SPURWING EBOOKS
  • Home
    • Why Spurwing?
    • Bestsellers
  • Contact
  • Blog
  • Michael Murray
    • LEEFDALE
    • A Single To Filey
    • Magnificent Britain
    • Learning Lines? >
      • Learning Lines? Additional Materials
    • Julia's Room
  • Cathy Murray
    • Cabbage and Semolina
    • Jam for Tea
    • Here & There
    • I Think I Prefer the Tinned Variety
    • Cathy's Family History Blog
    • Tinned Variety Photo collection

Cathy's Family History Blog

Let’s put some faces to the names #FamilyHistory

17/10/2020

0 Comments

 
As I've said on an earlier post, I'm the end of the line for my branch of The Buckles.
My Buckle ancestors are:
Norman Buckle 1924 – 1978.
Sidney Henry Buckle 1881 – 1969.
John Henry Buckle 1852 – 1933.
Christopher Buckle 1821 – 1896.
John Buckle born 1789.
Christopher Buckle born 1745.
Christopher Buckle born about 1712.

​Dad NORMAN BUCKLE 1924 – 1978

This photo was taken in 1954. I’m the child on the left with the teddy bear. My dad had a new job and we’d moved to Kettlethorpe near Wakefield in Yorkshire.
Picture

​Grandad SIDNEY HENRY BUCKLE 1881 – 1969 and Norman Buckle

I think this photo was taken in about 1937. My dad’s auntie had a guesthouse in Blackpool and I’m guessing this is where they might have gone for a holiday. Sidney Henry was about 5′ 4″ in height and my dad soon towered above him at 6′ 1″ when he was at his full height. 
Picture

​Great Grandfather JOHN HENRY BUCKLE 1852 – 1933

​​I found this photo in an old newspaper. John Henry Buckle is the person in the centre of the photo holding the flag. Taken in 1917, the photo records an event in Royston, Yorkshire to honour a young man of the village who was a First World War hero. John Henry Buckle was very involved in civic duties and on this occasion made a speech praising the young soldier for his valour.
Picture
​John Henry Buckle (centre holding flag) greets a war hero. 

​Great Great Grandfather CHRISTOPHER BUCKLE 1821 – 1896

This is one of my most treasured possessions. As the keeper of my family’s history I value this photo of the Buckles and am trying to keep it safe for future generations. Unlike most old photos, this one has the surname pencilled on the reverse, possibly by the photographer. John Henry Buckle is easily recognisable on the right of the photo. I am sure that the couple seated in the centre of the photo are Christopher Buckle and his wife Harriet. John Henry’s hand position looks affectionate towards his mother and I wonder if the boy on the left is John Henry’s son, Sidney Henry. 
Picture

Christopher Buckle (seated left).
That’s as far back as I can go in my family history in photos. Hope you enjoyed meeting The Buckles face to face.

0 Comments

Hidden in a photo frame #FamilyHistory

10/10/2020

0 Comments

 
Picture
This photo stood on my grandparents sideboard throughout my childhood and beyond. My mum is the bride and her father is escorting her into church. September 2nd 1950 at the parish church in Royston, South Yorkshire.
The picture turned up again in the box of photos I mentioned the other day.
While I was admiring the frame and reminiscing about it’s significance, I realised that the reverse of the photo seemed to be wedged with papers. So I very carefully prised open the clips to find a piece of brown wrapping paper and these three photos hidden behind the wedding photo.
Picture
Picture
Picture
What a find!
But no indication as to who any of these people are.
I’ve compared them with other likely photos but so far can’t see any matches.
​Probably another family history brick wall unless I can get copies to a very elderly aunt who may know (and more significantly, remember) who they are.
Thanks for reading my blog today. Don't forget to check out Book of the Day before you go. 
0 Comments

Oh! We do like to be beside the seaside

3/10/2020

0 Comments

 
Picture
This is one of my favourite family history photographs. 
My grandmother, Elsie Buckle, (1885 - 1952) is the woman on the left but I don't know who the other two are. I'm guessing from the hats it's the late 1920s. But who knows as there's no information on the back of the photo. As to location, again no info. I know from a few old postcards that Elsie and my grandad, Sidney Henry Buckle, (1881 - 1969) liked to visit Southport. So, maybe that's where they are. Who knows??
Picture
This postcard was sent by Elsie to her mother and sister when she went to Southport for a holiday with Sidney. The postmark is very blurred but it could be 1908 which is the year when they were married. So maybe on their honeymoon?
Picture
Elsie and Sid had two children. Vernon was born in 1921 but died within a few days. Their second child, Norman was born in 1924 and what a bonny baby he is. He's my dad and you can read more about him in I Think I Prefer the Tinned Variety if you're interested in WW2 diaries. Sid was a coal miner and for a while Elsie was a self employed confectioner.  Sid was born in Harthill near Rotherham and Elsie lived for her entire life in Royston, South Yorkshire.
Picture
Picture
These clippings are from the Parish magazine of Royston Church. Elsie died from cancer in 1952 but Sid lived on until 1969. I've got a couple of stories about him in Cabbage and Semolina which you might enjoy. Thanks for reading today. Hope to see you here again soon.
0 Comments

