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Matches 17,101 to 17,150 of 19,367

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17101 On 1871 census, eldest daughter Mary Ann is named Mary Ann Murkin Nunn. This could mean that she was Sarah's base child before she married James Nunn. To complicate matters there is also a Mary Ann Murkin aged 3 as a visitor and nearby neighbours with the Murkin surname.
 
--?--, Sarah (I6411)
 
17102 On 1871, John Dobbs, engine driver, aged 29, is living with wife Martha, aged 41, born Sheffield. She is described as formerly widow and, with them are her sons Walter Wilson aged 16 and Tom Alfred Wilson, aged 13, both born Sheffield

 
DOBBS, John (I6592)
 
17103 On 1881 census at 7 Mallinson Road, Battersea, Wandsworth, London, England in household headed by John Reeves:
Harley Storey Lodger Single Male 13 1868 Errand Boy New Zealand
Harry Storey Lodger Single Male 11 1870 Scholar New Zealand

 
STOREY, Harley Payne (I6719)
 
17104 On 1881 census at Comrie, Perthshire, with her Uncle David Silver who was a schoolteacher

 
SILVER, Margaret (I8193)
 
17105 On 1881 census, John Dobbs, aged 39, enginer driver, born Derbyshire, is living with wife Martha, aged 51, born Sheffield

 
DOBBS, John (I6592)
 
17106 On 1881 census, John Westwood is a visitor at the Red Cow, Wheathampstead. Head is Charles Gray
Entry: John Westwood, visitor, unm, aged 22, carpenter, born Welwyn

 
WESTWOOD, John (I6340)
 
17107 On 1881 Scotland Census, Name:
David Silver Age: 16 Estimated birth year: abt 1865 Relationship: Lodger Where born: Portlethen, Kincardineshire
Registration Number: 341 Registration district: Comrie Civil Parish: Comrie
Address: Burrel St Dairybank Cottage Occupation: Pupil Teacher
ED: 2 Household schedule number: 67 LINE: 15 Roll: cssct1881_101
Jane McCall 78
Cathrine McCall 34
Joseph Robertson 12
David Silver 16
Peter Anderson 22
James N Elder 24
Source Citation
Parish: Comrie; ED: 2; Page: 13; Line: 15; Roll: cssct1881_101

 
SILVER, David (I8167)
 
17108 On 1881, George, aged, 64, is a widower boarding with Harriet Pask, widow, aged 70, at Factory Lane, Chevington
 
AVIS, George (I5650)
 
17109 On 1891 census has 11 year old daughter Lillie Bentick who was born out of wedlock before her 1882 marriage to Aaron Nunn.

 
BENTICK, Ellen (I8298)
 
17110 On 1891 census, Charles is a lodger with brother-in-law John Race, coachman groom, at Horringer. Emma Race is his sister and, of course, their daughter Mabel is his niece.
 
NUNN, Charles (I5323)
 
17111 On 1891, had step grandson Albert Cooper with her

 
PARSONS, Mary Ann (I7007)
 
17112 On 1911 census entry, six of her eight children are still living.

 
EMMERSON, Phoebe (I7787)
 
17113 On 1911 census in Edinburgh, there is a James Silver, aged 26, single, born Edinburgh, music teacher, who appears to be in a institution (possibly a hospital). Did not pay for extra census pages to find name of institution

 
SILVER, James (I7302)
 
17114 On 1911 census with his wife Jane and daughters Margaret, aged 3, and Catherine, aged 1. Jane have given birth to four children with two males deceased.

 
SILVER, Francis (I5825)
 
17115 On 1911 census with wife Jessie and daughter Marjorie as well as father-in-law George Smith. Married five years and one child.

