Lanyon or Lannin?

In 1943 a William Lanyon of Bath was found floating in Bristol harbour.

Bath Chronicle and Weekly Gazette 3 April 1943

The newspaper helpfully reported his age so I thought it would be fairly straightforward to identify him and where he belonged on the family tree. I was wrong! The following post is about my search to find where William came from and to fit him on the tree.

The Search

From the dates on the newspaper report I quickly found his death certificate which gave his age as 76 and his address.

Death Certificate

I started to look for a birth circa 1867 and a marriage certificate, as the newspaper mentioned his ‘wife’. I couldn’t find either.

His death certificate listed his address as 27 The Paragon, Bath, Somerset. Today the Paragon is a very desirable area but in the 1930s it was rather run down and full of flats and boarding houses.

The Paragon Bath

I checked the census returns for 1921 at the Paragon but there was no sign of him. So I decided to check the 1939 register and bingo, I found him.

William Lanyon at 27 The Paragon was living with three women, Cecil, Elsie and Kathleen Lanyon. All four are listed as single so where is the wife mentioned at his inquest in 1943?

The 1939 register includes the full date of birth which is really helpful when trying to track an individual.

  • William – 5 Oct 1866 (retired grocer)
  • Cecil – 9 Jan 1868 (incapacitated)
  • Elsie – 20 May 1869 (unpaid domestic duties)
  • Kathleen – 1 Jun 1874 (unpaid domestic duties)

The closeness of the dates of birth suggested that they may be siblings so I started to search for the birth registrations of Cecil, Elsie and Kathleen. I couldn’t find any of them. I then reversed the search and started looking for their deaths after 1939.

I found a burial at Lansdown cemetery in Bath for a Rhoda Kathleen Lanyon, born 1874 and died 22 Dec 1966. I then found a death record for Elsie Lanyon in Bath in Jan Qtr 1951. So I ordered a digital image of Elsie’s death certificate to see what information it contained. I also found a burial in Lansdown cemetery for an Elsie Kingston Lanyon, where did the name Kingston come from, it wasn’t on her death certificate?

Elsie’s death certificate

The address was correct, it mentions her sister R Lanyon also of the same address, so that was confirmation that Kathleen was indeed Rhoda. It also mentioned that she was a retired school teacher and the daughter of William Lanyon a school master.

I then searched for Cecil Lanyon without any luck, so I added an ‘e’ to the end of her name and searched for Cecile. I found a Cecile Lanyon on the 1901 Irish census, born about 1873 in County Cork. Initially I rejected that as the Irish Cecile was five years younger than my Cecil, but I should remember that women don’t always age 10 years between censuses!

1901 Census of Ireland

Cecile is at the bottom of the form, she is a boarder at 5 Morrison’s Quay in Cork. She can read and write but has no occupation. It also notes that she is Church of England.

I searched the census for any sign of Rhoda/Kathleen Lanyon and found a possible entry.

1901 Irish Census

I found a possible entry at Cloughmacsimon (Ballymodan, Cork).

  • Sarah A Lanyon Head, age 60 retired teacher, widow, born in Charleville
  • Rhoda (R or K) Daughter, age 28, no occupation, single, born Co Cork
  • Susan Jane Daughter, age 25, no occupation, single born Co Cork

I then searched for a birth of William Lanyon circa 1866 in Cork, the son of Sarah. I couldn’t find anything. Nor could I find a birth for Rhoda/Kathleen, Elsie or Cecil Lanyon in Cork.

So where had they come from?

I did find a Rhoda K Lanyon of Bangor signing the Ulster Covenant in 1912. This was a declaration that they were loyal subjects of the King and didn’t want home rule for Ireland.

Ulster Covenant

I searched for a birth for Susan Jane Lanyon listed on the 1901 census, but couldn’t find anything.

I moved forward again and searched for probate records on the off chance I would find something useful. I didn’t hold out much hope.

I found Rhoda’s probate record. There was nothing terribly useful.

Probate

I couldn’t find a record for Cecil or William but I struck lucky with Elsie.

Probate

Elsie Lanyon was also known as Ellen Lannin. Now that was very useful!

Back to the internet, I now started looking for the name Lannin and I found them quite quickly in Cork.

Rhoda Kate Lannin born 31 May 1874 in Cork, the daughter of William Lannin and Sarah Howard.

Birth Registration Skull Tipperary, Ireland

The registration shows that Rhoda was the daughter of William Lannin a school master and Sarah Lannin née Howard.

I then searched Irish births and found William’s birth on 5 Oct 1866 at Clonakilty. Son of William Lannin school master and Sarah Howard. A Nicholas Howard is mentioned, a brother to Sarah? Father?

William Lannin’s birth

Even better I found a birth registration for Sarah Maria Lannin on 9 Jan 1868 daughter of William Lannin a school master and Sarah Howard, I had found Cecile. A Mary Howard was present at the birth, a sister? Mother?

Sarah Maria Lannin’s birth

It didn’t take long to find the marriage of William Lannin and Sarah Howard on 1 Aug 1865 at Clonakilty.

Marriage of William and Sarah

The registration lists Richard Lannin a shoe maker as William’s father and Nicholas Howard, a school master, as Sarah’s father. (There are certainly a fair few shoe makers in the Lanyon family!)

It was straightforward to locate Sarah’s baptismal record on 19 Aug 1838 at Innishannon, Cork, the daughter of Nicholas and Mary. So that explained the names Nicholas and Mary on the grandchildren’s birth registrations.

I searched for a birth/baptism of William Lannin senior but couldn’t find one. I searched for a possible marriage of Richard Lannin and found a marriage record in 1821 at Cork, to an Ellen Kingston, so that explained the Kingston name on Elsie/Ellen’s burial record.

I found another child of William and Sarah, Richard Frederick Charles Lannin b 20 Mar 1871 Skull, Cork. Then I found later records of him joining the Masons in South Africa and his name had changed to Eric Frederick Charles Richard Lanyon, also a school master.

So the tree now looked like this.

