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Tuesday 21 July 2020

The Old Country: POETRY

I wrote this poem some years ago as part of a Life Writing Course.
Sue was my best friend. We’d  talk about all sorts of things  She came from England and I'd always referred  to it as ‘Home’, after all Mum and Dad had called it that. I’d heard it called that all my life by all my rellies, and I thought it was the right way to refer to England. That was until one day Sue said to me “That’s not home, why are you calling it that? This is home, where you are right now” So I stopped calling it that, but I think in my heart of hearts I still felt as though it was. Years later my husband and I were able to go to England. As I stepped off the plane I remember being so disappointing. It was not the ‘home coming’ I had eagerly anticipated. It was just another country to visit. The key concept there was the change in my belief about myself. My parents and sister were English by birth, I’m not. I’m a New Zealander. This is my home

HOME
Whenever she spoke of England
Mum called it Home
I used to too.
Until my friend Sue said,
“But home is where you  are”
So I didn’t call it that
Anymore.

When I went to England
I expected it to feel like
I was coming home.
But when I stepped off the plane.
It was just another
Country.

I was pleased to leave.
To leave the crowded places.
To be returning to blue water
And Green fields
And Empty spaces.
Pleased to be going
Home.






Newsworthy: Georgian PIRRETT


I think my Nan was a bit of a mover and shaker. In her younger years, long before emigrating to New Zealand with her husband and my parents she was effectively a single parent. Granddad was a merchant seaman and spent months and months at sea, not unusual for those in their East End neighbourhood. Yes, he would have contributed to the household finances, but in an erratic way. Nan did domestic work, and according to my Aunt (her daughter) she also worked at the local pub, and raised her small family of three mostly on her own.
There’s nothing newsworthy about that, Nan’s newsworthy moment came later. In 1955 Nan wrote a letter to a local newspaper, probably the Hutt News. In the letter Nan expressed her outrage at Rev. R.F. Clements ‘attack from the pulpit concerning the press publishing an account of the Foster case’  
I remember a family story about Nan writing to local MP Walter Nash about the same case, but so far have not been able to prove it.
My Aunt provided me a copy of Nan’s letter to the newspaper, and with a bit of help from google I found an actual newspaper report.




Monday 13 July 2020

Multiple: Elizabeth HINSON

If there were twins on my side of the family i t would be easy to write about multiples, but there aren’t any. The only double ups I have are with names. I’ve got multiple Georges, Williams, and Edwards, as well as a few Marys and Mary Ann’s and Susannahs.
As I’ve already written a story about one of my great great grandfathers for week six, called Talking About George, But Which One? It’s time I stepped over to the other side of Mum’s tree and wrote about someone from there.
That someone was a great great grandmother called Elizabeth Hinson who married William Hall. They had at least eight children, including my great grandfather Thomas Hall.
Elizabeth and William lived their entire lives in Crowland/Croyland, an ancient fenland town situated near the southern-most border of Lincolnshire. The name Crowland or Croyland, means soft land. During the 13th century the area was just a muddy swamp, until fenland drainage lowered the water table.
This modern-day map shows the location of Poor’s Lane which was later renamed Albion Street.
According to public records Elizabeth seems hardly to have existed at all between her baptism and her marriage to William Hall, both events occurring at St Mary, St Bartholomew and St Guthlac, Anglican Church
Elizabeth was baptised at on May 24th 1805. Her actual year of birth is unknown, but census records put it at 1804 – 1805. The population of Crownland in 1801 was just 1425. By the time Elizabeth married William Hall on October 31 1831 Crownland’s population had increased to just 2268.
When Queen Victoria came to the throne in 1837 and like almost all of my ancestors, more than half of the population of  England worked in the countryside.

The 1841 census is recognised by genealogists as the most useful one as it details the names of the house occupants rather than jus the number of souls at a particular dwelling. In the 1841 is Elizabeth, aged 35, and married to William Hall, with five children. The address is simply ‘Town Lane’ 
To the left of Elizabeth’s Husband’s entry is a double slash and a single slash to the left of the older William’s name. The end of each building is shown with two slashes '//' and the end of each household in a building is shown with one slash '/'.
I am unsure if the older William Hall,  is related as Elizabeth’s father in Law was called John    


1841 England Census for Elizabeth Hall, Lincolnshire, Crowland, ALL, District 3, 
Elizabeth’s younger brother William later married Susannah Cook who lived right next door
Elizabeth’s husband’s occupation like most of his neighbours was ‘ag lab’. The life of an ‘ag lab’ would have varied with the seasons, and with the crops grown. They wouldn’t necessarily have been employed by just one farmer, though some were. Elizabeth would probably have worked in the fields during busy times like harvest alongside her husband and other wives. Children too were expected to work, their wages often an important addition to what would likely have been a meagre lifestyle.

