Liverpool 1775 to 1800 Olaf Stapledon Outline Plan for the County Borough of Birkenhead 1947 Pagan Wirral - Myth and Reality perambulation of the hundred of wirral Rambles around the old Churches of Wirral Smugglers of Parkgate and Heswall The Acts of Parliament and provisional orders relating to Wallasey 1809-1899 The history and meaning of the local and river names of South-west Lancashire and of Wirral The History of Cheshire The history of the hundred of Wirral The place-names of the Liverpool district; or, The history and meaning of the local and river names of South-west Lancashire and of Wirral (1898) The Wapentake of Wirral; a history of the Royal Franchise of the Hundred and Hundred Court of Wirral 1352 to 1786 Transactions of the Historic Society of.Lancashire and Cheshire 1868 Wirral Field Names & References Wirral in Medieval Legend
click here Sorry seemed to have lost the link to the above
I have a copy of the The Wapentake Of Wirral of which there had only been 200 copies printed. I bought a copy about 17yrs ago and paid £75 for it. Was that a stupid thing to do ? Somehow, I think the answer might be 'yes'.
Humankind has not woven the web of life. We are but one thread within it. Whatever we do to the web, we do to ourselves. All things are bound together. All things connect. ~Chief Seattle
I would gladly give you £100 for it, but I know you would not sell.I think it is up there with The Ragged Trousered Philamprothist. I was going to approach a friend with a view to making a play of it.I kept the page from the Morton case for a reference to metal detecting on the beach. Wirral Council beware. I love the passage abut the priest moving the dying mans hand to sign the will in favour of the church.
Last edited by dustymclean; 13th Oct 20177:40pm. Reason: spell on you
Could somebody tell me if there was a school operating in Bromborough in 1810? If not, where would boys (and girls?) get their education. Thankyou, bliplandy
Could somebody tell me if there was a school operating in Bromborough in 1810? If not, where would boys (and girls?) get their education. Thankyou, bliplandy
Before 1870 education was not compulsory. Prior to that all sorts of private schools were set up (in some cases just a couple of kids in a front room) but the Church of England had or sponsored a lot of schools of sorts, especially after 1811.
Larger companies also had schools of sorts either as a child minding service, getting kids ready to work for them or on the job training from early ages.
But in general, the majority of the working class were probably not educated in any formal manner in that era. Richer people had teachers come in to educate their children. A few in between would get the informal private education.
We don't do charity in Germany, we pay taxes. Charity is a failure of governments' responsibilities - Henning Wehn
The five boys in the William Manifold family had a good sound education in English and mathematics. They would have attended the St Barnabas Anglican church, Bromborough. (Two of them who drowned in the Mersey in their teens are buried there). Is there any record of students for the above mentioned church available? There schooling would have been over 1806 - 1827. The girls in this family could read and write, but perhaps not to the same standard as the boys. Incidentally, the family lived at the Court House Farm, Bromborough. (I am not sure if this was the big house, or perhaps a farm cottage?)
A house that size and number of kids has a wide range of possibilities. The lads may have gone away to a boarding school or been educated at home, possibly with a residential nanny/teacher. Its less likely the girls were boarded.
There were a number of boarding schools around Chester including Kings School but proximity wasn't always the main criteria.
We don't do charity in Germany, we pay taxes. Charity is a failure of governments' responsibilities - Henning Wehn
Court House, Bromborough. Is there a census for 1820 - 1824 for those people residing in this house? I am trying to place the Manifold and Barnes families. Thankyou, bliplandy
The first census was 1801 and every ten years after, unfortunately 1801-1831 were destroyed leaving only 1841 and after having any historical value.
The Bromborough Land Tax assessments has mention of Jas(James) Manifold at Courthouse Farm in 1791 & 1796 and he appears to be renting the farm and land from James Mainwaring Esq. In later years, William Manifold and Sam Manifold also rent from James Mainwaring.
I suspect the same property as Jas, unfortunately it is only described as, Farm & Land.
Images below, Jas Manifold, Courthouse Farm
God help us, Come yourself, Don't send Jesus, This is no place for children.
Thanks bertieone. All came through clearly. James was the father of William and Sam Manifold. I'm not sure if there was only one building (the big Court House building) on the farm or a second smaller farmhouse building on the site. Again, thanks for your help.