  • William Lannin/Lanyon b 1866 d 1943
  • Sara Maria Lannin/ Cecile Lanyon b 1868 d 1957
  • Ellen Lannin/Elsie Kingston Lanyon b1869 d 1951
  • Richard Frederick Charles Lannin/Eric Frederick Charles Richard Lanyon b 1871 d 1927
  • Rhoda Kate Lannin/Kathleen Lanyon b 1874 d 1966
  • Susan Jane Lanyon b 1876 (no trace of a birth or baptism but this is the name she was using in 1901)

I couldn’t find a birth/baptism/death or burial for William Lannin senior. He was probably born sometime after 1821 when Richard and Ellen were married. I searched for a death from 1875 onwards and didn’t find anything. I did find a small newspaper article which may have related to him.

The results of examinations of teachers of primary schools in 1889. That could well be him although Ballinalee is not in Cork! I think the town should be Ballinadee, which is in Cork.

When I found William’s death registration that confirmed that he was living in Ballinadee.

William’s death certificate 8 May 1892 at Ballinadee

That means that as early as 1889 they were using the name Lanyon rather than Lannin.

I decided to go back a generation and see what I could find and if that helped to make things any clearer.

I found Nicholas Howard and his family.

Howard family tree

Nicholas was a school master, baptised 16 Mar 1798 at Innishannon, he died on 8 Feb 1868 at Timoleague, Cork. He married Mary (the records state that her surname is Keefe but their children’s death certificates in the USA state that she was Mary Lester. Perhaps she remarried after Nicholas died?)

I found five daughters but as there are big age gaps between them there may have been more children or stillbirths.

  • Mary Howard born 1830s married William Henry Warner died 19 Jun 1869 age 40 at Bath in Somerset (she was suffering from TB)
  • Sarah Anne Howard who married William Lannin
  • Catherine Howard b 1840 married Samuel Kingston and died 1917 in Indiana USA
  • Jane E Howard b 1849 married Samuel Probert and died in 1917 in Indiana USA
  • Victoria Howard b 1853 married William Charles Osmand Ellis from Bath Somerset and died in 1943 in Bath
Mary Howard/Warner’s death certificate

With two of Sarah Anne’s sisters living in Bath it’s easy to see how her children would end up in the same city. In 1871 Victoria Howard appears on the census living at The Paragon in Bath. In 1878 she married William Ellis.

Victoria Howard’s marriage certificate from Somerset.

Catherine Howard married a Samuel Kingston and I tried to work out their family tree as we’ve seen the name Kingston before.

Samuel Kingston b 1831 was the son of Samuel Kingston and Ellen Brenan. Samuel and Ellen had a large family. Perhaps Samuel senior was related to the Ellen Kingston who married Richard Lannin in 1821?

Despite all the searching I still don’t know why they changed their name from Lannin to Lanyon.

Perhaps they read about Sir Charles Lanyon, famous architect, Mayor of Belfast and MP in the papers and wanted to enjoy a little reflected glory? If that was the case why did they feel the need to change their christian names too?

Perhaps the reasons lie in the fight for home rule and the Easter uprising of 1916.

Breiz Atao, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

Rhoda Lanyon in 1912 signed the Ulster Covenant which was against home rule for Ireland. Perhaps as a protestant family in southern Ireland they experienced problems and felt they had to move to England. Naturally they would go to family already settled there, which is how they ended up in Bath in Somerset. Perhaps they stayed with aunt Victoria at The Paragon?

If you can answer any of the questions posed in this post then please get in touch!

Fined 6 pence

Whilst exploring the National Archives catalogue I came across an extract from the Lostwithiel Sessions which opened a really complicated can of worms!

On 11 January 1781 Richard Lanyon and his wife, Elizabeth, charged with assault against Sarah Bishop, base child of Richard Lanyon, changed their plea to guilty and were fined 6d each. (Source – QS/1/4/292-298)

That was the first mention of Richard Lanyon’s illegitimate daughter, I had to find out more!

It didn’t take long to find the baptism of Sarah Lenyne Bishop at Newlyn East on 14 March 1774, the base daughter of Mary Bishop. Assuming that Sarah was baptised shortly after her birth that would make her just 6 or 7 at the time of the assault. At a time when it was common for children to be chastised this must have been far more serious to lead to an actual charge of assault.

Who was Richard Lanyon?

He was baptised on 1 January 1749 at St Allen, the son of John Lanyon (Lanion) and Sarah Straight. John and Sarah had six children: Margaret 1736-1802, John 1740-1771, William 1743-1763, Richard 1746-1747, Richard 1749-1838 and Henry 1752-1838. The three surviving children married into the Searle family. Margaret married John Searle and Richard and Henry married two sisters, Elizabeth and Mary Searle.

Elizabeth and Mary Searle were the children of William Searle and Isabella Stephens. William Searle jr was the son of William Searle 1675-1736.

The Searle Tree

Richard Lanyon was a yeoman and his mother, Sarah Straight (Lanyon) bought the farm Polstain, at Zelah near St Allen, for him. He later bought the farm Lanner. On 18 April 1774, just four months after his illegitimate daughter Sarah was baptised, he married Elizabeth Searle at St Allen. He and Elizabeth had 10 children. Elizabeth died in 1825 and in 1827 Richard married again to a widow, Catherine Charles. He died on 17 February 1838 at the age of 89.

Polstain still exists today.

Polstain Farm

So why is this a ‘can of worms’?

Richard Lanyon’s mother, Sarah Straight was the sister of Mary Bishop’s grandfather, making Richard and Mary first cousins, once removed. The family connections don’t end there.

Poor old Ancestry’s family tree templates can’t quite cope with that! Richard appears twice!

Straight family tree

But it gets even more complicated because Mary Bishop’s grandmother is Jane Searle (Straight) 1704- and Jane was the sister to Richard Lanyon’s father-in-law, William Searle 1708-. So Mary Bishop’s granny was Elizabeth Searle (Lanyon)’s aunt!

To complicate things further Mary Bishop had a brother called Richard (1759-1848) and Richard Bishop married Elizabeth Gill. Their daughter Elizabeth Gill Bishop married William Lanyon, the grandson of Richard Lanyon and Elizabeth Searle!

Bishop, Lanyon, Gill Tree

So that’s all clear then?

So what of Sarah Lenyne Bishop?

