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Notes |
Linked to |
201 |
Her name was Joan on the 1851 census, Joan when married. Her name was Jane on the 1881 census, Ellen on the 1891, 1901 censuses and Joan Ellen on the 1911 census and Joan on her death registration and probate | PAULL, Joan Ellen (I10)
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202 |
His executors wanted to bury him in Westminster Abbey but his family wanted him buried with Emma at Stinsford so they compromised and his heart is at Stinsford and his ashes in London. | HARDY, Thomas (I2065)
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203 |
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Etaples_Military_Cemetery | CARTRIDGE, Joseph George Edwin (I1699)
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204 |
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Hardy | HARDY, Thomas (I2065)
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205 |
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=11983199&ref=acom
Ypres (Menin Gate) Memorial
Ypres (Ieper)
West Flanders (West-Vlaanderen), Belgium
Plot: http://www.cwgc.org/find-war-dead/casualty/929817/BUDGELL,%20ARTHUR%20BEAVEN | BUDGELL, Arthur Beavan (I1404)
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206 |
http://www.kibble.org/history.php
He and his wife did a straight swap with the existing Head Teacher and Matron of Kibble Reform school in August 1867. They had previously worked at the Boy's House of Refuge in Duke Street, Glasgow. There were 43 other applicants for the post. | RAE, John (I2246)
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207 |
http://www.poole.gov.uk/go.php?structureID=U46405d3d22e69&ref=S464C3F319DAF4 | Source (S64151)
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208 |
http://www.pooleatwar.com/go/roh/ref/R3FAD04EF0C02E/
William John Cartridge (1894-1915)
William John Cartridge, child of William and Eliza Cartridge was born in 1894. Lived at 45 Strand Street, in Poole. Fought in WW1 (dogtag# 10448) as a Private in the 5th Bn. Dorsetshire Regiment. Died on Aug 21 1915 at the age of 21. A memorial for William John Cartridge can be found at Panel 136 to 139. Helles Memorial in Turkey. | CARTRIDGE, William John (I1608)
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209 |
https://goo.gl/maps/QJUKPZP8qEx | HICKS, Emma (I0866)
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210 |
https://goo.gl/maps/QJUKPZP8qEx | RAE, Charles Orr (I0034)
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211 |
https://goo.gl/maps/TR448jp5FsG2 | RAE, Andrew (I0038)
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212 |
https://goo.gl/maps/TR448jp5FsG2 | RAE, John Hallyburton (I0036)
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213 |
https://goo.gl/maps/TR448jp5FsG2 | ORR, Matilda Richardson (I0037)
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214 |
https://goo.gl/maps/TR448jp5FsG2 | RAE, Jessie Helen (I0039)
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215 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I0043)
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216 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I2224)
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217 |
At least one living or private individual is linked to this note - Details withheld. | Living (I2232)
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218 |
https://www.cwgc.org/find-war-dead/casualty/1603585/ | PEARCE, Harrie Herbert (I0277)
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219 |
https://www.cwgc.org/find-war-dead/casualty/2766970/rigler | RIGLER, William Arthur John (Jack) (I0686)
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220 |
https://www.cwgc.org/find-war-dead/casualty/31622/rae | RAE, John Muir (I0042)
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221 |
https://www.cwgc.org/find-war-dead/casualty/499759/cartridge | CARTRIDGE, Joseph George Edwin (I1699)
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222 |
https://www.cwgc.org/find-war-dead/casualty/544989/haskins | HASKINS, Clifford Herbert (I0918)
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223 |
https://www.pooleww1.org.uk/people/2072/stanley-pearce/ | PEARCE, Stanley Robert (I0970)
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224 |
https://www.pooleww1.org.uk/people/2355/harold-cartridge/ | CARTRIDGE, Harold Henry (I1581)
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225 |
https://www.pooleww1.org.uk/people/2637/harry-cartridge/ | CARTRIDGE, Harry Ashley Phippard (I1807)
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226 |
https://www.pooleww1.org.uk/people/428/private-cartridge/ | CARTRIDGE, Joseph George Edwin (I1699)
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227 |
https://www.pooleww1.org.uk/people/594/gunner-haskins/ | HASKINS, Clifford Herbert (I0918)
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228 |
https://www.pooleww1.org.uk/people/776/private-pearce/
Harrie Herbert Pearce (1899-1918)
