Author Topic: World War One. Gipsy Roll of Honour.  (Read 27778 times)

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Re: World War One. Gipsy Roll of Honour.
« Reply #72 on: Sunday 04 August 19 20:46 BST (UK) »
 
Friday 06 October 1882
  Mansfield Reporter
Nottinghamshire


Wm. Bacon, labourer, was convicted on the evidence of P.c. Skirmer for being drunk on the highway at Selstone, on the 27th ult., and was fined 15s.—Emily Bacon, wife of the previous defendant, was charged with


Saturday 09 December 1882
  Nottingham Evening Post
Nottinghamshire

Emily Bacon  of  selston., was summoned for wilfully breaking the window in a carriage on the Midland Railway



Re: Bacon - Selston & Worksop
« Reply #1 on: Friday 14 October 05 19:51 BST (UK) »
•   Quote
Hello Judith
1881 census RG11 3323 Folio 72 page 20
Charles Bacon with siblings inc Parthinia living with grandparent Harry Bacon widower 61 a farmer of 13 acres at Selston born Essex
William Bacon 40 labourer born London with wife Emily 38 born Selston.
1871 census RG10 3479 folio 54 page 27 Selston
 Boffits Farm - Henry Bacon 51 farmer wife Hannah 61 granddaughter Hannah 2
1861 census RG9 2432 folio 11 page 18 Selston
Dog Kennels - Henry Bacon 41 farmer 20 acres. wife Hannah 50
William Bacon son 19 un farmers son

Marriage 1867 William Bacon March quarter 7b 263
on the same page Emily Elliot

Marriage William Bacon 1869 Dec Quarter 7b 251 Basford
on the same page Emily Frost . This I think is favourite
see 1861 census RG9 2503 folio 108 page 12

A bit late, just browsing, my mum came from Selston

oly from Yorkshire

   Friday 26 April 1878
 Mansfield Reporter
  Nottinghamshire

MANSFIELD PETTY SESSIONS
  HORES. STRAYING.—WiIIiam Sharman and Wm. Bacon, of Selston, were charged with allowing their horeses to stay on the highway, at Selstone
   



Tuesday 28 July 1874
 Nottingham Journal
Nottinghamshire

Drunkenness. —Henry Bacon, farmer, Selstone, was charged with being drunk at the railway station. —P.c. Hand proved the case, and defendant was fined 10s. 
 


 Friday 15 September 1871
 Nottinghamshire Guardian
Nottinghamshire

Emily Bacon was charged with un- lawfully assaulting and beating Ann Dover, at the Railway inn, Selstone, on the 4th inst   

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Re: World War One. Gipsy Roll of Honour.
« Reply #73 on: Sunday 04 August 19 20:46 BST (UK) »

  Saturday 08 January 1870
  Derbyshire Times and Chesterfield Herald
Derbyshire

The grand jury threw out the bills against Emily Bacon for obtaining money by false pretences, at Pentrich 

 

Wednesday 01 December 1869
 Derby Mercury
  Derbyshire 

Emily Bacon, wife of Henry Bacon, Ripley, was charged by Jane Cope, widow, of the same place, with fraudulently obtaining from her 11. 5s.-Prisoner 


 Saturday 04 December 1869
 Nottingham Journal
Nottinghamshire

Emily Bacon, wife of William Bacon, late of Ripley, and now of Condor Park, was brought up in custody charged with having, the 10th ult., 


Saturday 04 December 1869
  Nottingham Journal
Nottinghamshire

 Prisoner had kept promising to pay her, and had never told her that she intended leaving the place.—Hannah, wife of Henry Bacon, farmer, Selstone, said the prisoner’s husband was her son. She had the gold watch


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Re: World War One. Gipsy Roll of Honour.
« Reply #74 on: Sunday 04 August 19 20:47 BST (UK) »
Wednesday 08 December 1869
 Derbyshire Times and Chesterfield Herald
  Derbyshire 

 Police Intelligence
  DERBY COUNTY POLICE. FRIDAY. (Before Dr. Heygate.) Defrauding a Ripley Beerhouse-keeper.— Emily, wife of William Bacon, labourer, late of Ripley, but now of Codnor Park, was charged with having, at Ripley, falsely pretended that her husband 


Friday 27 March 1868
 Nottinghamshire Guardian
Nottinghamshire

SELSTONE.— Charge of Horse Stealing.— At the Shire Hall, on Wednesday, John Rose was brought up on a charge of stealing a horse, the property of Mr. Henry Bacon, farmer, of Selstone, under the following circumstances


