Showing posts with label Hanrott. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Hanrott. Show all posts

Thursday, November 15, 2012

A Change of Name



Changing one's name turns out to be easy (well, it did for me at least). My parents divorced, and subsequently remarried, so although my birth certificate and medical records have one name, that of my biological father, my school records were in my stepfather's name. When I turned 16, my grandparents paid for me to legally change my name to Stuart-Tilley, combining the two. This seems worth documenting to reduce the frustration of future genealogists wondering what happened to me! In fact my name had already changed by common usage to Tilley. However, on the change of name deed, I was changing from Stuart to Stuart-Tilley - the only time I have signed my name "Alan Stuart".

To return to Zoe Davina HaltonYoung. One question is when she acquired the name Hanrott. Another is her familial relationship with Mary Anne Dover Hanrott, listed in the same household as cousins in the 1871 census.

In the 1851 England Census, Charlotte Taylor was living in the same boarding house with her mother Sarah H Taylor (widow, age 51, born in Walbrook, Middlesex), and her future husband, James Denoon Young. On their parish marriage record her father is listed as William. Searching for a baptismal record of Charlotte Taylor, I found an entry for St Michael Royal, City of London for a double baptism on 2 March 1826 for William Lonsdale (born 19 July 1824) and Charlotte (born 15 January 1826), the children of William Taylor, Solicitor of 3 Clock Lane, and his wife Sarah Halton. Note that James Denoon and Charlotte name one of their sons Lonsdale Denoon; this is most certainly the baptismal record of Zoe's mother.

Incorporating this information, the next search (for a marriage record) revealed the marriage 13 December 1821 at St Thomas the Apostle, City of London between William Taylor and Sarah Halton Birkett, that is, Zoe's maternal grandparents. Looking for more parish register records of this name, I found what was labeled a burial, but on examination turned out to be a baptism, in fact two baptisms on May 26th and July 21st 1799 of Mary Ann (born 23rd January 1797) and Sarah Halton (born 28th April 1799), daughters of John Birkett and his wife Charlotte, of the parish of St Stephen Walbrook (Middlesex). These, then, are Zoe's grandmother, great-aunt and great-grandparents.

And so to research the wife of Howard Augustus Hanrott, the Solicitor,who turns out to be Mary Anne Dover Fearon, daughter of John Hodgson Fearon, Captain in the Army, according to the marriage record in 1862. By this time, he had been dead seven years, but has left to posterity some interesting records. The Asiatic Journal confirms his service in the 63rd Foot in Moulmein (now Mawlamyine), Burma, Mary Anne's birthplace. Another daughter had been born in 1836 in Madras. This is the period of the uniform depicted on Quality Street toffees (and, for privates, in the right-most illustration above). But in 1839, he left Burma on furlough for health reasons, and next shows up in copies of the London Gazette for 1843, seeking protection under the 1842 Act for the Relief of Insolvent Debtors. He was buried at St George Battersea in 1855.

Pallot's Marriage Index records the marriage of John Hodgson Fearon and Mary Ann Birkett in Croydon, 1833. Parish records, if they exist, could confirm these identities as the future Captain Fearon, and Zoe's great Aunt. If so, Mary Anne Dover Hanrott and Zoe Davina Halton Young were first cousins once removed, through the Birkett sisters who were baptized in 1799.

Mary Ann Birkett turns out to be a fairly common name. For example, one of the right age was an unmarried schoolteacher in the 1861 England Census. There is at least one other John Hodgson Fearon, baptized in 1825, possibly the son of the above from a previous marriage - although, obviously too young for an 1833 marriage!. Also the Pallot's Index has some anotations which have been transcribed as Esq. and Jas Wester. Esq[uire] could mean that he was "more than a gentleman", or that he was a lawyer, or many other things. But I wonder if the scrawled note is Ens[ign], the most junior infantry officer rank in 1833. I also wonder if the other words mean St Ja[me]s, Westm[inste]r, where the banns had been read, and then transferred to Croydon.


Having been unsuccessful searching the 1881 England Census for Zoe, I searched for Mary Anne Hanrott. The fuzzy-logic allowed for few enough possible hits for me to scroll someway down the first page to a "Mary B Henrott", Head, Widower, Age 42, Annuitant, born in the East Indies. In the same household, at 20 Edgerton Road, Greenwich, was ___ Henrott, Daur., Unm., Age 21. The ink is faint, but I can definitely make out "Zoe _ H Y Do", the "Do" being ditto for Hanrott!

Among the pleasures of genealogy are the historical snippets I discover as background information. A question has arisen of whether Zoe Young was adopted by the Hanrotts. Well, the legal answer would have to be no. I learned that adoptions were not formally recognized in the UK until 1926. However, historians also note that de facto adoptions must have been quite common given the mortality rate. According to probate records, when her father, James Denoon Young died in 1868, Zoe's mother was still alive. Zoe Young came to the Hanrott household before 1871 when she was eleven years old. I speculate that Charlotte Taylor died between 1868 and 1871. However she understood the adoption process, by 1881 Zoe had acquired the surname Hanrott, and Mary Ann reckoned her a daughter.

