Yorkshire On This Day, Comprising 365 Historical Extracts, Red-letter Days and Customs, and Astronomical and Meteorological Data
John Hobson. 1877. The Journal of Mr. John Hobson, Late of Dodworth Green. Yorkshire Diaries and Autobiographies in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries. Ed. Charles Jackson. Durham: Surtees Society. A (morbid) compendium of everyday England. It is sometimes unclear whether the date given is that of an occurrence or that on which news reached his capacious ears. Get it:
.If an excerpt is used in the book, it will be shorter, edited and, where applicable, translated.
January 4th. – At the funeral of Madam Savile. She was buried at Mexborough, on the north side of the great quire, within the rails close by the wall. On her coffin was writ M.S., aetatis 100. It was of oak, and made 60 year ago for her mother … Cudworth, who had it by her 20 years before she died.
She died the week before:
29th, Fryday.-About one a clock, Madam Savill died at Fawthwaite, aged nigh 100. She was one of the three daughters and coheirs of Mr. Cudworth, of Eastfeild, and married Mr. Savill, of Mexborough.
Footnote:
Martha, second daughter and coheiress of Richard Cudworth, of Eastfield, in the township of Thurgoland and parish of Silkstone, wife of Samuel Savile, of Mexborough. She was a sister of the wife of Dr. Johnston, the antiquary. (See South Yorkshire, vol. i. p. 393, vol. ii. p. 270.) The marriage of “Samuel Savile, gener, et Martha Cudworth,” occurs in the Tankersley Register, Oct. 7, 1651.
Something to say? Get in touch
4 July 1838: 26 girls and boys drown trying to escape via a tunnel from flash flooding in Huskar Colliery, Silkstone, Barnsley, after the steam lifts fail during a rainstorm
The editorial footnote attempts to identify the individuals concerned.
Something to say? Get in touch
Place-People-Play: Childcare (and the Kazookestra) on the Headingley/Weetwood borders next to Meanwood Park.
Music from and about Yorkshire by Leeds's Singing Organ-Grinder.