John and Mary Green had nine children. Their children are John Traviss Squire's siblings and first cousins.
- 41.2.1 - Agnes Green (1826-1918)
- 41.2.2 - Abigail Green (1829-1878) m Elijah Bottom
- Henry Green (1851)
- Married Ellen Hardcastle (1852-1910)
- He was a coal miner, and they lived at 15 High Street, Barnsley; 24 Berry Row in 1891
- Children:
- Mary Catherine Green (1874)
- (George Thomas) Frederick Green (1876)
- 1901: He was a road labourer for the corporation. 24 Berry Row, Barnsley. 1911: Back High? Barnsley.
- Mary Ann Agnes Bottom (1854)
- 1871: At home in Barugh, Barnsley. Linen weaver.
- Married Edgar Hyde (1850-1918)
- He is a coal miner. They live at 5 Sykes Street, Barnsley.
- Children:
- Charles William Hyde (1873)
- James Hyde (1874)
- Arthur Hyde (1875)
- Abigail Hyde (1878)
- Rose Anna Hyde (1879)
- Agnes Ann Hyde (1883)
- John Hyde (1887)
- Edgar Hyde (1891)
- Mary Ann Hyde (1894)
- Richard Hyde (1895)
- Ernest Hyde (1896)
- 1901: 12 Keresforth Hill Road, Barnsley [now the A6133]
- Oserick Bottom (1856-1857)
- John Oserick Bottom (1864-1936)
- 1881: At home in Barugh. Collier labourer (16)
- Married Mary Ann Ingham (1866-1954) at St George, Barnsley in 1887
- Children:
- Annie Ingham (1885, step-daughter)
- Osrick Bottom (1888)
- John Edward Bottom (1890)
- Frederick Bottom (1892)
- Alice Bottom (1895)
- Edith Bottom (1898)
- Horace Bottom (1900)
- Edna Bottom (1900)
- Walter Bottom (1903)
- Arthur Bottom (1905)
- 1891: Sharing 42 Longcar Street, Barnsley with another coal miner's family.
- Most of the houses where the family lived have been cleared. In this case, the whole street has disappeared. It used to be to the right of the Longcar Inn.
- 1901: Court 1, No 1, Keresforth Hill Road. 1911: 100 Denton Row, Kingstone Place.
|
Barnsley, 1960s, with streets since lost
Note Old Town to NW of town centre |
- Zachariah Bottom (1870-1899)
- 1891: At home with his widowed mother at 8 Howard St, Worsbrough [Common]. Handloom weaver, like his mother. Died 8 years later.
- 41.2.3 - Charles Green (1831-1904) m Fanny Wilkinson (1837)
- 41.2.4 - Ann Green (1833)
- 41.2.5 - Mary Green (1835-1889) m Isaac Sykes (1837-1920)
- Elizabeth Ann Sykes (1858)
- Married Walter Holmes (1882-1924)
- He was a coal miner, and they lived at 166 High Street, Eckington, Derbyshire [Sheffield]
- The Eckington mine was a drift mine, i.e. driven horizontally into the side of a hill. It closed unexpectedly in 2019.
- Children:
- Mary H Holmes (1879)
- Bertha Holmes (1882). Bertha died in 1900.
- Eva Holmes (1885)
- Agnes Holmes (1886)
- Walter Holmes (1889)
- Herbert Holmes (1892)
- Emma Holmes (1895)
- Arthur Holmes (1896)
- Annie Holmes (1901)
- 1891/1901: 34 Pleasant View Street, Barnsley
- 1911: 80 Carlton Terrace. This was near Carlton Main Colliery which had closed the previous year (later reopening as part of Wharncliffe Woodmoor, closing again in 1970). With the aid of my old map, I've found it now. The street has been obliterated too.
- He was now a Sewage Manager in Carlton, working for the council. The old map shows the small sewage works next to the railway line. There is a car breaker across the tracks.
- Emma Sykes (1861)
- Married James Phillips (1857-1924) at St Mary, Barnsley in 1878.
|
Church of St Mary, Barnsley (credit) |
- He was a coal miner, and they shared 3 Foundry Street with another coal miner's family
- Children:
- Eliza Philips (1881)
- Mary Elizabeth Philips (1882)
- Emma Philips (1884)
- Alice Philips (1886)
- Lily Philips (1888)
- Annie Philips (1891)
- James Philips (1893). James died in 1893.
