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Messages - Ricardian

Pages: [1] 2 3 4 ... 12
1
Glamorganshire / Re: Morel Shipping Co Cardiff
« on: Tuesday 04 November 25 12:13 GMT (UK)  »
Also just thought that the cousin looks like my grandfather’s family. Ellen married David Davies and he had brothers who were younger than him. One of them was a seaman. Not sure of the name could have been Thomas Roger or Sidney. It is just a thought.


2
Glamorganshire / Re: Morel Shipping Co Cardiff
« on: Tuesday 04 November 25 12:04 GMT (UK)  »
That is interesting Trefgraig. Do you have any further details of the family? My grandmother was Ellen Eynon daughter of Arthur Eynon and Elinor Philips, she was born in 1875. She had lots of brothers an sisters and so did Arthur so I wonder if there is a connection.

3
I was born in Maesteg and went to school there. The Grammar School was known as Llwyni or Yr Llwyni  when I attended it and when they changed from being a Grammar School to a Comprehensive I believe the Comprehensive was known as Llwyni.

The school was on the top a hill overlooking the town and actually halfway up a mountain. There was an estate of houses called the Park Estate nearby. Could that have been called Llwyni before the school was built? It was built in around 1912. I must admit I have never heard of the town being called Llwyni.  It was in the Llynfi Valley and in the Parish of Llangynwyd

Mary

4
I was born in Maesteg and went to school there. The Grammar was known as Llwyni or Yr Llwyni  when I attended it and when they changed from being a Grammar School to a Comprehensive I believe the Comprehensive was known as Llwyni.

The school was on the top a hill overlooking the town and actually halfway up a mountain. There was an estate of houses called the Park Estate nearby. Could that have been called Llwyni before the school was built? It was built in around 1912. I must admit I have never heard of the town being called Llwyni.  It was in the Llynfi Valley and in the Parish of Llangynwyd

Mary

5
Carmarthenshire / Re: Kidwelly/Lancaster/Wild Family
« on: Wednesday 19 December 18 14:42 GMT (UK)  »
I think the reason that Kidwelly was part of the Duchy of Lancaster was because at one time I believe it was owned by John of Gaunt, son of King Edward III, who was the Duke of Lancaster by right of his wife Blanche.

6
Monmouthshire / Re: 1871 Mill Roller Trevethin - Help Please
« on: Friday 23 November 18 23:50 GMT (UK)  »
Sorry Doublecourt I didn't answer your question about pictures of Pontnewynydd. No I am sorry I haven't. I will check online and see if I can come up with anything.

Mary

7
Monmouthshire / Re: 1871 Mill Roller Trevethin - Help Please
« on: Friday 23 November 18 15:35 GMT (UK)  »
That is quite a coincidence too Doublecourt because my Hilliers were from Wiltshire too. They were clothiers and dyers.

Mary


8
Monmouthshire / Re: 1871 Mill Roller Trevethin - Help Please
« on: Friday 23 November 18 15:33 GMT (UK)  »
Thank you Hanes Teulu for your reply. That certainly confirms what I found on various census regarding Edward being a Forge manager in Pontnewynydd I didn't realise that it was many years and if I remember correctly he became the Forge manager at Tondu in around 1854 but of course I maybe wrong. Also having been in touch with a cousin who lives in America (descended from my gt aunt Kate one of Thomas' daughters) she has sent me a photograph of a painting that is in her family of grandpa Gower. Originally she thought it was Thomas but looking at it looks too old to be Thomas so we now think it is Edward. He is very smartly dressed in a top hat.
Mary

9
Monmouthshire / Re: 1871 Mill Roller Trevethin - Help Please
« on: Friday 23 November 18 15:20 GMT (UK)  »
Hi Doublecourt

Thank you for replying. Have you seen the reply from Hanes Teulu about my gt gt grandfathers death in 1867. I wonder if Pontnewynydd Forge  and Pontnewynydd Ironworks are the same place?

It is funny that your family went on to inn keeping as that is what my gt grandfather Thomas did after being employed at Pontnewynydd then he went on to build furnaces at ironworks eventually ending up in Maesteg where he met my gt grandmother. Edward was his father. Then in later years they had several public houses in Maesteg. When Edward Gower died in 1867 he was living at the Royal Dock hotel in Briton Ferry with two of his sons Silas and John who owned it. His oldest son Edward, who is mentioned in the newspaper article, went out to India to work in /build ironworks there as did his brother James.

Edward Senior started working in Trevethin as a labourer so must have worked his way up to Forge manager. 

You never know because of the dates that both families were working there they may have known one another.
Mary

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