Friday 27 March 1868
  Nottinghamshire Guardian
  Nottinghamshire 

 Henry Bacon, farmer, of Selstone, under the following circumstances: -On Saturday last, the 21st, the prosecutor engaged the prisoner to take a gelding, his property, to the Nottingham market, where he was to meet him between eight and nine o'clock


 Friday 10 April 1868
  Nottinghamshire Guardian
Nottinghamshire

NOTTS. COUNTY SESSIONS
... charged with stealing a gelding   the property of Henry Bacon, on the 21st March. - Mr. Bristowe held the brief for the prosecution. The prisoner was employed by Mr. Bacon, a farmer residing at Selstone, to take a gelding to Nottingham

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Re: World War One. Gipsy Roll of Honour.
« Reply #75 on: Sunday 04 August 19 20:47 BST (UK) »
Thursday 29 November 1866
  Ilkeston Pioneer
  Derbyshire 

COUNTY POLICE OFFICE
  Feminine Row at Hasland.— Emily Nowby, alias Bacon, hawker, Selston, was charged by Elizabeth Woodward, of Castle Donington, hawker, with assaulting her Husband, on the 27th Nov. Prisoner admitted the charge, but said she did so under circumstances of great provocation from the complainant. The Bench having heard the evidence of the prosecution, and the filthy language said to be used by each side, dismissed the charge, considering one as bad as the other. —The parties are step-sister

Tuesday 29 December 1863
 Nottingham Journal
Nottinghamshire
 
An agricultural labourer, aged 73, died from the effects of injury caused by a fall from a load of straw, on the premises of Mr. Bacon, a farmer of Selstone. The accident occurred on the 26th   




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Re: World War One. Gipsy Roll of Honour.
« Reply #76 on: Sunday 04 August 19 20:48 BST (UK) »
« Reply #6 on: Wednesday 30 August 17 21:15 BST (UK) »
•   Quote
 in this link below from the Rootschat archives the people are  talking about the Bacons first coming from down the south,  can anyone help in confirming that these researchers are not getting the Bacons on the records they find mixed up, I have found several Bacons with the same name in the same time scale and locations, will there be anyone who can confirm these records below relate to the People I am reserching , what I mean is did the Bacons first come from down the south, is there anyone who would help

Quote
Bacon - Selston & Worksop
« on: Saturday 23 July 05 08:24 BST (UK) »
Good morning. The 1901 census shows Charles Bacon aged 30, b Selston, Notts, a coal miner, living at Wilson's Fields Caravan with his wife Charlotte. Charlotte was aged 42 and was born in Barrow-on-Soar, Leics.

In 1891 Charles was living at "Caravan, Sand Hill", Worksop with his parents William and Emily and siblings including a sister named Parthenia.

I think Charlotte might belong to one of my husband's families, does anyone have any information about this couple or family.
Thanks

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Re: World War One. Gipsy Roll of Honour.
« Reply #77 on: Sunday 04 August 19 20:48 BST (UK) »
« Reply #1 on: Friday 14 October 05 19:51 BST (UK) »
Hello Judith
1881 census RG11 3323 Folio 72 page 20
Charles Bacon with siblings inc Parthinia living with grandparent Harry Bacon widower 61 a farmer of 13 acres at Selston born Essex
William Bacon 40 labourer born London with wife Emily 38 born Selston.
1871 census RG10 3479 folio 54 page 27 Selston
 Boffits Farm - Henry Bacon 51 farmer wife Hannah 61 granddaughter Hannah 2
1861 census RG9 2432 folio 11 page 18 Selston
Dog Kennels - Henry Bacon 41 farmer 20 acres. wife Hannah 50
William Bacon son 19 un farmers son

Marriage 1867 William Bacon March quarter 7b 26on the same page Emily Elliot

 The 1911 census shows her still living with this Charles Bacon as his wife, this time as a Van Dweller on Waste Ground at Hawthorn Street, Nottingham. It states they've been married for 17 years, which would make it around 1894. There are a couple of marriages for a Charles Bacon in '93 and '94 but I can't check the spouse, and if this is the same woman then I think her husband was still alive anyway! If I've found the right person then he appears to be in both the 1901 and 1911 censuses, lodging in his home county of Warwickshire and stating that he's married.

