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DavJohn
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21 Aug 2011 00:43 |
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Thankyou ann Yes I was a bit confused with Holloway allthough there is a big family of Holloways in Dorset and I picked up on a Mary Holloway with a Father called John from Winterborne-Whitchurch,which is close too Fordington My linage into the Christophers is from swanage and matravers areas From the Fancy Family but more Cattle, Vincent,Marsh It was a sarah Christopher(1770) that married James fancy So I was trying to tie a few loose ends Thankyou again for the help
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DavJohn
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21 Aug 2011 00:42 |
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Thankyou ann Yes I was a bit confused with Holloway allthough there is a big family of Holloways in Dorset and I picked up on a Mary Holloway with a Father called John from Winterborne-Whitchurch,which is close too Fordington My linage into the Christophers is from swanage and matravers areas From the Fancy Family but more Cattle, Vincent,Marsh It was a sarah Christopher(1770) that married James fancy So I was trying to tie a few loose ends Thankyou again for the help
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AnnCardiff
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20 Aug 2011 22:41 |
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think that's it - her forename was Holloway!!!!
Holloway Christopher Pedigree Female -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Event(s): Birth: Christening: 21 JUN 1772 Fordington, Dorset, England -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Parents: Father: James Christopher Family Mother: Holloway
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AnnCardiff
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20 Aug 2011 22:38 |
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or reading it again her forename could be Holloway!!!!
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AnnCardiff
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20 Aug 2011 22:36 |
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this is the marriage referred to in Item 6 - the marriage to Elizabeth Steer which apparently should in fact be Olive Stone [great name that] so where Holloway comes n is a mystery!!!
Eliz Steer England Marriages, 1538–1973 marriage: 26 Jun 1758 —East Lulworth, Dorset, England spouse: James Christopher record title: England Marriages, 1538–1973 groom's name: James Christopher bride's name: Eliz Steer marriage date: 26 Jun 1758 marriage place: East Lulworth, Dorset, England indexing project (batch) number: M01242-6 system origin: England-ODM source film number: 1239204
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AnnCardiff
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20 Aug 2011 22:31 |
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Item 6 above refers to Mary Holloway - seems she's a bit of a mystery so that's probably why we can't find the marriage :-)
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AnnCardiff
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20 Aug 2011 22:29 |
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10). Information from a Settlement Examination transcribed on the Blandford Forum OPC web page.
(11).This is likely to be Edward Bryar and his son William who were Innholders and admitted as Freemen of Dorchester on 14th April 1755.
(12). The 7 children baptised in Blandford Forum were:- John Christopher bap 14 Aug 1774 buried 7 Jul 1782; Elizabeth Christopher bap 10 Jan 1778. (She married there on 27 Dec 1797 to Henry Stainer and had at least 3 children in Ashmore Dorset by 1805); Mary Christopher bap 3 Mar 1780 (she married there 13 June 1815 to John Clench); Susannah Christopher bap 24 Dec 1783 buried 8 Sep 1786; William Christopher bap 24 Dec 1785 buried 1 June 1791; Hannah Christopher bap 11 Aug 1787(she married in Tarrent Crawford 13 Oct 1802 to John Adams); Thomas Christopher bap 18 Feb 1791, buried 19 Nov 1791.
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AnnCardiff
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20 Aug 2011 22:29 |
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(4). His age in the burial register of St Peters Church in Winterbourne Came is actually given as 90, but appears to be an approximation made by the priest after his death.
(5). James and Holloway Christopher had nine children baptised in St Georges Church Fordington:- Mary Christopher bap 25 June 1759 (She married James Dart in Fordington 26th Jan 1777and raised a family of 5 children in fordington followed by another 3 in Stinsford she was buried at Bockhampton 2 Sep 1833); John Christopher bap 14 Sep 1761 (buried 117 Feb 1780)5 Sep 1764); Thomas Christopher bap 23 Oct 1763 (He married Ann Chalker in Cheselbourne 17 Feb 1800 and had 4 children); Elizabeth (Betty) Christopher bap 10 Nov 1765 (She married William Lucas in Fordington on 31 May 1787and had 11 children in Fordington and Puddletown where she was buried 18 Dec 1833) ; Ann Christopher bap 14 Apr 1768 (She married William Harden 13 Jan 1788 and had at least 1 child before her burial in Fordington on 16 July 1791); Sarah Christopher bap 24 June 1770 (She appears to have died young before 1779); Holloway Christopher bap 21 June 1772 (no subsequent trace); James Christopher bap 4 June 1775 (He moved to Upway and married Hannah the daughter of William & Hannah White there 18 Jan 1798. they raised a family of 10 children there before James burial 22 Sep 1848 at Broadway); Sarah Christopher bap 21 Nov 1779 she also died young being buried in Fordington 28 Aug 1781.