 
GAMMIE, James William (I8334)
 
17116 On 1911 census, he is being cared for at a facility in Billericay and is described as "feebleminded from birth".

 
THORNTON, Robert James (I9531)
 
17117 On 1911 census, Susanna is in house headed by William J. Fraser:
Susan Nunn Servant Single Female 28 1873 General servant (domestic) Wareham, Norfolk, England

 
NUNN, Susanna (I1456)
 
17118 On 1911 census, wife Mary Ann is a widow
 
NUNN, Philip (I4905)
 
17119 On 1911 Ireland census, the Buckley family is found in house 8 in Ballymaquirk, Rosnalee, Cork (See http://www.census.nationalarchives.ie/reels/nai001938433/)
Surname Forename Age Sex Relation to head Religion
Buckley James 30 Male Head of Family Roman Catholic
Buckley Kate 28 Female Wife Roman Catholic
Buckley Denis 1 Male Son Roman Catholic
Buckley Mary five months Female Daughter Roman Catholic
Note: Given 1911 Ireland census was taken 2 April 1911, that means Mary was born Nov/Dec 1910.


On the Queensland Nominated immigrants 1908 to 1922, the family came to Australia on the Norseman.
James Buckley, aged 30
Catherine Buckley, aged 30
Denis Buckley, aged 3
Mary Buckley, aged 2
Patrick Buckley, aged two months.

 
BUCKLEY, Mary Pauline (I751)
 
17120 On 1921 census, known as Daisy Wright.

 
ALDRIDGE, Daisy (I6442)
 
17121 On 1937 electoral roll at 26 Shepherd St, Bondi there is a Vera Ransley and a Bernard Charles Ransley. Vera is presumably his sister but, at a guess, Bernard may be a cousin/uncle from Ransley branch.

At same address on electoral roll in 1943 and 1949 at Bondi is a Jean Ethel Bernice Ransley who presumably is his wife but no marriage record yet found.


In memoriam notice:
RANSLEY - In loving memory of my dear son passed away January 18 1953
To your resting place I wonder
And picture your face so dear
I touch each flower I place there
And whisper Vic I'm here
Inserted by mother and step-father
RANSLEY -In loving memory of Vic who passed away January 18 1953
A life of ever kindly deeds
A helping hand to those in need
Sadly missed by his sister Vera and Jim Walsh
RANSLEY -In loving memory of dear Vic who fell asleep January 18 1953 Still loved still missed still very dear Inserted by his sister. Ken and Dick
Family Notices. (1954, January 18). The Sydney Morning Herald (NSW : 1842 - 1954), p. 16. Retrieved June 23, 2013, from http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article18405219

 
RANSLEY, Victor George Westley (I1722)
 
17122 On 1939 register the surnames Cooper and Eldridge are noted above her maiden name McCarthy. There's a marriage to Ernest Cooper in 1941 and to a Peter Eldridge in 1949.

 
McCARTHY, Kathleen (I9672)
 
17123 On 1939 register with two people with surname Gray, her mother's maiden name, so a family connection is assumed. Living next door are her first cousins Bernard and Doris Westwood and their mother Minnie.

 
WESTWOOD, Nellie Maude (I6347)
 
17124 On 1939 register, Alice is not with her family but is found in a boarding house at 27 Cambridge Gardens, Hastings, Sussex. Also in household is a George Mayhew who is presumably her brother. In the date of birth column there's two dates: 25 Jan 65 and 25 Jan 74. She was born 1874, so seems to be an error.

 
MAYHEW, Alice (I289)
 
17125 On 1939 register, is found in Herefordshire with Coates family members.

 
COATES, Beatrice Maud (I9645)
 
17126 On 1939 register, it notes she had two marriages with the surnames as Orford and Skipp. Marriages are found for both. First to Albert Edward ORFORD in 1941 and then to Denis Arthur J Skipp in 1964.

 
AVIS, Violet May (I9353)
 
17127 On 1939 register, living at 11 Worsley St, Middlesborough
Entry is:
Nunn, Mary J, f, 27 Sep 1860, widow
John Nunn, m, 21 Dec 1913, single, bookbinder
*John may be a grandson.


Living at 13 Worsley St, Middlesborough are:
Nunn, Charles, m, 14 Apr 1878, married, wharf labourer
Nunn, Elizabeth A, f, 6 Sep 1888, married, domestic duties
Record for two names following names are blanked out
Nunn, Keith, m, 30 Jan 1930, at school.
Then her daughter Elizabeth is at 15 Worsley St, Middlesborough thus:
Hartill, Elizabeth A. f, 22 Jun 1886, married, domestic duties
Hartill, Benjamin, m, 3 Mar 1885, married, steel tube screwer
Nunn, William*, m, 23 Apr 1912, single, general labourer
Parentage not established and his mother's married name is known to be Duncan. Presumably a child of one of Elizabeth's sons.

