After a long gap, I have signed up once more for Amy Crow's 2026 "52 Ancestors in 52 Weeks" Challenge. For the first week the prompt is "An
Ancestor I Admire" and I have chosen my aunt Edith Danson (1907-1995),
I think of my Aunt Edith (right) as one of a line of "Feisty Danson Females", amongst them my Great Grandmother Maria and her daughter, my Great Aunt Jennie. Aunt Edith played a key role in my life and was a teacher, traveller, and great talker. She was also a talented lady - and married for the first time at the age of 73.
I think of my Aunt Edith (right) as one of a line of "Feisty Danson Females", amongst them my Great Grandmother Maria and her daughter, my Great Aunt Jennie. Aunt Edith played a key role in my life and was a teacher, traveller, and great talker. She was also a talented lady - and married for the first time at the age of 73.
Edith was born 2nd September 1907, followed just a
year and a week later by my mother, Kathleen, born on 8th September
1908, daughters of William and Alice Danson of Poulton-le-Fylde,
Lancashire. They remained very close as sisters and most of the
photographs I have of Aunt Edith show her almost always with my
mother.

(Edith left) and Kathleen at Poulton Gala Day c.1912
Edith (left) with Kathleen, 1916. |
| Kathleen and Edith (right) |
Aunt
Edith was fond of regaling me with stories of the family and her life
in teaching. She was the only one to win a scholarship to Fleetwood
Grammar School, riding the four miles on her bike in all weathers. She
became a teacher at Burn Naze School in Thornton Clevelys (a poor area
of town in the 1920's and 30's) and had a keen memory for past pupils
(particularly black sheep) and humorous incidents such as excuse notes,
written for absences.
"Miss Danson was my first teacher and was a lovely lady.
Just read Miss Danson's history and pictures - very interesting and I always thought she was a wonderful teacher with lots of patience and undesrsstnaind.
A wonderful teacher - my first teacher at Burn Naze School in 1956.
Fantastic tribute and pictures - just as I remember her.
Amongst learning our tables, reading and writing etc. who remembers knitting class with Miss Danson, making a sackcloth needle work case using blanket stitch,
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| Edith on the right with her class on a school trip. |
Edith must have been great to know in her 20's, with tales of the young men she went dancing with in nearby Blackpool.
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| Kathleen & Edith |
Like
her sister, Edith was talented in painting, embroidery and dressmaking,
loved dancing, music, reading and baking - though there were some
apocryphal cooking moments when my uncle (her brother) stirred a rice
pudding, thinking it was very thin - she had forgotten to put in the
rice! Another time she was proud of a tart with a golden pastry
crust and blackcurrants from the garden - until we took a mouthful -
she had forgotten to add sugar to the fruit. "Scatty" was often a
term used to describe Aunt Edith, as her mind was on so many things at
once.
My first visit to Scotland was thanks to Aunt Edith - a reward for passing the 11+ e xam for grammar school. I was stirred by the sight and sound of the bagpipes at the Edinburgh Military Tattoo, gazed over the battlements at Stirling Castle across to Bannockburn (the site of the battle in 1314) and was captivated by my first island trip to the Isle of Arran. I returned home singing "Scotland the Brave" and wrote a story about a fictional island, complete with map drawn with my coloured pencils. Six years later Scotland became my home.
My first visit to Scotland was thanks to Aunt Edith - a reward for passing the 11+ e xam for grammar school. I was stirred by the sight and sound of the bagpipes at the Edinburgh Military Tattoo, gazed over the battlements at Stirling Castle across to Bannockburn (the site of the battle in 1314) and was captivated by my first island trip to the Isle of Arran. I returned home singing "Scotland the Brave" and wrote a story about a fictional island, complete with map drawn with my coloured pencils. Six years later Scotland became my home.
Edith kept home for her widowed father and brother for much of her life and travelled widely, even to Russia in Iron Curtain days, bringing back gifts to add to my collection of costume dolls.On retirment she took a world cruise, visiting her other sister, Pggy. in Austral.
Edith kept home for her widowed father and brother for much of her life and travelled widely, even to Russia in Iron Curtain days, bringing back gifts to add to my collection of costume dolls.On retirment she took a world cruise, visiting her other sister, Pggy. in Austral.
In line with her spirit of adventure, she married for the first time in 1981 at the aged 73. a widower friend of my parents. and died in 1995 aged 88.
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| Aunt Edith (in blue) with her husband George, my mother Kathleen and brother Harry. |
You
can tell from these photographs that Aunt Edith was someone
who enjoyed herself. She took on the role of my godmother with great
gusto and with my mother left me with a wonderful legacy on how to get
the most out of life, plus many fond memories of a feisty woman.
Copyright © 2026 · Susan Donaldson. All Rights Reserved
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