(6). On the baptism of all nine of their children the name of James wife is clearly given as 'Holloway' . They also name their 7th child, a girl, Holloway after her mother but I can find no other trace of her, and James wife is eventually buried under the name of Holloway Christopher in Fordington in 1794. There is some confusion however over her exact name. There is only one unallocated marriage for a James Christopher in the database covering the whole of Dorset (or on a UK basis in the IGI) and that is for a James Christopher of Fordington to an Olive Stone on 26th June 1758 in East Lulworth a small parish 9 miles east of Dorchester. We are fortunate that this marriage record has been transcribed by OPC and confirmed by the Federation of Family History society database some years ago. The entry states that James Christopher's home parish was Fordington and this can only be his marriage as he is the only James Christopher living in Fordington at or anywhere near that date. The marriage also occurred one year before the birth of their first child exactly where we would expect it to be. The IGI run by the Church of Latter Day Saints however records her name as Elizabeth Steer so the original records held at the Dorset history Center need to checked to confirm that it should be Olive Stone. The Christian name of Olive is very unusual at this date in Dorset and most families named their children after themselves and their parents. None of James & Holloway's children name any of the girls Holloway but two of them (Mary & Elizabeth) name one of their girls Olive.
(7). Elizabeth had been married to a John Trask and already had three girls (Sarah Trask bap Milton Abbas 7 Aug 1751; Mary Trask born c1754 - died unmarried in Cheselbourne 15 May 1784; and Susannah Trask bap in Cheselbourne on 29 May 1757).
(8). Mary Trask the daughter of Elizabeth by her 1st marriage had four illegitimate children in Cheselbourne the last of which was recorded under the surname Christopher. Mary who was described as a child of John Christopher (i.e. by his marriage to her mother) was buried 15th May 1784. One child was named Joanna after Joan Christopher and she died aged 7 on 1st May 1785. Another child was called William possibly after Joan's son or his father and was buried in Cheselbourne on 8th Sep 1785.
(9). Susannah Groves had married Robert Hannam in Piddletrenthide on 21st April 1772. They had 3 children (Betty Hannam bap Piddletrenthide 24 Oct 1774) (James Bap Alton Pancras 18 Nov 1776) and ( Ann bap Alton Pancras 19 Nov 1780) before Robert Hannam died and was buried in Alton Pancras 13 Dec 1780
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AnnCardiff
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20 Aug 2011 22:28 |
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The vestry minutes for Fordington for the month of May 1789 show that the poor of the parish had all been inoculated and this would have included Charles & Elizabeth as they were receiving support in the same accounts. At various times Charles CHRISTOPHER was given a new shirt and a pair of shoes ,and when he died they paid £0-9s 8d to have him decently buried on 24 Feb 1791 in St George's graveyard in Fordington. The churchwardens at a Vestry meeting held on 6 May 1791 voted for Elizabeth, recorded here as the widow Betty Christopher, to pay her 2/- a week in lieu of the 3/- her husband had received. She is likely to have been of a similar age to Charles and was buried in the graveyard at St George's churchyard on 12 Jan 1792.
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Genealogical Notes:- (1). Over the last 20 years I have gradually established several large data bases in an attempt to record every documented occurrence of the surname 'Christopher' anywhere in Dorset. The general index (May 2010) currently has 2,835 entries and there are no references to a Charles Christopher anywhere in Dorset prior to his arrival at Fordington and the birth of his 1st child.