Buckle Facts and Figures #FamilyHistory

26/9/2020

0 Comments

 
As I mentioned the other day, I'm the end of the line for my branch of The Buckles. But there are still quite a few of us dotted around the country.

​In 2011 there were 5653 Buckles resident in England and Wales.

​Buckle was ranked 1401st in the list of most used surnames.
Smith was ranked first with 652563 individuals recorded in the 2011 census with that surname.
More fun with surname data at “Surnames of England and Wales”.

​In 1939 there were 4780 Buckles in Britain.

On the outbreak of WW2 when the 1939 Register was drawn up, there were 4780 Buckles resident in the British Isles of which 4718 lived in England.
There were 1016 Buckles living in Yorkshire in 1939.
And so far I’ve found 30 of my Buckle ancestors who were alive in 1939 but I may yet track down some more.

​In 1891 there were 901 Buckle families living in Yorkshire.

This was about 26% of all the recorded Buckles' in the UK. Yorkshire had the highest population of Buckle families in 1891.
Source Ancestry.co.uk

​Employment in 1881.

In 1881 the most common Buckle occupation in the UK was Agricultural Labourer. 9% of Buckles' were Agricultural Labourers. A less common occupation for the Buckle family was Blacksmith.
  • Agricultural Labourer 9%
  • Labourer 3%
  • Farmer 3%
  • Blacksmith 1%
Source Ancestry.co.uk

​Meaning of the Buckle surname.

The surname Buckle is of early medieval English origin and is an occupational name for a maker and or seller of buckles.
The name derives from the Middle English word “bokel”, buckle, from the Old French “bocle”, from the Latin “buccula”, the cheek strap of a helmet, a diminutive of “bucca”, cheek.
In some cases the modern surname may derive from a metonymic occupational name for a shield-bearer or maker of shields, from the Middle High German “buckel”, shield.
The surname development has included Peter le Bucler (1203, Yorkshire) and William Bokeler (1317, Kent), while the modern surname can be found as Buckler, Buckel, Buckell and Buckles.
The first recorded spelling of the surname is thought to be that of Anschetil Buclar, which was dated 1148, in the “Winton Book”, Hampshire, during the reign of King Stephen 1135 – 1154.
Source The Internet Surname Database

​FAMOUS BUCKLES

​My Google and Bing searches haven’t come up with any famous Buckles but good old Wikipedia can offer a few.
  • Andrew Buckle (born 1982), Australian golfer
  • Baldrick Buckle (born 1972), British artist
  • Bobby Buckle (1869–1959), English footballer
  • Catherine Buckle, Zimbabwean writer
  • Charles G. Palmer-Buckle (born 1950) is a Ghanaian Catholic archbishop
  • Claude Buckle (1905–1973), English painter
  • Claude Buckle (admiral) (1803–1894), English naval officer
  • Desmond Buckle (1910–1964), Ghanaian political activist
  • Francis Buckle (1766–1832), English jockey
  • George Earle Buckle (1854–1935), English editor and biographer
  • Harry Buckle (1882–?), Irish footballer
  • Henry Thomas Buckle (1821–1862), English historian
  • John Buckle (1867–1925), British trade unionist and politician
  • Paul Buckle (born 1970), English footballer
  • Richard Buckle (1916-2001), British ballet critic
  • Robert Buckle (1802-1893), English clergyman
  • Ted Buckle (1924–1990), English footballer
  • Terry Buckle (born 1940), Canadian archbishop
  • Walter Clutterbuck Buckle (1886–1955), Canadian politician
  • Richard Buckle (1959-), Radio presenter

And if you would like to know more about Norman Buckle check out this page here.

