Author Topic: Smith family mystery (Harewood and Leeds)  (Read 3218 times)

Offline Matt62

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Smith family mystery (Harewood and Leeds)
« on: Wednesday 01 May 19 21:27 BST (UK) »
I am a little perplexed by an apparent inconsistency, or rather anomaly, found while researching my Smith ancestors in Harewood and Leeds in the 18th-early 19th centuries.

My ancestor Hannah Smith - daughter of George Smith, banker, from Leeds - married Thomas Fawell in 1807 in St. Peters Church, Leeds (please see attached). I have a series of contemporary 'letters' with dates of births and deaths for this family, two leafs of which I have attached as 'Fawell letter 1' and 'Fawell letter 2' below.

In this letter, George Smith 'banker from Leeds' is listed as the grandfather of Hannah Smith's children with Thomas and therefore her father.

From a memoir written by George Smith's son William (born 1785), I learned that George's wife was Hannah Craven of Harewood:

https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=nyp.33433082272893;view=1up;seq=27

"My mother was Hannah Craven. daughter of a farmer who resided at Harewood..."

I subsequently found her marriage to George Smith in 1778 in Harewood on familysearch. There is another memoir written by Hannah Craven's sister in 1812 (Sarah Baiston) who likewise refers to her as "Mrs. Smith".

I then came across a newspaper account published in Salt Lake City in 1897 by Hannah Craven's great-granddaughter, Eve A Cooke and based upon her mother Sarah Anne Cooke's memories, in which she wrote the following:

Quote
"Hannah Craven married George Smith, a most estimable young man, a devout Methodist and a cashier in the Bank of Leeds, of which he afterwards became President.

They had a family of three fine sons, William and George, who succeeded their father in the bank, and Samuel, a surgeon, generally spoken of as the handsome and skillful Doctor, and two beautiful daughters, Mary (May?), afterwards Mrs. Towe, and Sarah, their youngest (Mrs. Sutton) my own mother's mother, whose early death was the great sorrow of the family
"

(Written by Eve Anna Dykes, Salt Lake City, August 15th 1897. "My mother, if living, would be 89 years old today." (Written Sarah Ann Cooke Born 1808 7-15-1808))

I found it odd that my ancestor Hannah Smith, a daughter of George Smith (banker), was absent from the above list of family members.

Hannah and George's youngest daughter Sarah Sutton (the grandmother of Eve A Cooke, the author of the above piece) is mentioned in my Fawell family letter 2 as "Mrs. (Hannah) Fawell's sister", where it is noted that Hannah Smith and Thomas Fawell buried their one year old son Thomas Hindmarsh Fawell in a grave alongside his aunt Sarah Sutton and "Mrs Fawell's father George Smith, the banker" and her brother George Smith Jr.

I also found an entry about Samuel Smith - the "handsome" doctor referred to above - in Parr's Life of the Fellows of the Royal College of Surgeons, where it is noted:

https://livesonline.rcseng.ac.uk/client/en_GB/lives/search/detailnonmodal/ent:$002f$002fSD_ASSET$002f0$002f372722/one?qu=%22rcs%3A+E000538%22&rt=false%7C%7C%7CIDENTIFIER%7C%7C%7CResource+Identifier
 
Quote
"[Samuel Smith was] born in Briggate, Leeds, the son of George Smith, banker; was apprenticed to his brother-in-law, Fawell, a general practitioner in Leeds."

Thus Hannah Smith was definitely the daughter of George Smith, banker, and sister of Sarah Sutton, William Smith, George Smith Jr. and Samuel Smith.

But on her marriage certificate to Thomas Fawell in 1807 (please see attached), Hannah Craven is nowhere mentioned. Her father George Smith 'banker' is again there but instead of Hannah Craven, I find 'Hannah Muschamp'.

This Hannah Muschamp is the daughter of Hannah Craven's sister Mary Craven, wife of William Muschamp of Harewood.

Could someone help shed some light upon: (a) the reason why Hannah Smith is not listed in the article above as one of the daughters of Hannah Craven and George Smith, banker & (b) the reason why Hannah Craven doesn't appear alongside her husband George on the 1807 marriage certificate.

I would be most grateful for any assistance.

Online mckha489

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Re: Smith family mystery (Harewood and Leeds)
« Reply #1 on: Wednesday 01 May 19 21:35 BST (UK) »
Hannah Muschamp is a witness to the marriage only.

There is no inferred relationship from any of the witnesses.

Offline Matt62

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Re: Smith family mystery (Harewood and Leeds)
« Reply #2 on: Wednesday 01 May 19 21:38 BST (UK) »
Hannah Muschamp is a witness to the marriage only.

There is no inferred relationship from any of the witnesses.

Hello,

Thank you for contributing!

I concur that she is listed simply as a witness (with no inferred relationship as you say and see that upon re-reading the doc) but my bewilderment had to do partly with why her mother Hannah Craven (who lived to 92) is not present as a witness at the wedding and why that above article omits her (and her alone) as one of the family members.

Eve A Cooke, who speaks about the other family members in great detail and accuracy in 1897 (i.e. the 'handsome and skilful' doctor Samuel) makes absolutely no mention of my ancestor Hannah Smith (Mrs. Fawell). And her mother Hannah Craven is likewise not a witness to her wedding, even though her father, brothers and (cousin?) Mary Muschamp are.

Online mckha489

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Re: Smith family mystery (Harewood and Leeds)
« Reply #3 on: Wednesday 01 May 19 21:47 BST (UK) »
Are you thinking that because there are so many other witnesses Hannah (Craven) Smith ought to be one? 

Regarding Eva....a family feud is all that comes to mind.

BTW am so jealous of those two informative pages!