(2). The Parish Marriage registers for St Georges church in Fordington have survived and are transcribed on this site but Charles and Elizabeth did not marry there. It was probably his success in obtaining stable employment that enabled them to marry and move to the area where he had work. I am confident that the first child born in Fordington was the first child of the marriage; not only because the first boy was named after his father and first girl after her mother but because we have documented the lives of all Christophers and there are no unaccounted for burials or other children with the family in subsequent years. Charles & Elizabeth's year of birth are unknown and have therefore been estimated (identified by use of the letter 'c' for circa before the year) as being 27 years old for a man and 25 years old for a woman. These are national averages applying to the Tudor period (1485-1603) for England. See the 'History Today' website under 'Courtship in Tudor England' and many others. It continued however during the House of Stuart (1603-1714). the ' Oxford Illustrated History of Britain' states regarding the Stuart Period" In all social groups, marriage was usually deferred until both partners were in their mid twenties and the wife only had twelve to fifteen childbearing years before her. The reason for this pattern of late marriage seems to be the firm convention that the couple save up enough money to launch themselves as an independent household before they wed. For the better off, this frequently meant university, legal training, an apprenticeship of seven years or more; for the less well off a long term of domestic service, living in with all found but little in the way of cash wages. For agricultural labourers it appears to relate more to obtaining stable employment which Charles certainly obtained. there is no better test for this supposition than Charles & Elizabeth's own children as we know both baptism and marriage dates for 6 of the surviving children:- (Charles aged 25; James aged 26; John aged 26; Elizabeth aged 29; William aged 26: Joseph aged 24)
(3). Their children were (a) Elizabeth Christopher (1755-aft 1788) bap Radipole 27 May 1755 who married James Buckler in Winterbourne Came 25 Nov 1777; (b) James Christopher (born Radipole c1757- he married 1st Martha Winzar in Fordington 19 Oct 1789 by whom he had 3 children in Fordington before Martha died. He married 2ndly Mary Bishop in Fordington on 23 Feb 1803 and moved to Winterbourne Came where another child was born; (c) Joseph Christopher born Radipole c1759 died a bachelor 12 Mar 1793 in Winterbourne Came; (d) Charles Christopher bap Kimmeridge 12 Jun 1761 died a bachelor 21 Nov 1791 in Winterbourne Came
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AnnCardiff
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20 Aug 2011 22:28 |
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He married after banns had been read for three consecutive weeks in St Peters and St Paul's church in Blandford Forum on 3 Jun 1771 to a Mary KING [Born c1749 she was buried a widow in Blandford Forum on 18 Feb 1837 at the age of 88] and they raised a family of 7 children there(12). William appears to have died 9 miles away in Lydlinch and been buried in 20 Sep 1802 in the Churchyard of St Thomas a Becket
Joseph CHRISTOPHER (1748-1776) bap 14th Sep 1748 he grew up in Fordington but moved to live and work in the adjacent parish of Holy Trinity Dorchester. On 28 Jun 1772 he married in All Saints Church Dorchester to a Martha SIMMS. [also baptised Fordington, on 4 April 1743, the daughter of Thomas and Mary Simms ] They had only one child Elizabeth Christopher whom they had baptised in All Saints Church on 29 Sep 1773 but she died an infant being buried there on 8 June 1775. Joseph, still only 28 died the following year and was interred in St Georges churchyard Fordington on January 16 1776. Martha re-married on 8 May 1780 to a Robert HAYWARD in All Saints Church Dorchester.
Poor Law support:
The churchwarden accounts from 1764 to 1782 are missing but by 1782 Charles CHRISTOPHER was an old man no longer able to work and he and his wife were receiving 2s 6d a week support which rose to 3 shillings in Oct 1790. In May 1789 he and his wife Elizabeth, together with all the poor of the parish, received an inoculation; a date well before Edward Jenner (1749-1823 ) carried out his experiments in 1796.