Her existence can’t have been a secret, the whole family are interrelated and must surely have known about Mary Bishop’s illegitimate child. When Sarah was born Richard Lanyon was unmarried, why did he not marry Mary? We’ll never know.

We’ll also never know the reason for the assault but just a few months after the Lostwithiel Sessions Sarah Lanyon Bishop was apprenticed to James Richards of St Erme, a carpenter. Did Richard Lanyon pay for her apprenticeship?

Apprenticeships Tuesday 3 April 1781

Carpentry is an unusual job for a girl but not completely unknown, the other female apprentices were training to become mantua-makers and milliners, why did Sarah end up as a carpentry apprentice?

Is there a family connection between the Lanyons and Richards families? Richard Lanyon’s son William married a Peggy Exter Richards, could she be related to James of St Erme? That’s a question for another day!

L0038569 Feme de Charpentier, A female Carpenter
Credit: Wellcome Library, London. Wellcome Images
images@wellcome.ac.uk
http://wellcomeimages.org
Feme de Charpentier, A female Carpenter with tools costume and apparatus
Coloured engraving
18th Century By: Martin Engelbrecht50 coloured plates / engraved by Martin Engelbrecht, from 18th-cent. German works.
Published: c. 1721

Copyrighted work available under Creative Commons Attribution only licence CC BY 4.0 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/

Sadly we don’t know what happened to Sarah. There is no trace of a Sarah Lanyon/Lenyne Bishop marrying or being buried in England. There are lots of Sarah Bishops the name is quite common and it’s not possible to prove if any of them is our Sarah Bishop.

Sarah’s mother, Mary, died unmarried in 1810 at Newlyn East. She was buried on 4 August.

Richard Lanyon left a will but there is no mention of Sarah. His estate was valued at under £300.

Ralph Lanyeyn

Family historians are lucky to find a documented legal dispute from the 14th century to help build their family tree. Ralph’s dispute with Princess Joan of Kent gives us valuable information which confirms names and relationships but it’s not the only record available about Ralph.

In 1390 the Bishop of Exeter granted a licence to celebrate divine service in the chapel of St Mary at Lanyen in Madron (Lysons 1817). Today the chapel is a ruin but it gives an idea of the size of Ralph’s home, the barton of Lanyon in the late 14th century.

Madron Chapel by Ashley Dace, CC BY-SA 2.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0, via Wikimedia Commons

There are also three records in the Court of Common Pleas which relate to Ralph.

CP40/561 Easter 1401. Roger Boswarneth sues Ralph Lanyeyn for a debt.

CP40/589 1408 Ralph Lanyeyn sues Luke de Pensans for detinue (the crime of wrongful detention of goods or personal possessions) for a chest of charters.

CP40/589 1408 Alice Reda sues Ralph Lanyeyn, John Cornyssh, Robert Pensans, Richard Joce (tailor), Ralph Joce, Richard Dere & David Shade for trespass.

At a time when there are no records of baptisms, marriages or burials these records prove that Ralph was still alive in 1408.

I also have a letter from Jane Veale Mitchell to Edward Augustus Bullmore dated 23 Jan 1926 which states:

‘In Rolls Office, Chancery Lane, a Radolphus Lanyon asks that Tregamynyan, then in possession of his brother-in-law de Rogers, might come to him and his descendants, because they had no children. Written in old French, date 1327.’

This throws up a query, is the date 1327 correct? Is it the same Ralph Lanyeyn? The original letter has been transcribed, could the transcriber have got it wrong? It’s possible.

We don’t know when Ralph was born but 1327 seems far too early. If Ralph is married with descendants in 1327 then he is a very great age in 1408!

We know that Ralph’s parents were John de Lynyen and Sibyl de Tregamynion. This is confirmed by the record in Calendar Close Rolls CCR Ric II Vol 30 p.71.

We know that John de Lynyen’s father was David de Kylminawis as CCR Hen IV Vol 4 states that ‘David de Kylmynawis to John his firstborn son and heir, and to the heirs of his body by Sibyl daughter of Jocelin de Tregamynion…’

So where does the Radolphus Lanyon mentioned in Jane’s letter fit in? I haven’t found the original record she mentions but I think the date 1327 must be wrong and that the Radolphus Lanyon she mentions is Ralph Lanyeyn, the son of John & Sibyl. This then gives us the name of his brother-in-law, de Rogers, and leaves us wondering why the property Tregamynion at Morvah should be in his possession?

Rosy Hanns / Old Guide Stone on Bosullow Common, south east of Morvah

And that’s the fun of researching your family history, a few records discovered and a whole load of new queries to puzzle over!

Wimbledon

Having just watched the men’s tennis final I’m going to add a post about our slightly tenuous family connection to Wimbledon.

Algernon Robert Fitzhardinge Kingscote was born on the 3 Dec 1888 at Bangalore in India. The son of Howard and Adeline Kingscote. Adeline was the famous author, Lucas Cleeve.

He joined the army, 107th Company Royal Garrison Artillery and during World War I he fought at the First Battle of the Aisne earning the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel and the award of the Military Cross.

On 9 Sep 1919 (9/9/1919) he married Marjorie Paton Hindley in London. Marjorie was the daughter of Douglas and Rachael Hindley. Douglas was the brother of Walter Paton Hindley who married Alice Mary Lanyon.

Alice Mary Lanyon was the daughter of John Charles Lanyon and Jane Stacey Bennett. She was Marjorie Paton Hindley’s aunt and also my husband’s great grand aunt. (I said it was tenuous!)

So having established a tenuous connection to Algernon Kingscote what is his connection to Wimbledon?

Algernon Kingscote learned playing tennis in Switzerland, where he won numerous championships.  He was crowned Swiss champion in 1908 and champion of Bengal in 1913. At Wimbledon in 1919, he lost in the all comers final. He won the singles title at the Australasian Championship in 1919. He reached the men’s doubles final at Wimbledon in 1920. In 1921 Kingscote was a runner-up at the Monte Carlo Championships. He represented Great Britain in the Davis Cup seven times between 1919 and 1924.

Algernon Kingscote – Sport & General Press Agency Ltd., Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

At the 1922 Wimbledon Championship he established the routine of bowing to the Royal Box, a tradition which lasted until 2003.