Thanks for reading my blog. Do leave a comment if you know any more interesting facts or figures about The Buckles. Especially if you're a Buckle yourself.
0 Comments

18th Century Buckles #FamilyHistory

19/9/2020

0 Comments

 
​I can confidently trace my ancestors back to a Christopher Buckle born in 1746 and I’m reasonably confident that his father was Christopher Buckle born in 1712. Certainly several Ancestry family trees include this connection. But I can’t nail a document to make this a 100% certainty.
However given the small population of the area and the fact that Christopher was married to Margaret Cook at Pickhill (North Yorkshire), I’m going to hang on to him as my great, great, great, great, great grandfather! 
Christopher Buckle was baptised on September 23rd 1712 at the parish church of St John the Baptist in Adel.
Picture
​​Adel is thirty five miles south of Pickhill and I think there’s a reasonably strong chance that this is my ancestor. In which case his father was Henry Buckle. But there isn’t really any evidence to make this a definite connection so I’m not going any further back on this branch of the family tree.
And that’s all I know about the early life of Great X 5 Grandfather Buckle. 
Picture
My 5 X great Grandmother, Margaret Cook was born in Pickhill in 1713.
She was baptised at the parish church on 13th August 1713. Her father was John Cook.
And that’s all I know about her early life until her marriage to Christopher Buckle in 1737.
The parish register records the marriage on 20th April, 1737. 
In due course, Christopher and Margaret had two children:
Mary Buckle baptised in the parish church on 11th April 1739
and
Christopher Buckle baptised on 15th February 1746.
Whether or not Christopher and Margaret lived happily ever after, I don’t know. Sources of further information don’t appear to be available. 
I haven’t been able to find out anything else about my 4X great grandfather Christopher Buckle until 1772 when he married Dorothy Binham. And here’s something!
The banns of marriage were signed by both Christopher and his intended with a cross. They made their mark. They were illiterate. 
Picture
​And both Christopher and his fiancée lived in Wath about five miles south of Pickhill. 
In 1772 it would have been straightforward to drive to Wath from Pickhill. Now it might be a bit more tricky as the A1 motorway section has been built between the two villages.
​Apart from her marriage to my 4X Great Grandfather (Christopher Buckle) in 1772, I’ve been unable to find out anything more about the early life of Dorothy Binham.
There’s a record on Find My Past of a Dorothy Buckle who died in 1799 in Topcliffe. That’s only 7 miles away from Wath where Christopher and Dorothy were married.
If this is my 4X Great Grandma’s burial record, her birth year is given as 1752 but I’m not certain about that.
However, on 14th December 1772, Dorothy Binham and Christopher Buckle were married in the parish church of St Mary in the village of Wath.
Christopher and Dorothy had their first child soon after their marriage and he was named Christopher too. Unfortunately he died in 1774 and was buried in the churchyard at St Mary’s on 14th March 1774.
​Christopher and Dorothy had several other children.
A second son was born soon after the death of Christopher. He too was named Christopher. 
The record of Christopher’s birth in 1775 doesn’t identify the church where he was baptised. But all his eight siblings were baptised at St Mary’s, Wath, Yorkshire, so I think it’s a safe bet that he was too.
There’s a record on Find My Past for the burial of a Christopher Buckle in the parish church at Well which is in the vicinity of Wath and Pickhill. There’s a degree of probability that this could be an accurate record for Christopher. If so, his date of burial was 7th September 1834 which makes him about fifty nine years old when he died.
Elizabeth Buckle was the oldest daughter of my 4X great grandparents, Christopher and Dorothy Buckle.
Born in Wath, North Yorkshire and baptised in the parish church on 28th September 1777, Elizabeth is a family history challenge.
Wath is a small village as are the neighbouring villages of Well, Pickhill etc. You wouldn’t expect to find records for so many Elizabeth Buckles as there are in this small area.
For example, there’s a burial record for an Elizabeth Buckle who died in Well in 1809.
And a different Elizabeth Buckle who died in Well in 1816.
And another Elizabeth Buckle who died in Well in 1834.
And then there’s an Elizabeth Buckle who married Robert Hobart in 1795 in the village of Kirklington, another small village in the vicinity. This is definitely a Family History brick wall!
Christopher and Dorothy’s second daughter, Dorothy Buckle, was born on January 28th 1780 and baptised in the parish church at Wath, North Yorkshire on January 29th.
Dorothy died aged fifty years in 1830. Her burial record indicates that she lived in the village of Melmerby which was part of the parish of Wath where she’d been born. Dorothy appears to have stayed close to home throughout her life.
Margaret was born on 23rd September 1782 and baptised four days later at St Mary’s.
Unfortunately, Margaret died in 1802 and was buried in the Wath churchyard on 17th January 1802.
William was born on 2nd December 1784. He wasn’t baptised until 1st March 1785. This was just before he died so presumably he’d been too ill since birth to be taken to church. William was buried in St Mary’s churchyard on 2nd March 1785.
Mary was baptised in the parish church on 6th March 1786. Unfortunately she died in 1803 and was buried in the churchyard at St Mary’s on 4th September 1803.
Anne Buckle was the youngest of my 4X Great Grandparents’ children. She was baptised at St Mary’s on 29th May 1791 and that’s all I’ve been able to find out about her.
John Buckle was baptised on 3rd January 1789 at St Mary’s.
John is my 3X Great Grandfather. 
John met Hannah Dobby who lived in the neighbouring village of Well. They were married on 25th November 1811 in the parish church at Well.
By the time of the birth of their first child in 1813, John and Hannah had moved to live in Pickhill just a few miles away from both Wath and Well.
John and Hannah had eight children: three boys and five girls. All their children were born in Pickhill and the neighbouring village of Sinderby which was part of the Pickhill parish.
My 3X Great Grandfather, John Buckle, died in 1836. He was buried in the churchyard of All Saints church, Pickhill on 10th August 1836.
Picture
Hannah Dobby, my 3X great grandmother, was married to John Buckle in 1811. The marriage took place in the parish church of Well in North Yorkshire just a couple of miles from the village of Wath where John lived.
Hannah was born in Well and baptised at the parish church on 9th January 1787. Her father (and my 4X great grandfather) was John Dobby.
Hannah and John were married in St Michael’s parish church, Well on 25th November 1811.
After husband John’s death, Hannah continued to live at Sinderby and she is recorded on the 1841 census as being the head of her household and a widow. She also had the care of her grandson, John Buckle, who was about three years old at the time.
Later that year, my 3X Great Grandmother, Hannah Buckle, also died. She was buried in the churchyard at All Saints, Pickhill on 26 December 1841.
That's all I know so far about my eighteenth century Buckle ancestors. Thanks for reading about them.
​If you enjoy reading about village life, you might also like Leefdale by Michael Murray. More details here.
0 Comments

