Wednesday, July 9, 2014

The Tailor and Dressmaker of Hereford

The Old House, Hereford

So far, I know my 4xgreat grandfather William Hardman was a provision merchant married to Elizabeth Willis and had four children by her, baptized between 1827 and 1834 in Worcester. Among his grandchildren is Edith Simmonds Hardman (my 2xgreat grandmother). Her middle name always seemed to me to recall a maiden surname somewhere in her ancestry, but up to this point I hadn't discovered where.

I have found no census returns for William Hardman, although I do have them for the four children, baptized in Worcester: John (Captain of the Mizzen Top, my 3xgreat grandfather), James (Labourer in Bristol), Thomas (Tailor in Hereford) and Elizabeth (Wife of John Green Winter who moved to Glasgow). It was a census return of Thomas the Tailor which caught my eye.

In 1851, on East Street at Hereford St Owen, in the household of James Hardman:
       James Hardman  Head             Mar  52  Tailor                   Herefordsh Hereford
       Mary       Do         Wife              Mar  49  Dressmaker               do               do
       Thomas  Do         Nephew          U     21  Tailor                   Worcestersh Worcester
       William Wilson  Father in law     W    75  Sergeant at Mace Herefordsh Hereford

As for finding William Hardman's relatives, Thomas the nephew is consistent with Thomas Hardman, son of William and Elizabeth, who was baptized 11 October 1829 in Worcester. And this would make James Hardman the head of household, William's brother.

Mary's father, William Wilson, was one of the civic officials who carried who carried the ceremonial mace at council meetings, etc. It is with him that we find the family in 1861, at 12 Price's Hospital in Hereford, which a brief google search shows to be almshouses founded in 1665.
       William Wilson   Head        Widr 85  Resident in Hospital        Hereford Hereford
                                                            (formerly Sergeant at Mace)
       Mary Hardman   daur          Mar  59  Dressmaker                                 do
       James    do        son in law  do    62  Tailor                                          do
       Thomas do        Grandson           11  Scholar                                 do      Hoarwithy
       Thomas do         Visitor       Un    31  Tailor                               Worcester Worcester

In 1871, we find them at 1 Gloster Plce, All Saints, Hereford. By this time William Wilson must have died, and Thomas grandson is no longer present:
       James Hardman  Head       Mar  72  Tailor      Hereford
       Mary     do           Wife         do    69                        do
       Thomas do          Nephew  Unm 41  Tailor      Worcester
       Thomas Williams   do         do    20  Plumber  Hereford Hoarwithy

Thomas Williams in 1871 may be the same as Thomas Hardman the grandson in 1861, with the latter surname incorrectly given. That he is a grandson to William Wilson does not mean that he is a son to James and Mary Hardman. I see no records of baptisms for possible children of James and Mary, leading me to the conclusion that they may not have had children of their own. Nor do I see a civil registration for Thomas Hardman born 1848-52 in Herefordshire - plenty of Thomas Williamses, though. I'm guessing he is an adopted son.

Just possibly James and Mary had also adopted William and Elizabeth's Thomas as well. Had they died before 1841, that would explain the lack of records for them. But it would not be uncommon for a child to be apprenticed out to an uncle, so I'll not give up on the records.

In 1881, Thomas Hardman is a lodger, aged 51, still a tailor, living at 21 Lower Castle Street, Abergavenny, after which I lose track of him. As well as documenting the life of a putative 4xgreat uncle, it also provides a clue to finding the origins of a 5xgreat uncle and his brother, my direct ancestor William Hardman Provision Merchant.

Thomas Hardman (my 5xgreat uncle), according to his census returns was born about 1798-99 in Hereford. My next stop was familysearch.org to look for Hardmans born in Hereford around this time. England Births and Christenings 1538-1975 shows baptisms for two families, both at St John Baptist, Hereford.

For parents parents William and Mary Hardman:
       Hester Hardman  15 Mar 1787
       Mary Hardman    28 Mar 1793

For parents James Hardman and Mary:
       Thomas Hardman  30 Aug 1784
       Mary Hardman       9  Sep 1786
       James Hardman     15 Dec 1789
       John Hardman       11 Mar 1794
       Richard Hardman  26 Jun 1796
       James Hardman     24 Sep 1798  (the older sibling James must have died)

There is no William Hardman baptized here around this time, but there is:
     William Hoardman  23 Jan 1792 (parents: James and Mary)

Which I would hazard as another of this sibling group. There is no other Hoardman baptism, and the date fits the series of baptisms well. Note especially, the consistency of James Hardman baptized in 1798 and the James Hardman Tailor of the censuses. In addition, England Marriages 1538-1973 has
       James Hardman and Mary Symonds 10 April 1783 at St Martin Hereford

In an age before standardized spelling, Symonds and Simmonds are surely the same name, and a clue that I am on to something. James Hardman and Mary Symonds are my 5xgreat grandparents. In addition, there are other Symonds connections.

