By michael, on August 15th, 2011
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By michael, on August 14th, 2011
Our burials database really does pay dividends and I’ve made some excellent discoveries recently. However, as I was adding each individual entry there were a number of individuals recorded in the registers that I couldn’t identify at the time for various reasons. I made a point to cross reference the entries with the civil registration index to ensure that the names I entered were correct whenever possible but the following one had me stumped at the time – there wasn’t a corresponding registration of death – and so not being able to make out the surname I had to enter the record under just the name ‘William’.

The entry above, shown at full size, is quite obvious to me now that I know exactly who it refers to but what I haven’t shown is that the particular entry also clearly indicates that the person was interred in grave nunmber 3038. Sometimes the grave numbers are not easy to make out but this one was absolutely clear – grave number 3038.
Now when I checked our burials database, laid to rest in grave number 3038 were Isabella Coward aged 66, Joseph Coward aged 70, an infant child with the surname ‘Wray’ and the individual ‘William’ listed above. At first it appeared that it was the family grave of a Joseph Coward and his wife Isabella but I had no record of any such marriage. I eventually identified Isabella as the wife of Charles Coward and immeditely thought I’d got things badly mixed up. Isabella died in 1908 but her husband Charles was recorded on the 1911 census so had I got Charles and Joseph Coward confused and mistakenly entered the wrong husband or placed one or other in the wrong graves?
I decided to look at Charles Coward again and discovered that on our family tree Charles had been married previosuly to an Elizabeth Webster. Elizabeth had died in 1876 aged 36 years and after her death Charles, a widower, married Isabella Webster, a younger sister of Elizabeth. In fact upon closer inspection of the marriage entry for Charles and Elizabeth I noticed that Charles was a widower at that time also, and ultimately discovered his first marriage to Elizabeth Earnshaw.
So, if Charles wan’t interred in the same grave as his third wife Isabella, where had he been laid to rest after his death in 1915? I discovered that Charles Coward, along with his second wife Elizabeth, were interred in grave 3036. It was all now much clearer.
Grave numbers 3036-3038 contain several members of the Webster and Coward families and therein lies the answer to our ‘William’ above. William George Webster was the brother of Elizabeth and Isabella Webster and his death registration records him only as George Webster which is why I had such difficuly locating him in the first place.
By michael, on August 12th, 2011
I have now completed adding all the available burial records (10,193 of them) for the Knottingley town cemetery on Womersley Road, to our burials database. The records span the years 1884 through to 2005. In addition we are currently adding basic details of a large number of burials recorded since the cemetery was first opened in 1859 up to the start of the first available remaining burial register for 1883/1884. Already, we have more than 1,200 burial records from the period 1859-1883 included on our database.
Scanned images of the burial registers have been available on the Wakefield MDC website for some time but some of the entries have been poorly transcribed, while others contain errors, and there is no way of searching the registers other than by the individuals name. Trying to discover which family members were laid to rest in the same grave has, until now, been an almost impossible task. That has now changed!
Once you have ascertained in which grave an individual was interred, the Yorkshire Ancestry website now allows you to simply enter the grave number and our database will immediately tell you which individuals are recorded in that same grave.
However, before we get carried away, our burials database is never going to be 100% accurate due to the fact that in parts, the burial registers are almost illegible and there’s every likelihood that some of the entries made in the registers are incorrect. In addition, I’m not entirely sure that every burial at the cemetery was officially recorded in the registers at the time, as there are some rather prolonged periods where no burials were actually recorded following immediately after a period where there were burials on a frequent daily basis. We have done our very best to ensure the information we have added to our burials database is as accurate as possible by checking the majority of the entries against the civil registration records available on FreeBMD and making note of the page and volume numbers. We have also tried to double check the grave numbers recorded alongside each individual using all the information available to us, including memorial stone inscriptions, but there is just no way of knowing for certain when we have got it right or when we have got it wrong.
In use the burials database is truly awesome and you’ll soon begin to wonder how you ever managed without it. It really does help your family history research when you can easily discover which people are interred together. It allows you to identify individuals, link families together, and locate spouses with greater accuracy.
As a project, the burials database has taken me more than 2 years but that’s just by adding a small number of records in my spare time. During that time however, I have had to spend many, many hours (far too many to recall) trying to make sense of some of the entries and verify the others as best I can. If you are a current registered member of Yorkshire Ancestry and the Knottingley Family History database, then you have complete access to the results of all that work already. If you are not already a registered member then you can access the burials database, along with all our other local family history records, including our 24,500 name Knottingley family tree, for a minimal registration fee. See the Yorkshire Ancestry home page for full details.