Algernon Kingscote in 1914 – Agence Rol, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

He also competed at the Summer Olympics in Paris in 1924.

Tangopaso, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

At the outset of the Second World War he was sent back into action again at the age of 52. He died on 21 Dec 1964 at Woking in Surrey.

The Gonja of Ghana

The Lanyons have travelled all over the world and there are branches of the family on most continents. A Lanyon is even listed as a ruler of the Northern State of Gonja in Ghana!

Gonja was created by Mande Conquerors around the beginning of the 17th century. According to Wikipedia the capital is Yagbum.

Map of Ghana showing Gonja region.

The first ruler of Gonja was Sumalia Ndewura Jakpa, a slave trader.

Precolonial Gonja society was stratified into castes, with a ruling class, a Muslim trader class, an animist commoner class, and a slave class. Its economy depended largely on trade in slaves from Central Africa and kola nuts, particularly through the market town of Salaga, sometimes called the “Timbuktu of the South.”

Wikipedia gives a list of rulers of Gonja.

Apparently between 1698 and 1699 Lanyon was regent and Yagbongwura (paramount ruler). I suspect the name Lanyon may have been used to fill a gap in the list!

1907 – 1909 Lanyon was again listed as Yagbongwura. Curiously Wikipedia identifies this Lanyon as Colonel Sir William Owen Lanyon, who died of cancer in New York in 1887.

William was born in Ireland in 1842 the son of Sir Charles Lanyon and his wife Elizabeth Owen. He was a British colonial administrator and army officer.

William Owen Lanyon – Wikimedia Commons

He was invalided in the Ashanti campaign which may be his connection to Gonja.

The Anglo-Ashanti wars lasted 70 years finally ending in 1900. The wars established the British Gold Coast and the country became a British protectorate.

Defeat of the Ashantees, by the British forces under the command of Coll. Sutherland, July 11th 1824.” Wikimedia Commons

It’s not clear how William Owen Lanyon went from fighting in the Ashanti wars to being listed as a ruler of Gonja twenty years after his death but it makes life interesting for family historians!

The Bequest

During the winter of 2024 I decided to transcribe all the old Lanyon wills I could find. Most were fairly straightforward but one did catch my attention, the will of Charles Mortimer Lanyon who died in 1877. He left a sizeable bequest to Isabella Lockhart Campbell “if at the time of my death she be living with me or living apart from me with my consent…”

Curiosity piqued I started digging to find out more!

Charles Mortimer Lanyon was born in Belfast on 23 Aug 1840 the son of Charles Mortimer Lanyon and Elizabeth Helen Owen. His father was the famous Irish architect who built a number of well known buildings. He was later knighted and became Mayor of Belfast.

Sir Charles Mortimer Lanyon – Architect

Charles was the third child of Charles and Elizabeth. He trained to be a barrister. He never married and died on 27 Feb 1877 at the age of 37. He was just a name on the Lanyon tree until I read his will and set out to find out more about Isabella.

The name Isabella Campbell is very common, especially in Scotland, and the search for information was long and at times frustrating and whilst searching often involves working backwards I will retell the story chronologically.

Isabella Campbell was born Isabella Jones (an even more common name!) on 9 Dec 1847 in the village of Pontesford in Shropshire. Being so close to the Welsh border they weren’t the only Jones family in the area.

Her father was Richard Jones, a lawyer, and her mother was Jane Lockhart Mills. Isabella was the second of seven children born to the couple. I found them on the 1851 census for Pontesbury, Isabella was aged 4. By the 1861 census Isabella was missing. At the age of 14 she could have been staying with relatives on census night, away at school or possibly even working, although that seemed unlikely as her father was a lawyer and probably financially secure.

I couldn’t find a single Isabella Jones born in 1847 in Pontesbury on the 1861 census. The most likely candidate I found was an Isabella Jones, born abt. 1846 in Lambeth, Surrey and at school in Plymouth, Devon.

Screenshot

Plymouth seemed the most likely place in view of what happened next. On 15 Feb 1865 Isabella gave birth to a daughter, Florence Lockhart Campbell, at 4 Buckland Street, Plymouth. Isabella was just 18 years of age.

Florence’s birth record names her mother as Isabella Campbell formerly Lockhart (no mention of the name Jones) and names the father – Edward Campbell, a surgeon. I did search before 1865 for a marriage, without success.

I searched for Isabella on the 1871 census. I found her and Florence living with two servants, a mother and daughter, both called Sarah Cowley. Isabella’s occupation is listed as ‘chambers’. Is this a reference to Charles Lanyon who is a barrister?

Screenshot

Isabella is described as a ‘wife’ but I could find no trace of a marriage before 1871.

On 27 Jan 1872 Charles Mortimer Lanyon made his will and named Isabella so they must have been in a relationship before that date.

Then on 22 June 1872 Isabella finally got married. Not to bachelor Charles Lanyon but to Edward Campbell!

Edward Campbell was a surgeon major and a little research quickly established that he had served in the Bengal Army and was born in 1815, making him 32 years older than Isabella!

Edward was the son of Thomas Campbell a Captain in the Royal Navy and his wife Phoebe. Edward was baptised at St Martin by Looe in Cornwall on 8 Apr 1815. He was an MRCS (member of the Royal College of Surgeons) by 1837 and served in the following wars:-

  • Afghanistan 1840-42 – Storming of Istalif
  • Attended the wounded during the retreat from Kabul
  • Gwalior War 1843-44
  • First Sikh War 1845-46
  • Crimean War 1855
  • Santhal Rebellion 1855
Hindu priest garlanding the flags of the 35th Bengal Light Infantry (c.1847) – British Museum – Wikimedia Commons

By 1864 Edward had retired from the army and returned to England where he met Isabella.

On 4 Jan 1876 Charles Lanyon wrote a codicil to his will. He reduced the bequest to Isabella from £500 to £300 a year as he had settled some money on her whilst he was still alive and he appointed his brother William Owen Lanyon his sole executor.

The next time they appear in the records is on 31 Jan 1877 when Isabella filed for divorce from Edward.