The mystery continues and any help would be appreciated.


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Re: World War One. Gipsy Roll of Honour.
« Reply #78 on: Sunday 04 August 19 20:49 BST (UK) »
then I found these   small extracts from larger information dated from the 1920s , this maybe could be who the Lady above was looking for
 
Tuesday 02 March 1920
  Nottingham Evening Post

A BASFORD APPOINTMENT
... Defense. Mr. H. B. Clayton said Bacon was a demobilized soldier who had been wounded and gassed and could not follow his employment as a miner. Was only able to earn about a pound a week as a scrap iron dealer. The cause of the trouble was Mrs. Bacon's betting
   
 Wednesday 03 March 1920
  Nottingham Journal

 HER THREE HUSBANDS
Unusual matrimonial tangle   Charlotte Bacon,  Meadows, Nottingham, charged her husband, Charles Bacon,   Hawthorne street, Nottingham, with desertion Mr. R. A. Young     
  she was married to a man named Black, who died she then married a man named Storer
   
 
    Tuesday 02 March 1920
 Nottingham Evening Post

A BASFORD APPOINTMENT
... Magistrates the Nottingham Summons Court today, when Charlotte Bacon, 66, Cremorne-street, applied for maintenance order on the grounds of desertion against her husband,  Charles Bacon, 51, of Hawthorne-street, Meadows. Mr. R. A. Young, for the applicant said she was married to a man named Black, and he died in 1889. Shortly after she married a man named Storer, and he left her

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Re: World War One. Gipsy Roll of Honour.
« Reply #79 on: Sunday 04 August 19 20:50 BST (UK) »
I have been relooking at the old maps and Cremorne street it is next to Hawthorne street, and Kings Meadow road, again and again the same solicitor's names keep coming up on records, just by tracing them much information about many Family's may be found







http://www.nottsheritagegateway.org.uk/places/villages/nottsparishes1835.pdf
http://www.nottsheritagegateway.org.uk/themes/poverty/poorlawunions1850.pdf
http://www.nottshistory.org.uk/resources/maps/ZoomifyExpress4-Win/nottingham1902.htm


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Re: World War One. Gipsy Roll of Honour.
« Reply #80 on: Sunday 04 August 19 20:56 BST (UK) »
if you go on the Gipsy Dan Boswell pagers or the Wilsher ones by Sky or just reread my old posts you will find information about Worksop and Joe Whites land where lots of Gipsies stoped over the yeares along with the Bacons, in my storyes they are conected to the Boylings Elliotts Smiths Woodwards to mention a few, i think they have the Gipsy in them and deserve respect, what is their true history and story, well this awaits as they await, who will speak for the Bacons, i have tryed my own best, now i hope people will respond only with the truth

r.i.p to all the Bacons, and to the ones who fought and the ones to who died in the first worled war i say thank you for fighting for us all, we will remember and pass on your great deeds, well done we are alive now becourse of you and your comrades, rest in peace
 
i forgot to put this one on last night, i think Charlotte connects to

Friday 01 December 1944
 Nottingham Journal
  Nottinghamshire, England

 inquest yesterday, when the City Coroner (Mr. W. S. Rothera) recorded that Mrs. Charlotte Emily Bacon (86). of 19. Cremorne-street, met with an accidental death. Mrs Bacon, who lived alone, was an active woman, and in good health for her age

 
 
  Thursday 30 November 1944
  Nottingham Journal
  Nottinghamshire

 Death Follows Fall Mrs. Charlotte Emily Bacon a widow, of 19 Cremorne strteet. Nottingham, has died in Nottingham General Hosoltal She fell at her home on 12 November ...

 
 
 
 Thursday 30 November 1944
 Nottingham Evening Post
 Nottinghamshire 

... Nottingham City Coroner (Mr. W. S. Rothera), at inquest to-day on Charlotte Emily Bacon, 86, widow, of 19, Cremorne-street. Mrs. Dorothy Campbell of 21. Cremorne-street, said she saw Mrs. Bacon every day. She had one or two falls but was a fairly active woman. On Sunday, November 12th, about 3 p.m., she heard her falling and found her lying in the kitchen near the gas stove. She said she had slipped on the lino. She was taken to hospital next day and died on November 28th.

 remember most if not all of these records have more information contained within their text, go to the British Newspaper Archive web site and signe up, it will be a true game changer in your own research, thank you in advance for all who take an innterest