Smallpox: (Info extracts from "Vaccination Jenner's Legacy" by Derrick Baxby published by the Jenner Educational Trust 1994) Before control measures were developed most people in populous areas contracted smallpox and of those approximately 20% died. The survivors were often terribly scarred, and blindness was a common complication. It is estimated that 200,000 to 600,000 people were killed annually by smallpox in Europe in the 18th Century, and it was a major killer of children. Smallpox caused about 10% of all deaths and 25-35% of deaths in children. With its characteristic appearance it was realised that those who survived smallpox did not get it again, and this led to a greater willingness to employ servants etc with pock marks because of their immunity. Prevention of smallpox by isolation of patients required some idea that the disease was specific and had a specific transmissible cause, and predated proof of the germ theory of disease. It also required specific knowledge of the infectious period which was from about the time the rash appeared until after the scabs dropped off. Such knowledge was acquired gradually and as presented by John Haygarth in his 'Rules for the prevention of Smallpox (published 1785)' meant that by this date many villages had an old cottage or similar on the outskirts of town that was used to immediately isolate individuals suspected of having the disease. Dorset was at the forefront of many of these developments. William Trask CHRISTOPHER (Joan Christopher's son mentioned above) was to die from Smallpox in the year 1785. he contracted the disease whilst he and his family were working in Morden Dorset and he was isolated in just such a cottage. After his death his wife and family were inoculated and returned to his place of settlement which was Cheselbourne.
Deliberate infection as a preventative measure was practiced in India and China centuries before it was introduced to Britain by Lady Mary, wife of the British Ambassador to Turkey. The process involved deliberate inoculation of smallpox material into the arm in the hope that mild smallpox would develop. The practice was called inoculation later called variolation. Lady Mary had her son variolated in Constantinople in 1717 and on her return to England she had her daughter variolated in 1721 and so introduced the practice to London Society. A successful trial on six prisoners soon followed and in 1723 two children of Caroline on Ansbach, Princess of Wales were variolated. Initially Variolation was used mainly only in populous areas and when epidemics threatened but became increasingly common in the 1760's. Dorchester and Fordington of course sat at the crossroads of major trade routes not just throughout Dorset to places like London, Oxford and Exeter but also with the continent through the nearby coastal ports as many of the merchants in Dorchester imported wine and other produce from the continent. Protection was therefore a major concern and not just for the rich.
There is no doubt that inoculated smallpox produced a less severe effect reducing mortality significantly, but there were occasional disasters such as at Blandford in 1766 when many were very ill and 13 out of 384 died. There was particular concern about the fact that those in contact with variolated individuals caught smallpox which was fully virulent and fatal and this was a major barrier to its widespread use. Individuals could be isolated but few could afford it so the practice arose for a whole village to be inoculated so that everyone was infectious at the same time.
Although Edward Jenner (1749-1823 ) is credited with the widespread introduction of vaccination using cowpox he did not carry out his first vaccination until May 1796. The use of cowpox was in use in Dorset well before that date mainly because of the work of Benjamin Jesty (1736-1816) who was using the practice some 22 years earlier. Jesty and two of his female servants, Ann Notley and Mary Reade, had been infected with cowpox. When an epidemic of smallpox came to Yetminster in 1774, Jesty decided to try to give his wife Elizabeth and two eldest sons immunity by infecting them with cowpox. He took his family to a cow at a farm in nearby Chetnole that had the disease, and using a darning needle, transferred pustular material from the cow by scratching their arms. The boys had mild local reactions and quickly recovered but his wife's arm became very inflamed and for a time her condition gave cause for concern, although she too recovered fully in time. Blue plaque commemorating Jesty's pioneering work at Upbury Farm at Yetminster. Jesty's experiment was met with hostility by his neighbours. He was labeled inhuman, and was "hooted at, reviled and pelted whenever he attended markets in the neighbourhood’". The introduction of an animal disease into a human body was thought disgusting and some even "feared their metamorphosis into horned beasts". But the treatment's efficacy was several times demonstrated in the years which followed, when Jesty's two elder sons, exposed to smallpox, failed to catch the disease.
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AnnCardiff
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20 Aug 2011 22:27 |
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Fordington for burial with his wife on 11 Nov 1818 when his age was given as 93 although in reality it was nearer to 86.