Harrie Herbert Pearce, child of William Anderson Pearce and Leonora Pearce was born in 1899. Lived at 80 West Street, in Poole. Fought in WW1 (dogtag# 34889) as a Private in the 10th Bn. Royal Warwickshire Regiment. Died on Mar 23 1918 at the age of 19. Buried in . A memorial for Harrie Herbert Pearce can be found at Bay 3. Arras Memorial - Pas de Calais in France. | PEARCE, Harrie Herbert (I0277)
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229 |
https://www.pooleww1.org.uk/people/814/charles-rigler/
Charles George Rigler, child of Frederick James and Emma Rigler was born in 1889. Married Alice Maud Rigler andLived at Heckford Road, in Poole. Fought in WW1 (dogtag# 41796) as a Private in the 7th Bn. Royal Inniskilling Fusiliers. Died on Aug 16 1917 at the age of 28. A memorial for Charles George Rigler can be found at Panel 70 to 72. Tyne Cot Memorial. | RIGLER, Charles George (I0305)
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230 |
https://www.pooleww1.org.uk/people/815/rifleman-rigler/
Thomas Rigler, child of Robert and Matilda Rigler was born in 1895. Fought in WW1 (dogtag# 3288) as a Rifleman in the 1st Bn. London Regt (Post Office Rifles) of the Territorial Army. Died on May 22 1916 at the age of 21 in France - Vimy Ridge, part of Battle of Arras. A memorial for Thomas Rigler can be found at Bay 10. Arras Memorial - Pas de Calais and Main Post Office, Poole High Street in France. | RIGLER, Thomas James (I0454)
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231 |
Imperial War Museum
Source information
ID: 6766848
Reference: AIR 79
Title: British RAF Airmen 1912-1919
Description: Warrant Officers, non-commissioned officers and airmen in the Royal Air Force (RAF) between 1912 and 1919. The record set contains records of more than 300,000 airmen, who were born in over 30 countries.
UPP: GBM/AIR79/203553
Credit: © The National Archives | CARTRIDGE, Thomas Arthur (I0127)
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232 |
Imperial War Museum
Source information
ID: 6435937
Reference: ADM188
Title: Royal Navy Seamen 1899-1919
Description: The Royal Navy Seamen records contain the complete service histories of 373,000 ratings who joined the service between 1899 and 1919.
UPP: GBM/ADM188/185818
Credit: © The National Archives | CARTRIDGE, Harold Henry (I1581)
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233 |
Imperial War Museum
Source information
ID: 6684158
Reference: AIR 79
Title: British RAF Airmen 1912-1919
Description: Warrant Officers, non-commissioned officers and airmen in the Royal Air Force (RAF) between 1912 and 1919. The record set contains records of more than 300,000 airmen, who were born in over 30 countries.
UPP: GBM/AIR79/124878
Credit: © The National Archives | SNOOK, William Emanuel (I1061)
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234 |
Info from Alan Gibbs Genes Reunited | GIBBS, James (I0443)
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235 |
Info from Alan Gibbs Genes Reunited | BRIXEY, Caroline (I0444)
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236 |
Info from Alan Gibbs Genes Reunited | EASTWOOD, Harriett (I0947)
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237 |
Info from Alan Gibbs Genes Reunited | GIBBS, John (I0948)
|
238 |
Info from Elaine Brain Genes reunited
Married and divorced with no children | Family: PEARCE, Cyril Anderson / DICK, Dorothy M B (F412)
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239 |
Info from Elaine Brain Genes reunited - Never married No children | PEARCE, Archibald Jenkins (I0922)
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240 |
Informant of death Ann Pearce - Wife of John Pearce her son | READ, Eva Kate (I0010)
|
241 |
Informant of death was E. K. Pearce (daughter) of 13 Tatnam Road Poole on the 9th December 1952 | PICKETT, Mary Ann (I0052)
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242 |
Informant of death was husband Andrew Rae | HALLYBURTON, Helen (I0045)
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243 |
Information from Brian Galpin | Family: RIGLER, John George / FALL, Louisa Sarah (F088)
|
244 |
It is thought that William Rigler's wife (name unknown) committed suicide by jumping in front of a train. The story told is that she laid the table for the familiy's tea and then walked out(to the railway line) - she may have tried to take Hector with her - but he sensed somethinh was wrong and ran home before she reached the line. | SCOTT, Elizabeth (I0554)
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245 |
Joined ? Staffordshire Regiment
Later Devon and Dorsets
Gassed during WW1
Served in Ireland and India
Private
Poole Hospital Heating Engineer
Death informed by Eva Pearce on 26/3/1976 | PEARCE, Wilfred John (I0009)
|
246 |
Joined the Lifeboat in 1931 | CARTRIDGE, Charles Ashley Phippard (I1724)
|
247 |
Jun qtr 1899 - ref. 5a 267 | EGG, Thomas Edward Frederick (I1638)
|
248 |
Just before his christening, a Richard Clark was married. He was a church warden and possibly Richard's father as he was "baseborn" | SNOOK, Richard Clark (I1008)
|
249 |
Kibble History - Summary of General Information
Establishment of Kibble
Opened in 1859 as Miss Kibble's Reformatory School, following a bequest from Miss Elizabeth Kibble (died 1841) to 'found and endow, in Paisley, an Institution for the purpose of reclaiming youthful offenders against the law'.
