Thursday, 27 February 2020

Great x4 Grandfather John Emberry

My Great x4 Grandfather John (1796 - late 1830's) was a cordwainer (shoemaker) and father of four.


John was born around 1796 in Cadbury, Devon, to Thomas Embrey (about 42) and Ann Embrey.

John was baptised on 15th May 1796 in Cadbury.

John was the youngest of three children (two daughters and one son):


  • Jenny  1787 -
  • Ann  1793 -
  • John  1796 -


All three were baptised in Cadbury. The three children's baptisms and well as their father Thomas' baptism spell their surname as Embrey rather than the latter used Emberry. John himself spells it Emberry on his 1817 record of marriage.

Signature of John Emberry, 1817

On 17th August 1817, John (about 21), a cordwainer, married Mary Arscott (about 24), a weaver and latter a laundress, in Holy Trinity, Exeter. Both are described as residents of that parish.

Sometime after their marriage, John and Mary moved out from Exeter, about eight miles north, to begin their family live in her native Silverton, which is but a few miles from his native Cadbury.

John and Mary had at least four children:


  • John  1827 - 1828 (fifteen months old)
  • Sarah  1829 -
  • Mary Ann  1831 -
  • Thomas  1834 - 


Whilst daughters Sarah and Mary Ann were baptised in Silverton, their youngest son Thomas was baptised in Brampford Speke, some four miles south-west of Silverton, implying the family may have moved in the early 1830's, but only locally.

It is possible John and Mary had more elder children, who were not baptised (John for example was not baptised, though we have record of his burial) or who did not survive, as the couple married a decade before the birth of their first known child John.

Though I cannot find record of his death, it seems John passed away sometime in the late 1830's, likely in his early forties, as he can not longer be found with his wife and young children come the 1841 census, and Mary is described as a widow come the more detailed 1851 census.

Great x4 Grandmother Agnes Cobley (nee Davey)

My Great x4 Grandmother Agnes (1789? - 1862) was a serge weaver, housewife, and mother of seven.


Agnes was born around 1789 in Morchard Bishop to John Davey.

Frustratingly two Agnes Daveys were baptised in Morchard Bishop around this time, each to a different John Davey and his wife; and I cannot discern which is our Agnes. Either way, she had several brothers and sisters.

On 14th May 1816, Agnes (about 27), a serge weaver, married William Cobley (about 18), an agricultural labourer, in Plymouth. The residence of both parties is recorded as St Andrews, Plymouth. Plymouth is some 45 miles south of Morchard Bishop - why would they have married so far from their hometown? Yet this does seem to be the marriage of our Agnes and William.

The couple married in the presence of William and Elizabeth Davey - likely relatives of Agnes. Whilst William was able to sign his name, Agnes left only her mark, implying she was illiterate.

Agnes and William had seven children (six sons and one daughter):


  • Richard  1817 -
  • George  1818 -
  • William  1820 -
  • John  1822 -
  • James  1826 -
  • Grace  1828 -
  • Samuel  1829 -


Agnes and William did not stay long in Plymouth evidently, as all seven of their children were baptised back in Morchard Bishop. Also all seven of their children appear to have survived into adulthood.

1841 Census:


Come the next census, all of William and Grace's children had left home, but living with them was little Mary Rattenbury. I can neither discern Mary's origins - her birth is recorded, but she seemingly wasn't baptised, so her parents names aren't given - nor her relationship to the Cobleys - I can find no marriage between any Rattenbury or Cobley. Her relationship to them is not listed on the census. It seems unlikely then she was a blood relation. Was she the young daughter of friends perhaps? She may well have passed away young, as a death for a Mary Rattenbury is recorded in that district (Crediton) in 1854, when Mary would have been around seven years old.

1851 Census:


1861 Census:


In Jul/Aug/Sep 1862, Agnes passed away, aged about seventy-three, in the district of Crediton.

Great x4 Grandfather William Cobley

My Great x4 Grandfather William (1798 - 1869) was an agricultural labourer and father of seven.


William was born around 1798 in Morchard Bishop, Devon, to Richard Cobley (about 24) and Grace Cobley (nee Rollstone) (about 36).

William was baptised on 11th March 1798, in Morchard Bishop.

