Category Archives: Places

The Sea

The village of Pocklington lies in close proximity to Hull, a major port especially in Victorian times. I was not unusual for local young Yorkshire men to go embark on a life at sea. By no means an easy life and in in some ways harder than the agricultural alternative. In Edward Weddall’s case he grew up in an agricultural setting, however the sea must have called to him. At the age of “sixteen” he left the land behind and headed off to to sail the seven seas.

In 1859 young Edward Weddall may have taken the 90 minute train journey from Pocklington Station to Hull to begin his life at sea.

Pocklington Station. Photo courtesy ofpocklingtonhistory.com

Hull’s Maritime History

During the late 12th century when the monks of Meaux needed a port to export wool from their estates they chose a spot at the junction of the rivers Hull and Humber to build a quay and named it Wyke on Hull. In the late 13th century when Edward I looked for a port in the north east of England he acquired Hull which then became known as Kingston (King’s Town) on Hull. The king set about enlarging Hull and built an exchange where merchants could buy and sell goods. Read More:

Sources
http://pocklingtonhistory.com/
http://www.hullhistorycentre.org.uk/discover/hull_history_centre/our_collections/maritime_sources/ships_and_shipping.aspx
Special thanks;
Andy Sefton of Pocklington Historical Society

 

Edward, the early years

Edward Weddall was born in March 1844, about the forth child of Eliza and Charles. Before he was born Eliza and Charles welcomed John Robert, Eliza Ann and Everilda, according to the 1841 census. It is possible that there was another child or indeed two before he arrived, but they could have died in infancy, not uncommon at the time.

Photo of Burnby Church. Courtesy of http://www.pocklingtonhistory.com

Edward, like his siblings christened at the local church in Burnby depicted above.  The same church the saw the Weddall family  baptised, married and buried for many generations.

School

 

Edward and his siblings attended the nearby school in Pocklington. Edward most likely continued his education to at least twelve (the age the average child left school in Yorkshire at the time), before setting off to sea at sixteen. Compared to many, his family enjoyed a more comfortable existence than most in Victorian times. Charles Weddall could afford to allow his children to attend school rather than sending them to work. They may have helped on the family farm but were spared having to toil in industry such as in the mills at the age of eight.

A Yorkshire primary school in the time of Edward Weddall. Picture courtesy of http://www.maggieblanck.com

 

Pocklington’s first National School was built in 1819 on West Green. The National Society, founded in 1812, had as its aim  ”to communicate to the poor generally, by means of a summary mode of education lately brought into practice, such knowledge and habits as are sufficient to guide them through life in their proper stations, especially to teach them the doctrine of Religion, according to the principles of the Established Church. Read more:

 

Farm Life

Charles Weddall had a sizable farm, employing labourers. He owned the land rather than rented it. He also owned property in the village of Pocklington and was also listed in the 1844 Williams & Co. Directory of York as a coal merchant at Canal Head. Most improtantly he appeared on the 1842 voting list. Only land owners or people of importance had the right to vote then.  According to http://www.maggieblanck.com “Very few people in England had the right to vote until the Reform A of 1884, which extended the franchise to two thirds of adult males. Females could not vote until 1918.”

The Weddall’s apparent wealth suggested that they were not fully reliant on the land for an income, but they lived on the farm at Burnby rather than in Pocklington, showing that the family was more accustomed to a rural setting than the slightly more industrial life in the village. Fairs were commonplace to the country lifestyle. Pocklington was no stranger to the village fair, they were taking place there since Medieval times. The infamous Dick Turpin showed up for several of them in the 18th Centenary, before he met his demise at York.

Fairs took place in Pocklington from early medieval times. The earliest recorded being a grant made for a four day fair to be held annually for the feast of St. Margaret (July 19-22) in 1245. More fairs were added until by the 17th century there were seven fairs held annually in the town. The infamous highwayman Dick Turpin was known to have attended Pocklington Fair, as it was mentioned in his trial evidence. His real name was John Palmer, a horse dealer who turned to horse stealing and highway robbery. He was hung in York on 7th April 1739.

Edward Weddall must have enjoyed an easy if not happy childhood in rural Yorkshire, for Victorian times. His future wife Emily was not quite as fortunate, but they both had a rural background in common. Maybe it was one of the reasons that they chose Achill, not dissimilar to the wild Yorkshire countryside to make their home.

Sources
Special thanks to Andrew Sefton, Archivist
Image of Pocklington Church 1844 courtesy of http://www.pocklingtonhistory.com
http://www.maggieblanck.com/Land/Children.html

Weddall’s Farm

Charles Weddall was listed as a yeoman farmer, which meant that he owned his own land rather than renting it. According to the 1871 census Charles Weddall even though he was 67 years of age was listed as a farmer owning 250 acres of land, employing three laborers and four boys, who could have been between the age of ten and fourteen, not uncommon for the time. These boys were sometimes the sons of other farmers, who hired them out.