- Laura Philips (1895)
- William Philips (1896)
- Ada Philips (1898)
- John Philips (1900)
- Harry Philips (1902)
- 1891/1901/1911: He is a colliery deputy, then hewer; they live in Sydney Terrace, Ardsley, Barnsley; 6 Alexandra Terrace in 1911
- Sarah Sykes (1863)
- Married Cephas Thorpe (1860-1923) in Sheffield in 1881
- He was a coal miner and they lived in 3 Conway's Court, Monk Bretton, Barnsley. Monk Bretton Colliery opened in 1870, extracting coal from the Barnsley Seam.
The colliery was modernised on nationalisation and pit head baths,
which still stand today, were opened. A village Miners' Welfare Hall was
opened in Cross Street. The colliery was closed in 1968.
|
Butter Cross, Monk Bretton (credit) |
- Children:
- Cephas Thorpe (1883)
- Isaac Thorpe (1885)
- Jabez Thorpe (1887)
- Mary Ellen Thorpe (1889)
- John Frank Thorpe (1891)
- Lottie Thorpe (1893)
- Laurence Thorpe (1895)
- Agnes Thorpe (1897)
- 1901: High Cudworth Street, Cudworth, Barnsley
- John Thomas Sykes (1865-1897)
- 1881: Doncaster Road Hospital and Dispensary, Rotherham. Coal miner trammer [i.e. an assistant or transporter], aged 17
- Married Mary Ellen Igtres (1867) in Barnsley in 1887
- Children:
- Died in Barnsley, aged 31
- Polly Sykes (1867-1902)
- No record found after 1871, save that of death, in Leeds
- Charles William Sykes (1870-1871)
- Lily Sykes (1872-1942)
- 1891: Domestic servant at Herman Fielding's grocery shop, High Green, Ecclesfield
- Married Matthew Bell (1869-1946) in Barnsley in 1891
- Mathew is a coal miner, and they live at 69 Pinfold Hill, Barnsley, next door to a bobbin winder, and close to the Shambles.
- Children:
- Thomas Frederick Bell (1892)
- Joseph Bell (1899)
- John Allen Bell (1902)
- Edith Bell (1906)
- Elizabeth Bell (1909)
- Ada Bell (1911)
- Died during WWII in Staincross, Barnsley
|
Isaac Sykes |
- 1881: Married Mary Maria Whyatt (1880-1921) in Barnsley in 1896
- Coal miner. They lived at 5 Mill Street, Barnsley.
- Children:
- Isabella Sykes (1897)
- Lottie Sykes (1903)
- Charles H Sykes (1906)
- James Henry Sykes (1908)
- Lucy Sykes (1911)
- Ernest Sykes (1914)
- Mary Sykes (1915)
- Violet Sykes (1917)
- 41.2.6 - William Green (1839-1897) m Harriet Limbert (1842-1916)
|
Arthur Green and family |
- 1881/1891: At home in Worsbrough. Coal miner / trammer
- Married Charlotte Becket (1872-1946) at St George, Barnsley in 1891
- 1901: 31 Henry Street, Worsbrough. 1911: No. 39. Census completed by Charlotte. She says he was born in "Ould Town", Worsbrough is "Wosbro".
- Children:
- Annie Green (1892)
- Beatrice Green (1896)
- Harriet Green (1898)
- Charles Frederick Green (1900)
- Gertrude Green (1906)
- Frank Green (1909)
- Martha Green (1911)
- 1939: He's retired, of course. He and his wife were at 23 Raley Street, Barnsley
- He died in Worsbrough Bridge
- Charles Green (1869-1937)
- Born Philadelphia, USA
- Married Mary Ann Carr (1872) at St George, Barnsley in 1890
- He is a coal miner. In 1891, they are staying with her sister and family at 15 Arthur Street, Worsbrough.
- Children:
- Florence Green (1890)
- Eliza Green (1893)
- Horace Rowland Green (1895)
- Amelia Green (1897)
- Kerenhappuch Green (1900)
- The original Kerenhappuch was the third daughter of Job, given to him late in life, after his ordeals were over.