William was the eldest of three sons:

  • William  1798 -
  • John  1800 -
  • Richard 1803 - 

On 14th May 1816, William (about 18), an agricultural labourer, married Agnes Davey (about 27), a serge weaver, in Plymouth. The residence of both parties is recorded as St Andrews, Plymouth. Plymouth is some 45 miles south of Morchard Bishop - why would they have married so far from their hometown? Yet this does seem to be the marriage of our William and Agnes.

The couple married in the presence of William and Elizabeth Davey - likely relatives of Agnes. Whilst Agnes left only her mark, William was able to sign his name.

Signature of William Cobley, 1816

William and Agnes had seven children (six sons and one daughter):

  • Richard  1817 -
  • George  1818 -
  • William  1820 -
  • John  1822 -
  • James  1826 -
  • Grace  1828 -
  • Samuel  1829 -

William and Agnes did not stay long in Plymouth evidently, as all seven of their children were baptised back in Morchard Bishop. Also all seven of their children appear to have survived into adulthood.

In 1822, when William was about twenty-four, his mother Grace passed away, aged about sixty. She was buried on 27th January 1822 in Morchard Bishop. Six years later, William named his only daughter Grace, likely for his mother.

In 1837, when William was about thirty-nine, his father Richard passed away, aged about sixty-three. He was buried on 2nd January 1837 in Morchard Bishop.

1841 Census:


Come the next census, all of William and Grace's children had left home, but living with them was little Mary Rattenbury. I can neither discern Mary's origins - her birth is recorded, but she seemingly wasn't baptised, so her parents names aren't given - nor her relationship to the Cobleys - I can find no marriage between any Rattenbury and Cobley. Her relationship to them is not listed on the census. It seems unlikely then she was a blood relation. Was she the young daughter of friends perhaps? She may well have passed away young, as a death for a Mary Rattenbury in recorded in that district (Crediton) in 1854, when Mary would have been around seven years old.

1851 Census:


1861 Census:


When William was about sixty-four, his wife Agnes passed away, aged about seventy-three, in Jul/Aug/Sep 1862 in the district of Crediton.

William himself passed away, aged about seventy-one, in Apr/May/Jun 1869 in the district of Crediton.

Thursday, 30 January 2020

Great Great Half Uncle Frederick 'Fred' Tonkins (later Vernon)

My Great Great Half Uncle Frederick 'Fred' (1897 - 1915) was a private in the First World War, and the younger half brother of my Great Grandfather Walter Charles Vernon (1892 - 1965).


Fred was born in Apr/May/Jun 1897, in the district of Crediton, Devon, the illegitimate son of Isaac 'Harry' Harwood Vernon (28), an agricultural labourer and farm carter, and Ellen Tonkins (21), a domestic servant and later a housewife.

When Fred was conceived, his father Harry was still married to his first wife Lucy James. Lucy was dying of TB and would pass away on 25th March 1897 - less than a month to three months before Fred was born.

On New Year's Eve 1897, when Fred was six to eight months old, his parents married. On their Banns, Harry is described as being Ellen's lodger. At the time, the couple lived, likely along with baby Fred, in Chawleigh. After this, on all records, Fred is acknowledged to be Harry's son and takes his surname of Vernon.

Fred had four older half siblings - the legitimate offspring of Harry and his first wife Lucy James - :

  • Edith Ellen 1891 - 1971 (79)
  • Walter Charles 1892 - 1965 (73)
  • William John 1894 - ???? (?)
  • Frank 1896 - 19?? (?)

And nine younger full siblings (7 brothers and 2 sisters):

  • Frederick 'Fred' (born Tonkins, later Vernon)  1897 - 1915  (18)
  • Mabel Ellen  1898 - 1994  (95)
  • George  1900 - 1900  (0 - 3 months old)
  • George Henry  1901 - 1973  (71)
  • Ernest Isaac  1904 - 1997  (93)
  • Isaac Harry (went by Harry like his father)  1906 - 1964  (58)
  • William Harwood  1908 - 1972  (64)
  • Florence Emily  1911 - 1993  (82)
  • Sidney 'Sid'  1913 - 2004  (91)
  • Percy  1915 - 2002  (86)

The fact that the family moved around mid-Devon a lot, likely as Harry sought farm work, is revealed in the children's different places of birth and their attending different schools...

