Showing posts with label family story. Show all posts
Showing posts with label family story. Show all posts

Growing up by a Graveyard and Church

the path down from St. John the Baptist to their white house
When the Walton children  - Annie #1, Lydia #2 (seated in the banner  photo that titles Walton Lodge blog, second row left between her standing grandson and seated daughter, her husband William Bird Hackett standing behind her), Tom #3, George #4, Ada #5,and James #6 -  were growing up in this 200 year old white house (the old vicarage) it was the new building on the block.[i] 

The grassy area seen down the path was the graveyard. People were being buried here for 500 years before our Waltons arrived. Early wealthy church members are buried under the floor inside. Others are buried outside. In the 1900’s the caretaker moved the tombstones to the side off the grass, "For easier mowing," he proudly told Jim Hackett and me on our visit in 2006. We found reading most of the tombstones impossible for the overgrown bushes.  FindaGrave [ii] (the international group documenting cemeteries) has as, of today, only 29 names listed for the 700 hundred year old St. John’s graveyard, and none taken from reading a tombstone. Early wills give the known burial information. Earliest church records available to us begin in 1564.[i] [iii] 

St John the Baptist 2006.

The well-used path past the house still leads from the stable and carpark to the church.  Brides and Grooms strolled up the hill to their weddings. Babies in their christening gowns were carried to the baptism font. The walkway every Sunday saw crowds of worshippers head to and from services dressed in their finery to pray together.

Granwilla imagined her grandmother “Sarah Atkin Walton, small and frail, felt very proud as she walked to church each Sunday with her three tall, silk hatted sons beside her.”[iv]  This may be a fanciful image, though groom Harry Franks in the banner photo IS holding a tall silk hat. The first three Walton kids were baptized here, but Ava #5 wasn't baptized until age 8, the same day as her 3 month old baby brother, James #6 was, and I haven't found a baptism record at all for George #5. 

Along with celebrations and church services, the path often brought pallbearers carrying wooden coffins to the graveyard. Gravediggers dug deep holes. Mourners wept as their loved ones were lowered into the earth, and when they visited the graves later. All this happened right outside the windows of the Walton home where six children ate, learned, slept, and in the yard where they played.

 Annie #1 told her children two stories about growing up by the graveyard. One was about a ghost. She told of
a white ghost that flitted nightly for a time in the cemetery and frightened the people. Finally, the doctor could stand it no longer. With gun in hand he waited for the ghost to appear. When it did, he called out, “Man or monkey, God or devil, whoever you are, speak now or I shoot.” The ghost did not speak, he shot, and soon after a man came to his home to be treated for a gunshot wound. That laid the ghost.”    
 
 Annie said they saw many burials in that church yard.
“One day young Jim [#6] and a friend decided to stage a burial of their own. They dug the shallow grave and the friend stretched out in it. Jim shoveled dirt over him and was reading the burial service when one of the family found him, just in time to rescue the lad.”[v]  

         Jim, Pawtillo, and I searched for stones that said Walton, Atkin, or Batchelor. I now that know none of James and Sarah's Walton family are buried here but James' father and mother could be.

Pawtillo and Jim explore the graveyard
moved headstones

St John the Baptist graveyard 2006

 It was tough slogging. Pawtillo enjoyed the exploration. We saw that nature was embracing the stones with brambles so we decided to walk to the canal to see the locks which is when we first saw Badsey’s Pub where we would meet other Waltons at our 2010 July 4th reunion.

James Walton married Sarah Favel Atkin 1 November 1847

James Walton married Sarah Favel Atkin 

1 November 1847 

The Banner photo is not their wedding - it is the 1913 wedding of a granddaughter, Sarah Hackett (daughter of their 2nd born Lydia Walton) marrying Harry Franks. We have no pictures of James or Sarah.

