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Showing content with the highest reputation on 07/12/24 in Posts

  1. My grandfather was born in Bedlington in 1913 to a single mother (of dubious morals IMO) and unknown father. He started his working life as a miner. In the 1939 census he was working in a hotel in central London. His wife (my grandmother), was working as a servant in a large house in the south. They left my father and his sister up here with relatives. One was left with Gr grandmother of dubious morals. Grandmother came back to Bedlington. Grandfather was in WW2 and never returned, barely seeing his children again. After the war he had a professional career, remarried, and although had no further children did very well. I remember my great grandmother well and she had calmed down a bit in her later years, but often wonder if grandfather left Bedlington because his mother was a disgrace. That said, I hardly remember him. No birthday or Christmas cards. Nothing. So perhaps the apple didn’t fall far from the tree. So although the mines were doing well, it may be personal circumstances that took your relative down south.
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  2. https://northumberlandcoastloop.uk/2024/12/07/nera-things-to-see-on-the-northumberland-line-a-free-guide-and-restating-the-case-for-the-n-c-l/?fbclid=IwZXh0bgNhZW0CMTEAAR0j5MbdiZk_49wU8SOyxHdrroQeJxNDFNnY2WWOeqtZ7xNondVW9CB7oVo_aem_orAnrxx4pvgvQVR7mbQJ6g
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  3. I can think of a couple of possible reasons for a coal-miner's child being born at the granary. Coal-mining was playing a big part in Bedlington’s industry and miners were ‘imported from many parts of Britain. If you look at the population in 1851 there were almost as many miners from other parts of the country as there were native Bedlingtonians. Housing was at a premium and miners lodged wherever they could get a roof over their head until colliery housing became available. Another explanation for a birth at the granary may be that your relative wasn’t born at home. It wasn’t uncommon that prima gravidas (first-time mothers) went to the home of a female relative, often their mother, when the birth was imminent.
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  4. The Watsons must have been there for a very long time. Wm. Watson Esq gets a mention on Armstrongs map from 1769. Almost next door to Mount Pleasant farm and granary is a "seat or noted house" with his name on it. (upper edge of map).
    1 point
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