Isabella’s petition alleged that in September 1874 Edward had deserted her and since December 1873 he had committed adultery numerous times with various unnamed women in both London and Plymouth. And that on the 25th and 26th of January 1877 he had committed adultery with an unnamed woman at the Norfolk Square Hotel in Paddington. Isabella also alleged that there were no children from this marriage!

Was she divorcing Edward so she could marry Charles? If so she was too late.

Less than one month later Charles was dead.

He suffered from a weak dilated heart and had developed painful inflammation of his collar bone, he was just 37 years old.

Charles’ will was proved on 26 May 1877 and probate was granted to William Owen Lanyon’s attorneys as he was in South Africa. Then nothing happened. The grant of probate ceased and expired.

We next find Isabella and Florence on the 1881 census. Florence was living with her ‘father’ Edward Campbell in Devon (helpfully her name was transcribed as Kormcoh Campbell! Nothing is ever simple in genealogy) and Isabella was a visitor at Clifton in Bristol. She is described as ‘wife of Dr Campbell’.

Screenshot

On 5 Aug 1887 probate of William’s will was finally granted to Sir William Owen Lanyon. We don’t know if William ever paid out the bequest to Isabella.

Isabella died on 3 Dec 1888 at 74 Bishop’s Road, Paddington in London. Her ‘husband’ Edward was present. She too was suffering from heart problems and collapsed. She was just 41.

Edward may have been 32 years older than Isabella but he outlived her and died on 16 Jan 1890.

We could of course leave the story there but I wanted to know what happened to Florence and consequently found myself disappearing down a genealogical rabbit hole!

Florence’s Story

On 8 Aug 1889 Florence married Willington Augustus David Shelton (now that’s the sort of name genealogists love!) Willington was of Irish heritage and I quickly found an obituary for him in the Limerick Archives. They also had a photo of him.

He had a distinguished military career and became a Lieutenant Colonel. He served in India, Ireland and South Africa during the Boer war and was at the siege of Ladysmith in 1900. He was mentioned in dispatches and awarded the DSO.

Perhaps of more interest to family historians was the mention of three wives! His first marriage was to Mary Bridget Goodlake on 17 Jan 1877. He filed for divorce on 25th May 1878 on the grounds of her adultery with Hermon Samler. On 4 Oct 1879 Mary married John Hermon Samler.

Just a year later, on 28 Oct 1880 Mary filed for divorce on the grounds of John’s cruelty (she alleged he was intoxicated and would pinch and kick her) and he counter sued on the grounds of her adultery! The divorce petition is some 64 pages long and they weren’t granted a decree absolute until 1886 and during that time she gave birth to two daughters who were both given the surname Samler!

On 6 Jan 1887 Mary married for a third time to William Middleton Power. She lived to the grand old age of 93!

Willington’s second marriage was to Victoria Chancellor in 1886. Victoria was ten years older than Willington and had been married twice before. Her first marriage was to John Atcheler who was 47 years older than her! Victoria’s father was a coach maker and John Atcheler was a horse dealer. John died in 1867 at the age of 75 and the same year she married for a second time to George Bury a GP who was 30 years older than her! George died in 1886 and that same year she married Willington.

Victoria died on 1 Jan 1889.

Victoria Chancellor

Willington waited eight months and then married Florence on 8 Aug 1889. They had two children but Florence died of scarlet fever at the London Fever hospital on 18 Jun 1905 aged just 40.

Whilst this starts off as a post about Charles Lanyon it develops into a post about marriage, adultery and divorce in the Victorian era.

We’re Getting There!

Sometimes when researching family history you find a tiny story which really has to be retold.

This is the story of William Henry Lanyon’s ‘Difficult Journey.’

William Henry was the son of Richard Lanyon and Susan Tucker of Acton Castle. He was the eldest son born in 1825 and appears to have been quite an unusual man. Although he was married and had a large family he chose to live apart from them.

He was a gunpowder manufacturer and merchant and evidently needed to travel to London on business.

The Royal Cornwall Gazette reports that on 24 June 1869 William contacted Mrs Dobb from the Royal Hotel and ordered a bus to call at his residence at Strangways Terrace in Truro to take him to the train station. Unfortunately his booking was forgotten, the omnibus didn’t call and he missed his train.

George Shillibeer‘s first omnibus – Wikimedia Commons

William then did something that many modern rail travellers wish they could do….he ordered a special train to be got ready which took him to Bristol to catch the train up to London! The Victorian equivalent of an Uber!

The cost of this special run was £68 and William planned to claim that from the landlady of the Royal Hotel, Mrs Dobb, who had taken the original booking.

Victorian Railways F class 2-4-0 type steam locomotive – Wikimedia Commons

William made it to London but sadly we don’t know if Mrs Dobb ever paid him the £68.

The Shepherd

George Lanyon, the second son of John Charles Lanyon and Mary Mead, was nicknamed “The Shepherd”. This post is my attempt to find out why.

George was born 3 Oct 1833 at Redruth in Cornwall. His father owned an ironmongers on Fore Street and in his later years was a successful merchant tanner and ironmonger.

John Charles Lanyon died in 1868 and left a detailed will, there was no mention of his second son George and that was the first indication that all was not well.

JC Lanyon’s eldest son, also called John Charles, his third son Alfred and fourth surviving son Thomas all receive generous bequests and businesses. (The estate was valued at £35,000 in 1868.) But there was nothing for George, why?

George Lanyon appeared on the 1851 census as a seventeen year old ‘assistant’, presumably to his father. Sometime after 1851 and before 1861 he emigrated to Tasmania. His elder brother was already trading in Adelaide in Australia (he was a partner in Adelaide’s department store ‘Harris Scarfe’) perhaps George set out to emulate him?

Initially I thought George may have acquired his nickname ‘The Shepherd’ through a business interest in sheep farming in Tasmania however the story is a little more interesting than that!

On 3 July 1861 George married Susan Ida Crisp at Hobart in Tasmania.

Susan Ida Crisp

By 1862 they had returned to Cornwall and their first child Catherine Rosina Lanyon was born at Falmouth.

Their children:

  • Catherine Rosina 1862
  • Theodore Tasman 1864
  • George Edward 1867
  • Norman Crisp 1869
  • Hilda Maud 1873
  • Mabel 1879 who died in infancy

In 1871 the census describes George as a tanner employing 10 men, by all appearances a successful businessman like his brothers.