Elizabeth Anne (known as Liz in England and Annie in America) was their first born. She told her children, “One afternoon in England young James Walton in a jovial mood was walking in town with some friends. His eye caught sight of Sarah Atkin, a petite young woman with large brown eyes. She took his fancy. “If ever I marry, that’s my wife,” he announced, and somehow he managed to do just that.”[i]

In autumn, after the Banns were read, James and Sarah married in the canal town of Hillmorton, Rugby, Warwickshire, England.                                                    

St. John the Baptist

Banns


marriage return James & Sarah Walton

James' father, William Walton

James was born nine miles north in Brinklow. He moved to              Hillmorton with his family when his father, William, came to work on the canal.[ii] James' mother, Elizabeth (Wilson) Walton, died before    James married.
Sarah's father, George Atkin

Sarah, daughter of George Atkin and Martha Esther Oliver, was born in Holbeach, Lincolnshire, 80 miles east. I don’t know when or why she moved to Hillmorton. Her younger sister, Lydia Anne, also came to Hillmorton some time after Sarah's wedding. In a few years Lydia would marry William Batchelor, a local, and raise their nine children in Hillmorton.

Sarah signed her marriage documents with a fine signature. Her mother had signed hers with an X. Education would be a big deal in this family. Sarah’s six and Lydia’s nine children were all born and raised in Hillmorton. Sarah's girls as well as the boys were scholars.

Descendants  from both Sarah and Lydia have kept in touch for 144 years. Down from Sarah  come Walton, Franks, Hackett, Hayes, Miles, Boddington, Clements, Bason, Brookins, Smith, Fitzpatrick,(in England), and more; Sale, Gilbert, Holt, Sockwell (in America). Down from Lydia  come Batchelor, Coggins, Heath, Kaberry, Davidson (in England and Australia)  and more. Many have written, visited, and kept a connection over the years.

Two of Sarah & James great great grandchildren (Jim Hackett and your author) took a 175 mile day trip to see each of the houses James and Sarah  were counted in on the English censuses 1851-1891. See brief timeline below. A future post will present "Jim and Vinnie's Excellent Adventure."

Briefly, here is where they lived, worked, and raised six children -- three boys and three girls:

1851 – The Wharfe, Hillmorton. James and Sarah and their first child, Elizabeth Anne "Liz" or “Annie”  lived at the wharf with his brothers and widowed father. His father worked on the canal, James and one brother were “Ag lab”i.e., "agricultural laborers", another brother was a “blacksmith boy.” Sarah was “housekeeper” for them all. (on a boat?)

1861 Weslyan Chapel, Hillmorton. James and Sarah mostly lived in the Old Vicarage of St. John the Baptist church and cemetery, close to the canal locks. But in 1861 they were counted at the "Methodist Chapel."  James was a successful railroad man. The children were all scholars.

1871    Old Vicarage, Hillmorton. Annie and Lydia were sent to London to learn fine needlework to go into service. Annie’s work as a lady’s maid/companion would take her to America. The boys were RR workers. NOTE: In 1871 Annie was enumerated as in “Serv. Out of place.” 

1881  13 Wood Street, Rugby. James and Sarah moved to Rugby and lived near the RR station and livestock corral. James was “leading coalman of the "R loco dept.” Their son George, a RR “engine fitter,” lived with them, as did daughter Lydia with her husband William Bird Hackett, who was a Railway Engine Driver and first two sons, Frank and Tom (penpal to Granwilla). RR engine driver was such a prestigious job that Lydia was listed as “wife of Engine Driver” and his two young sons  as“son of Engine Driver.”

1891  166 Emscote Road "WALTON LODGE ," Warwick. In 1887 James was killed in a railway accident. Widowed Sarah divided her time between living with the daughter Lydia and her Hackett family in Warwick, or son Tom and his wife on Wood Street in Rugby.

Hillmorton: red circle is St. John the Baptist church

The red circle on the map is St. John the Baptist and the Old Vicarage in Hillmorton where James and Sarah raised their six children right near the two Hillmorton locks.

Below is a photo someone in England sent to Granwilla of the Old Vic on the right, St. John the Baptist on the left. There's a large cemetery attached to St. John the Baptist between the two.

    photo St. John's & Old Vic - sent to Granwilla

Here are two photos taken in 2006. The red arrow shows Old Vic with St. John the Baptist to the right up the hill. An red arrow shows the same house just visible through the trees.This house is not the one marked "Walton Lodge" on the wall, but I think of all their homes as part of our Walton Lodge.

[i] Granwilla’s 1968 memoirs p1. family story

[ii] 2016 video of traveling by canal from Hillmorton to Brinklow, note nearby RR https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y-_dmMYQcEA