Showing posts with label history. Show all posts
Showing posts with label history. Show all posts

Thursday, 17 December 2015

Prestwick Chapel Baptisms



Baptisms at Prestwick Wesleyan Methodist Church

88 baptisms between 1888 and 1949 appear to have taken place- including the following.

The first is:

12th June 1888 Phillis daughter of Joshua and Mary Jane Turner of Pit Houses Prestwick Born 10th may 1888 Minister was J B Charles

19th March 1891 Meggie Lizzie daughter of James and Ann Taylor of Prestwick. Born 14th February 1891. Baptised by Joseph Robinson

1st March 1892 William son of John and Frances Orkney of Prestwick born 20th may 1891 baptised by E O Coleman

14th October 1895 Lydia Ann daughter of James and Annie (sic) of Prestwick born March 30th 1895. Baptised by Edward Dannett

24th January 1898 John Fenwick son of James and Annie (sic) Taylor of Prestwick Born 11th March 1897 baptised by Edward Dannett

30th August 1909 James Richard son of Federick and Maggie Heslop of Prestwick born 21st July 1909. Baptised by J Loder Nattrass.

2nd December 1913 John Robert son of Robert and Mary Scott of West Farm Prestwick born 8th November 1913 baptised by Philip Hawks.

11th January 1920 Mary daughter of James Temple and Isabella Orkney of Prestwick born 12th December 1919

12th December 1920 Olive daughter of John and Ann Elizabeth Orkney born 16th Nov 1920
15th Sept 1946 Joan Lesley daughter of Andrew and Winifred Scott of Lodge farm Prestwick

26th December 1948 daughter of above of 4 Hutment , Tranwell, Morpeth

Last baptism
3rd December 1949 Cynthia Joyce daughter of Andrew and Winifred Scott of 4 hutment, Tranwell, Morpeth.

Taken from Register of Baptisms at Prestwick Methodist Church
Held by Tyne and Wear Archives ref C/PW1/2

Saturday, 8 December 2012

More on Street House or Prestwick House or The Badger

Solicitors' documents, deposited at the Northumberland Record Office in 1959, provide much of the information about the owners and occupiers of Street Houses during the 18th and 19th centuries, and also make it possible to attempt to fix the boundaries of the property after 1724.

By 1724 Jane Carr (nee Shafto) was the sole surviving member of Lawrence Shafto's family and, together with her second husband, Robert Carr, owned the west part of Prestwick. They had been married with a lycence in May 1692 in Bedlington ; in 1693 he was overseer of ye poor for Prestwick .

A family settlement of 1724 arranged for the estate to be divided equally between Robert Carr's two daughters, Mary, wife of John Coulter, and Dorothy Carr. Failing heirs from the Carr sisters, the inheritance would go to their four older half-sisters, daughters of Jane Carr and her first husband, William Fenwick. He had been vicar of Lesbury and Shilbottle and had died there in September 1688 .

A deed drawn up in 1733 deals specifically with the part of Prestwick West Farm known as Mengeys (or Mindseys) Close, the site of what was to be known later as Street House Farm. Described as a Messuage Tenement and Close with John Coulter as the tenant, the property was to be for his use during the lifetime of his parents-in-law. Since John Coulter was of the Town and county of Newcastle, he and his family may not have lived at Prestwick. The Coulters were married, in 1716, at St. John's, Newcastle, where their four sons and seven daughters were all baptised .

Jane Carr was buried at Ponteland 7 May 1736 and her husband the following February , leaving their two daughters tenants in common of Prestwick West Farm.

John Coulter, tobacconist and feltmaker , died in 1743. According to the Land Tax Returns for 1748, 1750 and 1753, Mrs Coulter was liable for the tax on a property in Prestwick, whether as owner or occupant is not clear.
In 1756 Mary Coulter of Newcastle and Shafto Coulter of the same place Merchant eldest son and Heir of the said Mary Coulter..had documents drawn up to destroy the entail (so that the possessor would be allowed to sell the property outright) on all that full undivided moiety or half part of Prestwick West Farm.