John CHRISTOPHER (1734-1804) was baptised on 17th Nov 1734. As a young man he went to live in Cheselbourne, 8 miles north-east of Dorchester, staying with Joan CHRISTOPHER whom I believe to be Charles younger sister. She already had two illegitimate children by a member of the TRASK family who lived in the village (these being William Trask Christopher bap 12 July 1741 and Jenny Christopher bap 19 May 1745). Here John met a young widow from that family called Elizabeth TRASK (c1725) whom he married in Cheselbourne on 30 Aug 1760. She was known locally as 'Betty' a colloquial form of Elizabeth and had three children by her first marriage (7) . The Trask family had been in Cheselbourne from before 1734 and Fordington prior to 1706 so it looks like the two families knew one another over a long period. Her husband John Trask had obtained work on a large estate at Milton Abbas located only a couple of miles north-east of Cheselbourne and they had the first of their 3 children, Sarah TRASK, baptised in the Abbey on 7th August 1751. The following year the estate was sold to Joseph Damar who later became Lord Milton. He set about restoring the house and Abbey and landscaping the grounds a task so extensive that it lasted many years and involved moving the existing village to a new location. It was probably John Trask that drew John Christopher into working on the estate as well. A lot of the landscaping work was done during the summer months with labourers returning to their home parishes in the winter. Although I have not located his death, John Trask must have died shortly after their last child was born in 1755 as the overseers accounts for Cheselbourne for the following year suddenly show quite large payments being made each month to his wife and children. It was in the interest of the Overseers for Elizabeth to remarry and payments to 'Betty Trask' cease in the month of her marriage to John Christopher. They seem to have continued with some support to the expanded family however as ' Elizabeth Christopher and her children' received support in Nov 1761. As will be seen below only Thomas Christopher had been born at that date so this clearly includes children by her first marriage.
John Christopher had three children of his own with Elizabeth (Thomas Christopher (1761-1819) Bap Cheselbourne 21 Jul 1761 who married and raised a family of 6 children ; Sarah Christopher (1764-1799) bap Milton Abbas 29 Jul 1764, a spinster who was buried in Cheselbourne on 15 Dec 1799; and Joanna Christopher (1767-1770) named after his aunt, bap Milton Abbas 3 Jun 1767 still under the age of 3 when she was buried in Cheselbourne on 22 Mar 1770.
After the birth of John's 1st child they moved to live in Milton Abbas before returning to Cheselbourne after the birth of their 3rd child there, arriving by September 1767. John was ill in 1774 for 3 months and the Overseers for Cheselbourne paid for him to be bled, after which he seems to have recovered.(8) On 18th December 1775 Joan became ill and John seems to have attended her as he too received payment 'in his illness' the following month. Whilst he then recovered, his son Thomas fell ill in February followed by his his wife Elizabeth in March after which all seems to have been well. In late April 1780 however Joan Christopher again became ill this time gradually getting worse. She obviously needed constant care as the Overseers paid for seven consecutive weeks for John Christopher to attend her before she passed away and was buried in Cheselbourne on 17th June 1780. Joan and the family were well respected in the community as this proved to be the most expensive funeral paid for by the ratepayers for several years. They paid two shillings for example for her to be properly laid out in St Martins church, even providing an extra 6d for beer for the ladies that undertook the task. Sarah Drake who would have been one of her closest friends received another two shillings as she undertook washing the body and 'the waking' which was an all night vigil next to the body in the church. Joan, as required by the Acts of Parliament passed in 1666 and 1678, was dressed in a woollen shroud which cost them four shillings and eight pence and a further six pence for the affidavit which had to be signed by a relative before the vicar, so this must have been done by John Christopher. Her Coffin was the most expensive item costing eight shillings and and six pence. On the day of the burial they paid another three shillings and six pence for the grave to be dug and the church bells to be rung followed by two shillings for beer for the bearers of the coffin.
Elizabeth Christopher, John's 1st wife, died between 1767 and 1785 as at the age of 51 on 5 Feb 1785 John married for a second time to a 46 year old widow called Susannah HANNAM [HARRAM]. (9) She was past child bearing age so there were no children by the 2nd marriage and she died at the age of 82 in Cheselbourne being buried there on 28 Jul 1821. John Christopher lived until he was 70 being buried in Cheselbourne on 9th December 1804 by GW Langdon Curate of St Martins church.