- William Green (1902)
- Lawrence Green (1905)
- Irvin Green (1909)
- 1901/1911: 6 Henry Street - down the street his parents (then brother Arthur)
- Ellen Green (1872-1955)
- 1891: Domestic servant to a retired grocer at 8 Church Field, Barnsley
- Married Thomas Woolley (1874-1948) at St Mary, Barnsley in 1896
- He is a coal miner, and they live at 37 Somerset Street, then at 79 Bridge Street
- Children:
- Lily Woolley (1898)
- Frank Woolley (1900)
- 1939: 18 Keir Street; he is now a brickyard labourer
- William Green (1876-1954)
- 1891: At home in Worsbrough - at 15, it looks like he minds horses down the mine; by 1901 his father has died - Albert is a trammer
- Married Martha Ann Kellett (1871-1939) at St John the Baptist, Barnsley in 1904
- 1911: 16 Shaw Street, Barnsley. He is now a dinter (a colliery worker who maintains the floor of the pit)
- Children:
- 1915: Enlisted with the 15th Battalion, York and Lancaster Regiment (reserves)
- 1939: 19 James Street, Worsbrough. Watchman (road)
- John Green (1877-1926)
- 1891: At home in Worsbrough. Rope runner in colliery; 1901: Trammer
- Married Mary Batty (1877-1922) in Barnsley in 1902
- He was a coal hewer, and they lived at 19 Leopold Street, Barnsley
- Children:
- Alvin Green (1904). Alvin died in 1905.
- Alice Green (1906)
- Gladys Green (1909)
- Ellen Green (1911). Ellen died in 1912.
- Eunice May Green (1917)
- Sarah Green (1878-1970)
- Married Tom Wright (1880-1926) at St Peter, Barnsley in 1901
- Tom was a coal hewer. They lived at 3 Cope St
- Children:
- William Green (1898)
- Harry Green (1903)
- Ellen Green (1906)
- Ethel Green (1909)
- Sarah Green (1912)
- John Green (1914)
- Tom Green (1917)
- 41.2.7 - Alice Green (1849-1919) m William Horbury (1845-1899)
- Janet Elizabeth Horbury (1869)
- Annie Elizabeth Horbury (1874)
- 1891: Lodging (with her mother and siblings) at 10 Birks Hall Lane ([now Street?], Halifax. Like her mother, she is a bunting weaver.
- Married Walter Longbottom (1871-1934) at St John the Baptist, Halifax in 1893.
- He is a drayman for the Great Northern Railway They live at 46 Great Albion Street.
- Children:
- Edith Longbottom (1894)
- Maria Longbottom (1895)
- Walter Longbottom (1899)
- 1911: 88 Hanson Lane, Halifax. House keeper for the railway company.
- 1939: 12 Elm Row, Barnsley. Widow.
- Edith Alice Horbury (1875)
- 1891: Lodging, along with her mother in Halifax. Brush maker.
- Married Walter Haigh (1873-1944) in Halifax in 1900
- Walter was joiner. By 1901, Edith was a coating weaver, and they lived at 16 Rose Street, Halifax. By 1911, he was plying his trade at the Calico Print Works. Still at the same address in 1939: he has retired; she is a part time cleaner.
- Children:
- William Richard (Willie) Haigh (1901)
- Winnie Haigh (1906)
- Mary Horbury (1878-1952)
- 1901: With her widowed mother at 29 Park Street, Halifax.
- In common with many people in her street, she is in the worsted trade. Worsted (pronounced woo-sted, 'oo' as in 'cook', or possibly wur-sted) is a fine smooth yarn spun from combed long-staple wool. A seventh of British production was in Halifax. The technique originated in East Anglia, came to Halifax and Bradford in the late C18; worsted mills outnumbered woollen mills in the area by the 1830s. The movement from working at home, to workshops, to mills was a crucial piece of the history of the evolving industrial revolution.
- There is a great illustrated article on the area on Halifax People.
- Piece Hall in Halifax was built as a market for worsted and woollen piecework made on handlooms. The smallest clothiers could rent a stall in the courtyard for a penny a piece. By the time Mary was plying her trade, the bulk of the work had shifted to the big mills, and Piece Hall was focused on the wholesale market.