 
COOPER, Mary Jane (I8240)
 
17128 On 21 August 1923, Alexina married Joseph Stones, aged 42 (according to ancestry tree he was born 1878, so would have been 45), a chartered accountant at St Stephen's Church, East Twickenham, Middlesex. Her sister Helen Winton Thomson was a witness. They had one son, Philip Alfred Brandesbury STONES, born 2 Oct 1924 Brentford, Middlesex, England, UK, died 23 Feb 1990 at Flixton, Lancashire, England, UK. Presumably Joseph and Alexina divorced at some point because in 1940, according to an ancestry tree, she married James Alexander Peter with whom she had a child. In 1963 and 1968, they are found living at 23 Lynch St, Sunshine, Victoria, Australia, an outer suburb of Melbourne. He was a machinist. Their son James Westland Peter is with them in 1968. In 1977 and 1980 they are all together at 5 Johnson St, Sunshine, Victoria, Australia.

 
THOMSON, Alexina Ann (I5905)
 
17129 On 6 Aug 1913, there is an Edith Sargent, aged 33, discharged from hospital with a six-week old child named Edward as per following record. It's presumed this is her base child:
London, England, Poor Law Hospital Admissions and Discharges, 1842-1918
Name: Edith Sargent Discharge Age: 33 Record Type: Discharge
Birth Date: abt 1880 Discharge or Death Date: 6 Aug 1913
Discharge Place: Westminster, London, London, England
Poor Law Union: St Marylebone

 
SARGENT, Edith (I4932)
 
17130 On 8 March 1881, five of George and Elizabeth's daughters (second marriage) were all baptised at St Michael & All Angels, London, England: Clara, Emma (who was married), Alice, Florence and Edith.
 
COKER, George (I234)
 
17131 On attestation paper, gives his DOB as 10 Apr 1894 at Cheveley, Newmarket and his mother as Lucy NUNN

 
NUNN, John Thomas (I2189)
 
17132 On baptism certificate, date of birth clearly written 29 May 1895 but death records say it was 29 May 1894. In service record there is an entry dated 8 May 1919 which says he was 25 at last birthday which puts his year of birth at 1893! This only adds to the confusion but there are no other entries in his service record that give information on his date of birth. Those entries are blank.

 
BEZODIS, Edward (I1516)
 
17133 On both the 1958 and 1963 electoral rolls living at 36 Dawson Rd, Upper Mt Gravatt, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia there is what appears to be a family of seven: George Nunn, his wife Hilda and five sons. George died in 1965 and Hilda in 1969 but several of the sons are found at the same address up to including 1977 while another Nunn is found at 40 Dawson Rd, Upper Mt Gravatt with presumed wife in 1977.
Burials at Mt Gravatt Cemetery reflect they are family members:
Nunn George 07 / 07 / 1965 74 years 4B 2 70
Nunn Robert John 01 / 02 / 1941 18 years 4B 2 70
Nunn Hilda Emily 27 / 09 / 1969 71 years 4B 2 71
Nunn Emily Louisa Mary 04 / 03 / 1938 17 months 4B 2 71
Nunn Harold Charles 45 years 1971 4B 2 71A
Nunn Leslie George 64 years 1988 4B 2 71A
Nunn Ronald Henry 52 years 1985 4B 2 72
As well, daughter Dorothy and a Henry Smerdon (perhaps her father-in-law) are buried at Mt Gravatt:
Smerdon Dorothy Hilda 05 / 04 / 1966 38 years
Smerdon Henry William 21 / 08 / 1971 79 years

 
NUNN, George (I5777)
 
17134 On census record, Agnes is described as having infantile paralysis which, presumably, means cerebral palsy.

 
ROBERTSON, Agnes Graham (I4123)
 
17135 On census, pattern maker is crossed out and coal miner written in red

 
COLLINS, Charles Ernest (I2065)
 
17136 On death record is described as widow of Herbert Paton, yeast company manager. However, when Herbert Paton died in 1957, a beneficiary of his 33,000 pound plus estate was his secretary Elizabeth Simpson. On 1939 register Herbert Paton is living in Surrey, England with an Ann Paton and said Elizabeth Simpson is also in house. Was Ann his second wife? Did he divorce Helen?