By michael, on August 30th, 2010
George Metcalfe married Mary Rhodes at Christ Church, Knottingley, on 5 June 1855. George is recorded as a Waterman/Mariner and over the next 8 years, he and his wife Mary had at least 4 children. Census records confirm that Sarah Ann, Amelia, Lucy and Faith were all born into this marriage while there is a possibility of a 5th daughter, Elizabeth, but as yet I have not located any evidence to confirm this.
We know from census records that Mary was a Widow by the time of the 1871 census and according to my Knottingley cemetery burials, a George Metcalfe aged 38 years was buried at Knottingley cemetery on 23 January 1863. George and Mary’s daughter Faith was born in the September qtr of 1863 so her father would have died some months before she was born.
The 1871 census records Mary with a son Fred(erick), born 1869/70, but there doesn’t appear to be a birth registration on the GRO index. If it is correct that Mary’s husband George had died in 1863 it’s clear that he could not have been the father of Frederick.
As a means of confirmation, on the 5th Apr 1874 there is a record of baptism at Christ Church, Knottingley for Faith Metcalf, daughter of George & Mary – Mariner, and also on the very same date there is a record of baptism for Fred Metcalf, the son of Mary, with no details of the father recorded.
The 1891 census records Fred Metcalf, aged 21, at Shepherds Bridge, Knottingley, with his wife Jane, aged 22, of Wakefield. The 1901 census records a ‘married’ Jane Metcalfe at the home of Ross Haller, Union Row, Knottingley, where she is recorded as a Boarder and is working as a Bottle Packer at a Glassworks. With peculiar similarity, a ‘married’ Fred Metcalfe is recorded working as a Chemical Works Labourer and living as a Boarder at the home of William Miller, Ocean Terrace, Knottingley.
It’s a bit complicated but not too difficult to follow until you begin searching for the marriage record for Fred and Jane. The only record I can find is for Curtis Metcalfe and Jane Williamson who were married at Christ Church, Knottingley, on the 8th March 1891, however, I cannot find any census record of a Curtis Metcalfe.
I have a feeling that Fred and Curtis are one and the same but I have yet to find that one piece of information that offers confirmation. To fuel my belief, there is a birth registration in 1869 for Curtis Metcalfe which, if it turns out that they are the same person, would explain why I have not been able to locate one for Frederick Metcalfe.
Curtis Metcalfe, a 37 year old Labourer, died in 1906 and he was buried at Knottingley cemetery on the 22 October in grave no. 2339. His burial record offers no additional clues as to his correct identity at this time.
So, are Frederick Metcalfe and Curtis Metcalfe the same person? Let me know.
By michael, on August 29th, 2010
I’ve spent the past couple of days filling in the gaps and having added several hundred new records I’m pleased to say that I have now managed to record all the Knottingley cemetery burials from April 2005 right back to January 1928. This is in addition to those already recorded from 1859 through to 1906, so you’ll now find details of more than 8,700 Knottingley Cemetery burials on our database – all of them searchable by grave number. We also have approx 1,000 burials listed from other burial grounds making a total in excess of 9,700.
If you have ever searched any other online burials resource for Knottingley cemetery you’ll know how difficult it can sometimes be to find the individual you are looking for. I can’t promise that my database will be 100% accurate because from the information available to me it isn’t possible to ensure that it is, but in most cases I have double checked my burial records against the GRO index to ensure correct names and dates wherever possible. Similar resources available to you contain some rather unnecessary errors and omissions.
As for the grave numbers themselves it is pretty well hit and miss because there is no other information to compare them with. However, with so many records listed and by using the information contained on our family tree, it has been possible to work out any problems and I’m pretty confident that you’ll find this database extremely useful as a research tool.
All members can help to ensure that the database is as accurate as possible simply by searching for their own ancestors and by letting me know if they either find anything amiss, any individuals not shown who they feel should be, or any individuals shown who they feel shouldn’t be there.
Remember, all Knottingley Cemetery burials from 1907 through to 1927 have still to be added so please bear that in mind when searching the database.