Elizabeth CHRISTOPHER (1735/6-1815) named after her mother she was baptised on 21 March 1735/6. She married when she was 32 years old by licence in Winterborne Came on 20 Jun 1768 to a Francis FURBER [ Bap 25 Jul 1739 Godmanstone Dorset the eldest son of Ellis Furber and Elizabeth Caines]. They had at least 1 child Elizabeth Furber Bap Winterborne Came 4 Mar 1771. Elizabeth herself was buried in St George's churchyard Fordington by the Rev John Palmer on 5 Mar 1815 when her age was given as being 81.
Thomas CHRISTOPHER (1738/9-) baptised12 March 1738/9. No trace has been found of him after his baptism. It is possible that he may have died during one of the missing years in the registers eg. 1744/1745;1752 etc.
Joseph CHRISTOPHER (1741/2-1747/8) baptised 15th Feb 1741/2 and buried still a young boy on 19th January 1747/8.
William CHRISTOPHER (1745-1802) (10) baptised 7th July 1745 of parents legally settled there ; he lived with them until he was fifteen or sixteen and then hired out to a Mr Head at the 'Crown' in Blandford for 40 shillings, for one year; he then moved to Bridport and worked for Mr Harber at the 'Goulston Lyon' as a Chaise driver; later moving to Dorchester where he lived with a Mr Bryer(11) at the 'Kings Arms' for a quarter of a year as Chaise driver; then Blandford Forum for Mr Charles Voss for about a year.
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AnnCardiff
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20 Aug 2011 22:26 |
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The Parish Baptism Registers show that Charles and Elizabeth had the following eight children baptised in the above font in St Georges Church Fordington by the vicar of St Georges church the Rev. John JACOB BCL (1690-1759) who was vicar there from 1714 until his death in 1759.
Charles CHRISTOPHER (1728-1814) named after his father he was baptised on 30th June 1728. He was living and working in nearby Broadway when he met and married Ann GAPE the eldest child of Andrew GAPE of Cerne Abbas . They married on 12 June 1755 in the tiny church of St Nicholas in a small hamlet to the west called Buckland Ripers. They raised a family of 4 children in Radipole and Kimmeridge(3) before Ann was buried on 22 Aug 1787 in St Peters church Winterbourne Came . Many of the family ended up in this parish where Charles lived until he was over 86 being buried there on 16th Feb 1814.(4)
James CHRISTOPHER (1732-1818) was baptised on 26th April 1732. He married in 1758(5) to a lady known throughout the family as 'Holloway' and they produced a family of 9 children all baptised in Fordington between the years 1759 and 1779(6) . James, also an agricultural labourer, lived with his wife in Fordington until her death in 1794 her burial being in the graveyard at St Georges Church Fordington on 18th May that year. He acted as a witness at the wedding of his grandson John Dart in the church of St Michael in nearby Stinsford on 9th April 1810. Towards the end of his long life when he became too old to work, he moved to Upwey to live with his son James and his wife Hannah where he died, but his body was returned to Fordington for burial with his wife on 11 Nov 1818 when his age was given as 93 although in reality it was nearer to 86.
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AnnCardiff
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20 Aug 2011 22:25 |
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From records that survive concerning his life it is clear that Charles CHRISTOPHER (c1700-1791) settled permanently in Fordington Dorset about the year 1727 shortly after his marriage to Elizabeth (c1702-1792), as they raised a family of 8 children there between the years 1728 to 1748 and remained in the parish throughout their long life together. Charles was born around the year 1700 and almost certainly originated from outside of the County of Dorset (1). No indication has so far come to light as to where this might have been and we know very little about Elizabeth who was better known to family and friends as 'Betty'(2). Later events suggest that Charles was part of a larger family and had a much younger sister, Joan CHRISTOPHER from whom I am descended but in this account I will confine myself to what we do know about Charles and his immediate descendants.
Charles had been a young teenager when George I became King, but shortly after Charles arrival in Fordington, George I died. The ascendancy of George II to the throne in June 1727 (which he occupied for the next 34 years) would have been of little consequence to Charles who like the majority of the population worked on the land as an agricultural labourer. Dorchester was the largest market town in the area and a major crossroads for trade and he would have been hired by one of the local landowners at the annual fair there. Dorchester had a vibrant history being a center of non conformity in the 17th Century and many of its wealthy patrons directly involved in the major events of the day. Fordington, by contrast, was at that time a separate village but its parish surrounded Dorchester on three sides and its high street ran on from that of Dorchester. Although there were some wealthy people within the parish this was on a different scale from Dorchester and to a large extent the parish housed the less well off, particularly agricultural labourers who often worked in nearby Fordington Fields. Although only an agricultural labourer Charles managed to fully support his family from 1727 to sometime after 1764, never receiving any support from the Parish during that period.