Howard Augustus Hanrott died in 1880, and so does not appear in the 1881 England Census. Mary Ann remarried in 1885 to Henry Cowland (the Legal Clerk who was residing at their household during the 1871 England Census, now an Estate Agent). 


One of the witness signatures to the wedding is that of Zoe Davina Halton Young Hanrott - in her own hand. In another year she would use this signature for the last time, as she married Ardeshir Kapadia.



Monday, November 12, 2012

How Many Ways to Spell Zoe?





In my first week at grammar school, I remember my fountain pen leaking a mass of black ink, taking most of English class to clean up. My calligraphy skills improved however, under the tutelage of Mr. Jones, and with the use of a cartridge pen which seemed less apt to explode in my hands. Ball point pens and subsequently the word processor have all but reduced my handwriting to scrawl. It is comforting to know my scrawl is in good historical company, when I read handwritten entries to parish registers, census returns or the birth index, and find the whole range from beautiful penmanship to illegible scratching. Errors of transcription abound, and I can only make sense of some entries in relation to what I expect to see by looking at others.

And so it was in tracing the origins of Ardeshir Kapadia's wife. The BMD Marriage Index for Mar1886 Lambeth 1d 559 records the marriage of Ardeshir Kapadia to Zoe Davinia HY Hanrott. I could find nothing prior to that. There were the some possibilities: D might be Davinia or Davina, the H might be Halton, the Y possibly Yates. Zoe appears to be a particularly difficult word to transcribe. For example, the 1891 Census had "Loe". Perhaps the database searches came up empty because of mistranscription.

I was hoping to find Zoe hidden among the few families bearing the name Hanrott. The 1851 UK Census has Philip Augustus Hanrott senior, and a large household of grown children and minor grandchildren. Many of the gentlemen were solicitors, perhaps a link with Ardeshir Kapadia the barrister. One of those grandchildren Howard Augustus Hanrott (transcribed as Hansell) shows up on the 1871 UK Census with his wife Mary Ann Dover Hanrott (transcribed Mary Aaron Love Hansell) along with "Lee Devin Heston Young", which, with my eyes half-closed I could convince myself was Zoe Davina Horton Young, age 11, cousin of Howard's wife.

From here I found the 1861 UK Census with "Lan DK Young" age 1 living with mother Charlotte, older step siblings Jemima and James, and brothers Haydon C and Lonsdale D. And then her baptism, and census records associated with her father, James Denoon Young and mother Charlotte. In many records Denoon appears as "Denson". So here are the census returns for the Young family:

1841 Scotland Census at 7 High Street, Perth, Scotland
James DenoonYoung Head Age 30 Ironmonger
Jemima JessieYoung Wife Age 20
JemimaYoung Daur Age 1
Helen Dewar (60) Charlotte Murie (15) are F.S. (family servants?)

Jemima Jessie Young is James's first wife. She died before census time in 1851 since:

1851 England Census for Brompton
James D Young widower Age 40 Iron Founder and Engineer of Scotland
Sarah H Taylor widow Age 50 Accountant of Walbrook, Middlesex
Charlotte Taylor daur (of Sarah) Age 25 of College Hill, Middlesex
Zoe Taylor daur (of Sarah) Age 10 of St. Giles, Middlesex

And 23 December 1851 James Denoon Young, Engineer and Charlotte Taylor were married at Holy Trinity Church, Brompton. No sign of Jemima, the younger in 1851, but she returns to her father's household, along with her younger brother in time for:

1861 England Census for Brixton
Charlotte Young married Age 31
Jemima Young stepdaughter Age 21
James Young stepson Age 16
Haydon C Young son Age 6
Lonsdale D Young son Age 2
Zoe DH Young daur Age 1
(Eliza Shubert 22 and Anna Ling 21 are servants)



Zoe's BMD Birth Index entry is Dec1859 Lambeth 1d 406. I could not find it before because Zoe has been transcribed and alphabetized as "Joe" in the handwritten 19th century copy of the register! She was baptized 15 February 1860 in the parish of St Michael, Stockwell, Surrey; a modern transcriber wrote "Loe". There are also baptismal records for Haydon Charles and Lonsdale Denoon Young.

No sign of James Sr. in 1861. However, James Denoon Young died 19 April 1868 and was buried 25 April; he was 55 years old. I have yet to discover when Charlotte Young died, or how Zoe acquired Hanrott as a surname. But I do have Zoe's full name: Zoe Davina Halton Young Hanrott; and her parents: James Denoon Young and Charlotte Taylor. Charlotte Taylor's parents are William Taylor and Sarah H (could that be Halton?); James Denoon Young's father is James Young and mother possibly Denoon.

Needless to say, this is all written up as a word file alongside new transcriptions and digital copies of as many of the original records as I could find. But I'm thinking I should find an ink calligraphy pen to create a pedigree chart or family tree that would make Mr. Jones proud.