 
ESSON, Helen Bisset (I3204)
 
17137 On his army enlistment form dated 13 Jan 1917, gives his age as 32 years four months born Balmain, New South Wales

 
LOMAS, Rowland Frank Eugene (I2957)
 
17138 On his army record his full name is written as Archibald James Lea COKER. Given that his grandmother's maiden surname was Lee, it's likely to be a variation of that.

 
COKER, Archibald James Lee (I5347)
 
17139 On his brother Samuel's military record, Mark is listed as next of kin living at Chattock Hall. However, it is hard to decipher which county. The best known Chattock Hall was in Greater Manchester. Given that on the 1911 census Mark was living on the streets in London, wherever he was in 1905, it is unlikely it was a permanent arrangement.

 
SARGENT, Mark (I4931)
 
17140 On his brother Samuel's military record, Mark is listed as next of kin living at Chattock Hall. However, it is hard to decipher which county. The best known Chattock Hall was in Greater Manchester. Given that on the 1911 census Mark was living on the streets in London, wherever he was in 1905, it is unlikely it was a permanent arrangement.

 
SARGENT, Mark (I4931)
 
17141 On his military record, he gives wrong birth year (1879 instead of 1876), but in another document in his papers, his correct age (42 years 5 months) is given in 1919. His brother George Pitman Silver is initially given as next of kin, but after he married Elizabeth McGregor in 1918, he changed his will accordingly.

 
SILVER, William Walker (I4435)
 
17142 On his service record, there are details of his marriage to Jane Bass (widow, nee Avis), on 14 Oct 1917 at Cudham. There is a record of child named Richard but no birth details entered.
NOTE Jane Bass was not a widow when they married. She'd been married to George Alfred BUSS but they separated in 1893. Thereafter she'd co-habited with George Thomas MILLERSHIP with whom she had two children. Millership acknowledged he was father of those children.

 
ABRAHAM, Edward John (I9226)
 
17143 On mother's birth notice, married surname is given as STEWART, but no marriage record yet found. Presuming it's the same person, she is found several times on electoral roll as Alexandrina Stewart but has no spouse living with her until 1943 when she's with a William Stewart, trawlerman, at 32 Broughton St, Mortdale, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia. Given he was a fisherman, that may explain his absence from the roll.

 
ESSON, Alexandrina Victoria (I8972)
 