Having spent his first months in Chawleigh, by 1898, Fred and his family could be found in Crediton. There his younger sister Mabel was born in Tolleys on 25th November, and his elder half sister Edith attended Crediton Hayward School for one week from 28th November. Mabel's birth certificate shows that though she was born in Crediton, her mother's residence was Shobrooke, which is two miles west of Crediton. At some point, around this time, his elder half siblings Edith and Walter attended school in Thorverton, which is four and a bit miles east of Shobrooke.

1899 saw Fred and the family move again, about four and a bit miles, this time from Thorverton to East Coombe. Whilst the family resided there, Edith and Walter attended nearby Stockleigh Pomeroy Church of England School from the October. 1900 saw them move again: that year from East Coombe, about three miles east, to West Bowley, Cadbury. Edith and Walter attended Cadbury School from the 12th March to the 7th September, when the family left the area.

In Jul/Aug/Sep 1900, when Fred was three, his younger brother George passed away as a very young baby - only zero to three months old. His parents would name their next son George also, likely after their lost child.

The 1901 Census shows the family had moved back to Thorverton:


At some point between 1901 and 1904, the family moved three and a half miles south to Upton Pyne, for there Edith and Walter attended school for a time, before returning to Crediton in 1904.

Did Fred's older half siblings live apart from their father and step family for a time? Notably, whilst Edith and Walter attended Crediton Hayward School and their address is listed as Chapel Down in Crediton in October 1904; their younger sibling half siblings Fred, Mabel and George began attending Sandford School from 25th June 1904, and their address is given as Priorton Mill (a mile north of Sandford, and three and a bit miles north of Crediton). These three stayed at Sandford School for three years, till the family left the area in July 1907. Also Walter appeared to be staying, neither in Crediton nor Sandford, but with their grandfather in Chawleigh in the summer of 1905, when, aged twelve, he made attempt to steal a silver watch and chain. He was soon discovered and sent to an industrial school. This and the army were said to have reformed his character.

The family moved next back to Crediton, where Mabel and George attended Crediton Hayward School, like their older half siblings had done before them. Then from February 1908, they and Fred began attending Dunsford County Primary School. By this time, the family were living at Sowton Cottage, in Dunsford, which is about nine miles south of Crediton where they last lived. They left the school only five months later, in July 1908, when the family moved again - this time, five miles east, to Holcombe Burnell, where they again attended the local school.

Around 1909, Mabel, George, Ernest and Harry attended school in Longdown (only a mile west of Holcombe Burnell where they previously attended), before the family moved about ten miles to Hittisleigh - the children attended the school there from September 1910. At the time they lived at Beer or Bera Cottage, which was seemingly about half way between Hittisleigh and Cheriton Bishop. The family were still there a year later at the time of the 1911 Census; however, Fred was not with them, and had seemingly stopped attending school with his younger siblings. Had he left home to work?

Fred disappears from records as a teenager. Did he live and work on farms around Devon, as did most of his male relatives?

His older half brother Walter had joined the army, after leaving the industrial school. The First World War saw Fred follow in his older brother's footsteps. Fred's army service record doesn't seem to have survived, but we know Fred didn't survive the war. His name appears on the Men of Dunsford war memorial. Devon Heritage gives his army details: no. 14895, Private Fred Vernon, of the 9th Battalion, the Devonshire Regiment. He was killed on Thursday 30th September 1915, aged only eighteen.

He is memorialised also in France at the Loos Memorial at Dud Corner Cemetery, at Loos-en-Gohelle, Departement du Pas-de-Calais, Nord-Pas-de-Calais, France. His Plot is Panel 35 to 37. His Memorial ID: 15761976.

Fred's Army Medical Card states he arrived in France on 27th July 1915. It appears he saw action for the first and last time in the Battle of Loos. From The Keep Military Museum website:

"In early August 1915 the 8th and then the 9th [Devonshire Regiments] joined 20 Brigade in the 7th Division in Frances. After the briefest experience in the line, both Battalions were hurled into the Battle of Loos on 25th September. Despite German shelling and British gas blowing back on them during the attack, the 8th pressed on leading the attack and captured the German position. The 9th followed in support and lost a great many men to machine gun fire as they crossed No Man's Land to join the 8th in their stretch of German trench. The survivors of the two Battalions held the position until the evening of 26th September, when they were withdrawn. In this single battle the 8th suffered 639 casualties and the 9th 476."

