Walkeringham
If you are wondering why one says Notts & the other Gainsborough. Walkeringham is in Nottinghamshire & the nearest large town to the village is Gainsborough, Lincolnshire. Thus indicating the village's location if these bricks were sold further afield. Nottinghamshire's nearest large town Retford is eleven miles away.
1900 map showing the location of the brickworks next to the Chesterfield Canal just outside the village of Walkeringham. The canal was used to transport the bricks made at these two works to the canal's terminus at West Stockwith & then on to many locations via the River Trent with Cockings Walkeringham bricks being found in Hull.
The two yellow yards were primarily owned by the Cowling family & the green yard by the Cocking family & as a group are show as the Walkeringham Brickworks on this 1900 OS map. The access to the green brickworks was first via the main road & then after Cowlings east bank yard had closed, access was then through this old yard because the original access had become an extension to the clay pit & this is shown on a 1912 OS map.
The Fountain Hill brickworks coloured purple on this map was owned by Aaron Cooper who's family owned another brickworks in nearby Misterton & I write about this branch of the Cooper family later in the post.
So I start with the two yellow coloured yards owned by the Cowling family, with one yard on the west bank of the canal & the other on the east bank & they were known locally as the old & new yards. Most of the information about the Cowling family has been taken from an article written by Chris Page who has kindly given me permission to use extracts from his work & I have pasted his full article after my Cowling entry.
John William Cowling was a bricklayer in 1835 & by 1851 he is recorded as a master builder, then a few years later he is also recorded as a farmer at Walkeringham. John may have first started as a dealer in bricks in the 1840's because in 1849 he advertised that he had a quantity of ‘White Sands Stocks" for sale & was asking 30 shillings per thousand. He is first recorded as a brickmaker in White's 1853 edition at Walkeringham & then in Whites 1856 Lincs. edition lists John as a brickmaker, living at Spital Terrace, Gainsborough from were he ran his brickworks. In 1857 John was selling his crops, livestock & farm equipment to concentrate on the running of his brickworks, his building company & his artificial manure works. His son William Chamber Cowling in the 1861 Census aged 24 is now recorded as running the brickworks & I have an entry from Kelly's Lincs. 1868 edition as him living at Crowgarth, Gainsborough with his works at Walkeringham. John Cowling died in 1870 aged 60.
As well as white & red bricks Cowlings produced red floor quarry tiles & red roof tiles.
William Cowling continued to run the works until May 1871 when tragedy struck. He had been ill for short time & on Saturday 13th of May in the afternoon he died without a murmur in his office at the brickworks. William was only 35 years old. Unable to sell the works his wife Maria took over the running of the yards & in 1872 advertised for more brickmakers. Kelly's 1876 edition records the works as Cowling & Co. Walkeringham same as the floor quarry tile above. It was also in 1876 that Maria re-married & continued to run the works until 1880 when she successfully sold the business.
From Chris Page's article Charles Hill is recorded as purchasing the works on the western bank of the canal & F.M. Cousins purchasing the east bank yard.
Charles Hill is listed in Kelly's T.D. as brickmaker in it's 1881 & 1891 editions at Walkeringham & I have not found any listings for F.M. Cousins.
From the several maps that I have access to, the east bank yard (dark yellow) had closed & is no longer shown on the 1912 map. The west bank yard (light yellow) which is actually in the parish of Gringley on the Hill is still shown as a brickworks on the 1946 map. I do not have any more maps after this date. So when the west bank yard exactly closed & who continued to run this brickworks after Charles Hill is unknown, but from my recent visit to this brickyard & talking to a lady who lives in one of the houses which now occupies this site, she told me that she had found several Cocking bricks in her garden. I also came across several Cocking bricks myself on this side of the canal & I have added examples to the Cocking entry later in the post. So along with their main works (green) on the east bank of the canal, Cocking's may have also run the west bank yard (light yellow) until 1946 ?
The B.B.S. article tells us that these former brickyards were next used to dry silt collected from rivers & after several processes was used in the cleaning of silver. One gentleman is mentioned as having worked there for 36 years making this fine silver cleaning powder, so brick production may have finished around 1946 on the west bank works, the same date the map records this site still as a brickworks. This processing works was owned by Mr. P. Hanson & due to the lack of demand for this product closed in 1982. Houses now occupy the west bank site along with the chimney belonging to the former steam engine house, photo below.