- Married John Green (1877-1952) (John shared her mother's surname but was born in Sowerby Bridge, and no known relative) at St James, Halifax in 1903.
- St James was declared unfit and closed in 1952, and demolished in 1955. The congregation amalgamated with St Mary's Church, Rhodes Street.
- Children:
- John Green (1904)
- Alice Green (1908)
- Beatrice Green (1909)
- 1911: 12 Crossley Terrace. John was earning enough as a bill poster for the theatre, that May did not have to work. Her widowed mother was with them; Maria Longbottom, silk spinner, was visiting.
- John may have worked for the Theatre Royal (although there was competition from the Grand Theatre (demolished in 1957).
- Willie Horbury (1881-1960)
- 1901: At home in Halifax. General labourer (19)
- Married Rose Ann Farnell (1888-1981) at St James, Halifax in 1908
- 1911: 1 Crossley Terrace, Hanson Lane (a few doors down from sister Mary).
- He was a milling machine minder at the [Campbell] Gas Engine Co. From 1915 onwards, this company made shells for the war effort - mainly 18-pounders, 4.5 inch, and 6 inch, but also trench mortars, poison gas shells, smoke shells; also 'blue pig' anti-submarine paravanes, and generators for aerodromes
- She is a cheese winder at a Woosted (sic) Mill. A cheese is a cylindrical or conical drum of thread in the mill.
- Children:
- Ivy Horbury (1908)
- Willie horbury (1913)
- Harry Horbury (1919)
- 1939: They've moved to No. 8. William (sic) is a gas warehouseman. Campbell's has been closed after a long-running strike and a takeover; perhaps a warehouse remained.
- 41.2.8 - Richard Green (1850-1894) m Margaret Hyde (1851-1918)
- Harry Green (1873-1921)
- 1881: At home in Barnsley. Coal miner's hurrier.
- Married Lucy Nickerson (1878) at St George, Barnsley in 1896
- He was a coal hewer, and the lived at 14 Sykes Street
- Children:
- Alice Green (1898)
- Margaret Green (1900)
- Ivy Green (1903)
- Edith Green (1906)
- Harry Green (1909)
- He volunteered on 26 August 1914, and joined the 1st Battalion West Yorkshire Regiment (Army Reserve). They were mobilised for war on 10 September, and appointed a Lance-Corporal. He was posted to France on 2 July 1916, and fought at the Somme in the Battle of Flers-Courcelette. This was the first battle in which tanks were used. He was wounded (contused back) on 20 September and discharged as no longer fit for War Service on 3 November, with a Silver War Badge and a pension of 10 shillings a week. He died in Leeds in 1921.
- Willie Green (1875-1970)
- 1891: At home in Barnsley. Coal miner's hurrier (16), like his brothers
- Married Alice Jackson (1878-1898) at St George, Barnsley in 1897
- Alice died in 1898
- 1901: Back at home in Barnsley, with his step-father. Coal hewer.
- Married Jane Ann Dellow Owen (1882-1967) at St Edward the Confessor, Barnsley in 1903
- 1911: 11 Locke Street, Kingstone Place. Coal hewer. His wife's father, retired coal miner William Owen, is with them.
- Children:
- Evelyn Green (1904)
- Richard Green (1905)
- Ellen Green (1906)
- Willie Green (1908)
- Stanley Green (1908)
- Margaret Green (1912)
- Hannah Green (1916)
- Fred Green (1924)
- No record of war service found but gap in children suggest that it was likely
- 1939: Same address. Incapacitated coal miner. His son Richard was working as a coal miner; his son Willie was also incapacitated.
- John Green (1877)
- 1891: At home in Barnsley. Coal miner's hurrier (14), like his brothers
- 1901/1911: At home in Barnsley, with his step-father. Coal hewer, like his brother (1901), step-father and step-brother (two in 1911).
- A John Green of the right age died in Barnsley in 1926; another in 1946 (the former is more likely as he's not apparent in 1939).
- No record of war service found - mining was a reserved occupation
- 41.2.9 - Elizabeth Green (1858-1862)
More information on these individuals in
Chapter 59.
Next (Harriet's siblings)
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