Andrew Rawson, in Battleground Europe, describes how they were "shot to pieces before they had reached the Gun Trench".

Yet Fred's death is recorded as some days later. Did he survive the Battle of Loos, only to be killed or die on the 30th, a 'quiet day' when only "intermittent shelling went on throughout the day" (from 9th Devonshires Forum)? Or perhaps he did not actually survive the battle, and his body wasn't recovered, or his death wasn't recorded, until the 30th. Indeed, rather than stating his death of date, his Medical Card words it as his 'death regarded [or 'recorded' - its hard to read]: 30.9.15'

For his service, he was awarded the Victory, Britain and 1915 Star Medal, though whether he ever saw these, seems unlikely.

Great Great Uncle Frank Vernon

My Great Great Uncle Frank (1896 - 1897) was the younger brother of my Great Grandfather Walter Charles Vernon (1892 - 1965).



Frank was born on 18th August 1896 in Sandford, Devon, to Isaac 'Harry' Harwood Vernon (27), an agricultural labourer and farm carter, and Lucy Vernon (nee James) (28), a former domestic servant and housewife.

Frank was baptised on 13th September 1896 in Sandford, Devon. At the time of his birth, the family resided in Lower Henstill Cottages in Sandford.

Frank was the youngest of four siblings born to Harry and Lucy (one daughter, three sons):

  • Edith Ellen  1891 - 1971 (79 years old
  • Walter Charles  1892 - 1965  (73 years old)
  • William John  1894 - 1895  (1 year old)
  • Frank  1896 - 1897 (6 months old)

On 27th December 1895, Frank's older brother, 1-year-old William (recorded on his death certificate as John implying his parents may have called the young boy by his middle name) passed away, in Sandford. He had whooping cough, followed by a convulsive attack.

Baby Frank and his mother Lucy were both ill with pulmonary tuberculosis and passed away from the disease.

On 22nd February 1897, Frank passed away, aged only six months, in Langham, Kennerleigh.

One month later, his mother Lucy passed away, aged twenty-nine, on 25th March 1897, in Kennerleigh. Lucy's death left Harry a widower with three young children under five years old

But before Lucy passed away, it seems Harry may have begun an affair with Ellen Tonkins - her son Fred Tonkins, born Apr/May/Jun 1897, was conceived before Lucy's death and Harry would later recognise him as his son. On New Year's Eve 1897, Harry and Ellen married. Before they married, Harry was described as Ellen's lodger. 

Frank's ten younger half siblings (8 half brothers and 2 half sisters):

  • Frederick 'Fred' (born Tonkins, later Vernon)  1897 - 1915  (18)
  • Mabel Ellen  1898 - 1994  (95)
  • George  1900 - 1900  (0 - 3 months old)
  • George Henry  1901 - 1973  (71)
  • Ernest Isaac  1904 - 1997  (93)
  • Isaac Harry (went by Harry like his father)  1906 - 1964  (58)
  • William Harwood  1908 - 1972  (64)
  • Florence Emily  1911 - 1993  (82)
  • Sidney 'Sid'  1913 - 2004  (91)
  • Percy  1915 - 2002  (86)

Great Great Uncle William 'John' John Vernon

My Great Great Uncle William 'John' (1894 - 1895) was the younger brother of my Great Great Grandfather Walter Charles Vernon (1892 - 1965).


William was born in Jul/Aug/Sep 1894 in the district of Crediton, Devon, to Isaac 'Harry' Harwood Vernon (25), an agricultural labourer and farm carter, and Lucy Vernon (nee James) (26), a former domestic servant and housewife.

William was baptised on 16th September 1894 in Crediton, Devon.

William was the third of four siblings born to Harry and Lucy (one daughter and three sons):

  • Edith Ellen  1891 - 1971  (79 years old)
  • Walter Charles  1892 - 1965  (73 years old)
  • William John  1894 - 1895  (1 year old)
  • Frank  1896 - 1997  (6 months old)

On 27th December 1895, 1-year-old William (recorded on his death certificate as John implying his parents may have called the young boy by his middle name) passed away, in Sandford. He had whooping cough, followed by a convulsive attack.

His younger brother Frank and their mother Lucy were both ill with pulmonary tuberculosis and passed away from the disease.

