Author Topic: Charles Dennis 1844/5  (Read 2134 times)

Offline jorose

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Re: Charles Dennis 1844/5
« Reply #9 on: Sunday 11 September 22 03:57 BST (UK) »
I see in a couple of other censuses he states his birth as Westminster, so fairly consistently not Lambeth/Southwark.

However, I can't see him with the Lambeth/Southwark family after 1851, so perhaps something happened and he ended up with relatives in the Westminster/Bloomsbury area? Not so unusual for someone to remember where they grew up, and give that instead of what was on the birth certificate.

I would go back to the 1866 marriage.
Where did it happen, exactly?
What was his address at the time?
Who were the witnesses?
Census information is Crown Copyright, from www.nationalarchives.gov.uk

Offline Neale1961

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Re: Charles Dennis 1844/5
« Reply #10 on: Sunday 11 September 22 07:31 BST (UK) »
Now I had thought that I had found his birth in Lambeth (Mmn Gray) which matched up with a family of cabinet makers.
I do believe this is the correct Charles, and you are being thrown off by the 1911 census.

When Charles Dennis married Annie Elizabeth Webb in 1866 it was at St James Shoreditch. He was living a 5 minute walk from the church in New Inn Yard, Hackney.
Witnesses at wedding were Henry Webb and Ann Webb. Charles signed his name.

IN the 1851 census George DENNIS cabinet maker with wife Elizabeth (nee Gray) and family living in Southwark St George.
The son Charles is 6 born in Southwark. His birth registration is Dec ¼ 1844 Lambeth.

In 1861 that same son Charles is working as a shoeblack and boarding (still in Southwark), with the “Superintendent of Shoe Blacks”. (I note he married the daughter of someone in the shoe business)
In the 1861 census George Dennis is still in the Southwark area working as a cabinet maker, along with a couple of his oldest sons in the same trade.

By 1871 census the father George has died (possible death 1865 St George Southwark, age 58) and the rest of Dennis family is now living in Somers Town, St Pancras – older sons doing the cabinet making.

In 1871 your Charles is also in Somers Town, St Pancras (close to the rest of the Dennis family).

One other thing to note -  Charles's siblings who were also born in the Southwark area, say they were born Middlesex and St Pancras / Camden from 1871 & in later census.
Milligan - Jardine – Glencross – Dinwoodie - Brown: (Dumfriesshire & Kirkcudbrightshire)
Clark – Faulds – Cuthbertson – Bryson – Wilson: (Ayrshire & Renfrewshire)
Neale – Cater – Kinder - Harrison: (Warwickshire & Queensland)
Roberts - Spry: (Cornwall, Middlesex & Queensland)
Munster: (Schleswig-Holstein & Queensland) and Plate: (Braunschweig, Neubruck & Queensland & New York)

Offline Spiral

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Re: Charles Dennis 1844/5
« Reply #11 on: Saturday 24 September 22 17:11 BST (UK) »
I am sorry that I have not got back to thank you for all the help. I agree with all your research but there a couple of matters that prevent me saying “case closed”


In 1861 that same son Charles is working as a shoeblack and boarding (still in Southwark), with the “Superintendent of Shoe Blacks”. (I note he married the daughter of someone in the shoe business)


The “Society of Shoeblacks” was, I understand, a offshoot of the Ragged Schools movement set up to provide destitute and homeless boys with employment up to age 18. How did Charles, with a family in the area, qualify? Was it enough for him to have quarrelled with his father and been thrown out? I cannot find any records to help answer this question. Did he only reconcile with the family after his father’s death.

I know that we can seldom be certain of our facts and going on the balance of probabilities I am accepting the Southwark family but I am trying to get the Bloomsbury birth certificate.

Thanks again for all your interest.