17144 On pages 6 and 7 of The Bury and Norwich Post, and Suffolk Herald of May 23, 1876 there is a report of the local government board inquiry at the Thingoe Union under the heading charges of neglect on the part of a parish surgeon, Mt Watson.
James Nunn of Hargrave was one of the patients on whom the inquiry focused.
Part of the report reads:
The Rev. Samuel Chamberlain deposed: I am Rector of Hargrave, and the deceased James Nunn was a parishioner of mine. About two months ago I heard he was ill and called to see him. Mr. Watson was his private doctor, and acted as much in the first instance; after a time Nunn obtained an order from the Relieving-officer, and Mr. Watson still continued to attend him. Nunn complained to me very much about Mr. Watson's neglect - that he seldom saw him, and that he never examined him. According to Mr. Watson, Nunn was suffering from asthma. I felt his pulse and asked him to show me his tongue, and he then said I had examined him more than Mr. Watson had done. He then added, "Mr. Watson is the strangest man I have ever seen. I went to him for a bottle of medicine, and when he gave it to me he said, 'Take this, and slip it unto you: you will soon be all right'." I found that Nunn continued to get worse. From time to time I ascertained that Mr. Watson had not been to the man's house, and I learnt from Nunn's wife that Mr. Watson had said would be a good thing for him to get into the Hospital. I then wrote to Mr. Watson, and asked him whether he recommended that course. The date of that letter I do not remember. I afterwards consulted Mr. Tricker, the Guardian, and he strongly advised that the man should go to the Hospital. On the 24th April I called at Nunn's, and whilst I was there Mr. Watson came in. He spoke to Nunn as follows - "Mr. Chamberlain takes a great interest in your case: I will do all I can for you." Mr. Watson then came out with with, and I again asked him about Nunn being removed to the Hospital, and he said, "Wait a week : I will see him every day, and report to you his condition in two or three days." I went to Nunn's house nearly every day, but was informed that Mr. Watson had not attended at all. I asked Nunn whether he was still anxious to go to the Hospital, and he replied, "I only regret that I did not go before." So on Tuesday, the 2nd of May, I removed Nunn in my own carriage to the Hospital, where he died the same afternoon. I have no reason to think that Nunn was injured by the removal : he was well wrapped up in a great coat. - To the Inspector : My carriage is an open one. - To Mr. Watson (through the Inspector): You told me on the 24th of April that you did not think they would admit Nunn into the Hospital, as he was suffering from chronic asthma. As far as my judgment went I did not think he was suffering from asthma at all.
Mr. Watson said he attended Nunn once during the week.
The Inspector, upon looked at the medical sheet kept by Mr. Watson, on which is, or ought to be, recorded the different persons, times, and places relating to his visits, pointed out that there was no attendance at all entered for that week.
The Inspector : What about the disease Nunn was suffering from?
Mr Chamberlain: Mr. Watson certainly pronounced it to be one of asthma.
The Inspector: It appears from Mr. Watson's medical sheet that he was suffering from congestion of the liver.
Mr Chamberlain continued: After I had the conversation with Mr. Watson about Nunn going into the Hospital, he wrote a letter to me which ran as follows: - "Of course, to a man in Nunn's position it is a great advantage to get him into the Hospital; but I fancy you will meet with other cases during the year, which will be likely to receive greater benefit." I remember the words, though I have destroyed the letter, which I received on the 23rd of April. I am quite certain that Mr. Watson told me on the 24th of April he would see Nunn every day. Mrs. Nunn heard part of the conversation which took place between me and Mr. Watson on the 24th of April.
Mr. Tricker said he was very sorry to say that the poor man was only visited three times by Mr. Watson during seven weeks.
Mr. Chamberlain, to Mr. Watson : I don't know when you received an order to attend Nunn. Nunn told me he had two bottles of medicine from you, for which he paid you. You verbally asked me to wait a week before I removed Nunn to the Hospital: that was all the caution you gave me about removing him. It was on Monday, the 24th of April, that you told me to wait a week, and you would report how Nunn was going on. There was no arrangement entered into by the parishioners to keep Nunn's removal secret. I am able to state that you did not see Nunn that week: I had it from the poor man's own lips.
Mr Watson: That is not evidence: the man is dead now.
The Inspector, on again refering to Mr. Watson's sheets of medical attendances, complained that they were very irregularly kept, and said he should withhold them, and present them with his report to the Local Government Board.
Mr. Watson: Who received Nunn from you at the Hospital?-Mr. Chamberlain: Mr. Fuller, the house-surgeon.
Sarah Nunn deposed: I am the wife of James Nunn, deceased. On the 2nd of March my husb and went to Mr. Watson: he was then a pauper, but had not medical order. On the 11th of March he obtained an order from Mr. Calver, the Relieving-fficer, and I then applied to Mr. Watson to attend my husband: but he did not come. My husband subsequently went himself, and Mr. Watson came to him. Mr. Watson told me in my husband's presence that he was suffering from asthma. He complained to me of pain in his inside, and of shortness of breath; his eyes swelled a good deal; the pain was in his left side. About three weeks after I carried the order to Mr. Watson, he came and attended my husband. He did not examine him, he only looked at him: he was hardly in the house time enough to enable himself to turn round and go out again. I went for him about a week after this visit, and he afterwards called in and wrote me out an order for a piece of meat: he called again at the end of the week, and wrote out a similar order for meat. Mr. Watson also supplied my husband with medicine. Mr. Watson only visited my husband three times in nine weeks. I am certain he pronounced the diseased my husband was suffering from to be asthma. My husband called twice on Mr. Watson at his surgery. Mr. Chamberlain often visited my husband - once or twice a week. I asked Mr. Chamberlain whether he did not think the Hospital would be the best place for him, and he advised