Now on to the Cocking family who were another major player as brick producers in Walkeringham (green coloured yard on map above). Thomas Cocking, born 1819 in North Wheatley, Notts is recorded in the 1851 census as Master Brickmaker aged 31 & living with his wife Ann & one year old John in Walkeringham. The 1861 census lists Thomas now 41 as a Brick & Tile Manufacturer in Walkeringham together with his wife Ann & their 4 children, two boys & two girls. The 1871 census still records Thomas as Brick & Tile Manufacturer & now with 6 children, eldest son John, aged 21 is listed as an Engine Driver, so was he operating a static steam driven engine at the brickworks or was it on the railways ? I prefer the brickworks option. Kelly's 1876 edition is the first directory that I have found recording Thomas as a brickmaker. The 1881 census lists Thomas aged 61, a brick manufacturer employing 20 men at Walkeringham, then sons John Cocking b. 1850 & Frederick William Cocking b. 1867 are listed as Brick Manufacturers Sons & George Ellis Cocking b. 1857 is listed as a Brick Manufacturers Son & clerk. So it appears in 1881 George Ellis was more than likely working as a clerk at his father's brickworks & John & Frederick may have been learning the trade in becoming brickmakers. Thomas is not listed in the 1891 census & his wife is recorded as a widow & head of the family, so Thomas had died by 1891. A new search has revealed he died on the 9th of January 1888. The 1891 census records Frederick is now a brickmaker & still living with his mother in Walkeringham. So it appears after his fathers death Frederick was brickmaking at his father's works, however by 1892 Frederick was brickmaking in Kirk Sandall, Doncaster & more can be read about Frederick later. In the 1891 census I found John Cocking is recorded as a brickmaker & living with his wife Maria at her uncle's house, John Naylor in Walkeringham & Maria is listed as a House Keeper. So it appears John was also still at his father's brickworks in 1891. John died on the 21st of September 1892 & his estate went to Probate with his brothers George Ellis Cocking & Frederick William Cocking being listed as beneficiaries. I next found in the 1891 census that George Ellis Cocking is listed as Brick & Tile Manufacturer in Walkeringham & married to Sarah, so it appears George was now running the family business. George's entry is repeated in the 1901 census, but the 1911 census now records George Ellis Cocking as Managing Director of a Brickworks. George Ellis Cocking died on the 6th of April 1917.
Thomas Cocking 1876 to 1881 editions.
Cocking & Sons 1885 to 1928 editions.
Cocking (Walkeringham) Ltd. 1932 to the last available directory of 1941.
I found the Cocking brick above near to some houses which are being renovated on the eastern bank of the canal & the Cocking & Sons quarry tile I found on the western bank.
The eastern bank site later became a timber yard & sawmill owned by Fred Wilkinson who apparently never threw anything away. The results of his hoardings can be seen at the 28 days later link which I have pasted at the end of the Cocking entry.
I also have to add that there are now plans to convert this derelict land which was Cowlings eastern yard & Cockings brickyard into a marina (December 2015) & as previously said, the site is now in the process of being cleared (Feb. 2016).
Please note Gainsborough (Lincs.) on this brick only indicates the nearest large town to Cocking's Nottinghamshire brickworks. This next example does have Walkeringham, Notts stamped in it.
Cocking (Walkeringham) Ltd.
Cocking & Sons Ltd.
by Graham Snowdon & Jonathan Lockwood
February 2021
The Cocking family, from artisan producers to major players this publicly-quoted company were manufacturers of bricks and floor tiles, first at Walkeringham, Nottinghamshire then later at Kirk Sandall and Balby, Doncaster, covering a period of more than a century.
Like many smaller producers, they fell victim to increasing rationalisation in the brick industry which today sees production dominated by one large conglomerate which owns leading brands such as London Brick Company and Butterley. Cocking (Walkeringham) Ltd after being sold on to a rival manufacturer closed in 1956 and it was largely due to stiff competition from LBC, meanwhile Cocking & Sons Ltd at Balby had been a subsidiary of a larger business for four decades when the yard finally closed in the late 1960s.
Cockings had already been in business long before firms such as London Brick came on the scene. Thomas Cocking was born in 1819 in the Nottinghamshire village of North Wheatley, and by the age of 32, in the 1851 census, was listed at Walkeringham as a brickmaker (master), probably signifying that he was already employing other men. Also listed were his wife Ann (neé Ellis), five years his junior, who had been born in the village of Bole, near Beckingham, and one-year-old John.