On 22nd February 1897, Frank passed away, aged only six months, in Langham, Kennerleigh.

One month later, their mother Lucy passed away, aged twenty-nine, on 25th March 1897, in Kennerleigh. Lucy's death left Harry a widower with their two oldest children.

Before Lucy passed away, it seems Harry began an affair with Ellen Tonkins - her son Fred Tonkins, born Apr/May/Jun 1897, was conceived before Lucy's death and Harry would later recognise him as his son. On New Year's Eve 1897, Harry and Ellen married. Before they married, Harry was described as Ellen's lodger. 

William's ten younger half siblings (8 half brothers and 2 half sisters):

  • Frederick 'Fred' (born Tonkins, later Vernon)  1897 - 1915  (18)
  • Mabel Ellen  1898 - 1994  (95)
  • George  1900 - 1900  (0 - 3 months old)
  • George Henry  1901 - 1973  (71)
  • Ernest Isaac  1904 - 1997  (93)
  • Isaac Harry (went by Harry like his father)  1906 - 1964  (58)
  • William Harwood  1908 - 1972  (64)
  • Florence Emily  1911 - 1993  (82)
  • Sidney 'Sid'  1913 - 2004  (91)
  • Percy  1915 - 2002  (86)

Saturday, 10 August 2019

My Exeter Family History. Part 1

Maybe ambitiously, I have entitled this post 'My Exeter Family History. Part 1', for here I shall share what I have learnt already of my family's presence in Exeter, with the understanding that I have more to research and learn. Many of my direct ancestors lived in Exeter, but so did their siblings, who I am yet to research and write biographic posts for.

Originally a small village, far outside the city walls of Exeter, the 20th century saw Whipton absorbed by the city. By the time my father and his siblings grew up there in the 1960's and 1970's, it was to them a suburban, working-class area of Exeter. A generation or two before may have been living in rundown cottages in the country or damp two-up-two-downs or crowded tenement blocks in the city, but here they had good-sized council houses with gardens and indoor loos; they had electricity, gas, hot and cold running water - all manner of modern conveniences -; as well as fields and parks for the children to play in. They were beneficiaries of the welfare state.

My dad as a toddler, playing in the garden at Hillyfield Road, c 1964

My paternal grandfather, Les Vernon, and his siblings grew up in Cowley, which unlike Whipton, is yet to be absorbed by the city and remains a hamlet just north of a Exeter. His elder sister Peggy, in old age, remembered watching, from a seemingly safe distant in Cowley, her beloved Exeter being heavily bombed in the Second World War.

In the late 1950's, Les, his wife Delma, and their three eldest children moved out of his parents' family home to a house of their own in Whipton - 25 Hillyfield Road. It was in this house, that my own father was born.

My dad as a toddler, playing outside his home at 25 Hillyfield Road, c 1964
25 Hillyfield Road (left) today

In the late 1960's, the growing family moved around the corner to 10 Heather Close, also in Whipton. During this time, Les worked as a motor mechanic in and around Exeter - firstly at a garage in Blackboy Road and later at garages in the Marsh Barton trading estate.

Les and Delma outside 10 Heather Close, c 1980s
10 Heather Close (centre) today

Les's father, Walter, was not from Exeter, but his mother, my great grandmother, Winifred Violet Vernon (nee Edworthy) (1895 - 1982) was. At the time of her birth, her family lived at 64 Howell Road (and later no.54).

64 Howell Road is now a more modern building, but these two-up-two-downs next door may give an idea of the type of home the Edworthy family were living at the end of the 19th century
54 Howell Road today (on the left), where the Edworthy family were living come the 1901 Census

Howell Road is just around the corner from Exeter Central Station and not far from Exeter St Davids Station. Winifred's father (as a carrier and guard) and later both of her brothers worked for the railway. Winifred's father William, and her sisters who passed away in childhood, were all buried (in unmarked graves it appears) in Exeter Higher Cemetery in Heavitree, Exeter. By the time of the 1911 Census, Winifred, her mother, and brother Frederick had moved to 8 Park Road, which is just around the corner of Exeter Higher Cemetery. Sometime in the 1910's, Winifred and her mother moved away from Exeter towards Paignton.