Amazing Family History treasure found in loft! #FamilyHistory

12/9/2020

0 Comments

 
I’ve enjoyed family history for over twenty years. I’ve researched our family tree back to the eighteenth century. I became a Murray when I married Michael but was previously a Buckle. I’m the end of the line for my branch of the Buckles.
Originating in the village of Pickhill a few miles north of York, in 1850 my ancestors relocated to Harthill on the Yorkshire / Nottinghamshire border. In 1898 the Buckles moved again to Royston, Yorkshire.
My next family name is Ashworth and this is a story about some family history treasure which was almost lost forever.
​My uncle Jack Ashworth was the end of the line for our Ashworth family. When he died  his house was sold along with most of the contents. The new owner was clearing out the loft and came upon a couple of cardboard boxes filled with old photographs and cine films.
Thankfully he didn’t dump the photos and films but returned them to the vendor. 
One day my husband Michael recalled that the aforementioned uncle had made a short home movie at our wedding in the mid-nineteen seventies. He wondered what had become of the film and if there was anyway we could view it.
Picture
​In a phone call with my auntie I remembered to ask her about Michael’s request. She contacted the family and discovered that they’d had the films returned to them. A couple of weeks later they very kindly left the box of films at her house along with a box of photos.
Although she couldn’t do anything with the films, my aunt was thrilled with the photos. There’s over a hundred photos of her parents, grandparents, aunts, uncles and cousins going back to the 1920s and even a little bit before. She’s gone through all the photos and, where she knows them, written the names of the people on the reverse.
And then her son brought the two cardboard boxes over to our house for us to borrow for a while. And what a treasure trove they proved to  be.

​First, the box containing the cine films.

CONTENTS
​• Agfa Family cine camera
• Agfa Family cine film viewer
• 4 boxes of film reels each holding about 200 ft of film
• Splicing kit
• INSTRUCTION BOOKLET
The boxes of films and the film reels are labelled and have been sorted in groups for transfer to video cassette. Unfortunately the video cassettes haven’t survived the house sale. Which is a shame as 
a) it would have taken my uncle quite a while to sort them out 
and
b) it would be much easier to get video cassettes transferred onto DVD or a memory stick.
However, fortunately the instruction booklet for the cine film viewer is in the cardboard box and, even more fortunately, despite being at least thirty years old, the viewer still works.
So I spent the best part of three days working out how to use the viewer and then looking at all the films to try and find some film of our wedding.

​And I did!

