Andrew Humphrey > family history Through my grandparents, I am
part of the Humphrey, Barker, Shinner and Glover families.
My cousin Lorraine Beasley (nee Humphrey) was a great supporter of my
family history project, and a regular emailer on the subject since we got
reacquainted through Facebook and at our grandmother's funeral in 2008. Lorraine passed away
in March 2009, and I miss her contributions, thoughts and
affectionate good humour about our scattered family.
If you use the Ancestry website, you can visit my personal family tree. They have a free 14-day membership
trial too. Other family links:
Shinner Nick Martin's Shinner family genealogy traces my
family from Edward Shinner of Totnes (1689-1783) to my great grandfather Archie Shinner (1890-1961). That's
Archie's mother Ann Spencer on the right. Ann had six children with two different Shinner husbands, and I have now been in touch with the descendants of most of the six. Through Ann, I am also related by
marriage to the novelist George Eliot, and through the Shinners to John Babbacombe Lee,
known as The Man They Could Not Hang.
Barker My last surviving grandparent Margaret Barker (later Humphrey,
then Hone), known as Benny, died on 3 January 2008 at the age of 92. I discovered recently that Benny shares a common 4 x great grandfather with Hillary Rodham Clinton, whose Rodham roots are in County Durham's mining community. Benny and Hillary are sixth cousins, and Mrs Clinton is my sixth cousin, twice removed. On her Dad's side, Benny's paternal grandmother Sarah Williamson (1838-1896) ran a boarding house in
Bishop Auckland, County Durham, which was often used as theatrical digs. ,
The 1891 England census shows that two of Sarah's lodgers that April were theatre manager Arthur Jefferson and his wife Margaret, whose stage
name was Madge Metcalfe. They were the parents of Arthur Stanley
Jefferson, a 10-month old baby who was then living with his grandmother in
Ulverston, Cumbria. He would move to Bishop Auckland later that year, when
his parents moved out of Sarah's lodging house. He grew up to be
Stan Laurel of Laurel and Hardy.
Humphrey BBC History did a report on the now disappeared
Canney Hill Pottery in Coundon, where my Scottish-born
great-great-grandfather William Humphrey (1840-1894) worked when he first
moved to County Durham in the 1860s, before becoming a coal miner. As a
teenager, he had left his family in Scotland to work as a shepherd in
Northumberland. There he met and married fellow Scot Euphemia Wood, and
they moved to Durham for work.
Glover My great-grandfather Thomas Glover was born in
1813 in Warmington, Northants. In middle-age, he and his wife Mary moved
his family to Teesside, where they lived in the Brotton area.
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