In her will signed 7 August 1840 and registered at Edinburgh on 28 January 1841 she divides her wealth into two halves - one for legacies to her relatives and certain good causes, and the other for the establishment of the Kibble Reformatory. She comments on that and on her gifts to the various good causes that it was "...also to fulfil the intentions of the late Janet Kibble, my sister".
Elizabeth Kibble's family was one of the prosperous and important families in Paisley at the time, inheriting land from both grandparents and acquiring other properties. They intermarried with other entrepreneurial families and her brother was one of the principal linen manufacturers in the town. He married a granddaughter of Humphrey Fulton of Maxwelltown who had introduced silk weaving into Paisley. Her mother's family was socially concerned, establishing the Thread Street School funded by the Corse legacy and, with her sister who had pre-deceased her, she had obviously thought about ways of improving life for the poor in Paisley either through existing institutions or through the establishing of a new one - Kibble Reformatory. She carefully shared her wealth among her brothers, brothers-in-law and her late sister's family (with a notable and unexplained exception).
Her parents, grandparents, brothers and brothers-in-law all played important roles in the life of Paisley either as landowners, manufacturers, burgesses or as directors of charitable organisations.
General Background (up to 1900)
Boys were sent to Kibble for a range of reasons, although the majority were sent for committing offences. During the school's first forty years boys sent here were generally aged between 10 and 15, although the earliest records list a case of an eight-year-old being committed to Kibble.
Most offences committed by boys sent to Kibble during this period were thefts; however, in many cases these involved theft of food, clothing, blankets and, most commonly, theft of shoes. The latter offence is tinged with irony since shoemaking was the most common trade taught to boys while they were in the school and many boys were apprenticed to local shoemakers on their release. Some more serious offences are recorded but these were in the minority. Boys are regularly listed as being orphans, abandoned by parents, or being the children of drunkards. Therefore, in the absence of a State welfare system and given the nature of the thefts, it appears that at least some of these boys stole from necessity rather than greed or malice. There are also some cases of boys being referred to Kibble for ?care and protection? and not because of any wrongdoing on their part.
It was standard practice for boys to be sentenced to adult male prison (usually for fourteen days, occasionally for twenty-one days) before being moved to Kibble. This was in order to give them a short, sharp shock and hopefully deter them from following a life of crime. Reformatory sentences were usually for between three and five years. The practice of passing down preliminary prison sentences prior to admission to reformatory was abolished in Scotland in 1893, following the Day Industrial Schools (Scotland) Act, which also severed links between the adult prison system and reformatories.
While in the school, boys were given industrial training; this was mainly of a practical nature but did include lectures from external personnel on subjects such as dairying, the silk worm and tannery processes. In addition to shoemaking, tailoring and farming were the main skills taught. Although the emphasis was on equipping the boys for employment on their discharge, they were also taught to read, write and do arithmetic; many of them are recorded as unable to read or write on admission to the school, while some could read but not write.
Social evenings were also held; these included entertainments put on for parents and invited guests/dignitaries by the boys, where the boys would perform musical recitals, for example. Boys were also treated to magic lantern shows as a form of entertainment.
Sleeping accommodation was in large dormitories and the daily routine, taken from an 1881 Trustees' Report, was as shown below:
Daily Timetable (1881)
5.30 - 6am Rise; wash; dress
6 - 9am School; worship
9 - 10am Breakfast; play
10am - 1pm Work
1 - 2 pm Dinner; play
2 - 6pm Work
6 - 7pm Wash; supper; play
7 - 8.30pm School; worship
8.30 - 9pm Prepare for bed
9pm Bed
This illustrates the mixture of work, education, social interaction and religious worship that constituted Kibble's ethos and routine.
| RAE, John (I2246)
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250 |
Known as Charlie | CHAPMAN, Charles Godfrey (I0874)
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