Around the time of Edward’s birth the agricultural industry in the area was thriving:

The Pocklington Agricultural Society started in 1847. An Agricultural show was followed by a public dinner with an an impressive number of toasts! Read more from and Extract from the Hull Packet and East Riding Times for July 30, 1847.

Charles Weddall was also a coal merchant, in1844, the same year his son Edward was born he was listed as such in the 1844 Williams & Co. Directory of York. The address of his business is given as Canal-head, Pocklington. It was not unusual for merchants to have their business’ close to canals to transport heavy goods before railways and motorways. However Charles Weddall’s business may not have been as lucrative as it could have as described below by the Pocklington Canal Amenity Society;

The canal was mainly used to carry coal and agricultural produce. It was never a great financial success, partly because goods had to be transferred to horse-drawn carts at the terminus of the canal, adjacent to the Hull-York turnpike road, to continue their journey.

COAL MERCHANTS.

Hodgson, Rt., Canal-head
Peart, James and Josh., Canal and West-green
Weddall, Chas., Canal-head

Pocklington Canal today, near where the Weddall’s had their coal business. Photo courtesy of PocklingtonHistory.com

In spite of their less than thriving coal business the Weddall’s were comparatively well off the standards of the time. Young Edward, unlike his future second wife Emily, would have grown up wanting for nothing. Somehow the agricultural lifestyle did not appeal to Edward Weddall and at the tender age of sixteen he left home and headed to the nearest port, Hull and embarked on a life at sea.

 

Sources
http://www.history.com/topics/child-labor
http://www.pocklingtonhistory.com/archives/people/directories/1844_williams/index.php
http://www.pocklingtoncanalsociety.org/history.html

 

Special thanks to Andrew Sefton, Archivist
Image of Pocklington Church 1844 courtesy of http://www.pocklingtonhistory.com

The Weddalls of Pocklington, Yorkshire

Edward Weddall was born in March 1844 to Eliza and Charles Weddall of Pocklington, Yorkshire. His was from a farming background, not unlike Emily on her paternal side. The Weddall’s like the Burkes, owned a significant amount of land and prospered from it.

19 December 1846 – Yorkshire Gazette – York, North Yorkshire, England

An early drawing of Pocklington Church by William Watson around 1844 (The year Edward was Baptized) Note the position of the church clock* (reproduced by kind permission of Wm. Brown), Courtesy of PocklingtonHistory.com

Charles Weddall and Eliza Scaife were married on 5th September 1832, in Pocklington Church, Charles was 27 and Eliza had just turned 21. The couple went on to have at least six children, Edward was about their fourth, although they could have had more who did not survive, not unusual for the time.

Charles Weddall, let his some of his land to tenant farmers, and was also a coal merchant. The Weddalls were by the standard of the times quite well off. Young Edward and his siblings would have had enjoyed a relatively comfortable childhood. As well as being financially secure, they were respected members of the community, Charles sat on the North Yorkshire Grand Jury.

02 July 1842 – York Herald – York, North Yorkshire, England

 

Sources
http://search.findmypast.co.uk/record?id=gbprs/or/york/m/00…
02 July 1842 – York Herald – York, North Yorkshire, England
19 December 1846 – Yorkshire Gazette – York, North Yorkshire, England

 

Special thanks to Andrew Sefton, Archivist
Image of Pocklington Church 1844 courtesy of http://www.pocklingtonhistory.com

 

The Beginning of a Beautiful Friendship

April 1896 was the time and Hotel Splendid was the place when Emily first met her husband to be Edward Weddall. It is only a guess, because there is no true way to tell. The odds are more than average, that she first encountered the sea captain, who may have been staying on the French Riviera, to improve his health. Emily had just qualified as a nurse and may have been on one of her first jobs. Private nurses or nursemaids were high in demand by families and individuals traveling through on staying on on the area. In his book. Wintering in the Riviera, William Miller explains the appeal of Mentone for the ailing and indeed the healthy.

“We stayed but one night at Nice, although we went several times afterwards from Mentone to spend the day there. I do not therefore pretend to know it well. It is the most expensive town in the Riviera, but is alluring to those who go in good health for pure enjoyment. For promotion of enjoyment and gaiety, it is, I presume, everything[163] that can be desired; but although the climate is better than that of some other places, being, it is said, equal or similar to the climate of Florence, it wants the shelter which is so necessary to invalids.”

Edward Weddall was newly widowed at that time only loosing his wife a year or so before. He may have been there on for his health, Emily on the other hand, who enjoyed good health all her life could have been those “who go in good health for pure enjoyment” but, she was most likely there as a nurse. Either way she found the time to collect for the families of the Kingstown Lifeboat Disaster of 1895. Helping those less fortunate than herself was a character trait, which may possibly have attracted the sea captain to her. Kindness was only one of her attributes, she also had an attractive and vibrant personality. Captain Weddall made an ostentatious contribution to Emily’s fund raising.  That may just have been the beginning of a beautiful friendship.

 

Sources
http://gutenberg.polytechnic.edu.na/4/7/4/6/47463/47463-h/47463-h.htm#ill235
The Irish Times – Page 5, Saturday 18 April 1896