A closer look at Susan Ida Crisp revealed why he may have been given his nickname and also why he was left nothing in his father’s will.

Susan was the daughter of Samuel Crisp and Elizabeth Sams. She was born in Hobart in 1840. Samuel’s obituary describes him as one of the original colonists.

What they failed to mention is how he arrived in Tasmania….transported for life for sheep stealing!

Samuel Crisp was born in Sudbury in Suffolk in 1805. In 1820 he was sentenced to a month in prison for larceny, stealing 18 yards of ribbon from the shop of John Holman. Shortly after this he married Elizabeth Sams and they had two young sons, Samuel born 1823 and George born 1824. In September 1825 Samuel was caught sheep stealing. The Bury and Norwich Post for December 1825 has this report:

He was found guilty. The sentence of death was commuted to transportation for life and Samuel aged just 20 was transported to Tasmania on the ship “Earl St Vincent” which set sail on 20 Apr 1826.

The Royal Navy kept detailed records and the ship’s surgeon records the following:-

So 200 years later we know Samuel and three others were suffering with worms which caused intolerable itching! The treatment sounds even worse; they were given a purgative and then had to inject a decoction of tobacco into their rectums! To prevent the worms returning they were told to drink a pint of salt water twice every week.

The journey to Tasmania took 110 days and the ship contained 180 prisoners.

Two years later Samuel’s wife and sons followed him to Tasmania and they produced another 5 children whilst he was still a prisoner.

By 1840 “The Hobart Town Courier and Van Diemen’s Land Gazette” reported that he had been given a free pardon.

Now a free man Samuel set about creating a successful timber business, Crisp & Gunn.

Samuel and Elizabeth had twelve children. In 1853 Elizabeth died and Samuel remarried to an Elizabeth Farquarson. By the time of his death, aged 84, he had 80 grand children and 18 great grand children. He had become a respectable member of Hobart society. His children became solicitors and his son James was a Wesleyan minister. His grandsons served as Mayor of Hobart.

Samuel Crisp

So what became of his grandchildren in Cornwall?

Catherine Rosina never married. She lived with her father in Falmouth and died there in 1928.

Catherine Rosina Lanyon

Theodore Tasman 1867-1949. Theodore was a paymaster Admiral in the Royal Navy. There were four children from his first marriage.

George Edward 1869-1916. George was a doctor. There were six children from his marriage to Pollie Bullmore.

Theodore & George Lanyon

Norman Crisp 1869-1917. Norman married his cousin Dorothy Mead and they had three sons. He was shipwrecked in the English channel by a torpedo and drowned.

Norman Crisp Lanyon

Hilda Maud 1873-1922. Hilda married Edward Augustus Bullmore (Pollie Bullmore’s brother). He too was a doctor. They had two sons.

Hilda Maud Lanyon

George Lanyon and his family lived at Tasman Villa in Falmouth (circled) just behind what is now the Greenbank Hotel.

Susan Ida died in 1903 and George in 1921, at the grand old age of 88. He outlived all his siblings and three of his six children.

George is on the back row (left) standing behind his daughter in law Pollie.

Edward Augustus Bullmore, who was married to Hilda, collaborated with Jane Veale Mitchell to research the Lanyon family tree. He left his papers to William Smith Lamparter so that he could continue the research. In turn those papers made their way to me and ultimately led to the creation of this website.

So now we know why George Lanyon was nicknamed “The Shepherd”. If you have a better theory please get in touch!

Thomas Lanyon – Pewterer of Bristol

Researching a family often necessitates many hours trawling through online resources for any mention of the family surname. A trawl through the Somerset Heritage Centre online index produced the deeds for a farm and lands at St Decumans and the name Thomas Lanyon.

The record starts on 13 Aug 1601. ‘Thomas Fulford of Fulford, Devon, Esq. enfeoffed to John Hooper of Ould Cleve, yeoman, a messuage known as Hooper’s Tenement and ten acres of land, part of the manor of Williton Fulford’ The deeds show the various tenants over the years. In 1715/6 John Leach of Bristol, ‘powterer’ and Sarah his wife (daughter and heir of Robert Mawdsley of Bristol, mariner and brother of Richard Mawdsley of Williton mortgaged the property to Arthur Thomas of Bristol, ‘powterer’. On 1 Jul 1718 John Leach mortgaged the property , by lease and release, to Abraham Lloyd, merchant, John Andrews, merchant, Richard Stafford, merchant and Samuel Cox, soapboiler, all of Bristol.

On 13 Mar 1718/19 John Rowe Esq and Martin Innys and Milborn Taylor, gents, all of Bristol , assigned the property to Daniel Woolmer, haberdasher, Thomas Lanyon, pewterer and George Bridges the younger, distiller, all of Bristol and John Roberts of Bedminster, cotton weaver (all creditors of John Leach, who was now bankrupt.)

So who was Thomas Lanyon and where does he fit on the tree?

Thomas was working as a pewterer (a tinsmith) from around 1715 and is last mentioned in 1755.

In 2021 this charger made by Thomas sold for £318.

Thomas was apprenticed to John Batcheler of Bristol on 2 Feb 1707 and is free by 9 Apr 1715. He’s mentioned in the Poll Books of 1721 and 1739 as of St Nicholas Bristol, the last mention of him in is 1755.

Poll Book 1754 mentions father and son.

We know Thomas Lanyon married someone called Anne before 1725 but I can’t find a record of the marriage anywhere in England. Her name is mentioned alongside Thomas’ apprentices.

They had at least one son, Francis Lanyon, who was baptised on 29 Aug 1725 at St Nicholas, Bristol. He was also working as a pewterer on 26 Jun 1747. In the 1754 Poll Book he is listed as of St Nicholas in Bristol.

Baptism of Francis Lanyon – St Nicholas Bristol

Thomas had at least two apprentices; Thomas Page who was indentured to Lanyon between 1729 and 1737 and Robert Bush who was indentured at a cost of £50 between the years 1748 and 1755. In 1765 he was based in the High Street in Bristol.