By michael, on August 16th, 2010
Our burials database now comprises details of more than 9,000 burials with more than 7,800 entries from Knottingley cemetery alone. As I’ve already said, this is a useful resource to have available when compiling your family history. Find one member of a family, take note of the grave number, and then search for others interred in the same plot. It’s often a good way to locate a wife who had remarried after the death of her husband, as they were often interred along with their first husband.
Over the past few days I have entered all Knottingley cemetery burials from January 1928 through to May 1937 and I intend to keep adding additional records until I have completed right through to 1945. Our database already contains details of all burials at Knottingley cemetery from 1945 through to 2005 so that leaves me with just another 8 years worth to make the link between the 2 batches of records. Once that link is made it will leave only the period 1907-1927 in order to fully complete the entire cemetery from approx 1859 right through to 2005.
By michael, on August 13th, 2010
Yesterday, whilst trying to unravel a mystery regarding a separate member of the France family, I encountered a record for Elizabeth Radley, who married Thomas France at Christ Church, Knottingley, on 6th February 1871. The marriage entry transcription I have available to me records that Elizabeth was
‘a Spinster of Full years and the daughter of John Radley, a Bricklayer’.
Looking at our family tree database I discovered that there were 3 possible individual records for an Elizabeth Radley and to my surprise one of those was already recorded as the wife of Thomas France. So, were these actually 3 separate Elizabeth Radley’s or could two or more be merged into a single record? Firstly, let’s see what we have to start with.
The 3 individual records were:
I3261 Elizabeth Radley, daughter of William & Sarah, baptised at Christ Church, Knottingley, 15 July 1850
I9760 Elizabeth Radley, mother of Alfred Radley who was baptised at Knottingley on the 1st August 1869
I4240 Elizabeth Radley, wife of Thomas France
The fact that our marriage transcription records Elizabeth’s father as ‘John, a Brickmaker’ appears to dismiss any theory that she was the daughter of William & Sarah. However, transcriptions can often be erroneous and there is some evidence to suggest that this may be the case here. There are ‘unions’ and relationships in later census records that suggest a link between Elizabeth, the wife of Thomas France, and a George Radley, son of William & Sarah (her possible parents). What I have certainly not yet discovered is an Elizabeth Radley baptised to John, or a census entry showing Elizabeth with a father, John.
We know from baptism records that William and Sarah Radley had a daughter Elizabeth born in 1849, she being recorded at home with her parents on the 1851 and 1861 census. We also know that an Elizabeth Radley had an illegitimate son Alfred who was baptised in 1869. The fact that a 2-year-old Alfred Radley is recorded at the home of his ‘grandparents’ William and Sarah Radley on the 1871 census, and as a 12 year-old at the home of his widowed ‘grandmother’ Sarah Radley in 1881, means that Alfred’s mother must be Elizabeth, the daughter of William & Sarah Radley. It is clear that records I3261 and I9760 as listed above can be merged into a single record. That leaves us to consider any possible links with Elizabeth, wife of Thomas France.
It may be important to recall that as already discovered, Alfred was the grandson of William and Sarah Radley and that the 1871 & 1881 census records also reveal a George Radley, son of William and Sarah and the uncle of Alfred Radley. In fact the 1891 census records George Radley, a Coal Merchant, living at Low Green, Knottingley with his nephew Alfred, a Coal Labourer.
One fact that might be of interest is that on the ‘Thomas France’ marriage record of 6th February 1871, Elizabeth Radley’s father is recorded employed as a ‘Bricklayer’ but to date I haven’t yet encountered that occupation within the family. However, the 1911 census records George Radley, previously a coal merchant, as a ‘Retired Brick Maker’ so there is clearly some family connection with that occupation.
Returning to George Radley we find that in the 1891 census he is recorded living with his nephew Alfred next door to Topsy Johnson, a married lady whose husband William appears to have not been present at the time of the census, or indeed those of 1901 and 1911. William and Topsy’s only child Ann Louisa died at the age of 7 years in 1887. Perhaps William and Topsy no longer resided together as husband and wife although William was later interred in the same grave as his wife Topsy and daughter Ann Louisa at Knottingley Cemetery, his wife being interred in 1912 and he in 1927.
On the 1901 and 1911 census we find George Radley recorded as a Boarder at the home of Topsy Johnson. In addition, the 1901 census also reveals that William and Frederick France, sons of Thomas & Elizabeth (nee Radley), are recorded as visitors. Furthermore, the 1911 census reveals that 4 sons of Thomas & Elizabeth France; Frederick, John, Dawson and Walter, are all recorded as Lodgers with Topsy Johnson and George Radley. Does that suggest a family connection through Topsy Johnson or with George Radley?