Ten years later Thomas Cocking described himself as a ‘Brick & Tile Manufacturer,’ and adding to the family were Mary, seven, George, four, and Betsy, 11 months.
Thomas left no doubt about his status in the 1871 census when his description under ‘Rank, Profession or Occupation’ is given as ‘Brick & Tile Manufacturer, 12 men & 6 boys.’ Also now part of the growing family were Emma, eight, and Frederick William, four. By now John, 21, was presumably one of those dozen men and was described as an ‘engine driver at brickworks,’ which may have been a static steam driven engine rather than a locomotive.
In around 1876 the name Cocking & Sons started to appear. By the 1881 census the address at Walkeringham is narrowed down slightly as North Moor, and Thomas, by now 61, is listed as a ‘brick manufacturer 20 men’ along with wife Ann and their completed family ranging from 31-year-old John, himself also described as a brick manufacturer, via George, 24, a ‘brick manufacturer’s clerk’ to 14-year-old Frederick.
Thomas Cocking died at the age of 69 at the beginning of 1888, and in the 1891 census Anne (sic) is listed as a widow and head of the household at 34 North Moor ‘living on her means’ along with spinster daughters Mary and Emma and 24-year-old Frederick, a brick manufacturer.
George Ellis Cocking, to give him his full name, had been married in 1882 to Sarah Anne Hudson, and by the 1891 census they were living at High View House, Walkeringham, along with daughters Eleanor, five, and Hilda, three. George was listed as a brick manufacturer.
Also missing from the household at North Moor was John, who had been married in 1890 to Maria Tetley and was now living with Maria and her 70-year-old farmer uncle John Naylor at Naylor’s Grange, Walkeringham (along with two servants). He was still listed as a brick manufacturer, but sadly was to die to at the age of only 41 the following year.
Although Frederick William Cocking, a 24-year-old ‘brick manufacturer’ - and George Ellis Cocking’s younger (by ten years) brother - was still living at home in Walkeringham with his widowed mother Ann when the 1891 census was taken on the night of Sun 5th April, he had within weeks married Theresa Dook, from nearby village of Laughton.
He was keen to branch out by himself, and soon after their marriage he and Theresa moved to Kirk Sandall, near Doncaster, where their children Florence Emma (1892) and John George (1893) were born. Kelly’s Directory (Yorkshire West Riding) for 1892 and 1893 listed ‘Cocking, Frederick William, brick maker, Sandall Brick yards.’ Frederick and Emy, as she was known, were living on site at the brickyard, possibly in one of the two cottages which would later become the café for Sandall Park and its boating lake, developed from the former workings.
Frederick and family did not stay at Kirk Sandall for long. By the time of the 1901 census they, plus a domestic servant, were living at Moraine Villas on the other side of Doncaster, at the junction of Balby Road and Furnival Road (their address was actually 1 Furnival Road), and Frederick was described as a ‘brick manufacturer (employer).’
Precisely when Frederick made the move from Kirk Sandall to Balby is not known, but Doncaster Borough Archives has a photograph of the Tickhill Road brickyard in operation by 1900. Meanwhile, back at Walkeringham, in the 1901 census George Ellis Cocking (‘Brick & tile manufacturer -employer’) was at home at High View along with his wife Sarah and 16-year-old daughter Eleanor.
Living in nearby Main Street was 49-year-old George Cooper, ‘living on own means,’ his wife Maria and 20-year-old son George Charles Cooper, a ‘draper’s traveller and Wesleyan local preacher.’ Seven years later Eleanor Cocking and George C Cooper were married. Although George, Eleanor’s husband, was himself from a large local family of brickmakers which had started with his grandfather Aaron Cooper at Gringley on the Hill and spread to Walkeringham and Misterton, young George himself had obviously decided to follow a different career path.
However, it would seem he maintained a vested interest in the brick business. He described himself as a ‘retired draper’ (at 30!) in the 1911 census, when he and his wife Eleanor were living with her parents, and his father-in-law George Ellis Cocking was listed as ‘Managing Director, Brick Works.’ Then, in 1931, when they were named as joint executors in the will of the unmarried Mary Cocking, both George Charles Cooper and his brother-in-law Frederick William Cocking were described as ‘brick manufacturers.’
In 1908, when Cocking & Sons had been incorporated as a limited company, there were still strong links between Balby and Walkeringham. The new business had a capital of £25,000 in £1 shares to ‘take over the business of manufacturers of bricks, tiles, pipes, pottery, earthenware, china, terracotta, stoneware, plastic materials or products, etc, carried out by G.E. Cocking and F.W. Cocking, at Walkeringham, Nottinghamshire, and at Balby, near Doncaster, together with all the real and personal property used in connection therewith.’