me to speak to Mr. Watson about it. I did so, and he said, "Good living and good attendance will do your husband a great deal of good." I acquantainted Mr. Chamberlain with that, and he promised to get me an order for the Hospital. On the Monday week before my husband died Mr. Watson and Mr. Chamberlain were together at my house. Mr. Watson then felt my husband's hand, which was the only time he had touched him. He promised Mr. Chamberlain he would see my husband every day during the week, but did not come till the Monday in the following week. I was present on all occasions when Mr. Watson visited my husband. He never looked at his tongue, tapped his chest, or asked him any questions as to the condition he was in. The last time he called he looked at my husband's legs. I have made a slight mistake - altogether Mr. Watson attended him four time. My husband was anxious to go to the Hospital, but was not removed on April 26th because Mr. Watson promised to do all he could to do him good. He was removed to the Hospital on Tuesday, the 2nd inst., and before starting he ate a hearty breakfast, drank some whisky and water, and smoked his pipe. The house-surgeon at the Hospital did no say anything to me about him. - By Mr. Watson: My husband first of all saw you at your surgery: He went there twice altogether. - Mr Watson: Then, how do you know that I didn't examine him there: - Witness: Because my husbane told me you never did.
I never heard him say that you promised him you would call and see him.
Mr. Harry Fuller deposed: I am house surgeon at the Hospital. I remember Nunn being brought to the Hospital on the 2nd inst. He was almost in a dying state: he had effusion on the chest, arising from pleurisy and emphysema of the lungs; he had also an effusion in the pericardium. There was nothing to lead me to enquire into the state of his liver : I had quite sufficient evidence to account for death. I made a post mortem examination, and found the chest on both sides full of fluid, the result of pleurisy: the pericardium was also filled with fluid. He did not speak to me. I did not consider that he was in a proper condition to be removed: I could not say at the time whether he had been under medical treatment. When I say that he was not in a condition to be removed, I don't mean that the removal actually caused death: he must have died under any circumstances, as he was so badly diseased. The symptoms were not those where the disease would have come on suddenly. Judging from what I saw, he was likely to have been in a dangerous condition on the previous day. I cannot understand his eating a hearty breakfast on the morning of his removal, and was very surprised to hear it was so. Drinking and smoking a pipe would tend to relieve him somewhat. - To Mr. Watson: I did not say that the removal to the Hospital accelerated his death.
In answer to the Inspector, as to whether he had any explanation to offer, Mr. Watson said he was perfectly ignorant of the removal of Nunn to the Hospital : it was a course he should have objected to, knowing that he was suffering from some bronchial affection. He did not think it was a case that required constant attention. He had every reason to believe that his removal on such a cold morning of the 2nd Inst. brought on congestion of the lungs.
The Inspector: That is not the point you have to answer: the complaint against you is that on the 24th of April you promised to attend Nunn during the week, and you never did so.
Mr. Watson: I did go to see him in the middle of the week, on the Wednesday.
Mr. Tricker, the Guardian for Hargrave: You did not, and it has been proved by two witnesses, and therefore what is the use of your telling such a falsehood?
The Inspector (to Mr. Watson): Have you anything to show to prove to us that you really did go in the middle of the week:
Mr. Watson: No; I never kept my memorandum. I never dreamt that anything was going to made of this case.
The Inspector: Well, then, we have had two witnesses who have distinctly sworn that you did not go.
A Guardian: Why did you promise you would attend, and never perform it?
Mr Watson: That promise of mine has been very much enlarged upon since I made it: I merely promised to pay attention to the man.
Mr. Tricker: You did not even visit him once during the seven days. The poor man's residence was in the centre of your practice, too, and you would not have had to go a yard our of your way. There might have been somewhat of an excuse for you to offer if you had lived a few miles away from him. I must inform my brother Guardians that there is now a pauper lying very ill in the parish, whom Mr. Watson has not visited for 14 days.
In answer to Mr. Tricker, who asked Mr. Watson whether the entries on an attendance sheet were in his own handwriting, replied that half of them were and the other half were not.
Mr. Tricker observed that it was a most improper thing to allow other persons to make these entries.
Mr. Watson said, all he went by was, that when he first undertook the duties of the Union, the attendance-sheets were not filled up, and that was the reason he never completely filled his own up.
Mr. Sparke (the Clerk) here handed to the Inspector certain sheets which were in use at the time Mr. Watson was appointed to the office, and which were, he said, all properly filled up.
The Inspector again expressed his entire disapproval of the manner in which Mr. Watson had kept his sheets, and said it was his intention to lay them before the Local Government Board.
The Inspector, in closing the enquiry, pointed out that in the first case there had been very conflicting and contradictory evidence given on the part of Paske and Smith, whiles the statements of Ashman and Smith seems to confirm each other, so it would have to depend on the credibility of the evidence whether there was really any neglect on the part of Mr. Watson in this case. With reference to the case of Nunn, they had had evidence to show that Mr. Watson promised to attend him regularly, or all all events he made some promise of that sort, but according to the witnesses he failed to act up to it. Mr. Watson had said that he attended twice during that week, but he had not brought forward any proof to susbstantiate that assertion, and so disprove the evidence of Mr. Chamberlain and Mrs. Nunn.
The Inspector then notified to the Board that the report of this enquiry would be laid before the Local Government Board for their consideration at the earliest opportunity, and the enquiry, which lasted five hours, was brought to a close.


