FAMLY HISTORY
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about Mariners: Clarence, Henry and Sidney Barcham
When researching family history it is remarkable what
turns up in the most unexpected places. By family lore it was known that
Clarence, Henry and Sidney Barcham, sons of Ann (née Edwards) and William Ayres
Barcham, became mariners, but only Henry’s career was known until this
year when Chris Farrow visited the Scilly Isles. At the Isles of Scilly Museum
on St Mary’s, Chris had a chance meeting with Roger Banfield,
a local genealogist who is a descendant of Francis Banfield,
owner of the three-mast barque Chieftain, a tea-clipper built by Thomas
Edwards and commanded by Anne’s brother Richard Edwards. Roger had a transcript
of the 1851 Crew List of the Chieftain which named Clarence and Sidney Burcham [sic] indentured to their maternal uncle. [previously, Chris had assumed that the brothers had sailed
to China with their paternal uncle, Robert Barcham, aboard the Salamander.
The Chieftain made a number of voyages to China from 1847 until May 1855, when she was dismasted and badly damaged in a typhoon off Pollilo Island, Phillipines, while sailing from Shanghai. She put into Hong Kong for
repairs, then sailed to Rotterdam where the ship was condemned and sold for scrap.
It is known that Captain Richard Edwards became master
of coastal trading ships, sailing from the Scilly Isles. Clarence and Sidney
may have joined another ship in Hong Kong,
because it is known that Clarence was murdered by a ship’s cook on 22 November
1866, and buried on Formosa by his brother. It is not known if Clarence received
his Master’s Certificate of Competence because the surviving Lloyd’s Captain’s
Register lists only those who were in active service in 1859. The Mercantile
Navy List for 1861 shows that Sidney gained his Second Mate’s Certificate of
Competence in London in 1855, presumably before sailing on the Chieftain’s
last voyage to Shanghai. Since he is not listed in Lloyd’s
Captain’s Register, Sidney probably left the merchant navy in about 1865, and settled in Australia before migrating from Melbourne to Dunedin as a steerage passenger aboard the
South Australia in December 1865.
Meanwhile Clarence and Sidney’s brother, Henry,
had married Jane Richards in 1854 and settled in Portland, Victoria. This year, Chris visited the tiny, picturesque Zennor Church Village, near St Ives on the north coast of Cornwall, where Jane’s father had been a shoemaker before he and
his large family sailed to Australia aboard the Nestor in 1854. Sidney was probably going to visit Henry and Jane in Melbourne when he died aboard the Te Anau
on 14 July 1882, aged 48.
Descendants
of Benjamin Barcham of Sherringham
This year we have heard from persons related to five
different limbs of the Sherringham
branch of the Barcham family, two of whom are in Australia:
Karly, wife of Benjamin John Barcham: Benjamin is a third-great
grandson of Neal Raven Barcham’s son James (b. 1826 at Sherringham) who married
Susan Ann James. Susan Ann and James Barcham lived at 71 Wellesley Street, Mile End, London. They had nine children, of whom the third was George
Nicholas (b. 1857) who married Amelia Noakes and had
six children, the fifth being Leslie Raven (b. 1904) who married in 1949 and
emigrated with his wife, Mavis, to Australia in 1950, at which time she was
pregnant with her first child. Mavis died in 2004, and Leslie, now 79, is ‘often
caught tinkering with things’ according to his daughter-in-law Karly.
Muriel Crowe, a great-great-niece of Nicolas Harland
Barcham’s wife Maria Crowe: Nicholas Harland (b. 1830 at Sherringham) was the
son of Neal Raven Barcham. Nicholas Harland and Maria Crowe (b. 1830 at Roughton, Norfolk) lived in the small town of Holt, Norfolk, where their four children were born. The two eldest,
Catherine Maria and Frederick lived in Heigham, a suburb of Norwich, and in Fishgate Street, Norwich respectively. The third child, Alfred
Charles (b. 1861 at Heigham), was a draper’s assistant at a large
general drapery and clothing store on Westbourne Grove, Paddington, London,
belonging to Owen Williams. The single employees, aged in their 20s, were
accommodated in residences in Westbourne Grove Terrace - living, working and
playing together - Alfred with about 20 other young men at number 4; and
unmarried women in another residence in the terrace. Maria and Nicholas
Harland’s youngest child, Eliza (b. June 1864 at Heigham), married William Parfett, a hansom cab driver, working from cab ranks at
Euston, St Pancras and King’s Cross stations; they
lived in Islington, London.
