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Sorry to sound gory but..

ProfilePosted byOptionsPost Date

Abigail

Abigail Report 17 Feb 2005 00:27

Thanks Geoff. i am sure that Granny Sherwin was widowed but this could be the reason that George is such a treasured name in the family. If both Georges died on the railway it would create a certain sort of tragic romance around the name I suppose. I shall follow this up tomorrow with my sister in law whilst the cousins are all playing (scrapping) downstairs. Roll on the end of half term!! Abigail

Geoff

Geoff Report 16 Feb 2005 22:52

I might be onto something or maybe not. A George Sherwin (18, Porter) was a railway casualty in 1913, in which case it would be George the younger who was involved. You will find him in this list: http://www.lightage.demon.*co.uk/RAILSha-Sme.pdf (remove *) Lanmadlow is just a mile or two SW of Buxton, so in the right sort of area. I'm not sure if it was ever a passenger station - by 1923 it was 'the end of the line' and was just a goods station, so perhaps he was a Goods Porter.

Abigail

Abigail Report 16 Feb 2005 22:33

I can't believe this! I have been banging my head against a brick wall, looking in all the places you have mentioned and seeing nothing! Thank you SO SO much! Why did I not just ask in the first place!? Abigail

Geoff

Geoff Report 16 Feb 2005 22:30

Presumably you have him on 1881 census #112---Dale End, Kingshill---[Brassington]---(RG11-3426-2-p21) Br105a Stephen SHERWIN Head M 43 M Stone quarry lab Brassington Br105b Emmeline SHERWIN Wife M 32 F Hognaston Br105c John William SHERWIN Son U 15 M Stone quarry lab Brassington Br105d Elizabeth SHERWIN Dau 13 F Scholar Brassington Br105e Selina SHERWIN Dau 11 F Scholar Brassington Br105f George SHERWIN Son 7 M Scholar Brassington Br105g James SHERWIN Son 5 M Scholar Brassington Br105h Robert SHERWIN Son 3 M Brassington Br105i Florence SHERWIN Dau 1 F Brassington

Abigail

Abigail Report 16 Feb 2005 22:21

Thanks Johnathon. I am going to try to find their marriage next. Elizabeth would have been 18 if William was the eldest but I know that there is a Sarah missing from that list of children so maybe she came later. The pieces of the jigsaw are coming together. Five minutes ago I didn't even know that Granny Sherwin's name was Elizabeth! Whoopee! Abigail

Abigail

Abigail Report 16 Feb 2005 22:10

Johnathon, you are a superstar. Thank you so much - I now have that desperately needed foothold! Anytime I can return the favour, I will do my best. Now if I can get myself off the ceiling I will start writing it down! Abigail

Abigail

Abigail Report 16 Feb 2005 21:55

Hello Jen That's a good idea - If I can identify where around Bakewell they lived at the census then I could try and find out what paper they would have had. I used to live near Bakewell and I am wandering the streets and the area in my mind trying to think where the nearest railway would be. There is a cottage hospital on the road in which looks like an old station house but I can;t think of where in Bakewell the station is now. It is so frustrating. The times my husband and I used to escape from uni and go for walks and picnics around there? I must have wandered aroundt that churchyard so many times and never even thought of the name Sherwin!! Thanks Abigail

Abigail

Abigail Report 16 Feb 2005 21:45

Hello Twinkle. Thank you for asking a list of questions - you know when you get stuck in a problem and need a rope out? The only child of his that I know married I do have the marriage certificate for but it does not say father deceased on it. I have her birth certificate too but it is the short one giving only Bakewell as the district of her birth. She was born on the 2nd Feb 1894 but I don't know if she was the youngest. I know that he was supposed to be dead by 1911 because Granny Sherwin had had to bring up the nine children by herself doing laundry for other people ( and being the village midwife - I wonder whether there might be any joy following that line, though I don't know where to ask about it). She didn't get any help I don't think because he wasn;t that old and hadn't been working for the railway for that long. Granny Sherwin died in the 1920s and I think that she had diabetes. From the stories she sounded quite old so perhaps Mary Emmeline, born in 1894 was the youngest of the nine. I started to think that he might have just run away but in a village you wouldn't say that your husband has been killed in a railway accident and stay there would you? Thanks I will get back to you Abigail

Abigail

Abigail Report 16 Feb 2005 21:23

Does anyone have any ideas as to how I can identify when a George Sherwin died. He died in a railway accident and although he lived around Bakewell I am not sure that it was where he died just becuase of the nature of his job. I don't know what his age was when he died, he was a railway employee and had nine children. The trouble is I don't know how to use these clues to identify the George Sherwin deaths that I find on free bmd. Has anyone any advice? Please, Oh Please, before my brain pops! Abigail