Beedham Family HistoryBased on material supplied by Dan Inman previous item | up | next item One of Dan Inman’s genealogy interests is the Beedham family who farmed at Gowthorpe; there were 17 children whose offspring are now widely scattered. Dan’s great-grandmother, Lucy, was one of the 17 and she married his great-grandfather, William Inman, a farmer at East Acklam. Dan has notes on the Beedham family written by George Beedham. These were written in 1930 when George was living in Pocklington. George, one of the 17 children, was born at Gowthorpe in 1844. The following extracts from George Beedham’s notes relate to Gowthorpe and Bishop Wilton: Richard and Mary Hithershew were married at Fenton Church about 1809.
Their children were: Eliza born 1821, married Steel of Poppleton, farmer, and they emigrated to the State of New York in 1851. Jonathan who emigrated to America in 1851 first came to Gowthorpe with my father in 1844. About 1848 he built a steam mill at Bishop Wilton but was unsuccessful. He died in America about 1893 aged 76. The above John Beedham (my father) was helped by the Rev. William Brocklebank to take a small farm called Cold Harbour at Norton Disney. Through a dispute with Colonel Hare he migrated to Gowthorpe, Yorks, Lady Day 1844 where he was successful and died in 1889 aged 79 years. His wife, my mother, was the only daughter of Henry Astling previously mentioned and called Mary. She died at Gowthorpe in 1891 aged 70 years. My father's family by his wife Mary (nee) Astling were: The family of George Beedham (myself) are as follows: Beedham Family Arrival at Gowthorpe Mrs Lily Jebson’s late husband, William Jebson, was the grandson of William and Flora Jebson mentioned above. Lily recalls a story about the arrival of the Beedham family in 1844. They came by train to Fangfoss Station and went to the Gowthorpe farm only to find that they weren’t allowed in due to a mix up over payment. It all had to be sorted out while the mother and children waited outside. Ellen Brigham Ellen Brigham’s Farming Diary for 1911 to 1930 is available for
reference in the Beverley Local Studies Library. The original handwritten
diary was loaned to the library by Ellen’s relatives so that it
could be copied and bound. Written during Ellen’s time at Swynford
House Farm, Gowthorpe, the diary contains references to the farming calendar
and to people, villages and events in the surrounding area. The reference to the steam mill in Bishop Wilton is particularly noteworthy. Located at what is now No. 15, its former existence was known to Owen Robinson who lived there until he died in 1998. He often speculated on its use. Now we know how brief its existence was, it is fortuitous that it was identified on an Ordnance Survey map published in the 1850s. In his book “The East Riding of Yorkshire Landscape”, K. J. Allison says that there were only “a handful of new steam-mills at work in 1850”. Jonathan Beedham Obituary Miraculously, a check for Jonathan Beedham on the Internet returns a newspaper abstract from the Union & Advertiser for Rochester, Monroe, N. Y., dated January 2, 1894: Jonathan BEEDHAM died yesterday morning at 10 Erie Street, aged 70 years. He leaves a wife and five children. The interment will be at Spencerport. George & Matilda Beedham George Beedham, the writer of the notes, died in 1932. He is buried at Bishop Wilton with the inscription “… 40 years a servant of the G.N.R.; 18 years manager of Bread St. Depot, London.” George’s wife, Ellen Matilda, who died in 1924, is also buried in Bishop Wilton. Her inscription also includes “George, elder son of the above who lost his life in submarine A.8., June 8th, 1905. (Interred at Plymouth).” The fate of the A.8. submarine is commemorated on the Internet at: http://www.cyberheritage.org/a8loss/ Above the title “Heroes all of Them” is a montage of photographs of the crew, both those who drowned and those who were saved. One of these is George Beedham, ERA. His grave at Plymouth, Devonport and Stonehouse Cemetery, Ford Park, Plymouth bears the inscription: George Beedham, Engine Room Artificer, 27 yrs, of Winchmore Cottage, Stamford Bridge, York. Next kin, sister Bertha. |
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