8 Park Road (centre), where the Edworthy family were living around 1911

Winifred's parents, my great great grandparents, were from the Devon countryside. Her father William had moved to St Sidwell's in Exeter, as young man, from the Coldridge/East Worlington area. He married Bessie Staddon Nott in her native Morcharch Bishop in 1877, but soon after the marriage the couple settled in Exeter, where they brought up their six children. The 1881 Census shows William, Bessie and their baby son living at 11 Follett's Buildings in Exeter.

Follett's Building

Follett's Buildings had been built only seven years earlier in 1874, when an improvement scheme headed by Exeter's mayor Charles Follett had seen their construction. With Exeter's recent cholera outbreaks in mind, Follett oversaw the building of these new tenements of between two and fours rooms, with each tenement having a larder, scullery, water supply, coal cellar and water closet! By 1886, and the birth of their daughter Cora, the family were living in Hoopern Street. Sometime in the early 1890's, they moved to Howell Road, where they were living at the time of my great grandmother Winifred's birth.


Hoopern Street, c 1950s, where the Edworthy family lived in the 1880s

My paternal grandmother Delma Margaret Emma Vernon (nee Wright) (1925 - 1992) spent most of her life in and around Exeter. She was born in the city - the 1939 Census shows her and her family living at 52 Burnthouse Lane


Burnthouse Lane, c 1930s

Burnthouse Lane, c 1930s
Burnthouse Lane, VE Day. Are Delma and her younger siblings amongst these smiling children?

She married in Exeter in 1946. Over the next decade she lived with her in-laws in Cowley, but the late 1950's saw Delma, Les and their children return to the city. She would live the remainder of her life in and around Whipton in Exeter.

Delma's father, Ernest 'Len' Leonard Wright (1905 - 1981), my Great Grandfather, was born into a large family in the poor West Quarter area of Exeter. As children, he and his siblings, attended Rack Street Central School.

Rack Street Central School (left) and Follett's Building (right), c 1963

The 1911 Census shows the family living at 6 Teigh/Tighe Place, a small court off Rack Street. Alas the West Quarter was overcrowded and poverty strickenan historic but poor area of Exeter. Bathhouses, temperance societies and soup kitchens were set up to help alleviate the appalling conditions; nonetheless, in 1925, the council began plans for demolition, clearance, and re-building of the West Quarter. Most families were relocated to new houses in Burnthouse Lane by the mid 1930's. Around 1912, before the clearing, Len and his family moved from the West Quarter to 11 Clinton Street


11 Clinton Street (centre), where the Wright family were living in the 1910s, today

In 1925, Len, by then a railway refreshment attendant, married Ivy Jane Boobier (also from Exeter). By the start of the Second World War, Len, Ivy and their children were living in the new Burnthouse Lane. I know little to nothing of Len and Ivy's later life, but that they passed away in Exeter in the late 1970's/early 1980's.

Len's father, Francis 'Frank' - Wright (1868 - 1939), my great great grandfather, was another ancestor of mine who spent his whole life in Exeter. At the time of his birth, his family were living in Prospect Place, which was another small court off Rack Street in the West Quarter. The 1881 Census shows the family at no.11 and the 1891 Census at no.3. In 1892 or 1893, as a young married man, Frank, his wife Emma, and their eldest children moved from Prospect Place to 5 Mermaid Lodge, still in the West Quarter; however, within five years, they were back at 10 Prospect Place. Around 1900, they moved again - this time to 6 Teigh/Tighe Place, where Frank was born.

The Wrights lived in Exeter for generations. Frank's father, my great x3 grandfather, William Wright (1821 - 1880), a man of many varying occupations, including shoemaker and mason's labourer, was born in the area of St Sidwell in Exeter. At the time of his birth, his family lived in Spiller's Lane. The 1841 Census shows him and his widowed mother Mary, a washerwoman, living in Summerland Street in St Sidwell. By the time of the 1851 Census, William, then a young married man, his wife Sarah, and their eldest son were living in Coombe Street Place in the district of St Mary Major in Exeter.

Coombe Street, where the Wright family were living around 1851, c 1920s

From the mid 1850's into the 1860's, the growing family lived in Sun Street, also in St Mary Major. And in the late 1860's, they moved to Prospect Place, where they were living at the time of Frank's birth.