Of the Hereford baptisms to James and Mary Hardman, I have found no direct evidence for William (Hoardman), my direct ancestor, although I have so far shown evidence for his children and brother James. I ought to be able to find some of the other children, if they lived into their 50 and 60s, of this couple.

In 1841, I find at Packer's Lane, Hereford St John, Thomas Hardman, age 56, Bottler, with household: Phoebe Hardman (presumably his wife), age 54; Mary Bowson, age 30, Straw Bonnet Maker; Elizabeth Hardman (presumably a daughter), age 17; and William Hardman (presumably a son), age 20. By 1851, Thomas (66), Wine Cooper, and Phoebe (64) are at 8 Price's Hospital, Hereford.

Searching for Thomas and Phoebe's children discovers the following baptisms:
       James Hardman       28 Mar 1813  All Saints Hereford
       Thomas Hardman    15 Jan 1817   St John Baptist Hereford
       William Hardman     9 Dec 1820  St John Baptist Hereford
       Elizabeth Hardman 10 Nov 1824  St John Baptist Hereford

John Hardman, with (presumed) wife Sarah and daughters Eliza, Elizabeth and Emily, is also in Hereford in 1841, where he had been baptized. However, his 1851 census at Bowsey Lane or Portfields, Hereford shows some evidence of movement:
       John         Hardman  Head  Mar  57  Accountant       [Hereford]
(new page)
       Sarah        Hardman Wife  Mar  56                            Ludlow Salop
       Sarah             Do      Daur   U     29 School Mistress     Do      Do
       Elizabeth A    Do      Daur   U     20  Assistant Do      Hereford
       Emily             Do      Daur   U     18                                 Do

Searching for baptisms in Ludlow and Hereford (parents John Hardman and Sarah) discovers the following:
       John Hardman                         22 Nov 1818 in Ludlow
       Caroline Simmonds Hardman  5 Sep 1820 in Ludlow
                                           (burial 30 Sep 1821, and father John Simmonds Hardman)
       Sarah Hardman                        26 Apr 1822 in  Ludlow
       Mary Hardman                        27 Jun 1824 in Ludlow
       James Henry Hardman             9 Jul 1826 at St Peter Hereford
       Eliza Hardman                         22 Jan 1829 at All Saints Hereford
       Elizabeth Alice Hardman        27 Feb 1831 at All Saints Hereford
       Emily Hardman                       24 Feb 1833 at St Peter Hereford

Four of the daughters (Sarah, Eliza, Elizabeth and Emily) may be found in the 1841 and/or 1851 census returns for John and Sarah Hardman, while Caroline Simmonds Hardman is clearly a granddaughter of James Hardman and Mary Symonds.

Richard Hardman and wife Katherine are found in 1851, eight houses before John and Sarah, where he is the landlord at the purportedly now-haunted Wellington Arms in Widemarsh Street:
       Richard Hardman   Head       Mar  54  Innkeeper    Hereford        [Herefordshire]
       Katherine  Do         Wife         Mar  50                      Mansell Lacy            Do
       George      Do         Son          U    20   Clerk           Hereford                   Do
       Charles      Do        Son           U   16   Scholar             Do                        Do
       Ann S         Do        Daur               14      Do                 Do                        Do
       Alfred         Do        Son                 12      Do                 Do                       Do
       Emily S      Do        Daur                10      Do                 Do                        Do
       Katherine S  Do      Daur                 7       Do                Do                        Do
       Susan Guy        Sister in law    U   44  Barmaid       Mansell Lacy             Do
       Richard Guy     Brother in law  U   35  Groom         Hereford                    Do
       Martha Cook        Serv             U   16  House Serv  Dinedor                     Do

England Select Marriages 1538-1973 has the marriage of Richard Hardman and Catherine Guy 20 November 1825 at St John Baptist Hereford.