Subscribers were G.E. Cocking and F.W. Cocking and their respective wives, as well as Alderman and Mrs Abner Carr, of 3 Victorian Crescent, Doncaster, and William T. Duckett, builder, of 33 Royal Avenue, Scarborough.
As early as the 1920s Cocking & Sons Ltd were having difficulty maintaining their independence in an increasingly competitive industry. F.W. Cocking remained as managing director, and he was also a director the Yorkshire Brick Co Ltd which, like Cockings and a handful of other related businesses, would in 1929 become part of a new company, Yorkshire Amalgamated Products Ltd, in an attempt to rationalise their operations. In 1933, the Yorkshire Brick Company, with F.W. Cocking still named as one of three directors, had a share issue on the London stock exchange.
George Ellis Cocking had died in 1917 at the age of only 60, after which it is believed that George Cooper took charge at Walkeringham. Alderman Frederick William Cocking, who had been the Mayor of Doncaster in 1920, passed away in 1935, leaving the family represented by his son John George Cocking, who took over as manager of the Balby works until his retirement. He died in 1957.
George and Eleanor Cooper were listed in the 1939 England and Wales Register as living at High View, Fountain Hill, along with their 24-year-old son George junior, a fourth-year architectural student at Sheffield University. The Cocking operation at Walkeringham, being run by George Cooper, was sold some time after 1941 to the rival Hill Brothers, who had brickworks at Misterton and Gringley. Facing competition from London Brick, Hills halved the staff (from 28 to 14) in an attempt to survive, but sold the works to Smith & Co of Stockport, who continued to run the yard until its closure in 1956.
The post war years also proved problematical for the Tickhill Road brickyard at Balby, when there was a danger that they, too, would have to halve their workforce, which stood at 60 employees in 1948, when the firm was given a stay of execution as a result of the easing of restrictions on private building after the war.
Storage space had become a major problem after a 50 per cent fall in demand during the previous year, leaving Cockings with an estimated 2.75 million bricks on their hands, enough to build an estimated 2,000 houses.
By the early 1950s a holding company known as Brick Investments controlled or had large interests in Yorkshire Amalgamated Products, Yorkshire Brick Co Ltd (and its subsidiary Cocking and Sons Ltd) and Flettons Ltd, another well-known manufacturer.
Cocking and Sons Ltd continued in business at Tickhill Road until the late 1960s, with one last appearance in the classified telephone directory of 1970. All that remains today is the aptly-named Clayfield Industrial Estate.
Many Thanks Graham & Jonathan for your work.
I now move on to the makers who operated in nearby Misterton who also may have used the canal to bring in their coal & then transport their bricks. As shown on the map above there were two brickworks at Misterton, one of which consisted of two yards one either side of the canal & I have found six brickmakers recorded in trade directories & census records for this village.
George Henry Tomlinson is recorded in the 1881 Census as living in Gringley on the Hill aged 37. Born in Gainsborough in 1844 his occupation is given as brick manufacturer employing 10 men & 1 boy. George is listed as brickmaker in Kelly's 1881 to 1904 editions at Gringley on the Hill.
The Shaw Brick Works is recorded on the 1875 map right through to 1946 map & was owned by the Hill family who are listed in Kelly's 1908 to 1916 editions at Gringley. There is also an entry for Hill Brothers, Gringley in the 1941 edition. One can only assume that the Hill family continued to operate their Gringley works between these dates unless the site was mothballed until 1941. The date when this works closed is unknown.
As previously wrote the Hill Brothers also operated another brickworks in nearby Misterton & I have trade directories recording the Hill family at Misterton between 1881 & 1941.
As well as George Tomlinson & the Hill Brothers working in Gringley I have found that both Charles Barrowcliff & S. Marples are listed in trade directories in 1855 & I have a photo of one of Charles Barrowcliff's bricks.
S. Marples is listed in Kelly's 1855 edition as brickmaker at Gringley.
Worksop
© Crown Copyright. Reproduced with permission of NLS/Ordnance Survey 1900.
The Chesterfield Canal also passes through Worksop & the Low Grounds Brickworks was built next to the canal. I have established from 1875 & 1885 maps that the Low Grounds Brickworks consisted of two yards with the purple coloured yard last shown on the 1900 OS map above & with it being incorporated into the yellow coloured yard in 1904. In 1925 the yellow marked yard also consisted of two yards & I will explain that later. I have also established that the Low Grounds yards where part of the hamlet of Haggonsfields.