Frank's wife Emma Wight (nee Bennett) (1871 - 1944), though born just over the border in Somerset to Devonian parents, after the tragic death of her father, when she was a baby, moved to Exeter, where her mother remarried, Scottish veteran of the Crimea War James Clapperton, and had more children by him. The 1881 Census shows the growing family at 69 Little Clifton Street in St Sidwell. Between 1885 and 1888, they moved to 2 New Cheeke Street. Emma's father James Bennett (1842 - 1872), came from Upton Pyne, a village just north of Exeter, and as a young man lived with and worked as a manservant for the Hodge family, headed by dairyman William Hodge, at 7 Colleton Building, in Colleton Grove.

When Emma was about fourteen, her younger half-brother James, around the age of eleven, alas turned to stealing. And not being a fast runner, he was twice caught. On 31st August 1885, James, 11, acted as watch-out, as his young friend Charles Henry Green, 9, stole threepenny worth of sweets from a shop at 54 Richmond Road, the property of a Miss Osborn. Their crime was witnessed by a William Kerslake, who subsequently caught James. Charles said James, the older lad, had told him to steal the sweets. Only a week later, on 7th September 1885, James attempted another steal with Charles, and another lad, Frederick Charles Hookaway, 10. They stole 50 prawns, worth 1s 6d, from a fish shop at 15 Paris Street, the property of a Mrs Smith. She ran after the boys down the street and once more James was caught. He was sentenced to three weeks in prison, to be followed by five years in a Reformatory School.


Paris Street, c 1900

Tragedy struck seventeen-year-old Emma and her family in 1888: as an accident involving a lorry killed her father, so an accident involving a tram killed her younger half sister, Ada. On the evening of 11th April 1888, Ada was only a toddler, out of her mother, Sarah Ann's sight for barely a minute while she fetched water from the house next door, and watched over by an older brother; but in a passing moment a younger brother left the front door open and little Ada wandered out, just when the older brother wasn't looking; she wandered onto Paris Street near Morgan's Square, where lots of children were at play, just when a tram came pass. The tram-driver braked suddenly, but too late. The elder brother, oh how racked with guilt and shock and sadness he must have been, when he then ran to his mother to tell her.

So that's my Exeter family history on my paternal grandmother Delma's father's side. Delma's mother, my great grandmother, Ivy Jane Wright (nee Boobier) (1905 - 1978) and her family were also from Exeter. Ivy and her sister Ellen grew up in the early 1900's at 4 Colleton Grove.

Ivy (left) and her older sister Ellen, likely outside their home in Colleton Grove, c 1906

They attended Holloway Street Infant School, then Holloway Street Girl's School. Ivy's mother, Mary Ann 'Polly', a laundress, passed away when Ivy was ten, and her father, Walter, a labourer, passed away when she was nineteen. By the 1920's, orphaned Ivy, then a young woman, had moved a few streets away to 26 Melbourne Street. Sometime after marrying Len in 1925, they moved to Burnthouse Lane.

26 Melbourn Street, where Ivy lived in the 1920s, today

Ivy's father, my great great grandfather, Walter Boobier (1871 - 1924), a manicipal labourer, was born and baptised in the area of St Leonard in Exeter, though his parents weren't originally from the city. The 1881 Census shows him and his family living in Jubilee Street in St Leonard. When Walter was a teenager, both his parents passed away. He and his brothers supported themselves and each other, and by the 1891 Census were living together in Weirfield Place. Sometime in the 1890's they moved to 5 Paragon Place, also in Exeter. In 1901, Walter married laundry maid Mary Ann 'Polly' Manning. At the time of their marriage, Walter lived at 14 Melbourne Street, and Polly lived at 4 Colleton Grove. At the latter address, Walter and Polly set up home.

14 Melbourne Street, where Walter lived c 1900, today

My great great grandmother, Mary Ann 'Polly' Boobier (nee Manning) (1869 - 1916), was also born and baptised in the area of St Leonard in Exeter. Before they married, Polly and Walter were neighbours. The 1871 Census shows Polly and her family living in Weirfield Place, and the 1881 Census shows them living in Jubilee Street, where Walter and his family were living at the same time. Sometime in the 1880's, Polly and her family moved to 4 Colleton Grove, where Polly would stay and start her own family with Walter.

