RootsChat.Com
England (Counties as in 1851-1901) => England => Lancashire => Topic started by: suziet on Sunday 13 February 05 10:26 GMT (UK)
-
Looking for connections with Wolfenden's of Slaidburn in particular:
Isabella Wolfenden b 1856 Slaidburn m Robert Waterworth and later Thomas McManus
Annie Wolfenden b 1860 m John William Henry Bargh and farmed at Head Nook, Myerscough.
Sue
-
Hi Sue,
Out of interest what connections have you already made.
Have you found them in the census returns ? we would love to know what you are stuck with ;D
Sarah
-
Hi
I have quite a lot of information on the families but not on my particular line. I am able to access census info.
Firstly, I was hoping that someone would be researching the Bargh line as I have a letter written to my gt gt grandmother from one of her neices.
I have made some contacts on GenesReunited, so I'll see what happens.
-
Hi
I've done a lot of research into the Bargh family - I am one! I'm also a professional genealogist.
If there's anything I can help with just shout.
Carl
-
Welcome to RootsChat Carl.
Whilst this thread is from 2005, Suziet was last online here in 2021 and hopefully still has the same email address and will receive notification of your post. I'm sure she will be pleased to hear from you.
-
Carl
Are you related to the Bargh family who used to farm at Claughton, near Lancaster? They were our neighbours many years ago.
-
Hi
Quite possibly.
A lot of my ancestors came from Lancaster. I also had family from Derbyshire and Yorkshire.
If you can give me some first names I can let you know if there is a link.
If it was Norval (Claughton Hall Farm) then yes - I'm a 3rd cousin twice removed.
Carl
-
Carl.
It's over 30 years since we lived in Clsughton and even then we didn't know the Bargh family very well, I'm afraid, so names escape me. There was also a fleet of lorries/tankers belonging to them which were housed close to the M6 junction. They were labelled S. Bargh, I think.
I do remember that one of their cows jumped over our fence and galloped through our garden, narrowly missing the pram containing our baby daughter! It was running away to escape being trapped in the metal frame which an animal is trapped in, so that the farmer can deliver injections and so on. My small son was a great friend of the farmhands Ronnie and Johnnie!
-
The haulage firm is S J Bargh. Founded in 1935 by Samuel James Bargh to transport milk (I'm a second cousin three times removed).
Samuel died in 1961 and the company went from strength to strength.
-
Oh yes, S.J.Bargh , now I remember. Still see them on the motorway sometimes.
That brings back a few memories, but I'm sorry we are not relatives, just old neighbours. Bargh is an interesting and unusual surname. Do you know its origins,?
-
It is an medieval English term meaning dweller by a hill or burial mound. It is probably taken from the
Anglo Saxon word 'beorg' meaning mound or hillock. Another theory is that it came from the Yorkshire parish of Barugh.
-
That's interesting, Carl. Thank you for stirring some old memories for me. :)
-
Just an additional memory - I don't really remember Claughton Hall Farm, but do remember Claughton Hall, which apparently was moved stone by stone further up the fell and away from the farm in the 1930s. It's a striking building, in part Elizabethan and maybe older. This move placed the Hall not just at a distance from the farm of the same name, but away from the main Lancaster to Hornby Road and the River Lune. At the time we were living in Claughton the Hall was owned by the flamboyant and somewhat notorious Owen Oyston, but now it's a business offering sporting "shoots" and AirBnbs. An aerial ropeway, incidentally the last one operating in this country, brings down clay and shale from the fell in buckets (by gravity feed, so no other power needed) over the main road and into the Claughton Brickworks. I don't think the Bargh family were involved in the brickworks, however. (There are several illustrated references to Claughton Hall and the Brickworks to be found via Google.)