For later reference, the road that I have marked in red is Sandy Lane & runs from Worksop town centre (off to the right of this map) & Shireoaks Road I coloured green. I have also coloured the access roads to these brickworks in the same colour as the road.
I next found two brickmakers by the name of Whittaker, Thomas & Edward in 1890's trade directories at Worksop & both are listed at either Low Grounds or Haggonsfield. Up to yet no bricks have been found with the Whittaker name stamped in them. I have established Thomas & Edward were brothers, but I start by telling you about their father William (b.1818) who in the 1851 census was a journeyman tile maker living in Worksop & married to Mary. They had one daughter & three boys, Thomas, Edward & George & all three boys were to become brickmakers in Worksop. In the 1861 census William is listed as a tile maker in Worksop residing in Haggonsfield, however the 1871 census records he is now a brick & tile maker aged 56. I am assuming William will have been working at a brickyard rather than owning a yard himself.
We next find that the two Low Grounds brick yards were combined & the purple yard had become the clay pit to the yellow works by the 1912 OS map. The Low Grounds Brickworks was now owned by the Worksop Brick Company & the company first appears in Kelly's 1904 edition listed at Shireoaks Road, Worksop. Graces Guide records that the company name of the Worksop Brick Co. had been registered in 1900. Kelly's 1904 entry for the company is repeated in subsequent editions until the 1916 entry when there is the addition of Charles James Saunders as Managing Director.
The next Kelly's trade directory in 1922 now lists George W.M. Turner as Managing Director. Then in the last two entries in Kelly's 1925 & 1928 editions it is just Worksop Brick Co.
I next found entries in Kelly's 1925 & 1928 trade directories for The General Refractories Ltd. Sandy Lane Brickworks, Shireoaks Road, Worksop with Frank Russell as Managing Director. G.R's Sandy Lane works is the same works as the works belonging to the Worksop Brick Co. The 1912 OS map below shows the Low Grounds Brickworks had two entrances one on Shireoaks Road (coloured green) & the other Sandy Lane (coloured red) & new buildings are now shown on this site at this date, also the works was connected to the railway network.
Update 13.3.16.
A visit to Nottingham Archives last Thursday has revealed a document in the form of a Prospectus outlining the formation of a new company from The Worksop Brick Co. to The Worksop Tile & Refractories Ltd. Dated 29th February 1928.
This very lengthy document contains everything about what the "New Company" is taking over from the "Old" & lists many activities the "New Company" will engage in. The core of which is bricks, tiles & refractory products, but the list is endless. Another main point is to acquire the land situated at Sandy Lane which is leased to Arthur Beardmore for a term of 21 years from the 30th november 1927, but then the document goes on to say that they are seeking permission to dig clay from the land leased to Mr. Beardmore who is recorded as living at James Street, Worksop. Mr. Beardmore's name later appears on the list of Shareholders which also includes Frank Russell, Brick & Refractory Manufacturer & M.D. living at Auldam House, Worksop, John Peter Ruault, London & John Gillies Shields, Isley Walton. All parties having 2,000 shares each.
The list of property included in the change over is one 16 chamber Hoffmann kiln, two down draught kilns, engine & boiler house, mill house, workshops, store house, drying sheds & 3 cottages. The site is served by a railway siding from the Great Central Railway Line & the kilns have the capacity of producing 6 million bricks & 500,000 tiles per year.
Please note that this "New Company" - Worksop Tile & Refractories Ltd; appears not to have been established with the Sandy Lane brickworks being recorded as being fully owned by General Refractories Ltd in 1929 with Frank Russell now recorded as Managing Director of General Refractories Ltd.
Then from the article at Retford Library, William Traunter is recored as employing fifteen workers in 1851, thirty five in 1861 & twenty in 1871 at his Haggonfields Low Grounds yard. Traunter operated this yard between 1844 & 1888. In the same article G.M. Unwin is also recorded as owning a brick yard at Low Grounds (purple marked yard) between 1844 to 1872, employing seven workers in 1851.
Timeline for the two Low Grounds brickworks from trade directory entries & other sources. Please note these are not exact start & finish dates of each brickmaker or company.
The yellow marked yard on the 1900 map.
1844 to 1888 William Traunter.