Polly's parents were not native to Exeter; however, her mother, my great x3 grandmother, Mary Ann Manning (nee Ireland) (1842 - 1908), a laundress, moved as a toddler with her family to Heavitree (then a village just outside Exeter, but now part of the city). The 1851 Census shows them living at Cholwell Cottages in Heavitree.

Cholwell Cottages, where Mary Ann lived around 1851

In the 1860's, she married labourer William Boobier and they settled in St Leonard in Exeter. In the 1870's, Mary Ann's surviving children attended Rack Street Central School in Exeter's poor West Quarter. It was reported that many of the school's poor pupils started their day with a Farthing Breakfast at the Coombe Street mission, before walking to school. The family soon moved to Jubilee Street. Jubilee Street was at the bottom of Weirfield Road in Exeter, and consisted of rows of slum terraced houses, close to the River Exe. Sometime in the 1880's, Mary Ann and her surviving family moved from Jubilee Street just around the corner to 4 Colleton Grove. Mary Ann's mother had been a laundress before her, and Mary Ann built up the family business. Her son William, listed as a laundry assistant in the 1901 Census, took over Mary Ann's laundry business after her death. The 1911 Census shows him living three doors down at 1 Colleton Grove (his laundress sisters remain at 4 Colleton Grove); there he is listed as a laundry man and employer, and his wife a laundress, running a launderette at their home, like Mary Ann had done before.

Those are all my direct ancestors on my father's side who lived in Exeter in the 19th and 20th century and the homes in which they lived. 

A few on my mother's side also lived in Exeter. My great great Grandmother Emma Mutters (nee Brealey) (1855 - 1924), a dressmaker, was born and baptised in Holy Trinity in Exeter. During her childhood, she and her family lived at 5 Trinity Place, near South Street. At the time of her marriage in 1888, she and her husband, mason George Mutters, were living in Centre Street in Exeter. After moving around a little, they settled in his native Woodbury. 

Emma's mother, my great x3 grandmother, Joanna Brealey (nee Sampson) (1820 - 1872), a domestic servant from Broadwoodkelly, moved as a young woman to Fore Street in Exeter. There she lived with and worked for the Brock family, who ran Willcocks and Brock Wholesale and Retail (later William Brock & Co), before marrying George Brealey and settling in Trinity Place.


A sigh for William Brock & Co can still be seen on Fore Street today

My great x3 grandfather, George Brealey (1830 - 1894), a carpenter from North Tawton, moved as a young man to Exeter. He and Joanna lived at Trinity Place, till the 1870's, when Joanna passed away. George remarried laundress Charlotte Filleul and they moved to 12 Melbourne Street - the same street members of father's side of the family would live on a generation or two later. 

George's younger half brother, Henry 'Harry' Brealey, had also made the move from North Tawton to Exeter. Harry was the black sheep of the family. I shall let you read why...

On the night of Thursday 1st August 1889, Harry struck his mistress Elizabeth 'Lizzie' Redway, who fell back, hit her head and died. He was soon arrested and charged with manslaughter. The incident happened at their home - a shared house called 'The Barracks' at 8 Mary Arches Street. He had returned home late drunk and the pair had quarrelled over his spending all their money on drink. Lizzie used her last breath to shout 'Murder!' which, along with the sudden stop to the quarrelling with a thud, alerted neighbours. Young Kate Parsons (about thirteen) was sent for a policeman, whilst charwomen Elizabeth Holman and Eliza Tiley went to see if Lizzie was all right. Harry would not let them in - said Lizzie was sleeping. When the policeman arrived, he let him in, but claimed Lizzie had had a fit. It was reported, when Harry sobered up, he realised his guilt and "suffered deeply". He pleaded guilty in court; was imprisoned from the August till the November, when the court sessions re-opened and he was sentenced to an additional ten days hard labour. The sentence "evidently surprised both the prisoner and those present in court". You can read further about the case in local articles from the time available on Find My Past. 

I encourage you too to delve into your family history, be in it Exeter or not. Just be aware you may find skeletons in closets - even in Exeter homes.


Old Drawing of Mary Arches Street, where Lizzie met her end by Harry's fist in 1889

In finishing this little piece, I must acknowledge a debt of gratitude to Exeter Memories for much of the information about and pictures of historic Exeter, which helped me paint a more detailed and colourful picture of my Exeter family history.