Baptism of 8 Children: St Georges Church Fordington
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AnnCardiff
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20 Aug 2011 22:23 |
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Joseph CHRISTOPHER January 19 [Note:- Joseph was the 5th of 8 children of Charles CHRISTOPHER (1700-1791) and baptised in Fordington on 15th Feb 1741/2]
if you scroll down to the bottom you will see under Item 6 that Mary Holloway is a bit of a mystery!!!
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AnnCardiff
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20 Aug 2011 22:21 |
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Dorchester, &, Fordington, Dorset, England, Parish, Page- Fordington High Street 2008. Dorchester is the county town of Dorset and the seat of ... is not unusual to find records for a person or family in both Fordington and Dorchester .... Charles CHRISTOPHER [1700 –1791] Agricultural Labourer ...
freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~fordington... - Similar Charles CHRISTOPHER (c1700-1791) Agricultural ... Arrival in Fordington: From records that survive concerning his life it is ...
freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~for... - Similar
[ More results from freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com ] Parish, Fordington, Dorset, England, St George, Burials 1734-1755 Transcribed from BT's by Michael Russell OPC for Fordington 2007 ...
freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~fordington... - Similar
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AnnCardiff
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20 Aug 2011 22:18 |
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I can't find the marriage either - looks like the first child was born in 1859 so would imagine that is around the time the marriage took place
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DavJohn
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20 Aug 2011 22:07 |
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Hi all Thanks I have all those births it was the marriage of their parents I was looking for ie James Christopher and Mary Holloway yes christopher is the surname I have searched find my past, and also searched the records on genes in the marriage records section I have also looked on the LDS site I have not been able to get to parish records for dorset for some reason and I have looked in an ancesters note book and the marriage is not mentioned so I dont know but could use help
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AnnCardiff
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20 Aug 2011 19:12 |
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Thomas Christopher England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 residence: Fordington, Dorset, England parents: James Christopher, Holloway record title: England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 name: Thomas Christopher gender: Male baptism/christening date: 23 Oct 1763 baptism/christening place: Fordington, Dorset, England father's name: James Christopher mother's name: Holloway indexing project (batch) number: C15872-2 system origin: England-EASy source film number: 1279497
John Christopher England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 residence: Fordington, Dorset, England parents: James Christopher, Holloway record title: England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 name: John Christopher gender: Male baptism/christening date: 14 Sep 1761 baptism/christening place: Fordington, Dorset, England father's name: James Christopher mother's name: Holloway indexing project (batch) number: C15872-2 system origin: England-EASy source film number: 1279497
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AnnCardiff
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20 Aug 2011 19:12 |
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Bettey Christopher England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 residence: Dorset, England parents: James Christopher, Holloway record title: England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 name: Bettey Christopher gender: Female baptism/christening date: 10 Nov 1765 baptism/christening place: Fordington, Dorset, England father's name: James Christopher mother's name: Holloway indexing project (batch) number: C15872-2 system origin: England-ODM source film number: 1279497
Holloway Christopher England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 residence: Fordington, Dorset, England parents: James Christopher, Holloway record title: England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 name: Holloway Christopher gender: Female baptism/christening date: 21 Jun 1772 baptism/christening place: Fordington, Dorset, England father's name: James Christopher mother's name: Holloway indexing project (batch) number: C15872-2 system origin: England-EASy source film number: 1279497
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AnnCardiff
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20 Aug 2011 19:11 |
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Ann Christopher England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 residence: Dorset, England parents: James Christopher, Holloway record title: England Births and Christenings, 1538-1975 name: Ann Christopher gender: Female baptism/christening date: 17 Apr 1768 baptism/christening place: Fordington, Dorset, England father's name: James Christopher mother's name: Holloway indexing project (batch) number: C15872-2 system origin: England-ODM source film number: 1279497
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