occupations (60)
    • artist (7)
    • author (7)
    • aviation (4)
    • British East India Company (7)
    • clergy (3)
    • farming (1)
    • lawyer (8)
    • medicine (14)
    • mining (5)
    • public service (2)
    • railways (4)
    • teacher (2)
  • orphanage (2)
  • Parliament (7)
  • photographs (15)
    • Great great Aunt Rose's photograph album (7)
  • piracy (3)
  • police (4)
  • politics (20)
  • portrait (27)
    • Whitmore Hall portraits (7)
  • postcards (3)
  • prison (5)
  • probate (9)
  • PROV (2)
  • Recipe (1)
  • religion (37)
    • Huguenot (10)
    • Methodist (5)
    • Mormon pioneer (1)
    • Puritan (5)
    • Salvation Army (1)
  • Royal family (6)
  • sheriff (1)
  • shipwreck (3)
  • South Sea Company (2)
  • sport (14)
    • cricket (2)
    • golf (4)
    • riding (1)
    • rowing (2)
    • sailing (1)
  • statistics (4)
    • demography (3)
  • street directories (1)
  • temperance (1)
  • Trove (37)
  • Uncategorized (11)
  • ward of the state (2)
  • Wedding (22)
  • will (9)
  • workhouse (1)
  • younger son (6)

Pages

  • About
  • Ahentafel index
  • Books
    • Cavenagh, Mainwaring, and Cudmore: A journal of family history
    • Champions from Normandy
    • C F C Crespigny nee Dana
    • Pink Hats on Gentle Ladies: second edition by Vida and Daniel Clift
  • Index
    • A to Z challenges
    • DNA research
    • UK trip 2019
    • World War 1
    • Whitmore, Staffordshire
    • Beggs family index
    • Boltz and Manock family index
    • Budge and Gunn family index
    • Cavenagh family index
    • Chauncy family index
    • Cross and Plowright family index
    • Cudmore family index
    • Dana family index
    • Dawson family index
    • de Crespigny family index
    • de Crespigny family index 2 – my English forebears
    • de Crespigny family index 3 – the baronets and their descendants
    • Edwards, Ralph and Gilbart family index
    • Hughes family index including Hawkins, Plaisted, Taylor families
    • Mainwaring family index
      • Back to 1066 via the Mainwaring family
    • Sullivan family index
    • Symes family index
    • Way and Daw(e) family index
    • Young family index

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Follow Anne's Family History on WordPress.com

Blog at WordPress.com.

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Anne's Family History
    • Join 387 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
  • Privacy
    • Anne's Family History
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar

Loading Comments...