To give you an idea of the size of Lanyon’s business, in the 1740s he exported 1148lbs of pewter in one year. The book ‘Old Pewter, its Makers and Marks’ described Thomas Lanyon as being from Bristol and Coventry but I can’t find any records placing him in Coventry.

Lanyon’s Pewter Marks

The same book mentions a Thomas Lanyon of Coventry in 1774. This could be a son or even a grandson but I can find no trace of a baptism, marriage or burial.

A trawl through St Nicholas, Bristol’s parish registers reveals two baptisms which may be relevant: William & Anne Lanyen, twin children of Eli and Anne Lanyen, baptised on 3 Dec 1723 and three days later, William Lanyen and Anne Lanyen both buried 6 Dec 1723. Who was Eli Lanyen and was he any relation to Thomas Lanyon?

Sadly the records do not give us any answers. We don’t know if Eli was related to him or if it was just a coincidence that two men called Lanyon/Lanyen had wives both called Anne and were baptising children at the same time in the same area.

To complicate things even further there is a marriage of an Ann Lanyon/Lanion to a William Wayne/Wain at St Nicholas Bristol on 10 Sep 1758. They had a daughter Anna Maria Wayne. William Wayne was a metallurgist who went to Cornwall with his daughter, presumably after his wife died, to teach the Cornish metallurgy (Jane Veale Mitchell research). Both William and Anna feature in several Lanyon wills and are left very large bequests. They are related to Tobias and Mary Lanyon (the children of Francis Lanyon and Phillipp Nicholls of Sancreed).

Tobias’ Will, proved 1779, mentions ‘…my nephew William Wayne gentleman late of the City of Bristol, now residing with me (at Penzance) and my niece Anna Maria Wayne his daughter….’ Tobias bequeathes them £5000!

Tobias’ Will – PROB 11/1050/103

Tobias’ sister, Mary, also had her will proved in 1779. She bequeathes her nephew William Wayne £1000 and her niece, his daughter, £2000.

Mary’s Will – PROB/11/1051/117

Tobias and Mary clearly regard William Wayne as their nephew which implies that his wife, Ann Lanyon, was their niece.

It was time to look at Tobias & Mary’s branch of the tree and see what information I could find.

The Sancreed branch of the Lanyon family tree.

Tobias and Mary were the children of Francis Lanyon and Phillipp Nicholls of Sancreed. Francis was the son of John Lanyon, called ‘The Golden Lanyon’ as he made so much money from tin. John was a grandson of John Lanyon Esq and Phelype Milliton.

Tobias and Mary had a brother called Thomas and whilst I cannot prove that he was the Thomas who was a successful pewterer in Bristol, it does seem likely.

Tobias and Mary’s sister Jane died in 1738 and she leaves her brother Thomas the sum of one guinea in gold to buy him a ring.

Thomas had a son called Francis Lanyon, perhaps he was named after his father, who died in 1725, or his elder brother Francis, who died in 1723.

This branch of the tree now looks like this –

So Thomas Lanyon of Bristol was born in Sancreed, Cornwall in 1691 and died sometime after 1755. We don’t know what happened to his wife, Anne. We know that his son Francis became a pewterer but we don’t know if he married or had any children (the Thomas Lanyon working as a pewterer in Coventry in 1774 may be his son). There is no record of a birth of a daughter Ann Lanyon but we do have a record of her marriage to William Wayne.

Bristol, England, Church of England Marriages and Banns, 1754-1938

Their marriage was solemnised in the presence of one Thomas Lanyon!

Anna Maria Wayne married Samuel Bird Esq. in London in 1784.

Marriage Register – St James Piccadilly, Westminster

By 1790 William Wayne was dead and administration of Tobias’ will passed to Anna Maria Bird the residuary legatee.

I found one possible burial entry for William at St Philip and St Jacob in Bristol on 19 Feb 1787. If it is ‘our’ William Wayne, he died of asthma.

Bristol Archives; Bristol, England; Bristol Church of England Parish Registers; Reference: P/St P&J/R/1/5

Anna was left a very wealthy young woman with bequests of several thousand pounds, a huge sum at that time.

Sadly she died on 8 Apr 1803, at East Stonehouse in Devon, but her will requests that she be interred at Sancreed in Cornwall. She was just 40, widowed, and suffering from Consumption (TB). She and Samuel were childless so her fortune was left to various cousins. There is a plaque in Sancreed church which reads:-

‘Sacred to the memory of Anna Maria Bird, widow of Samuel Bird, of Ridgeway in the county of Devon, Esqr. She died the 8th day of April, 1803; aged 40 years. Her body is deposited in a vault with the remains of her relatives, Josiah Lanyon, Esqr, and Jane his sister.’ (https://sancreedopccornwall.tripod.com/id1.html)

Josiah Lanyon? I think that should read Tobias!

Mining in Cornwall and Accidents & Incidents

There were many mines in Cornwall and sadly quite a few accidents. This post is about the accidents and incidents that affected the Lanyon family.

Evening at Bottallack Mine by Ashley Dace, CC BY-SA 2.0 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0, via Wikimedia Commons

The Lanyons had connections to mining in Cornwall going back to the mid sixteenth century and possibly earlier. In 1556 John de Veer, Earl of Oxford, Viscount Bulbek and Chamberlain of England gave William Laniene and David Angove a licence to dig and search “…for the loode and veyne of tynne…” within de Veer’s manors and lordships in Cornwall for two years. (Source – CRO AP/1/852) We don’t know where they found tin but the original document has later been endorsed in pencil with the word ‘Gwinear’.

William Laniene’s son, Richard, married Margaret Treskillard in 1531. She is mentioned in Carew’s ‘The Survey of Cornwall’ as having a dream which told her where to find tin.

“Some have found Tynne-workes of great vallew, through meanes no lesse

strange, then extraordinarie, to wit, by dreames.  As in Edward the

sixts time, a Gentlewoman, heire to one Tresculierd, and wife to

Lanine, dreamed, that a man of seemely personage told her, how in such

a Tenement of her Land, shee should find so great store of Tynne, as

would serve to inrich both her selfe and her posteritie.  This shee

revealed to her husband: and hee, putting the same in triall, found a

worke, which in foure yeeres, was worth him welneere so many thousand

pounds.” 