Although the evidence suggested by the marriage transcription indicates Elizabeth, wife of Thomas France, not to be the sister of George Radley (her father being John and his William), there are some clear assumptions that they were in fact brother and sister and that there is a possibility that the marriage transcription is incorrect. Had ‘John’, as recorded on the marriage transcription, been recorded as ‘William’ then everything would fall neatly into place. If you are able to offer any confirmation or other suggestions then please let me know.
By michael, on August 12th, 2010
Our burials database has been overlooked recently but at times it proves so useful that it really does pay to keep adding to it. Being able to link family members together through their burial records is an asset, and even though our burials database is somewhat crude in design, (being ‘home made’) the ability to find family members interred together in the same plot by searching on the grave number is an extremely useful addition even though there are still many hundreds of records to add. This evening I have entered the whole of 1928 through to May 1929 and during the day another batch of pre 1884 burials have been included. It’s very time consuming because we are trying to cross reference all entries with the GRO index to make sure they are as correct as possible but there have been almost 200 new records added today.
By michael, on August 10th, 2010
Benjamin Bean, a Farmer of Hensall, Yorkshire, married Elizabeth Senior of Darrington, Yorkshire, at St Botolph Church, Knottingley, on the 8th March 1849. Elizabeth was the daughter of John and Sarah Senior.
The 1861 census records Benjamin and Elizabeth Bean residing at Hensall along with their 15 year-old niece Sarah Ann Steel, and later, at St Giles Church, Pontefract, on 26 November 1874, after the death of his wife Elizabeth, Benjamin takes his second wife, Sarah Ann Steel, daughter of Samuel.
It’s clear that Benjamin and Elizabeth’s niece Sarah Ann Steel who was recorded with them in 1861 became the bride of Benjamin Bean in 1874 but the relationship chart on our family tree didn’t identify any link between either Benjamin or Elizabeth and Sarah Ann Steel to substantiate the ‘niece’ description. The only possible explanation was that Sarah Ann Steel’s mother, Christiana, was the sister of Benjamin’s first wife Elizabeth Senior, but although it seemed a pretty obvious assumption, I hadn’t yet located the necessary proof. Until, that was, I managed to find Christiana’s baptism record by searching the IGI database on just the given name. Finally, there it was – Christiana SENIOER, along with an additional brother and sister.
Now all that remains is to identify the parents of Alice Bean born abt 1866.
Alice is first recorded as a 15 year-old daughter on the 1881 census with her ‘parents’, the above Benjamin and Sarah Ann Bean, along with two other children that are most certainly from that marriage. The date of Alice’s birth suggests that she is the daughter of Benjamin’s first wife Elizabeth but the 1871 census doesn’t record her and there is no record of baptism. It is likely that Alice was the illegitimate daughter of Sarah Ann Steel but if that is so then who was the father?
By michael, on August 7th, 2010
Initially, the Knottingley Family History Database family tree comprised individual records for George Robert Wood and Robert Wood as sons of Richard Wood and his wife Hannah (nee Stacey) A form submitted to the IGI by a member of the LDS church (Batch No: 7617726, Sheet 20, Source Call No.: 1058652) records the baptism at Knottingley of George Robert Wood on the 7th September 1834 as son of Richard Wood and Hannah.
Early census returns record only a Robert Wood and indicate his date of birth to be abt. 1836 making it appear that there may be two individual brothers. After his marriage to first wife Charlotte, Robert Wood is recorded on the 1871 and 1881 census returns with his wife and 2 sons, Tom and Robert. However, after the death of Charlotte in 1888, Robert Wood takes his second wife Eliza Ann Bailey, whom he marries at Pontefract in the final quarter of 1890, and on this occasion he is referenced by his correct given names of George Robert Wood.
The second marriage appears to have been a turning point and the 1891 and 1901 census both record the additional given name although more confusingly the 1911 return has them in reverse order as Robert George Wood.
To end as was begun, ‘George Robert Wood’ was finally interred in plot no. 1280 at Knottingley Cemetery on the 15th April 1926 along with his second wife Eliza Ann.
With the evidence uncovered through his second marriage and from subsequent census returns our two individual records for George Robert Wood and Robert Wood have now been merged into a single record
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