As we travel over cyberspace and dusty library shelves we pick up all sorts of
references to Brinsmeads. Sometimes these references fit into the bigger picture. At other times, like the blue sky bits of a puzzle, they sit on the sidelines waiting for their place to be found.
A listing at http://www.caliver.demon.co.uk/mjhmisc/hpartner.htm records a marriage between Brinsmead, Martha at Iddesleigh, Devon on 15/05/1758 to Richard Holman (spelt Holeman on the IGI). There are no IGI Brinsmead references for the Iddesleigh batch numbers. Where was Martha born and who were her parents?
The new National Burial Index CD listed only two Brinsmeads (largely because Devon is not included in the project). They are:
- 10th October 1874 - Hugh Henry Brinsmead Age 3 Yorks WR, Doncaster, Hyde Park Cemetery.
- 18th September 1877 Hugh Brinsmeade (?) Age 45 Yorks WR, Doncaster, Hyde Park Cemetery.
A family history page for the Scadding family http://www.scadding.demon.co.uk/EVERY001.HTM includes the following reference. If he worked at the firm in 1861 he would have been with the firm when it still had a relatively small staff.
George Robert Scadding (John, Robert Scadden, John, JohnScadding, Moses, Mark, Aaron, Mark, John) was born on 13 Mar 1838 at Westminster, Middx. He married Elizabeth Green on 21 Jan 1866 at St. James's Church, Bermondsey, Surrey He married Mary Norris, daughter of John Norris, on 2 Jun 1872 at Saint Olave, Southwark. He died on 17 Sep 1917 at London at age 79.
He was Pianoforte Maker (1861) Insurance Agent (1905). He Worked in Camden Town at Brinsmead's piano manufactury. He and Elizabeth Green According to Jessima Alice Scadding, George Robert tore the references to his second family out of the family Bible. He would not let anyone see the family notes until the relevant sheets had been removed. George Robert had a drink problem, but ended life a strict tea-totaller. George Robert lived in Allcroft Road, then moved to Burghley Road t be near John William's family in Evangelist Road, in about 1911. There he had a small flat with his carpenter's bench set up.
BRINSMEAD Lt. Col. H. (M.C., O.B.E.)
A pilot in WW1 , he became the first Controller of Civil Aviation after the war. He fiercely defended Government policy of not allowing Airways to compete with the Railways, thus frustrating the hopes of QANTAS at the time. He had a difficult task controlling not only development of aviation ,but also the daredevil flyers of the era. They were a wild ,unruly lot.
('Flying Matilda',Norman Ellison)
Information from: http://www.tne.net.au/wil/avhisaa.html
Tombstone Ck 3: (Flat) in Northam Cemetry reads:
Here
Lie The Remains Of Elizth The Wife Of
Robert Day Who Departed This Life The
10 Day Of May 1803 Aged 22 Years
Also Here Rests The Remains Of Mary
H. Brinsmead Of This Parish Who Died
The 15th July 1837 Aged 22 Months
Reader Prepare To Meet Thy God.
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