Robert Emery, related to James Emery, a carpenter living
in Beeston Regis, Norfolk in 1881: James married Eliza, the granddaughter of Maria Ann
(nee Sunman) and Barcham Barcham. In about 1896,
Eliza and James adopted Eliza’s nephew Stanley (b. about 1887) whose mother had just died: Stanley took his step-father’s name: his birth parents were Rachel Ester
(nee Grimes) and Benjamin Barcham. Beeston Regis, one
mile south-east of Sherringham, was a village and parish of 850 acres of land
where Samuel Fuller (b. 1824), son of Mary Ann Barcham and Samuel Fuller, was
farming 160 acres in 1881.
Judy Brown, sister-in-law of Julie Ann Barcham, and
Nicola, wife of Paul Yorke, gave us information about
the descendants of Stanley Emery’s younger brother Reginald Barcham. Reginald
(b. 1889 at Sherringham) married Eileen Kerr of Dublin; and their son Kenneth Grosvenor
Barcham emigrated to Melbourne, Australia in about 1950.
There is an interesting link between the
Barcham/Shalders family of Worstead and a branch of the Emery family that lived
in Scottow. John Barcham of Church Farm, Edingthorpe,
married Elizabeth Helsdon of Bradfield in 1755. Their
grand-daughter Elizabeth Shalders (b. 1811 at Worstead) married Helsdon Learner (or Larner). The
latter was the nephew of Benjamin Helsdon (b. 1792 at
Antingham), whose daughter Caroline (b. 1829 at Antingham) married James Emery
(b. 1811 at Sidestrand) in 1857, at Northrepps. In 1881, Caroline, James and their four
children were living in Scottow, where James was
farming 273 acres of land. One of their sons, George (b. 1864) married his
cousin, Alice Helsdon (b. 1863 in London).
Sheila Tytel provided
information on the descendants of Maria Banfather, the sixth child of Maria Ann
(née Sunman) and Barcham Barcham. Maria (b. 1831, at
Sherringham) married Richard Cox (b. 1825 at Sherringham), in 1852 at
Sherringham. Richard’s parents were John Cox and Phoebe (née Pegg): these were
Sherringham families linked by marriages to other members of the Barcham
family, but the common ancestors have not yet been identified. At the time of
his marriage in 1775, John Cox was living in Beeston
Regis, and Phoebe Pegg was living about 15 miles away at Wood Dalling. Until about 1865, Richard Cox was a fisherman in
Sherringham; then he and his wife and four children moved to Great Yarmouth
where their fifth child was born; and where Richard owned a fishing smack, Chosen, and a lugger, Cynthia. After
a change of ownership, the Cynthia was lost with all hands in October
1876. It is not known if these fishing boats were built by the Barcham
shipwrights in Great Yarmouth or Lowestoft.
Descendants
of John Barcham
Simon Barcham Green, a descendant of Elizabeth and John
Barcham’s daughter Rachel,
born 12 February 1788 at Edingthorpe. On 1 February
1809, when she was 21, Rachel
married James Beard, a watchmaker residing in Tonbridge, Kent. The marriage did not last long: James died on 21 January
1813. Rachel’s second marriage
was to Samuel Green, a builder and surveyor, living in Sevenoaks.
Kent.
One of Rachel and Samuel’s four children was John
Barcham Green (b. 1823), who owned Hayle Mill at Maidstone, Kent, renowned for Barcham Green handmade art paper. The
mill was renowned for making fine, handmade paper – especially artists’
watercolour and printing paper. Hayle Mill was built in 1808, and operated by the
Green family from 1813 to 1987, when the production of handmade paper ended.
Unfortunately, the mill house was destroyed by fire in June 2003, but the Mill
itself was saved and is presently being converted to accommodate residential
units, but some areas in the complex will be preserved as an industrial
heritage site. Work on the Mill will be completed by 2008. The Green family
also kept all the Mill’s production records, and this now comprises the Hayle Mill Archive, still in family ownership. Simon
Barcham Green’s wife is presently working on a book about the Mill, which will
be published by the Janus Press.