​The film is in colour and has no soundtrack. The colour quality is excellent and the film is sharp and bright. Many of the guests have passed on. It was more than forty years ago, don’t forget. I wondered how I would feel looking at moving images of close relatives and friends, some who’d died far too young.
In fact, it was wonderful. Like every wedding it was a happy occasion and to see so many of our recent ancestors laughing and chatting was a real pleasure.
And that wasn’t the end of the discoveries.
There was another film which had my sister and myself aged about eight and ten respectively and then a couple of years older. There was my other sister’s christening in the early 1960s and my grandad Buckle who was born in 1881. And lots more. My mum and dad who both died in their mid-fifties in a happier time before ill health took over. And my grandmother smiling and laughing and looking with great tenderness at her baby grandchildren. 
I sent the films in the post to a photo studio to be transferred to DVD. I googled and picked a company which judging from the reviews would do a good job. And they did. 

​And the box containing the photos…

​These photos are all of my Ashworth and Barratt ancestors.
My grandad was Horace Ashworth (1905 – 1984) and my grandmother was Minnie Barratt (1906 – 1991). 
There are photos of both sets of their parents:
• John Thomas Ashworth (1871 – 1931)
• Emma Jane Gooding (1871 – 1957)
• Thomas Barratt (1881 – 1949)
• Harriet James (1881 – 1947)
and some of their siblings, aunts and uncles and other family members too. Plus a good few photos of individuals unfamiliar to my auntie who’s done a good job naming lots of the photos. 
There’s also an envelope containing the family history researches of Cousin Clifford Ashworth. He was my grandad’s nephew and I was aware that in the 1970s / 80s he’d collected considerable family history information and shared it with my grandfather. I’d never seen it or ever thought I would but it’s all there and I’m still going through it in detail and comparing it with my own researches. Cousin Clifford died in 1989 and didn’t have the benefit of on-line data so it will be interesting to see what he discovered.

​But, already there’s the most amazing find…

​About four years ago I was contacted by a distant relative who’d inherited lots of old photos. The information with the photos suggested that his Great Grandfather and mine were brothers. He very kindly sent copies of all the photos including this one:
Picture
​and this:
Picture
​My distant relative was able to identify his great grandfather back row right in the first photo and back row left in the second photo. Knowing that my great grandfather was older I guessed he would be the taller man in the back row of each photo. And I guessed that my grandad (Horace Ashworth) was the little boy in the middle of the front row of the second photo. 

​And now I know

​because not only did Cousin Clifford send my grandparents a copy of the second photo

​he annotated it!

Picture

​And that, I think you’ll agree, is just Family History perfection! 

​And yes, my guesses were correct.
My great grandfather John Tomas Ashworth is Number 4 and my grandad is Number 26.
There was hours of scanning to get copies of all the photos and match them into my family history files. But what a labour of love it was.

​And how fantastic that the new owner of my uncle’s loft recognised family history treasure and saved it for us. 

Thanks for reading my blog today. You might also like Cabbage and Semolina, my memories of a 1950s childhood.
0 Comments
Forward>>

    Cathy Murray

    For over thirty years Cathy Murray worked in British primary education as a class teacher and then as head teacher of four different schools.
    She retired early about ten years ago and has developed an interest in e-publishing as well as writing. In addition to her own books, she's published several novels written by her husband, Michael Murray. These include the best selling detective novel "A Single To Filey: a DCI Tony Forward novel".
    Cathy is a passionate family historian.
    When not writing and e-publishing she enjoys reading, gardening, country walks, music, films etc. A diagnosis of advanced colorectal cancer in mid-2017 was followed by 30 months of chemotherapy and two major operations in 2020. Our wonderful NHS put Cathy well on the road to recovery and she hoped to be cancer free for many years to come. She is everlastingly grateful to her family and friends, especially her husband Michael, for their love and support. Unfortunately, Cathy is receiving chemotherapy once again. She will write more family history blogposts when she can. ​

    Archives

    February 2021
    January 2021
    December 2020
    November 2020
    October 2020
    September 2020

    Categories

    All

    RSS Feed

Powered by Create your own unique website with customizable templates.
  • Home
    • Why Spurwing?
    • Bestsellers
  • Contact
  • Blog
  • Michael Murray
    • LEEFDALE
    • A Single To Filey
    • Magnificent Britain
    • Learning Lines? >
      • Learning Lines? Additional Materials
    • Julia's Room
  • Cathy Murray
    • Cabbage and Semolina
    • Jam for Tea
    • Here & There
    • I Think I Prefer the Tinned Variety
    • Cathy's Family History Blog
    • Tinned Variety Photo collection