Mrs Coulter's will was proved in 1774. In 1779, Shafto Coulter and Robert Carr [cousins] were . . Tenants in common for life of Prestwick West Farm containing by Estimation 200 acres and wanted to divide the estate between them. Since the capital messuage [large house i.e. Prestwick Hall] and the greatest part of the other Houses and Buildings [had] fallen to the lot of the said Robt. Carr Shafto Coulter was to be awarded £122.10s. to be paid by ...Robt. Carr together with a further £2 in view of the greater value of wood piling in Robt. Carr's allotment. This £124. 10s. was to be extended and laid out by Shafto Coulter in making and erecting a new Dwellinghouse outhouses and other necessar,' Buildings upon the said Premises so awarded to him.

The new house was a well designed, U-shaped farmstead. Solidly built of stone, it had a meticulously balanced brick facade facing the road. The two-storied central portion was flanked by two single-storey wings, housing the kitchen and a large reception room. The rest of the farmstead included: good Stabling, Coach House, Dog Kennel, Dove-Cot, a Garden walled with bricks, with other Offices and Outhouses, besides all necessary Buildings for a Tenant.

The dove-cot was artistically positioned in the field opposite, so as to be visible from the main windows of the house.

Wednesday, 5 December 2012

Turner and Young colliery owners

The workforce of "Turner and Young" at Prestwick colliery circa 1900. Joshua Turner is seated second from the left in the front row with Robert Turner third from the left in the front row.
Seated first on the left is James Taylor who went on to sink two new shafts for the  Prestwick Coal Company in 1904 when Turner and Young sold their interest.


Tuesday, 13 November 2012

PC Wanderings a Blog not to miss





 
Apologies  to Peter for this repost but I'm sure many will like to see the latest entry and indeed many of his other posts at PC Wanderings.
AND don't miss



Tuesday, 16 October 2012

Prestwick Colliery Home Guard



Back Row: Officer from Woolsington? Gordon Taylor (aged 16) ? from Woolsington, "Buck" Graham, Tommy Strangeways, George Barras, "Reggie" Graham, Billy Weightman
Mid Row: Cyril Graham, ?, Jack Coulson, Wilson Scott, "Robbie" Graham, Jack Lynch, 
Front row: John Guy, Mick lynch, Stan Taylor, Ronnie Lynch, Tommy Winthrop, "Tucker" Robson, Stan Simpson

Friday, 7 September 2012

Prestwick Hall 1900




The 1911 Census shows that Prestwick Hall was occupied by 71 year old William Boyd and his of 40 years, 70 year old Jane Diana together with cook, Ellen Brown and 4 other female servants.

William Boyd, born in Arncliffe, Yorkshire, birth, first came to Wallsend in 1874, when he was invited to become managing director of the Wallsend Slipway Co. Under his direction the small shipyard became a major marine engine building concern, erecting the first steel boilers on the Tyne in 1878. Mr Boyd retired from management at the end of 1911.

He was involved in Wallsend local government from May 1878, when he became a member of the Local Board of Health. In April of the following year he was elected chairman of the board, and served in that position until 1894, when it was replaced by the new district council, of which he became the first chairman. Mr Boyd was elected an Alderman and first Mayor of the new council and continued to serve until October 2, 1906. On Wednesday, June 19, 1907, William Boyd laid the foundation stone for Wallsend's new Town Hall when a Freedom Ceremony was opened for him. By this time he had moved to Cheltenham, where he died in 1919.

The
North East Coast Institution of Engineers and Shipbuilders was founded in November 1884 at the instigation of William Geddes Spence (1860-1946) of R.W. Hawthorn's marine engine works. William Boyd (1839-1919) Managing Director of the Wallsend Slipway and Engineering Works served as its first President and is widely recognised as being the leading force behind the Institution's creation.

Monday, 13 August 2012

The Prestwick Hoard

In 1890 13 bronze vessels and a possible handle were ploughed up on Prestwick Carr 350 yards north of Prestwick Whins Farm. This camp kitchen set contained a cauldron, 4 bowls, one basin and 7 saucepans. Though battered and patched, the names of two makers and three owners survived on 4 of the vessels. Of the 13, 7 were donated to the Society of Antiquaries by the landowner, Charles Loraine Bell of Woolsington. The cauldron disappeared before the publication of the group in volume XIII of the Northumberland County History (1926) and the other 5 pieces subsequently also vanished.