Offline alpinecottage

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Re: Smith family mystery (Harewood and Leeds)
« Reply #4 on: Wednesday 01 May 19 21:49 BST (UK) »
I don't think you can read too much into who was or wasn't a witness.  Some people maybe couldn't write, a person may have had too poor eyesight, a wife may have considered her husband was a suitable representative for that branch of the family, she may have been unwell on the day of the wedding and many other reasons besides no doubt.


When my uncle married in 1940s, his widow told me about 50 years later that his mother (my grandmother) didn't even go to the church as "she was at home preparing the meal" - seems very strange these days.
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Offline Matt62

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Re: Smith family mystery (Harewood and Leeds)
« Reply #5 on: Wednesday 01 May 19 21:50 BST (UK) »
Are you thinking that because there are so many other witnesses Hannah (Craven) Smith ought to be one? 

Regarding Eva....a family feud is all that comes to mind.

BTW am so jealous of those two informative pages!

Indeed, I thought it was bizarre that her father, brothers and cousin are all there as witnesses - but not her mother.

And then, Eva just 'omits' her writing her later history of the family and speaks as if the family only had three sons and two daughters.

I feel kind of bad for my ancestor that her mother doesn't witness her wedding and then she's somehow (purposefully or accidentally) omitted years later.

And yes, haha, I was delighted to find such details! There are a lot of sources written by different, later family members that have proved very useful for this particular line of which I am grateful.

Offline Matt62

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Re: Smith family mystery (Harewood and Leeds)
« Reply #6 on: Wednesday 01 May 19 21:51 BST (UK) »
I don't think you can read too much into who was or wasn't a witness.  Some people maybe couldn't write, a person may have had too poor eyesight, a wife may have considered her husband was a suitable representative for that branch of the family, she may have been unwell on the day of the wedding and many other reasons besides no doubt.


When my uncle married in 1940s, his widow told me about 50 years later that his mother (my grandmother) didn't even go to the church as "she was at home preparing the meal" - seems very strange these days.

Good points!

Offline Mabel Bagshawe

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Re: Smith family mystery (Harewood and Leeds)
« Reply #7 on: Wednesday 01 May 19 22:00 BST (UK) »
Are you thinking that because there are so many other witnesses Hannah (Craven) Smith ought to be one? 

Regarding Eva....a family feud is all that comes to mind.

BTW am so jealous of those two informative pages!

There's a newspaper entry for Thomas Fawell, surgeon, marrying Hannah Smith, daughter of George Smith, banker, just to completely confirm your deductions  [The Leeds Mercury, Saturday June 20, 1807 - marriage was on the Tuesday]

Agree the family split theory looks possible. I wondered, with the Salt Lake City connection, whether the family members followed different religious groups, hence the fall out 

Offline Matt62

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Re: Smith family mystery (Harewood and Leeds)
« Reply #8 on: Wednesday 01 May 19 22:15 BST (UK) »
There's a newspaper entry for Thomas Fawell, surgeon, marrying Hannah Smith, daughter of George Smith, banker, just to completely confirm your deductions  [The Leeds Mercury, Saturday June 20, 1807 - marriage was on the Tuesday]

Agree the family split theory looks possible. I wondered, with the Salt Lake City connection, whether the family members followed different religious groups, hence the fall out

That's an interesting point!

Hannah Craven was a devout Methodist, as was George Smith. The rest of the family - William, George Jr. and Samuel - continued as Methodists, indeed William Smith became really influential in missionary work. 

As a young woman, three separate accounts (by different authors) have confirmed that Hannah's father disowned her and she had to leave the home to live with her uncle, because she abandoned the established church and refused to attend a ball held by Edwin Lascelles 1st Baron Harewood at his estate, due to her religious objections (she hated the 'immoral' luxury and excess of the upper class, apparently).

Eve A Cooke's version of the story (from 1897) reads as follows:

Quote
She was one of a large family, having several sisters all remarkable for their beauty, gay and fashionable girls. When Hannah was eighteen years old she, with her sisters and a party of young friends were on a pleasure excursion in the country, and hearing of a Methodist Camp Meeting, went to one of its meetings "just for fun." But the more serious nature of Hannah was impressed by what she heard, and she felt that there was more to live for than the gay and frivolous life they were leading, and on their return home the others often joked her about her seriousness, and asked if she had got religion, etc.

She had an Uncle who had joined the Methodists, and with whom her immediate family there was very little association, but she went to him in her perplexity and found help and comfort from him and his good family, attending meetings with them etc. This annoyed her Father exceedingly. About this time a large ball was given at the Earl of Hargrove's and as the girls discussed their costumes for the occasion, they could elicit no interest from Hannah on the subject, and in answer to their questions she at length told them she did not intend to go. They repeated this to their father and he was much incensed and commanded Hannah to attend the ball and to cease attendance at the Methodist meetings, and on her refusal to comply disowned her as his daughter.

This is confirmed in different wording by this much earlier account published in a Methodist magazine by Hannah Craven's sister, Sarah Baiston, in 1812:

https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=kxEEAAAAQAAJ&pg=PA677&dq=sarah+baiston&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjpoI23n_vhAhVuURUIHVykCsYQ6AEIKjAA#v=onepage&q&f=false

And thirdly confirmed by the account written by her son William Smith that I referenced above:

https://babel.hathitrust.org/cgi/pt?id=nyp.33433082272893;view=1up;seq=27

Eve A Cooke's mother converted to Mormonism for a period while tarrying in Salt Lake City during the Gold Rush in 1852, but then left the religion later on to become a prominent anti-Mormon. But I'm still not convinced that would explain why Hannah Fawell is omitted (since she was Methodist like all the others and none of them were forgotten!).