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The Farndale Directory Direct
links to Farndales born during this period |
Scroll right to discover the historical and local context for this period |
Each volume of the Farndale
directory provides a direct link to individual Farndales born during the
period. This page provides a chronological list of Farndales born during the
period 1811 to 1820. To the right of the page, you will also see a timeline of
historic events that were taking place at the time, to provide some context. Find yourself or the Farndale
you are interested in. Click on the blue reference
number for more information. Or click on the brown family line
link. |
George III, 1760 - 1820 |
1811 Mary Farndale, baptised on 2 July 1811 and buried on 3 July 1811 in Brotton (FAR00253). The Brotton 3 Line. An infant girl who died at birth. |
Population
of the United Kingdom reached 18.5 million. First
Luddite activity, in Nottingham.
Napoleon’s
Retreat from Moscow The
Framebreaking Act imposed the death penalty for Luddites. Gas
lamps became widely used to light streets. |
1814 Robert Farndale, baptised on 27 February 1814 in Brotton and died of phthisis on 2
February 1866 in Stockton on Tees
(FAR00254). The Brotton 3 Line
and Founder of the Stockton 2
Line. Master grocer of Stockton. Mary Ann Farndale (Porritt), baptised on 27 February 1814 in Brotton and died in 1876 in
Middlesbrough (FAR00255). The Brotton 3 Line.
A farmer’s daughter of Brotton. Dinah Farndale (Stamp), born on 19 March 1814 in Whitby and died on 31
December 1887 (FAR00256).
The Whitby 4 Line.
Dinah was a carpenter’s daughter who married a carpenter, later a master
shipwright in Hartlepool, and she died a widow relatively wealthy. William Farndale, baptised on 14 October 1814 and buried on 24 May 1886 in Egton (FAR00257). The Whitby 5 Line.
William was an agricultural labourer of Egton. |
James
Pigot published national directories comprising information about
professional people, gentry and nobles, clergy, and coach and carrier
services. |
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1815
- The Battle of Waterloo. The names of soldiers are recorded in medal rolls. John
Farndale (FAR00217) wrote “After the great battle of
Waterloo, and Buonaparte had been taken prisoner, that glorious event was
celebrated at Brotton by parading his effigy through the street and burning
it before Mr R Stephenson’s hall, amidst the rejoicings of high and low, rich
and poor, who drank and danced to the late hour. The author formed one of a
band of musicians that played on the occasion, and he composed a song
commemorating the event, which became very popular in that part of the
country. Brotton bever before or since saw the like of that memorable day.” Impressment
into the Royal Navy ended. Mass
unemployment followed demobilisation of the army. First
of the Corn Laws helped farmers, but disastrously impacted upon the poor. |
1816 William Farndale, baptised on 6 January 1816 in Ampleforth and died in 1887 in
Scarborough (FAR00258). The Ampleforth 1
Line. William was an
agricultural labourer of Settrington. Mary Ann Farndale (Pringle or Pringles), born on 20 July 1816 in Whitby
to after 1891 (FAR00259).
The Whitby 5 Line.
Mary was a farmer’s daughter of Whitby and later married to an agricultural
and general labourer. |
The ‘Year without a Summer’ led to dire harvests. |
1817 William Farndale, baptised on 10 July 1817 in Stokesley and died after 1901 (FAR00260). The Kilton 1 Line.
A mine labourer in Margrove Park who was still working as a farm labourer and
gardener in 1901, in his nineties. Mary Ann Farndale, born on 6 October 1817 in Whitby and died on 2 May
1819 in Whitby (FAR00261).
The Whitby 4 Line.
Ann was a carpenter’s daughter of Whitby
who died at birth. |
Maps of most English counties published by the Greenwood Brothers. |
1818 George Farndale, born about 1818 and died on 4 February 1844 in the
Malton area (FAR00266).
The Ampleforth 1
Line. George was a labourer in Old Malton who died aged 26. John Farndale, born in 1818 in Goathland and died in 1865 in Whitby (FAR00265). The Whitby 6 Line.
John was a sailor of Whitby. Richard Farndale, baptised on 15 February 1818 in Great Ayton and probably died at birth
(FAR00263).
The Great Ayton 2
Line. John Farndale, born on 28 March 1818 in Whitby (perhaps Bracken Riggs
Farm) and buried on 12 August 1874 (FAR00262). The Whitby 5 Line.
John was a farmer (1838), an agricultural labourer (1841 and 1851), quarry
waggoner (1861 and 1871) and carrier of Eskdaleside. Martin Farndale, baptised on 17 December 1818 in Easby, near Great Ayton and died from
empyema on 12 July 1862 in Skelton (FAR00264). The Kilton 1 Line.
Martin was an agricultural labourer of Skelton
who married Elizabeth Taylor. After working on a farm at Skelton at about age
25, he worked with his father in law, a farmer at Fogga Farm, Skelton from
about 1842 and by 1861 was an agricultural labourer at Hutton Lowcross just
southwest of Guisborough. He died a year later when he was still only 43.
There is a family story that Martin was kicked by a horse. Empyema is the
medical term for pockets of pus that have collected inside a body cavity. His
wife later lived at Craggs Hall Farm with her son Matthew. |
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1819 John F Farndale, baptised on 20 January 1819 in Great Ayton and died in
1862 in Auckland (FAR00267).
The Great Ayton 2
Line. John was a joiner in Bishop Auckland. |
The Peterloo Massacre – 15 dead and several hundred injured. |
1820 Ann(e) Farndale, baptised on 16 March 1820 in Ampleforth and buried on
13 May 1886 in Settrington (FAR00270). The Ampleforth 1
Line. Jane Farndale (Readman), born on 21 March 1820 in Hawkser and buried on
9 December 1884 in Goathland (FAR00268). The Whitby 5 Line.
Jane was a servant in Danby. George Farndale, baptised on 15 April 1820 in Great Ayton and died on 25 December 1891
aged 70 of hemiplegia in Middlesbrough (FAR00271). The Kilton 1 Line.
George was a tile maker (1841), ironstone worker (1861) and then brick-layer
(1871, 1881) of Middlesborough. Ann Farndale, baptised on 4 July 1820 in Bishop Wilton (FAR00272). Ann Farndale (Charlton), baptised on 31 December 1820 in Great Ayton and died after 1891 (FAR00273). The Great Ayton 3
Line. Ann married Mark Charlton who was a platelayer on the
railways. |
The
Cato Street Conspiracy The Cato
Street Conspiracy was an attempt to murder all the British cabinet
ministers and Prime Minister Lord
Liverpool in
1820. The name comes from the meeting place near Edgware Road in London. The police had an
informer and the plotters fell into a police trap and 13 were arrested, while
one policeman was killed. Five conspirators were executed, and five others
were transported to Australia. How
widespread the Cato Street conspiracy was is uncertain. It was a time of
unrest; rumours abounded. Malcolm Chase noted that, "the
London-Irish community and a number of trade societies, notably shoemakers,
were prepared to lend support, while unrest and awareness of a planned rising
were widespread in the industrial north and on Clydeside." First
Europeans settled in New Zealand. |
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