 
NUNN, James (I5137)
 
17145 On son James's army record the address 11 Worsley St, North Ormesby, Yorkshire, is crossed out at Prospect Place written instead.
 
NUNN, George (I8239)
 
17146 On the 1851 census at 1 Court St (?) in a household headed by Francis Gidley, this appears to be this George as a lodger.
Entry is: George Nunn, single, aged 28, labourer, born Chevington
 
NUNN, George (I4974)
 
17147 On the 1851 census at Chedburgh and the 1861 census at Chevington, there is a Thomas and Mary Nunn. Age fits best for this Thomas
 
NUNN, Thomas (I5658)
 
17148 On the 1871 census, James is a lodger at No 71 Merton St, Grantchester in a household headed by Charles Dilley
 
NUNN, James (I3961)
 
17149 On the 1871 England census, there is a George Nunn, aged 16, born Wickhambrook, as a servant at the The Downs, Epsom, Surrey, England which may be a horse racing business.
Not yet established if this is the same George, but seems highly possible.


Given his parents moved from Suffolk to Durham, and were living at Crook by 1881, which is the Weardale district, he may have followed them.
There is an 1874 death in Durham for a George Nunn, aged 19, that fits, so, unless other information comes to hand, this may be the George Nunn son of Philip Nunn and Sarah Mason.
Only information from the death certificate could establish George Nunn's parentage for certain.


As per above, Philip Nunn and Sarah Mason are first found in Durham on 1881 census at 139 Freeholders Homes, Crook, which is about 13km from Satley, Durham, where George Nunn, aged 19 was buried, in 1874 as per this entry:
National Burial Index For England & Wales
George Nunn Age 19 Birth year 1855 Death year 1874
Burial date 24 May 1874
Church St Cuthbert Denomination Anglican Place Satley County Durham


There are no other George Nunns born in Durham around 1855, or found in census records, that potentially fit the one died 1874 that I can find.
There is one born 1855 died 1916 from Middlesbrough:
England & Wales Deaths 1837-2007
GEORGE NUNN Birth year 1855 Age 61 Death quarter 1 Death year 1916 District Middlesbrough County Yorkshire
He's found him on census records and was actually born Hundon, Suffolk, so a number of Nunn families moved up to Yorkshire, which really confuses things.

 
NUNN, George (I9301)
 
17150 On the 1891 census there is a Fred A. COOTE staying with Robert Nunn at Plumpton, Whepstead. This is almost certainly Frederick Arthur COATES, Robert Nunn's grandson, the child of Emma Nunn and James Coates

 
COATES, Frederick Arthur (I4489)
 

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Welcome to Warren Nunn's family history research website.
It includes research into various paternal and maternal branches.
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