The idea that an agricultural revolution was the forerunner to the industrial revolution continues to be debated by some even today. Nevertheless, better agricultural knowledge and techniques improved the efficiency of food production necessary to feed England’s rapidly growing population: a fifty percent increase 1800 – 1801.   This efficiency in food production meant that there were less jobs for the ‘ag labs’ ultimately resulting in the increasing number of people migrating from rural to urban areas. Elizabeth and her husband though, remained in the same town up until their deaths, William’s in c1880 and Elizabeth’s in 1885.

1851 England Census for Elizabeth Hall, m Lincolnshire, Crowland, ALL, 8b. Birthplace for the entire family ‘Craylands’
Address is Poor House Lane. Even though the name of the street has changed all the neighbours, including the Cook Family, remain the same, which makes me think that it was a matter of just renaming the street rather than them all moving. I have yet to discover if there was a workhouse/poorhouse close by before the new Union Workhouse was built in 1836 on the north side of Thorpe Road, workhouses were closed in 1930. I am waiting for a copy of a book called ‘In the Shadow of the Abbey’, which I am told has a section on Poors Lane which may answer the question. Crownland’s population in 1851 had now increased from 2268 to 3183. 
1861 England Census for Elizabeth Hall, Lincolnshire, Crowland, ALL, District 2In 1861 the family continued to live in Poors Lane, at number 5, as do their immediate neighbours the Cook Family, including Susannah, William’s future bride. They married October 24th 1870. Elizabeth’s husband’s occupation remained ‘ag lab’, no occupation was listed for Elizabeth as was common for the time, and son Thomas was a basket maker. Elizabeth may well have been occupied in milking and cheese and butter production or perhaps was employed in some domestic role. It is frustrating not to be able to be at least to have least a little knowledge about her life.
It is interesting to note that there now a family of Hinsons a little further along the street, at this stage I do not know if the family is related.

Moving forward another ten years to the 1871 census I find just William and Elizabeth at home at Poors lane with the Cook family still their neighbours. This time Elizabeth’s brother William is there too with his wife Susannah. Elizabeth’s husband still describes himself as an ‘ag lab’ at age 67. Crownland’s population had declined slightly to  3168, probably an indicator of the forthcoming Great Depression of British Agriculture 1873 -1896. In the 1870s faster steamships transported cheaper American grain leading to a dramatic fall in the price of domestically grown grain. It is no wonder then that many thousands succumbed to the lure of work in the cities.
1871 England Census for Elizabeth Hall, Lincolnshire, Crowland, ALL, 2

1881 England Census for Elizabeth Hall, Lincolnshire, Crowland, ALL, District 2. There had been a slight increase in population to almost three thousand.

Another ten year on and the census address is still Poors Lane are living the now widowed Elizabeth with her widowed daughter Elizabeth. William died in 1880. The daughter’s occupation was Nurse SMS (Subsidiary Medical Services). SMS may mean that she had some medical training, but it could just as likely be by custom/practice.  
Elizabeth died in 1885 aged 81 

Notes about Crowland today


The town has a variety of Georgian, timber-framed and thatched cottages. There are also some interesting archaeological and historical sights, the most famous of which is the ruined abbey. The abbey was part of Benedictine monastery, built in AD 716 by King Ethelbald of Mercia, to honour the memory of St Guthlac. Most of the monastic buildings were lost during the Dissolution and the English Civil War. Apart from the north aisle, which is now used as the parish church. A squat tower and ruined Norman arch still remain, supporting a superb west front, with five tiers of statues, representing the saints and apostles. The Abbey was destroyed and rebuilt several times, until it was finally decimated by Cromwell's troops it in 1643. Hereward the Wake is believed to be buried here with his family.
The Abbey Church holds a popular Flower Festival every August Bank Holiday.

An extraordinary three-way bridge sits in the centre of the town, built in the 14th-c over the confluence of two streams, which have long since dried up due to fenland drainage. A weathered stone figure on one of the bridge parapets is thought to represent either Christ or King Ethelbald.
 You can find a modern day guid to the town at
and a guide to the Abbey at