No prizes for guessing the middle initial S of his daughters. England Birth and Christenings 1538-1975 have the following baptisms to Richard and Catherine Hardman:
       Richard Hardman                  5 Sep 1826 at St John Baptist Hereford
       Ann Simmonds Hardman   18 Nov 1836  at All Saints Hereford
       Emily Simmond Hardman   30 Apr 1841 at All Saints Hereford

So far I have not found baptisms for George, Charles, Alfred or Katherine, but there is the following civil registration:
       BMD Birth Index Catherine Symonds Hardman Jun1843 Hereford 26 179

Thus, the name Simmonds/Symonds/Simmond connects my direct ancestor William Hardman, Provision Merchant, whose granddaughter was Edith Simmonds Hardman, with the baptisms 1784-1798 at St John Baptist Hereford of the children of James and Mary Hardman. And it is this mother whose maiden surname is Symonds.

3 comments:

  1. Alan, have you looked into the Symonds/Simmonds connection relating to Jane Hardman b. 1821, married name Leicester? She emmigrated to Australia and had a daughter named Jane Simmonds Leicester in 1854.

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    Replies
    1. Thanks, Janet, for taking time to ask. In short - yes, I have some information on Jane Hardman. Ann Symonds Hardman (married Kurn and Smith) mentions her in a declaration of identity (see the post Hardmans Down Under and Elsewhere). I see James Leicester and Jane in the 1851 England Census; and the baptisms of two of their children (Adelia Symonds Reynolds Leicester b.1846 and Richard William John Leicester b.1849) in England, and birth record for another in Adelaide, Australia, Jane Simmonds Leicester 19 Nov 1854. On 29 Feb 1880 Jeanette Jane Symonds Leicester marries Tom Charles Shepherd Anthony. Jane dies 21 Jul 1871 in Norwood, Adelaide, South Australia, and her husband James Isaac George Leicester dies 23 May 1869 in Lefevre Peninsula, Adelaide, South Australia. If you want more information or have more to share, please contact me stuarttilleygen@gmail.com

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  2. May I add another Symonds Hardman to the list, who brings with him his own conundrum of quite what he was doing there when he died - unless it is some connection yet to be discovered between the Leicester name or Janet's branch of the family moving to Australia...or some other reason entirely.

    You show above the family of John Hardman and Sarah. I have yet to identify any further details about Sarah, or to find a marriage, but the suspicion is that it must have been in Ludlow. Initially John appears to have been a school master in Bye St and Bewell St. Subsequently John is described in all cases as an Accountant, and looks from the entries in the Hereford Times and Hereford Journal to have worked for the Council when he got back to Hereford. For many years he acted as Secretary and Collector of the Hereford Art Union and for the Literary and Philosophical Institution of the City. In many fund raising situations, he was the man trusted with looking after the money. He was also a witness (with Sarah Wilson) on the marriage certificate of his daughter Eliza at All Saints Hereford in 1855 to who I am related. This marriage, like his Grandfather James, was by Licence but this range of licences appears lost from the records. His family shows 6 daughters, although only 4 show in the 1841 census, and two sons of which neither show. James I assume had died because John is described as John's only son in his obituary, age 21 in Prince of Wales Island, East Indies. This obituary appears not only in the Pinang Gazette of 12 June 1841, but also in the Hereford Times and Journal some 4 months later, in October. John Symonds Hardman, only son of John Symonds Hardman of this City died:

    "On Saturday last, the 5th instant, at the residence of Mr J Hogan, in Province Wellesley, of bilious fever, John Symonds Hardman esq. Professor of Music, aged 21 years."

    Subsequently in March 1842, some poetry appeared in the Hereford newspapers dedicated to the said John Symonds Hardman.

    A number points raise an eyebrow here: (1) that he was in Penang, (2) that he died at the residence of Mr J Hogan, Senior Collector of Land Revenue, second only to Stamford Raffles and great friend of the similarly powerful Leicester family, and (3) Professor of Music?

    These mysteries are yet to unfold. I have found two references to JS Hardman (Jnr) in the Hereford Newspapers.

    1. On 30 July 1836 it was reported that young men from the City had lately amused themselves by employing their leisure hours in the manly and healthful exercise of rowing on the River Wye. The £5 prize for winning 2 mile course from the bridge, up the pool, round a boat moored off Handerton and back again was won by the boat Paul Pry crewed by J Hardman, J Pitt, P Dallow and J Reid (J Powell Coxswain).

    2. On 30 November 1836 a Kington Grand Concert was advertised where JS Hardman Jun. invited the nobility, gentry and inhabitants of Kington and its vicinty where he would stage a concert of vocal and instrumental music at the Assembly Rooms on 5th December. Tickets of 5s each to be had at The Swan Inn and at Mr J Wilson, Kington.

    Ian West

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