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Messages - rugee

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Canada / Re: richard barrow gaskarth
« on: Saturday 12 April 14 17:09 BST (UK)  »
Satty,

Very sorry for the long delay, I hope that the attached photo makes up for the wait - the world of the living has been more pressing these last few weeks!

Best Wishes.

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Canada / Re: richard barrow gaskarth
« on: Monday 10 March 14 19:03 GMT (UK)  »
I'll have a look for the photos and scan them. It seems that I can attach them to these posts however it would probably be better via the PM private message facility - which 'Polar Bear' has suggested, thanks for that. not really sure yet how to access that so stand by.

Russell.

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Canada / Re: richard barrow gaskarth
« on: Sunday 09 March 14 19:31 GMT (UK)  »
I didn't know that they owned the Kings Arms, that makes a lot of sense. I have a wedding photo of Barrow and Maud with their parents (Barrow in uniform) and a picture of a lead decorated spout head which barrow made as a plumber. The post card, which I mentioned earlier, was of the square but has a nice description of a visit to the Gaskarths on the back and has a Halifax address. I don't know how the post card stayed in Cartmel as I only live a mile away! my Grandmother was Edith Gaskarth Barrow's niece.
There has always been the suggestion that the Gaskarths were connected to the 18th century explorer Sir John Barrow, hence the name Barrow however I've never been able to find this connection other than Sir John came from Ulverston.
Exchanging copies of photos seems like a good idea.
Many thanks,
Russell Gee

4
Canada / Re: richard barrow gaskarth
« on: Sunday 09 March 14 11:47 GMT (UK)  »
Hello satty,
Richard Barrow Gaskarth or Barrow as he was known to everyone, was my Great Grandfather's (John Lishman Gaskarth) brother.
The family home was at 6 Park View, Cartmel - now in Cumbria, south Lakes. Barrow was a plumber and worked with his father in the family plumbing and painting business in the village. Maud was from Halifax in Yorkshire and I own a really nice post card from Cartmel where Maud writes home to her parents. The couple left for Canada before the first world war and Barrow joined the army, in fact they were married at this time although I don't think he actually so service. This was in contrast to Lishman and his other brothers, the unmarried James being killed at Arras in 1917. There is a story that the couple stayed in Chicago for a short while and where shocked by the sight and sound of gangster's battling in the street outside the hotel.
Barrow's nephew William (Bill) Gaskarth (My Father's uncle) also emigrated to Canada after serving in the Royal Navy during WW2. Bill and his wife Jean (from Troutebeck Bridge) joined Barrow and Maud in a rapidly growing Vancouver but struggled to make a new life at first due in part to Barrow and Maud's indifference. Bill soon established a plumbing firm which may have been linked to Barrow, but I'm not certain about that, and is still in existence today in fragmented form. As a child I was lucky enough to visit 'Great' Uncle Bill on a visit to Canada which was very exciting.
The Gaskarth family have links to Ulverston , where Joseph (Barrow's Father) was born and prior to this Buttermere. The family is proud of its Norse heritage, which has a good chance of being true!
Joseph's wife Grace who was a Lishman from High Cark, just outside Cartmel, has direct links to people living and working in Cartmel in 1618.
Barrow appeared to have visited Canada several times before he and Maud settled and the  Vancouver which they found was largely a 'shanty' town very different from today and hard to imagine, perhaps he still had some of that Viking spirit!
Most of the family lie in the grave yard opposite the race course in Cartmel, 2 minutes walk from  Park View cottages and both James and Barrow are commemorated there.
Hope this is useful, I'm new to this so I'm not sure when you sent you post.
Rugee

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