Richard Carew – Survey of Cornwall (1602)

John Lanyon of Sancreed, who died in 1664, was known as the Golden Lanyon as he made so much money from tin.

A document in the National Archives dating from 1605 is the first documented ‘incident’ with mining. Challynor v Buvargus concerns: assault; destruction of property and unlawful assembly.

Plaintiffs: John Challynor esq of Fulham. 

Defendants: William Buvargus (Busvargus) of Buryan, Maderne Pendeene of Madron, Sandry Maderne, and others, tinners. 

Subject: Assault on Ralph Lanyn, agent of plaintiff John Challynor, and seizure of tin belonging to four ‘doles’ of a tinwork called Wheal (Bennett) at St Tust (reetius St Just). Cornwall.

We don’t know where this Ralph fits on the tree but I think he is the same person who was buried at Sancreed on 29 Apr 1614.

Hugh Lanyon ‘tynner’

The first confirmed ‘tynner’ in the family is Hugh Lanyon 1648-1709. Hugh was born in Madron, the son of William Lanyon and Jane. He married Mary Tonkin and is described as a ‘merchant of Paul.’ His will survives and it is that document which describes him as a ‘tynner’.

Hugh Lanyon’s will. CRO AP/L/1104

Doubtless there were plenty of other Lanyons involved with mining in some way or another but with so few early records available it isn’t possible to identify them.

In the 19th century Coroner’s Inquests, newspaper reports and death certificates make the search much easier.

East Wheal Rose Mining Disaster

The biggest disaster to affect the family was the East Wheal Rose disaster of 1846. At that time the mine employed over 1000 men, women and children. A terrible thunderstorm sent torrential rain pouring into the valley, where the mine was situated, and into the mine itself. The men at the surface struggled to divert the water away from the mine entrance but the shafts quickly began to fill with water. There were great acts of heroism; a timber-man, Samuel Bastion, went down into the mine to lie across a manhole, diverting the flow of water and saving eighteen lives. Men went down to search for sons, only to lose their lives.

In all 39 men died in the mine including Josiah and Reuben Lanyon, brothers from St Allen.

Malcolm Kewn / East Wheal Rose / CC BY-SA 2.0
East Wheal Rose Commemorative Sculpture

Most mine accidents aren’t as big as the East Wheal Rose disaster. We only find out about them from Coroner’s inquests or newspaper reports.

10 Nov 1843 – Ralph Lanyon junior from St Just in Penwith aged 14 was working in the Wheal Bosean mine and accidentally fell into one of the shafts, a distance of approx. 10 fathoms and was instantly killed. The verdict was recorded in the Royal Cornwall Gazette “Accidental death.”

Deep Down A Tale of the Cornish Mine – Internet Archive Book Images, No restrictions, via Wikimedia Commons

9 Oct 1838 – John Lanyon who was born in Gwennap, died in the Ellen Beryle Mine and was buried at St Day in Cornwall.

24 Mar 1865 – Simon Lanyon was born in St Allen and was killed at the Cargoll Mine, he was just 19 years old. “On Tuesday, an inquest was held at Zelah, before E. T. Carlyon, Esq., deputy coroner, on the body of Simon Lanyon, of the above place, who was accidentally crushed to death under the bob of the engine at Cargoll mine. A verdict of “Accidental death” was returned.” Royal Cornwall Gazette.

10 Nov 1855 – John Lanyon of St Just in Penwith was killed at Park Noweth Mine. “…in the parish of St. Just in Penwith, on the body of John Lanyon, aged 47 years. The deceased was a miner, and worked at Park Noweth Mine, in that parish, and was at the 80 fathom level, assisting in changing the boxes of the lift, when the engine being working, the rod came down, and the navel-pin thereof struck him on the head and caused such injury thereto that he died on the following day. It appeared to be the usual practice to change the boxes whilst the engine is at work, and that the same may be done without fear of accident where the party doing it is ordinarily careful. – Verdict “accidental death.” –The deceased was very much respected. He leaves a widow and five children to deplore their loss. The poor woman has been very unfortunate, having had her first husband drowned, her father killed, her son killed, and now her second husband also killed, and not long since a grand child was drowned in a well.” Royal Cornwall Gazette

Dolcoath Mine – John Charles Burrow (1852—1918), Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

5 Jul 1912 – James Lanyon was a timber man at Wheal Carne mine in Pendeen, he was the grandson of John Lanyon (above). “He and another were “spilling” along an old adit level were they were working the sides were of decomposed granite and were weak. The level supports consisted of stull pieces hitched in the hanging and foot walls, and over these supports the piles were driven. The last stull piece, which was about 2 feet from the dirt, had been set with rather less pitch than usual and the bottom ledge of the hitch in the hanging wall was only half an inch deep. At the time of the accident, Lanyon was cutting a hitch in the hanging wall, for another stull piece when a big fall of ground about 4 feet above him fell from the wall knocked out the last stull piece and pinned him under it. The loose stone had been noticed at the commencement of the shift but it was thought that it would not fall. If legs had been set under the stull pieces the accident would probably not have happened.” Source – UK, Coal Mining Accidents and Deaths Index, 1878-1935 on Ancestry.com

When the mining industry in Cornwall started to collapse in the mid 19th century many Cornish miners took their skills to new mines overseas.

Brothers John and James Lanyon of Breage both died in Sarawak on the island of Borneo. John was a tin dresser and he died 30 Dec 1871 and James was a miner and died on 14 Jun 1872.

Simon Searle Lanyon of St Allen emigrated to Australia in 1857. He headed to the gold mines of Ballarat, like so many others, to make his fortune. His sister Emily followed soon after. Simon set up a mining company at Ballarat, Ophir Mine, with Thomas William Bull and a man called Rablin. In 1859 Simon and Rablin were killed by a fall of earth. “The timbers slipped and earth came down in that one section only, covering Rablin and Lanyon so that it was eleven hours before their bodies were recovered.” Source – “These Were Our People” by Ruth Lanyon.

Thomas William Bull broke the terrible news to Emily and in time they became friends. He went on to marry Emily Lanyon in Oct 1859.

Thomas & Emily

This post is a work in progress and will be added to as new information is found.