1904 Worksop Brick Co.
1925 Worksop Brick Co. & General Refractories Ltd.
1932 to 2000 General Refractories Ltd., then G.R. Stein, then Hepworth, then Premier & Cookson.
2000 Vesusvius.
2005 Closed.
The purple marked yard on the 1900 map.
1844 to 1872 G.M. Unwin.
1881 Daniel F. Anderson.
Retford
On OS maps dated 1875 & 1887 I have found that the Spital Hill brick works is marked in a field called Balk Field at the top of Spital Hill opposite the Workhouse & not to far away on Bolham Lane just off Moorgate is marked a brick & tile works which I am taking to be in West Retford with the map saying West Retford just to the left of this site. I have used two 1887 maps to show the locations of William Phillips yards in 1853 Spital Hill & 1864 West Retford.
George Ogle is listed as brick & tile maker at Moorgate/Bolham Lane in Kelly's 1881 edition to it's 1900 edition. George's works was the one which was nearest to Moorgate on Bolham Lane & I have coloured this yard yellow on the 1897 map below. Also to note on this map is that Jesse Smith's yard no longer shows only the clay pit (green).
I then find on the next map dated 1887 that his brick yard is no longer shown, hence the later trade directory listings for only Strawberry Terrace, Tom's home address. So that begs the question where was Tom brickmaking with him being listed in trade directories dated 1891 & 1895 ? That question at this moment in time I cannot answer.
What I can add is that today the darker green section of Pottery Lane is now Caledonian Road & the lighter green section up to the yard is Strawberry Road. Also the houses of Strawberry Terrace still stand & just after these houses there is a small cul-de-sac called Hind Street (coloured red on the 1875 map above). Hind Street is shown built on the 1887 map, so one can assume that this street was named after Tom. You can also speculate that Tom's bricks were used to build these houses ?
Shown on the 1900 map above this brickworks at Harworth was owned by Viscount Galway of Serlby Hall who was the primary land owner in Harworth & his initials are shown on the brick below with Harworth on the reverse. The year this brickworks had been established is unknown as there are no trade directory entries for this works. All we know is that it was in production around 1900 as shown on the map above. The brickworks must have closed before 1920 because Harworth Colliery was sunk on the same site replacing the brickworks in that year.
Frank Lawson, fellow collector for the use of his excellent photos.
http://britishbricksoc.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2013/10/BBS_029_1983_Feb_.pdf page 6.
http://info.nottinghamcity.gov.uk/insightmapping/#
http://maps.nls.uk/geo/explore/#zoom=13&lat=53.2330&lon=-0.5638&layers=1
http://www.bassetlawmuseum.org.uk
Wonderful blog! Very detailed and interesting.
ReplyDeleteThank you for your comments Helen. Glad you enjoyed it.
ReplyDeleteI'm researching a family who worked in the industry - Albert Leesing (b1882) worked as a labourer (lived in Walkeringham). His wife was Sarah Woodhead and her father ran the Brickmaker's Arms in Walkeringham in the mid-1800s. I'll add a link to here.
ReplyDeleteHello Helen, I have not come across Albert during my research, but thank you for you info. Good lucky in tracing your ancestors.
ReplyDeleteThank you for that fasinating history article. I too am trying to research family ancestors (Montague) who are known to have worked at these works and addresses given as brick yards Walkeringham. After travelling here by canal from Wells in Somerset circa 1860.
ReplyDeleteAgain, many thanks for the insight.
Mark Fahy.
Coopers certainly owned the 'purple' brickyard in walkeringham in the early 20th century. they lived in the big house at the top of fountain Hill. Not stan's house, which is much newer and further along fountain Hill Road. then in the mid 1950's, possibly upon retiring, they built a house in the village of walkeringham and lived there until the 1970's.
ReplyDeleteMany thanks Sallie for your Coopers information. I will add it to the Cooper entry. Martyn
ReplyDeleteIlived and worked in the brickyard and warp yard at walkeringhamandwas in contact with Mr GC cooper as he was a Methodist minister and owner of the yard , my Father and Mother worked in the yard as setters, we lived in canal cottage, Brickyard lane, i was given half a crown a day for steering a narrow boat up from Stockwith with warp by Mr Stan Spencer
ReplyDeleteThank you for family history at Walkeringham.
Deleteiwish to know more about the history of the Brickyard at Walkeringham as i lived there for 20 years and was born in cansl cottage
ReplyDeleteSorry to say that what I know about the brickyard is in the post. Thanks for reading my post.
Delete