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Friday 7 December 2018

A Pocket Watch Accessory - Sepia Saturday

A miner, a ship's riveter, a general labourer, two business men, a group of schoolboys and a station bookstall manager - all feature in my post for this week’s Sepia Saturday challenge.  What is the link?   They are all wearing pocket watches on a chain. 
  
This week's Sepia Saturday  prompt photograph shows a large man on a bicycle, looked on by two friends, date c.1920s.   My eye caught the pocket watch chain that he was wearing, so I turned to my family collection to see what I could find.  

Pocket watches were invented in the 16th century and were the most ocmmon type of wtch until the First World War and the introduction of wrist watches.  They  generally had an attached chain so they could be secured to a waistcoat, lapel or belt loop.  The casements varied from brass to gold, so they appealed to a range of budgets.  Pocket watches were often a prized family possession, passed down through the generations.   I remember my grandfather wearing one on a Sunday with his best suit - but unfortunately I do not have any photograph of him wearing it.  

From the extended family of my cousin:



Edward Henry Coombs(1857-1922) was the great grandfather of my cousin' s wife.  In 1879 Edward  married 19 year old Ann Elizabeth Shaw and in 18 years, they had a large family of 10 children.   He was founder of Coomb Bros.  - a wholesale grocery business and manufacturer of sweets and jams in Essex.


The period 1917-1918 was a tragic time for Edward,   with sons Percy and William killed in the First World War; the death of his wife  and of his daughter Lilian.  Edward died in 1922, aged 65. 

As you can see from this photograph, Edward was an extremely big man, said to take up two seats on a bus - and his pocket  watch and chain are very evident in this photograph.

 
 
Anna Holt and Charles Oldham (c.1861-1937)  
Charles Oldham was brother of my cousin's great grandfather Joseph Prince Oldham (1855-1917).  Born in Blackpool, he joined the family business and in the 1891 census was described as a self-employed coal merchant. But by 1901 he had had a complete change of both address and occupation, setting up a mineral water manufacturing business in Wisbech, Cambridgeshire. Looking here very much like a serious businessman, and wearing his pocket watch and chain. 

 Wiiliam Dower (1837-1919) and his wife,  Jesse Edward. 
Jesse  who was sister to my cousin's great grandmother, married William Dower, born in Banchory, Aberdeenshire. William   worked as a joiner before training as a minister of the church.   He was appointed as a Wesleyan Missionary in South Africa and he and his new wife Jesse set sail there  in 1865. 
 
In March 1870, William and Jesse set out on an ox wagon journey to East Griqualand and the town of  Kokstad, where he was asked to take on the role of pastor.  William helped build both his own home and the church there.  He went on to write a definitive history of the area in "The early annals of Kokstad and Griqualand East".

The photograph above of  William Dower and his wife Jesse was taken in 1913 when they visited Jesse’s sister in Blackpool.  

William Dower died in Africa on died 21 December 1919 at  "Banchory", - his home named after his Scottish birthplace.  He left behind a legacy in the country he came to love and a family who made their mark in many different fields.  


 William Bailey Bastow - my mother's second cousin.
Elizabeth Bailey born in Poulton-le Fylde, Lancashire  was William's mother. She married Peter Bastow, a Blackpool stone mason, and they had three children.  But Peter could not have survived much beyond the birth of his youngest son in 1882, as by 1890 Elizabeth married her second husband Henry Robinson.   In the 1901 census William was described as stepson, 20 years old and a general labourer.

Here he is dressed formally in the traditional style of waistcoat and pocket watch.


From my husband's family:

Alice Armitage and Matthew Iley White  - 
my husband's grandparents of South Shields, County Durham

Matthew (1886-1956) and Alice (1888-1967) married in 1908 and this photograph is thought to  mark their  engagement, with Matthew wearing a watch chain with the watch itself hidden in his waistcoat pocket. 

The couple had a background of mariners and miners.   Matthew, a ship's riveter,   was named after his father  Matthew Iley White;  his mother was  Louisa Moffat,and both came from a family of seafarers. 

Alice hailed from South Kirby, Yorkshire where her father Aaron Armitage (1851-1889)  was a miner, the eldest of a family of ten children born to Moses Armitage  and Sarah Galloway. 

Aaron aged 36 married  19 year old Sarah Ann Cuthbert in 1887 but within two  years he was dead,  leaving fatherless his infant only daughter Alice.   His widow Sarah remarried a year later another miner George Hibbert and the family moved to the Durham minefields, settling in South Shields.  The 1901 census saw the family there, with Alice now 13 years old with a step brother Robert and step sister Violet. The two half-sisters remained close throughout their lives.

 Moses Armitage, (1824-1878),  Alice's grandfather 

 I was lucky to get this photograph from an Ancestry contact and it is the oldest photograph we have of my husband's ancestors. 

Moses was a Yorkshire miner  and in 1844  married Sarah Gallaway (1826-1896)  and in the next 20 years between 1845 and 1868  they had 10 children  in Barnsley.


And Finally - photographs from my Danson family collection  of my great uncle George Danson (1884-1916).



Young George Danson, my great uncle is on the left of this group of  boys and  three of them are wearing watch chains, yet they look  only around 12-13 years old.



George has featured many times on my blog.  He was the youngest of eight sons  of William Danson and Alice English,of Poulton-le-Fylde, Lancashire and worked on railway station bookstalls, run my W.H. Smith.  He served as a stretcher bearer in the First World War and was killed on the Somme in 1916.

This is not a great photograph, but it  does show very clearly the pocket watch and chain that he was wearing.

                      Is this the same watch  - found in a box of Danson memorabilia?


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Sepia Saturday gives bloggers an opportunity
to share their family history through photograph



Click HERE to see more of this week's blogger tales


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5 comments:

  1. Oh how creative you are in matching the photo for this week! And I enjoyed reading about each of these wonderful men's lives, and their relationships to you. (I admit to enjoying genealogy!)

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  2. This is such a clever approach! After reading it, I'm all set to go digging through my family archives to look for the appearance of pocket watches.

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  3. A wonderful take on this week's prompt & what a keen eye you have to catch it! I have my paternal grandfather's pocket watch displayed hanging in a glass dome. It would be neat to have a picture of him wearing it, though. I never thought to look! Now I'll have to search for one! :)

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  4. That is a terrific photo of Edward Henry to match our theme and then cleverly find a hidden one. The pocket watch in earlier times was probably the most costly technology a person could own. Certainly a fine watch was a valued gift to receive back then. In old photos we never actually see the watch but instead its chain and fob. I think the fob is often a clue to a man's fraternal order or society club.

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  5. Thank you all for your kind comments. It is not often that I pick up quite a minor detail in the prompt photograph, but I was surprised at how many matched images I found in my family collection.

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